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"I Heard a Tap-Tap of Gunfire. But I Didn't Realize My Legs Had Gone."

by: Paul Harris  |  The Guardian UK

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President-elect Barack Obama hugs Iraq war veteran and director of Illinois department of veterans affairs, Tammy Duckworth, after placing a wreath at a veterans memorial in Chicago. (Photo: Reuters)

    Last week the world watched as Barack Obama embraced an Iraq war vet at a Veterans Day ceremony. Tammy Duckworth lost her legs on a mission in Baghdad four years ago. Now she is among a rising number of ex-soldiers reshaping US politics and may yet serve under the new president. Here she talks about her fight for her comrades - and her own fight for life

    New York - As the man and woman walked slowly towards the war memorial in Chicago last week, the figure of Barack Obama was instantly recognisable. But as the pair hugged after laying a wreath in the ceremony, it was the young woman who caught the attention of the media and whose photograph flashed around the world.

    It was difficult not to notice her. As the President-in-waiting embraced her, it was clear that she was a double amputee. Rarely has the human cost of America's war in Iraq been so painfully and poignantly illustrated.

    The woman was Tammy Duckworth, one of the most remarkable figures to emerge from the conflict. Horribly wounded by an insurgent attack, the former helicopter pilot is now part of a wave of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans who are returning home and reshaping US politics. They are running for office, heading government departments and campaigning on issues they care about.

    Duckworth is now one of the most visible and high-profile among them. There are even whispers that she might replace Obama in the Senate, taking the seat left vacant when he moves to the White House, or that he might appoint her to his cabinet as head of the Department of Veterans' Affairs. But on that cold Chicago morning last week, as Duckworth and Obama paid tribute to America's war dead, it was not politics that were on Duckworth's mind. It was her former comrades-in-arms, recently redeployed back to the country where she lost her legs. "I was actually thinking about my crew," she told The Observer.

    Last week marked a doubly poignant anniversary for Duckworth, a petite and pretty half-Asian woman with a homely Midwestern accent. Veterans of all wars were remembering their fallen comrades on 11 November, but the day after was Duckworth's "Alive Day", the fourth anniversary of her close brush with death.

    The Alive Day is a tradition that sprang up in Vietnam as wounded American soldiers struggled to cope with the physical and emotional scars left by the injuries of war. Now Duckworth is part of a new generation treading the same path and marking a fresh wave of Alive Days. For Duckworth, 40, commemorating the day that left her so horribly wounded was a bitter-sweet moment.

    "It could be a horrible day, but I choose to celebrate it. Every year we kind of have a big party. I know it's the day I lost my legs, but it is also the day that I survived and got my life back," she said.

    On 12 November 2004, Duckworth was a helicopter pilot in the Illinois Army National Guard. She had persuaded her superiors to send her to Iraq when her unit was shipped out, just as she was about to be transferred elsewhere. On that fateful date she had piloted her "bird" over Baghdad from landing zone to landing zone.

    Her final stop had been in the green zone, where she had picked up milkshakes, stir-fry food and Christmas decorations. Once back in the air, she heard the sound of bullets hitting the chopper. "I remember hearing the tap-tap of small-arms fire. I was reaching over for the GPS to record the location and then there was a giant fireball," she said.

    The chopper had been hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired by an insurgent. Unaware of the extent of her injuries, Duckworth tried to help her fellow pilot, Dan Milberg, guide the stricken craft down. But as she struggled she wondered why the pedals were not responding to her commands. It never occurred to her that she no longer had any feet with which to press them. "I did not realise my legs were already gone," she said, with a lightness of tone that belied the full horror of what she was describing. "I mean, how many times a day do you ever look down to check if you still have your legs?"

    The helicopter hit the Iraqi dirt and Milberg dragged her to a second aircraft for evacuation. Her injuries were so bad that Milberg mistakenly assumed she was dead. Instead she woke up eight days later at the famed Walter Reed military hospital back in the US. Her husband, Bryan Bowlsbey, had been at her side for days, repeating a mantra-like chant to her as she lay unconscious: "You were injured. You are at Walter Reed. You are safe."

    So began Duckworth's new life. Like thousands of injured Iraq veterans before and after her, she faced months of painful physical therapy and the mental anguish of coping with her loss. But for Duckworth, her energies gradually began to focus around veterans' rights and their health issues.

    Walter Reed is a regular stop on many politicians' rounds as they make trips both private and public to visit the wards. Soon Duckworth found herself making contacts with politicians such as Senator Richard Durbin, Senator Obama and Congressman Rahm Emanuel.

    It was Durbin in particular who persuaded the feisty and outspoken veteran to consider entering public life. It was a long process. By March 2005 she was taking her first steps on her artificial limbs. Learning to walk again was her priority. But by that summer Durbin wanted her to run for office as a Democrat in a local congressional seat in 2006.

    "I did not know if I wanted to put up with entering public life. It is not an easy thing to do," she said. "But then I realised that I spent all this time complaining about things not being done right for the troops. Why not change the laws yourself? I like challenges and I thought, 'it's easy to complain, but it's not so easy to change things'." She made the decision to get involved. It could yet end with her as a high-profile face in the new Obama administration.

    Changing things is now Duckworth's focus. She ran for Congress in Illinois, eventually losing a nail-bitingly close race in a previously solid Republican seat. Then she became director of Illinois's Department of Veterans' Affairs, where she has raised the profile of veterans' needs, especially the problems they face getting jobs when they return from duty. She has testified before Congress regarding medical care and employment for returning veterans and spoke at this August's Democratic party convention.

    In 2006 she delivered an official Democratic response to one of President Bush's weekly radio addresses to the nation. In it she lambasted his policies on Iraq and the path the White House took in going to war. "Instead of a plan or a strategy, we get shallow slogans like 'mission accomplished' and 'stay the course'," she said in the broadcast. Now political office in Washington may be beckoning her.

    Duckworth said she was flattered that her name was being bandied about, but insisted that she has had no talks with anyone about either a Senate seat or cabinet post. However, she does say she is willing to serve if asked.

    "I have been in the army for 18 years and when my commander-in-chief asks me to do something, I just grab my helmet," she said. "If I was willing to go to Iraq for Bush, I would be willing to serve in any capacity for Obama that he asked me to."

    That sort of military attitude has defined Duckworth's life. Perhaps it also gave her the strength to overcome her injuries. She was born in Thailand, the daughter of an American father and a Thai-Chinese mother. She joined the army reserves at college and chose to train as a helicopter pilot because it was one of the few military jobs that could place a woman directly in combat. She later joined the National Guard as she took a day job as a manager with Rotary International.

    Amazingly, she displays no bitterness towards the war in Iraq. "Anger is such a waste of emotion. It is not worth it. I am moving on ... I am not going to pick at that scab. I learned in hospital not to pick at scabs," she said.

    Duckworth believes firmly that the war was based on false intelligence and that the American public was sold lies. But it still does not make her regret serving there. "That does not diminish the honour and service of my buddies and me. I would go back to Iraq if I could," she said.

    In her dreams, she still does. Duckworth has a recurring dream that is becoming less frequent now, but is often triggered by news reports from Iraq on television. In it she has her legs back and is flying her chopper again. "I go to sleep and in my dream I wake up in Iraq. I get up and fly my missions. I live an entire day. At the end I am exhausted and I go to sleep. When I wake up I am in Illinois," she said.

    The dream carries with it a mixed bag of emotions. "I am happy because I am flying again and I have my legs and I am doing my job," she said.

    But for Duckworth, her experiences on the battlefield have changed that job for ever. She now has a fresh mission, one that has already taken her into the heart of American political power, carried on new legs of steel.

  

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truth - out

truth - out

SHAME, SHAME, SHAME, on this

SHAME, SHAME, SHAME, on this administration, our complicit congress, republican and democrat alike. any one who ever voted, and or promoted this illegal attack on iraq can never be forgiven or forgotten.

Rather than repeat the shame

Rather than repeat the shame shame mantra about the evil lies of Bush, Cheney, et al, I rather would challenge the idiot's vow of blind obedience, the elevation of the concept military "service" to the President, no matter what. This is not some sort of holy level of commitment to human ideals! Working for the military may be a complex personal choice, but it should never guarantee that what you do qualifies for hero status. Rather, it may signify some educational or cultural deficit, just as the notion of "patriotism" is little more than a "higher form" of jingoism. A pox on all this crap!!

beautiful article. thank you

beautiful article. thank you

Where is the discussion of

Where is the discussion of what Obama and Duckworth did to Christine Cegelis, who almost defeated that same Republican opponent and probably would have won the Democratic primary - if it hadn't been for all the big guns campaigning for Duckworth?

Remember the wounded woman

Remember the wounded woman that WASN`T Jessica Lynch...?

Remember the wounded woman

Remember the wounded woman that WASN`T Jessica Lynch...? I hope BUSHCO INC are haunted by her terrified expression until the last vile bastard gets what they have coming!

Shot down by an "insurgent"?

Shot down by an "insurgent"? Why not speak the truth? She was shot down by a resistance fighter, just like the French in WWII. And the "famed" Walter Reed? Don't you mean the Infamous Walter Reed? And she realizes the lies that took us to Iraq, but she is honored to serve the war criminal Bush? And would go back if she could? What the He!!? Do we really want this woman in any position of power? I am sorry for her loss, but it was a useless loss. Have her talk to Raytheon about new legs. Or GE.

since when did the military

since when did the military use combat helicoptors to deliver chinese food and milkshakes??? at the taxpayers expense? so BUSH could keep em duped????

I am not proud. I am

I am not proud. I am ashamed. I served as well and when i saw the atrocities committed in the name of peace and security , I realized I had been horribly deceived by the Military. the commander in chief became a sic joke. I have left. moved away. far away. i NEVER want my children faced with the propaganda and lies and hypocrisy that this american administration has delivered and duped so many wonderful young people with. I am sorry for the woman that lost her legs but she should never have supported a corrupt war, an illegal war and a fascist administration.

Hmm, let me see. Ms

Hmm, let me see. Ms Duckworth, the daughter of an Euro-American father and a Sino-Thai mother is "half-Asian". Mr Obama, the son of a Euro-American mother and a Kenyan father, is black. Puzzling, eh? One possibility is that, like Aristotle, we think fathers make a larger contribution to the child's heritage than mothers do. More likely, sexist though we still are, the puzzle comes from Euro-Americans' shameful relations with African-Americans, especially the long standing law demoted to "mere" inviolable custom to the effect that one drop of African blood made a person African-American. For my part, I'm glad we Euro-Americans have matured to the point where Ms Duckworth can be a mutt, but it will be a long time until most of us can see Mr Obama as just another mutt. 'Til then, perhaps best we see him as black. Otherwise racists both out and in the closet will see his oratory and athleticism as black and his intelligence, calm, and good sense as white. Ah, for world that has no pure breds and no mutts, just dogs. And one in which no one gets their legs blown off so somebody else can throw caviar in the trash.

I heartily agree with

I heartily agree with REALITYZONE (aove). And I also question the milkshakes? comment. The war was illegal, started with lies (this was demonstrated long ago), and yet the media never challenged McCain's insistence on "victory". A war having started steeped in such mendacity can never have a positive outcome.

We need to get the f*%# out

We need to get the f*%# out of these illegal occupations and restore our name as a peace loving nation. Why do we need to listen to more propaganda about the Iraqi being the terrorist insurgents. If some foreign country was occupying Washington in a green zone, building military bases to launch attacks from and had killed over a million of my countrymen I would join the resistance movement as well. Who does this author get her debriefing from the Pentagon? DISGUSTING!

Why do we need to listen to

Why do we need to listen to more propaganda about the Iraqi being the terrorist insurgents. If some foreign country was occupying Washington in a green zone, building military bases to launch attacks from and had killed over a million of my countrymen I would join the resistance movement as well. Who does this author get her debriefing from the Pentagon? DISGUSTING!