America’s Endless Wars: “At West Point, Graduation Day Felt More Like A Tragedy Than A Triumph”

Authored by US Army Major Danny Sjursen (ret.) via TheNation.com,

Patches, pins, medals, and badges are the visible signs of an exclusive military culture, a silent language by which soldiers and officers judge each other’s experiences, accomplishments, and general worth. In July 2001, when I first walked through the gate of the US Military Academy at West Point at the ripe young age of 17, the “combat patch” on one’s right shoulder – evidence of a deployment with a specific unit – had more resonance than colorful medals like Ranger badges reflecting specific skills. Back then, before the 9/11 attacks ushered in a series of revenge wars “on terror,” the vast majority of officers stationed at West Point didn’t boast a right shoulder patch. Those who did were mostly veterans of modest combat in the first Gulf War of 1990–91. Nonetheless, even those officers were regarded by the likes of me as gods. After all, they’d seen “the elephant.”

We young cadets arrived then with far different expectations about Army life and our futures, ones that would prove incompatible with the realities of military service in a post-9/11 world. When my mother—as was mandatory for a 17-year-old—put her signature on my future Army career, I imagined a life of fancy uniforms; tough masculine training; and maybe, at worst, some photo opportunities during a safe, “peace-keeping” deployment in a place like Kosovo.

Sure, the United States was then quietly starving hundreds of thousands of children with a crippling sanctions regime against autocrat Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, occasionally lobbing cruise missiles at “terrorist” encampments here or there, and garrisoning much of the globe. Still, the life of a conventional Army officer in the late 1990s did fit pretty closely with my high-school fantasies.

You won’t be surprised to learn, however, that the world of future officers at the Academy irreparably changed when those towers collapsed in my home town of New York. By the following May, it wasn’t uncommon to overhear senior cadets on the phone with girlfriends or fiancées explaining that they were heading for war upon graduation.

As a plebe (freshman), I still had years ahead in my West Point journey during which our world changed even more. Older cadets I’d known would soon be part of the invasion of Afghanistan. Drinking excessively at a New York Irish bar on St. Patrick’s Day in 2003, I watched in wonder as, on TV, US bombs and missiles rained down on Iraq as part of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s promised “shock and awe” campaign.

Soon enough, the names of former cadets I knew well were being announced over the mess hall loudspeaker at breakfast. They’d been killed in Afghanistan or, more commonly, in Iraq.

My greatest fear then, I’m embarrassed to admit, was that I’d miss the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It wasn’t long after my May 28, 2005, graduation that I’d serve in Baghdad. Later, I would be sent to Kandahar, Afghanistan. I buried eight young men under my direct command. Five died in combat; three took their own lives. After surviving the worst of it with my body (though not my mind) intact, I was offered a teaching position back at my alma mater.

During my few years in the history department at West Point, I taught some 300 or more cadets. It was the best job I ever had.

I think about them often, the ones I’m still in touch with and the majority whom I’ll never hear from or of again. Many graduated last year and are already out there carrying water for empire. The last batch will enter the regular Army next May. Recently, my mother asked me what I thought my former students were now doing or would be doing after graduation. I was taken aback and didn’t quite know how to answer.

Wasting their time and their lives was, I suppose, what I wanted to say. But a more serious analysis, based on a survey of US Army missions in 2019 and bolstered by my communications with peers still in the service, leaves me with an even more disturbing answer. A new generation of West Point educated officers, graduating a decade and a half after me, faces potential tours of duty in… hmm, Afghanistan, Iraq, or other countries involved in the never-ending American war on terror, missions that will not make this country any safer or lead to “victory” of any sort, no matter how defined.

A NEW GENERATION OF CADETS SERVING THE EMPIRE ABROAD

West Point seniors (“first-class cadets”) choose their military specialties and their first duty-station locations in a manner reminiscent of the National Football League draft. This is unique to Academy grads and differs markedly from the more limited choices and options available to the 80 percent of officers commissioned through the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) or Officer Candidate School (OCS).

Throughout the 47-month academy experience, West Pointers are ranked based on a combination of academic grades, physical fitness scores, and military-training evaluations. Then, on a booze-fueled, epic night, the cadets choose jobs in their assigned order of merit. Highly ranked seniors get to pick what are considered the most desirable jobs and duty locations (helicopter pilot, Hawaii). Bottom-feeding cadets choose from the remaining scraps (field artillery, Fort Sill, Oklahoma).

In truth, though, it matters remarkably little which stateside or overseas base one first reports to. Within a year or two, most young lieutenants in today’s Army will serve in any number of diverse “contingency” deployments overseas. Some will indeed be in America’s mostly unsanctioned wars abroad, while others will straddle the line between combat and training in, say, “advise-and-assist” missions in Africa.

Now, here’s the rub: Given the range of missions that my former students are sure to participate in, I can’t help but feel frustration. After all, it should be clear 18 years after the 9/11 attacks that almost none of those missions have a chance in hell of succeeding. Worse yet, the killing my beloved students might take part in (and the possibility of them being maimed or dying) won’t make America any safer or better. They are, in other words, doomed to repeat my own unfulfilling, damaging journey—in some cases, on the very same ground in Iraq and Afghanistan where I fought.

Consider just a quick survey of some of the possible missions that await them. Some will head for Iraq—my first and formative war—though it’s unclear just what they’ll be expected to do there. ISIS has been attritted to a point where indigenous security forces could assumedly handle the ongoing low-intensity fight, though they will undoubtedly assist in that effort. What they can’t do is reform a corrupt, oppressive Shia-chauvinist sectarian government in Baghdad that guns down its own protesting people, repeating the very mistakes that fueled the rise of the Islamic State in the first place. Oh, and the Iraqi government, and a huge chunk of Iraqis as well, don’t want any more American troops in their country. But when has national sovereignty or popular demand stopped Washington before?

Others are sure to join the thousands of servicemen still in Afghanistan in the 19th year of America’s longest ever war—and that’s even if you don’t count our first Afghan War (1979–89) in the mix. And keep in mind that most of the cadets-turned-officers I taught were born in 1998 or thereafter and so were all of three years old or younger when the Twin Towers crumbled.

The first of our wars to come from that nightmare has always been unwinnable. All the Afghan metrics—the US military’s own “measures for success”—continue to trend badly, worse than ever in fact. The futility of the entire endeavor borders on the absurd. It makes me sad to think that my former officemate and fellow West Point history instructor, Mark, is once again over there. Along with just about every serving officer I’ve known, he would laugh if asked whether he could foresee—or even define—“victory” in that country. Take my word for it, after 18-plus years, whatever idealism might once have been in the Army has almost completely evaporated. Resignation is what remains among most of the officer corps. As for me, I’ll be left hoping against hope that someone I know or taught isn’t the last to die in that never-ending war from hell.

My former cadets who ended up in armor (tanks and reconnaissance) or ventured into the Special Forces might now find themselves in Syria—the war President Trump “ended” by withdrawing American troops from that country, until, of course, almost as many of them were more or less instantly sent back in. Some of the armor officers among my students might even have the pleasure of indefinitely guarding that country’s oil fields, which—if the United States takes some of that liquid gold for itself—might just violate international law. But hey, what else is new?

Still more—mostly intelligence officers, logisticians, and special operators—can expect to deploy to any one of the dozen or so West African or Horn of Africa countries that the US military now calls home. In the name of “advising and assisting” the local security forces of often autocratic African regimes, American troops still occasionally, if quietly, die in “non-combat” missions in places like Niger or Somalia.

None of these combat operations have been approved, or even meaningfully debated, by Congress. But in the America of 2019 that doesn’t qualify as a problem. There are, however, problems of a more strategic variety. After all, it’s demonstrably clear that, since the founding of the US military’s Africa Command (AFRICOM) in 2008, violence on the continent has only increased, while Islamist terror and insurgent groups have proliferated in an exponential fashion. To be fair, though, such counter-productivity has been the name of the game in the “war on terror” since it began.

Another group of new academy graduates will spend up to a year in Poland, Romania, or the Baltic states of Eastern Europe. There, they’ll ostensibly train the paltry armies of those relatively new NATO countries—added to the alliance in foolish violation of repeated American promises not to expand eastward as the Cold War ended. In reality, though, they’ll be serving as provocative “signals” to a supposedly expansionist Russia. With the Russian threat wildly exaggerated, just as it was in the Cold War era, the very presence of my Baltic-based former cadets will only heighten tensions between the two over-armed nuclear heavyweights. Such military missions are too big not to be provocative, but too small to survive a real (if essentially unimaginable) war.

The intelligence officers among my cadets might, on the other hand, get the “honor” of helping the Saudi Air Force through intelligence-sharing to doom some Yemeni targets—often civilian—to oblivion thanks to US manufactured munitions. In other words, these young officers could be made complicit in what’s already the worst humanitarian disaster in the world.

Other recent cadets of mine might even have the ignominious distinction of being part of military convoys driving along interstate highways to America’s southern border to emplace what President Trump has termed “beautiful” barbed wire there, while helping detain refugees of wars and disorder that Washington often helped to fuel.

Yet other graduates may already have found themselves in the barren deserts of Saudi Arabia, since Trump has dispatched 3,000 US troops to that country in recent months. There, those young officers can expect to go full mercenary, since the president defended his deployment of those troops (plus two jet fighter squadrons and two batteries of Patriot missiles) by noting that the Saudis would “pay” for “our help.” Setting aside for the moment the fact that basing American troops near the Islamic holy cities of the Arabian Peninsula didn’t exactly end well the last time around—you undoubtedly remember a guy named bin Laden who protested that deployment so violently—the latest troop buildup in Saudi Arabia portends a disastrous future war with Iran.

None of these potential tasks awaiting my former students is even remotely linked to the oath (to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic”) that newly commissioned officers swear on day one. They are instead all unconstitutional, ill-advised distractions that benefit mainly an entrenched national security state and the arms-makers that go with them. The tragedy is that a few of my beloved cadets with whom I once played touch football, who babysat my children, who shed tears of anxiety and fear during private lunches in my office might well sustain injuries that will last a lifetime or die in one of this country’s endless hegemonic wars.

A NIGHTMARE COME TRUE

This May, the last of the freshman cadets I once taught will graduate from the Academy. Commissioned that same afternoon as second lieutenants in the Army, they will head off to “serve” their country (and its imperial ambitions) across the wide expanse of the continental United States and a broader world peppered with American military bases. Given my own tortured path of dissent while in that military (and my relief on leaving it), knowing where they’re heading leaves me with a feeling of melancholy. In a sense, it represents the severing of my last tenuous connection with the institutions to which I dedicated my adult life.

Though I was already skeptical and antiwar, I still imagined that teaching those cadets an alternative, more progressive version of our history would represent a last service to an Army I once unconditionally loved. My romantic hope was that I’d help develop future officers imbued with critical thinking and with the integrity to oppose unjust wars. It was a fantasy that helped me get up each morning, don a uniform, and do my job with competence and enthusiasm.

Nevertheless, as my last semester as an assistant professor of history wound down, I felt a growing sense of dread. Partly it was the realization that I’d soon return to the decidedly unstimulating “real Army,” but it was more than that, too. I loved academia and “my” students, yet I also knew that I couldn’t save them. I knew that they were indeed doomed to take the same path I did.

My last day in front of a class, I skipped the planned lesson and leveled with the young men and women seated before me. We discussed my own once bright, now troubled career and my struggles with my emotional health. We talked about the complexities, horror, and macabre humor of combat and they asked me blunt questions about what they could expect in their future as graduates. Then, in my last few minutes as a teacher, I broke down. I hadn’t planned this, nor could I control it.

My greatest fear, I said, was that their budding young lives might closely track my own journey of disillusionment, emotional trauma, divorce, and moral injury. The thought that they would soon serve in the same pointless, horrifying wars, I told them, made me “want to puke in a trash bin.” The clock struck 1600 (4 pm), class time was up, yet not a single one of those stunned cadets—unsure undoubtedly of what to make of a superior officer’s streaming tears—moved for the door. I assured them that it was okay to leave, hugged each of them as they finally exited, and soon found myself disconcertingly alone. So I erased my chalkboards and also left.

Three years have passed. About 130 students of mine graduated in May. My last group will pin on the gold bars of brand new army officers in late May 2020. I’m still in touch with several former cadets and, long after I did so, students of mine are now driving down the dusty lanes of Iraq or tramping the narrow footpaths of Afghanistan.

My nightmare has come true.

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43 Comments
Ginger
Ginger
November 9, 2019 9:26 am

The military and the endless war going on now drives the US economy.
Numerous laws have been made so that everyone (women, homos, transvestites, children, even illegals) are eligible no matter who they are so they can happily be a part of it. You wanted it and guess what, you got it.

Donkey
Donkey
  Ginger
November 9, 2019 10:59 am

My daughter was turned down by the military. Scoliosis.

splurge
splurge
  Donkey
November 9, 2019 1:20 pm

Lucky for both of you.

Donkey
Donkey
  splurge
November 9, 2019 1:44 pm

I’m thinking the same thing.

Boarwild
Boarwild
  Donkey
November 9, 2019 2:12 pm

I got turned down during the first Gulf War for asthma, diagnosed when I was a kid.

Rob157
Rob157
  Ginger
November 9, 2019 2:28 pm

This is a product of the creatures that control the US from the background. Most people, even the Major, can’t seem to figure it out. Once they have drained the US of blood for their wars of global domination, they will move on to their next useful victim, probably China.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Rob157
November 9, 2019 11:10 pm

Rob157.
Yes indeed. We are just Plasma donors to them.

M G
M G
  Fleabaggs
November 10, 2019 8:38 am

Now, when you say Plasma, are you talking about the kind of plasma that turns electrical impulses into coded messages, ultimately DNA? OR are you talking about giving blood for good causes?

Jaz
Jaz
November 9, 2019 9:43 am

The intellectual honesty and bravery of the author is impressive. If we could get more of the military to recognize the true “clear and present threat “ to the American way of life; the politicians might be hard to find.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 9, 2019 9:53 am

So , your awake now that the patriotic flag waving hero worship nonsense evaporates under fire real quick !
The lesson learned in Vietnam disappeared with the new boogie man threat funded promoted by and profited for the Circle Jerk Of Wall Street To K-Street To Capitol Street . A West Point grade who commanded the European theater in WW2 and later became president warned us of the military industrial complex did he not !
You have now experienced the damage they are capable of with a complacent press and a spineless legislative branch of government that all profit from your sacrifice of blood and treasure as they scurry about Washington DC like cats covering up shit !
Yes my friend you are awake now and realize the “THEY” in this country really don’t give a flying fuck about you !

Ginger
Ginger
  Anonymous
November 9, 2019 10:09 am

The fact that the President of which you spoke was the very one that attacked and burnt out the “Bonus Army” is very telling of what is actually thought of any veteran.

Rob157
Rob157
  Ginger
November 9, 2019 2:30 pm

Most people in America are unaware of that incident.

Bad Brad
Bad Brad
  Ginger
November 10, 2019 6:09 am

I thought the Bonus Army was during the Great Depression. The officer who
ran that fine show was “Dug Out Doug” MacArthur.

Rob157
Rob157
  Bad Brad
November 10, 2019 8:15 pm

Eisenhauer and George Patton were there, without any second thoughts about it…

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 9, 2019 10:53 am

I know a four-star Army General (West Point grad) who almost became chairman of the Joint Chiefs who only heard of Fox News about ten years after he retired (and thought it was great). I know a congresswoman who sat on the House Banking Committee and didn’t know that her mortgage company – CitiMortgage – was part of Citibank. There are a lot of mediocre intellects with a lot of power in this country. I can’t think of a single Commander in Chief in the last 60 years to whom I’d entrust my life. No one should join the military.

CCRider
CCRider
  Iska Waran
November 9, 2019 2:10 pm

I can’t wait for mr. buttcheeks to become president. So Southern Sage can proudly state: My Commander in Chief takes it up the ass.

Sorry SS. I couldn’t resist.

Donkey
Donkey
November 9, 2019 10:58 am

That is f’d up. We are destroying some of our best people while emboldening the leftist educators. Woe is me and my country.

M G
M G
  Donkey
November 10, 2019 8:57 am

He speaks true. I was on a static display at the USAF Academy one time and one of the graduates was fascinated with the radar equipment. After I explained my job (even a tour of the big klystrons under the floor!) he asked me why such an important job was entrusted to an enlisted person. With a straight face, I explained I had to be able to use hand tools to take equipment apart, if necessary, and quite often, I had to do some real manual labor, like lift and assemble test equipment.

That seemed to satisfy him. He was going to be a USAF Academy Grad! He knew good and well he was too damn good to use hand tools or lift shit.

Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
November 9, 2019 11:16 am

In my view, the tipping point where the governing elite began to forcibly and openly gang-rape the middle class was with the Vietnam War, where our government gave children of our so-called rulers free passes not to be drafted into combat duty due to college-deferments, reserve duty and medical ‘issues.’

There was absolutely no shared-sacrifice by the elite when over 50,000 of our boys were killed (that statistic makes me sick …. FIFTY THOUSAND!!!) and many more were traumatized by physical and mental scars.

Flash-forward to the latest Iraq fuck-show in 2003-2004 with the still yet-to-be-discovered WMD … I don’t think there were many of the offspring of W and the other governmental criminals that served in active duty in the war zones.

I have nothing but admiration for the folks that serve in the military in the current day. Most of these folks that I know personally that serve or have served are of the highest caliber.

These fine people have been played by our bullshit war-mongering government that does not give two-fucks about our best and brightest, as the author has courageously pointed out.

Agree with Jaz’s point:
“If we could get more of the military to recognize the true “clear and present threat “ to the American way of life; the politicians might be hard to find.”

Rob157
Rob157
  Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
November 9, 2019 2:33 pm

More Vietnam Veterans have committed suicide, than were killed in that war. US military suicides average 22 per day, many from the recent wars.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Rob157
November 9, 2019 11:06 pm

Rob157.
In addition, there are that many more who for all intents are trapped in the Psychiatric wards who have been chemically lobotomized.

Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
  Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
November 9, 2019 8:31 pm

Not to belabor the point … but how in God’s name can anyone put anyone else’s children in harm’s way without being absolutely sure that it needs to be done???

Know it will never happen, but in cases where we go to war (and/or other non-declared acts of war), sons of all high-ranking cabinet members, senators and reps should all be on the fucking front-lines!!!

(Yep, said sons … no place for chicks in war)

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Joey Joe Joe Shabadoo
November 10, 2019 9:36 am

” …but how in God’s name can anyone put anyone else’s children in harm’s way without being absolutely sure that it needs to be done???”

The short answer is MONEY and POWER.

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
November 9, 2019 12:33 pm

My thanks to Maj. Sjursen for writing such a heartfelt piece. I never served and can only imagine the anguish his recollections must have caused in writing it.
It’s never easy to buck the consensus and adopt views that are clearly out of the mainstream. It’s even harder to act on them.
It’s simply complicated, as I’ve told my kids many times, when faced with a difficult decision, to always choose what is right.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 9, 2019 9:19 pm

I don’t want to marginalized combat. When somebody is trying to kill you its bad. However we have not had a really bad war with lots of casualties since Vietnam . I pray to God we don’t. Arthur Sorenson, Jack Swender and Marshal Guyer. Forever young . RIP.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
  Anonymous
November 9, 2019 9:23 pm

They did what they thought was right. They did their “duty”, they were lied to and they died.

Waddesdon Mannor
Waddesdon Mannor
  Overthecliff
November 10, 2019 12:11 am

Said the widow of the Roman soldier… Accept the consequences of choosing to let others define what your duty is including dying for their benefit. Does the timeless soldier ever consider that what he thinks he is fighting for is the exact opposite of what he is actually fighting for? History provides the answer: No. He performs his duty (given to him by us) until his last breath, when the next continues in his place. The soldier is a victim of his own parents who failed to teach him the lessons of history, which is another choice. All this transfers the power from you to us, just the way we like it.

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
  Waddesdon Mannor
November 10, 2019 11:18 am

The Roman soldier had two incentives if they survived. One, he got to keep what ever loot he could carry off the battlefield and surrounding area. Two, he got to become a Roman citizen with all the benefits and privileges citizenship that entailed. Many times men from conquered areas became Roman soldiers for the exact reasons listed above. Additionally, many Roman soldiers became wealthy as a result.

Today’s soldiers can’t loot any shit and citizenship doesn’t really mean squat these days.

Bad Brad
Bad Brad
November 10, 2019 6:27 am

Interesting article.
I’m also hearing many of the graduates coming out of the Academies
are not the caliber of the past years. Many lack discipline, character,
and the military bearing to lead. What we know have is a diversity crowd
with lower standards and a sense of entitlement. I probably wouldn’t
follow some of the new generation officers into a bar much less a combat
situation.
And his jab at Ft. Sill. I wore the Ft. Sill Training School Patch for several
years during my hitch with Uncle Sam. I liked the place. No bones to pick.
Maybe if I was a West Point grad I would feel different about it. Oh, well.

M G
M G
  Bad Brad
November 10, 2019 8:35 am

My husband and I ventured out to a movie theater to see Midway yesterday. He retired from USAF; I spent ten before being medically disqualified from my career field.

So, we both enjoyed the movie in spite of despising Woody Harrelson’s political leanings to the point of disliking General Nimitz’s attitude, though Quaid’s rendition of Halsey was tolerable.

My father was taken captive in the Dutch Harbor attack. It was particularly poignant to me, seeing the young man treading water and then, later, the others in the raft. My father’s raft was picked up by a Japanese battleship. The rest is in his book. And, when I say the rest? I mean the rest.

I should pdf it and make it available online for free. That would be a fitting tribute to a guy who just wanted to get back to Southeast Missouri and sit in the shade.

[email protected] will get a message to me in the next couple of days. If I want to give you a real contact, I will. The protonmail crap isn’t worth all the cloak and dagger, in my opinion. They pick up everything anyway.

M G
M G
  M G
November 10, 2019 10:07 am

The movie was pretty good, overall.

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
  M G
November 10, 2019 11:26 am

I can’t stand Woody Harrelson, He ruins every movie he is involved with. As for the new Midway? F it! I would rather visit a dentist! The new movie will be so full of SJW warrior crap and Pentagram propaganda it will not be worth watching.

I prefer the one made with the All Star cast involving Charleston Heston, Henry Fonda, Robert Mitchum etal! This even though, it as all military movies are, propaganda pieces put out by the DOD.

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
  Bad Brad
November 10, 2019 11:22 am

When I was in the military @ Fort Bragg after coming back from Viet Nam, a bar could quickly become a combat zone and be just as dangerous physically although rarely lethally. The reason being Camp Lejune was close enough to Fort Bragg for the Marines to visit and most times Marines and RA do not mix in a casual albeit alcoholic setting.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  None Ya Biz
November 11, 2019 7:21 pm

It is still known as Fayettenam.