News

Disabled Soldier Returning to War, Facing "Stop Loss"

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by: Tom Philpott, The Hanford Sentinel

photo
Disabled soldiers are facing stop-loss deployments.
(Photo: Phototime)

    One day last August, while manning the .50-caliber gun atop his a Humvee on a dirt road in northern Iraq, Army Spc. Daniel "Joey" Haun suddenly lost consciousness. His vehicle had struck a buried bomb, an "improvised explosive device." Haun was ejected, his vehicle flipped over.

    On impact with the ground, Haun's left hand was driven up toward his forearm, crushing his wrist. The surgeon who rebuilt the wrist, using a metal plate and screws, told Haun last year that his infantry days were over.

    The blast also blew out Haun's right ear drum, which required surgery to partially restore his hearing. That surgeon warned him to avoid sustained exposure to any loud noises or risk having to wear a hearing aid.

    As to head injuries, a neurologist diagnosed the 24-year-old with post concussive syndrome and mild traumatic brain injury, the likely cause of his daily headaches since the attack. Finally, a psychologist urged Haun to get counseling for his post-traumatic stress symptoms or they could devolve into Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, a more debilitating condition. So while recuperating in a wounded warrior unit at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, Haun regularly saw a psychologist. He takes the drug Tramadol for his migraine headaches and Elavil, an anti-depressant, to ease his stress.

    Adding to Haun's stress is this surprising news: he's returning to Iraq.

    Though Haun expected to be separated or retired on disability, Army doctors have cleared him for transfer back to his infantry unit, Delta Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade of the 25th Infantry Division. Rather than appearing before a medical evaluation board, Haun will rejoin 3rd Brigade which is to redeploy this fall to Iraq after only a year back home. Also, because Haun's 39-month enlistment doesn't end until January, Haun will have to stay in Iraq under a "stop loss" order. His active service time will be involuntarily extended by at least nine months.

    Haun doesn't sound angry or bitter describing his predicament. But he doesn't understanding why the Army wants to keep him. He tells anyone who asks that he would prefer to leave service in January. Yet when he was told of his transfer back to the 2-27, Haun asked that he not be restricted to "pushing paper" in Iraq with the company's headquarters element. So his first sergeant agreed he could return to his platoon, Haun said.

    How will he perform there? Haun isn't sure.

    "I can't do push ups because I can't bend my hand that way. I can't climb rope. I can't do pull ups. I don't have any strength in my hand," Haun said. "I can't really carry anything that's heavy with my left hand because there's always the possibility of popping some screw loose."

    His father, Earl Haun of Crestview, Fla., suggested there's a screw loose already - with any Army policy that allows redeployment of soldiers obviously not fit for duty. His son is just one of many, Earl Haun said, and it's time somebody called the Army on it.

    A Government Accountability Office report in May cited inconsistencies in Defense Department instructions on pre-deployment health assessments.

    "During our site visits to three installations," said the GAO, "we found that health care providers were unaware that a medical record review was required, and medical records were not always reviewed by providers conducting the pre-deployment health assessment."

    Earl Haun said something sure is wrong.

    "He got blown out of a Humvee about 25 feet in the air, his commander told me. He crushed his arm. He's only got 30 or 40 percent use of it. And his first surgeon told him he was done," said Earl, an Air Force veteran who repaired aircraft during the Vietnam era. "Now, all of a sudden, some new surgeon comes in, says 'Hey, you're deployable again.' ... That's kind of stupid. They're sending a kid back over there who's half a man," at least half an infantryman, Earl said.

    Joey Haun doesn't blame his company's leaders for his pending redeployment. They didn't expect he'd be cleared for duty. The last doctor who saw him, Haun said, "understands I can't do push ups and climb rope and stuff. But other than that he said I was deployable."

    Rep. Jeff Miller (R-Fla.), Earl Haun's congressman, has asked the Army to review the decision to return Haun to full duty, given his disabilities. Miller said he understand that Haun can't pass the Army's Physical Fitness Test.

    "I am extremely concerned that this wounded warrior is mentally and physically unable to deploy," Miller wrote, adding that Haun's physical limitations and post-traumatic stress could even put other soldiers at risk.

    Haun said he doesn't regret enlisting to fight in Iraq. But most Americans, he said, don't understand how hard assignments there can be. Haun was involved in another IED attack three weeks before he was injured. His platoon experienced at least 10 to 15 IED attacks plus other assaults from insurgents using rocket-propelled grenades and mortars.

    Haun said he lost one very close friend. Another buddy was wounded severely in the attack that disabled Haun. During his short stay in Germany last year, and in treatment at Tripler Army Medical Center, Hawaii, Haun said he saw injuries far worse than his. The wounded have Haun thinking about a career in physical therapy when he does leave service. But their wounds and his also have made him more anxious now about returning to Iraq.

    "The first time we deployed I was actually looking forward to it because that's what I joined for. I was going to go there and fight and serve my country ... I never believed something would happen to me or to any of my friends. I thought we were untouchable ... Now there are so many more things I've seen. Now I realize it can happen at the blink of an eye. So I'm a lot more nervous about going over again," Haun said.

    A spokesman for Miller said the congressman hasn't heard back from the Army on Haun's future.

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Comments

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The military bureaucracy is

The military bureaucracy is BYZANTINE, to say the least. They have forms in their systems and in their networks that needs to be filled out to address anything and everything. Add to that insufficient clerical manpower and budget cuts, and you will have a LOT of clerical mixups, errors, gaps, misidentification, misroutes, etc. Combine that with the sheer OVERLOAD of clerical information existing about the soldiers, sailors airmen and marines on different, incompatible databases, and some crucial detail(s) will inevitably get overlooked for each one of our military personnel. In this case, as a result, you have injured people getting sent back into combat, when they shouldn't have been. And BAD POLICIES carried on indefinitely, like "Stop-Loss," imposing its will onto our men and women in uniform, only makes these errors far, far worse, since it only burns out people who shouldn't have been sent back. 'Stop-Loss' is like "rolling the dice," to see if you come back alive, in pieces, or dead. The system's broken. When will it get fixed, only after the military can no longer fight and win? Or are the neocons intentionally testing to see what the breaking points will be because they're blind to all the profiteering they're making off this war? Or have they wrapped themselves around the flag so tightly that they can't see beyond it so only they can hear themselves saying they're patriots? And why should they care? These chicken hawks, they got theirs. Far as they're concerned, everyone else except themselves are cannon fodder. What better way to get rid of the poor and the minorities in their neighborhoods, and leave only them behind to run the show? You want to fix 'Stop-Loss'? Send all these wealthy chicken hawks to the front lines, with their records full of clerical errors that works against them, and no body armor. And they'll see what war feels like. After they come back missing limbs, SEND THEM BACK IN AGAIN.

Few would believe what

Few would believe what really goes on even if they knew. Oil wars will be fought no matter who sits in the White(washed) House.

Suck it up and don't hold

Suck it up and don't hold your breath for anything to be resolved with a "new democratic president"! when will you people and everybody else WISE UP and realize that behind drawn curtains onstage or behind closed office doors ALL these pols are backslapping and glad-handing each other because they are achieving a COMMON GOAL: To rip the rug of Sovereignty out from under the United States of America and it's loyal (but blinded) citizens...reduce us to shreds and call it anything you want to but it all boils down to indentured slavery for the global masses, just like everywhere else in the world that we read about and think: "Oh , those POOR souls!" Corrupt government, corrupt local and state officials, rampant graft and greed...this did not happen in 8 or 16 or even 40 yrs...THIS has been the Grand Plan for many decades...trouble is, the sheeple believe what they hear and read in the news and cannot fathom how to search for and ferret out the truth anymore. "Hellooooo...? Any intelligent signs of life out there? I don't think so.....so sad....!"

Talk about SHOCK and AWE! I

Talk about SHOCK and AWE! I am totally disgusted, but also scared. Not just to know that there are people out there who would think that this was okay, but rather that there is a SYSTEM in place where this is not just tolerated, but unfortunately, encouraged. This makes me angry and sad at the same time.

The above comment is

The above comment is extremely eloquent and, in fact, raised the blood to my cheeks. I second this person's remarks. If any president deserved impeachment it's Bush ... along with Cheney and the rest of the respectable thugs responsible for this war, for making America UNSAFE for democracy. They will probably get away with their crimes (as they have so far) because politics knows no shame and its muse is hypocrisy. "We the people" is a phrase that is foreign to the Bush administration's ears. But I have to wonder why so many of "we the people" are themselves deaf to the transparent message blared at us daily from this administration: that it cares only for itself. Furthermore, that its top officials deserve impeachment at the very least.

It is confounding that with

It is confounding that with all the patriotism for supporting our troops, this goes under the radar. The doctor who reassigned Daniel Haun back to regular duty should have his license taken away. Commanders heads should roll. How many men are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan with similar debilitating conditions? Would you want someone that sick as part of an integral battle mission? Obviously Bush is fighting this war with no respect for anyone, especially the soldiers on the ground. The arrogance and hubris of his administration is criminal! There is a systematic pattern of abuse here, and do not expect it to end until we have a new democratic president.

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