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DAV REFUTES ADMINISTRATION'S CLAIM OF JUST 30,000
WOUNDED IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN -- "That 30,000
number
is a fantasy...202,000 have filed claims for VA
disability...A quarter
million have turned to the VA for treatment...Our
government
tried to do war on the cheap..."

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Story here...
http://www.earthtimes.org/
articles/show/news_press_release,218170.shtml
Story below:
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-------------------------
Shape Shifting on Veterans Day
Author : Disabled American Veterans
WASHINGTON, /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The following is an Op-Ed by David
W. Gorman, Washington Headquarters Executive Director, of Disabled
American Veterans:
On Veterans Day, politicians will praise the 30,000 troops "officially
wounded" in action in Iraq and Afghanistan as if this "statistic" were
some kind of "fact." In doing so, they'll harm the men and women who carry
the burden of our nation's defense in today's very dangerous world.
That 30,000 number is a fantasy.
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Here's the truth about the human cost borne by
the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan as shown by data from the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Of the 1.5 million troops who served
in Iraq or Afghanistan, 720,000 (48%) are now veterans in the civilian
population.
Of these, 202,000 have filed claims for VA disability benefits. The VA
granted benefits in more than 90% of the cases processed so far, and will
grant more upon appeal or presentation of additional evidence.
In other words, real statistics show that one out of four veterans from
Iraq and Afghanistan is disabled in military service. This should shock no
one as troops return to the war zones for their third, fourth, and now
fifth tours of combat duty.
Of the 720,000 veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, a quarter million have
turned to the VA for treatment - more than one out of every three veterans
of the combat theaters.
The figures above don't include troops still on active duty, many of whom
remain in the service after being harmed by war. They too must not be
forgotten.
Yet that 30,000 figure keeps floating in political and media circles as if
it had authority. Well, it all depends on what you count. If you
intentionally count to get a low number, you'll get a low number.
Obviously, someone wants a low number. But what happens as a result?
For one thing, the scandal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center developed as
Washington officials dazzled each other with low "casualty counts," but
this was just the tip of an ugly iceberg! Even as our troops shed their
blood in Afghanistan and Iraq, health care and benefits for veterans have
been decaying across the nation.
Our government tried to do war on the cheap, failing to recognize the
back-end cost of veterans with disabilities. True, it increased funding
for VA programs each year - by amounts far below the rapidly increasing
needs of our disabled heroes.
By using the tightest definition to minimize the casualty count,
politicians deny reality, preparing a ruinous future for all disabled
veterans, especially our youngest generation. In no way is America
prepared to deal with the aftermath of today's wars as it will be
experienced by veterans in the VA.
This is not meant as criticism of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but to
present a more complete picture of the sacrifices made by our men and
women in uniform.
Much is made of the idea that veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan differ from
past generations of America's defenders. Actually, that's been true of
every generation of veterans to date, and the veterans' movement has
accommodated those differences.
But one thing will always be the same. Veterans age, and the costs of war
last a lifetime.
A soldier who suffers a severe brain injury in Iraq today will still be a
disabled veteran 60 years from now when reaching the age of today's World
War II veterans. Our nation will still owe that veteran every care in the
world.
We must not allow self-serving rhetoric to shortchange any American hero -
not now, not ever!
Disabled American Veterans
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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