This reality would be infuriating enough if there wasn't an additional piece compounding this problem: the contractors are doing a poor, and sometimes downright destructive, job. In the case of KBR's performance in fulfilling their contracted service of providing water to the troops, Rachel had much to share with me:
Of the people you have kept in touch with, have any experienced long term symptoms? Have any received a diagnosis?
When I came home from my deployment, I had a physical with a civilian doctor. Full physicals were not given when we came off of active duty. My doctor said that I had a high amount of bacteria and he wasn't sure why it was there. Two other females who lived with me also had elevated bacteria levels. I didn't yet know that the water I showered with was contaminated. It took several months for my stomach problems to stop.
It seems that the soldiers who shaved and brushed their teeth with the water from the sinks in the shower trailers are still having symptoms. Another male soldier, who didn't realize you could shower in the water but not brush your teeth with it continues to have bad stomach problems.
The issue many soldiers are having now is that they do not know what specifically to have the doctor test for. Without accurate information as to what exactly we were exposed to, the doctors can only do so much. Other soldiers have requested testing from the VA and received equally uncertain responses from their doctors. What is more disturbing though, is that very few, if any, of the soldiers have been informed by KBR or the military. We all learned different ways, whether it was in a news story or by word of mouth.
I remember after this scandal broke in the press, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morell at once dismissed this issue and made a joke about it at the troops expense, saying, "I mean, they make it perfectly clear that you don't want to drink the water...[the troops] should read the signs and just drink bottled water."
I don't know what I find more repulsive, the fact that Morell blindly defended the cronies of his superiors at the Pentagon, or the fact that he avoided addressing the real issue of what this water was provided for. This water wasn't given to the troops to drink. It was provided to shower in, and as Rachel points out, this makes the issue all the more serious, because soldiers' bodies were covered in it. As for Morell's comment that the troops should somehow know better, since Rachel points out that they often ran out of water, it makes sense that when the troops received batches of water allocated for hygiene purposes, many of them would use the same water to brush their teeth (and since yesterday's post revealed the abysmal pay the troops were receiving compared to the contractors, do you really think many of them would choose to spend their hard-earned money on bottled water?).
The second aspect to Morell's statement which I find equally disturbing is his blind defense of the contractors. Bear in mind that KBR is a former subsidiary of Dick Cheney's brainchild, Halliburton. This is a poorly disguised case of the administration protecting its own bedfellows and valuing cronyism over the health of American soldiers. Yet these are the folks who have the audacity to call war critics unpatriotic and accuse us of not supporting the troops. Perhaps an act of a true patriot would be to call for the protection of our troops through contractor accountability.
Tomorrow, Rachel will reveal her responses to the reports and investigations regarding the water scandal upon her return to the United States.
|
|
|
Permalink :: 2 Comments :: Post a Comment
|
In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.
If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.