US 'smuggles Wounded troops home' late at Night to Avoid Bad Publicity
Saturday, April 9, 2005 at 09:46PM
TheSpook
The Pentagon has been accused of smuggling wounded soldiers into the US
under cover of darkness to avoid bad publicity about the number of
troops being injured and maimed in Iraq. The media have also been
prevented from photographing wounded soldiers when they arrive at
hospital. Records show that flights from military bases in Germany
arrive in the US only at night. Officials say this is purely the result
of flight-scheduling pressures and is not a deliberate tactic to
minimise detrimental publicity. They also say that by leaving Europe
later in the day soldiers are given a better chance to sleep well the
night before. But many campaigners believe otherwise. Just as the Bush
administration has banned the media from taking photographs of the
coffins of American troops killed in Iraq as they arrive in the US,
opponents say it is now trying to cover up the number of wounded. "The
American public has very limited information about the real impact of
this war," said Ellen Taylor, a spokeswoman for Code Pink, a peace
group that has been protesting outside the Walter Reed military
hospital in Washington, where the bulk of the wounded are taken. "I
think that a lot of information about this war is being kept from the
public. That is what we are protesting about." It is not even clear how
many troops have been injured since the start of President Bush's "war
on terror". The Pentagon says that around 12,000 troops have been
evacuated from the battlefields of Afghanistan and Iraq, though because
officials only list as casualties those soldiers directly hurt by bombs
or bullets, the actual total of injured and wounded is believed to be
closer to 25,000. [more]
Pictured above:
Army Spc. Justin R. Burgess, right, is congratulated by actor Denzel
Washington, left, as Washington pins a Purple Heart medal on
Burgess' shirt, during a ceremony held to honor Burgess at Brooke
Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, Friday, Dec. 17, 2004 [more]
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