This
guy lost EIGHT of his comrades to suicide
It was the video that put WikiLeaks on the map: “Collateral Murder” turned the tide of war in Iraq and landed Private first class Bradley Manning in military detention. But for Army veteran Ethan McCord, it was just another day on duty.
Surviving
'Collateral Murder': Soldier relives infamous WikiLeaks video
RT,
7
April, 2013
It was the video that put WikiLeaks on the map: “Collateral Murder” turned the tide of war in Iraq and landed Private first class Bradley Manning in military detention. But for Army veteran Ethan McCord, it was just another day on duty.
“The
helicopters were approximately a mile and a half away and they were
zooming in on these guys,”
McCord recalls to RT’s Meghan Lopez. “And
looking at it now you obviously can’t see anything.”
The
whistleblower website released the video on April 5, 2010, and
instantly made international headlines by exposing what the War in
Iraq really meant to some. The clip in question, taken from camera
affixed to an Apache helicopter flown by US troops, showed Americans
opening fire on civilians and journalists.
“That
right there is obviously a camera dangling if you really pay
attention,”
McCord says of one person caught on film. “That
guy has an AK-47 right there,”
of another.
McCord
was patrolling a volatile part of Baghdad on July 12, 2007 with the
216th Battalion when his colleagues started shooting. “I
was about five blocks away, four or five blocks away to the left of
the screen... this was a battalion wide mission,”
he recalls.
Upon
the sound of heavy gunfire, McCord and his infantry squad began
running towards the scene to provide support. Once again, though, the
Apache unloaded. By the time McCord arrived, the helicopter guns were
quiet and most of those on the scene were dead.
“One
guy’s head was off, the top of his head was completely off and his
brains were on the ground and the smell, the smell still haunts me
every day. I don’t know how to describe it,”
he says.
Then
when McCord approached a van targeted by the airstrike, he heard a
noise he wasn’t expecting: the cry of a little girl.
“I
think she was four years old and you could tell she had a wound to
the stomach and I remember her looking at me and the blood around her
eyes made her eyes so ghostly,”
he says.
McCord
grabbed the girl and ran her into a nearby building. There he picked
the glass out of her eyes so she could blink and handed her off to a
medic.
“I
went back outside and we were told to take pictures and so I started
taking pictures of the van,”
he says.
Then
he discovered another child.
“That’s
me right there,”
McCord tells Lopez as he walks her through the now infamous
“Collateral Murder” clip. “That
is a little boy that I originally thought was dead.”
Despite
their injuries, the children survived. Part of Ethan McCord, though,
changed forever.
“I
couldn't stop myself from crying,”
he says.
McCord
sought out mental health afterward, and says he was mocked by his
commanders and threatened with expulsion from the military.
“And
that's when I started drinking,”
he says. “And the mental
health [doctor] had given me prescriptions: 13 prescriptions.”
Things
got worse, though, and McCord began imagining the worse. Routine
daydreams turned to fantasies about killing own children and everyone
around him. In response, he tried to end his life.
“I
had already begun drinking pretty heavily and I downed all of the
pills and I drank a fifth of Crown Royal at 10 o'clock in the morning
and my wife at the time found me and called the ambulance,”
he says.
After
trying to take his own life, McCord was dismissed from the military.
“Kicked out with no
disability, no benefits from the Army whatsoever,”
he says.
Then
McCord moved to Wichita, Kansas and attempted suicide again.
“I
actually wrote a poem right before I did it. Right before I put the
gun in my mouth,”
he says.
“I
don't know if I really want to talk about it. It was really bad.”
Ethan
McCord’s story is tragic, but he is not alone. Thousands of
veterans suffer from the effects of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD). For those who can’t handle the stress, many have taken
their own lives. They were fathers and brothers, soldiers and sons,
and now they are just another casualty in American wars abroad. In
the past two years alone, McCord has lost eight of his veteran
brothers to suicide — and his own outlook on life hasn’t exactly
improved either.
“I
know that I will never, ever, ever get better,”
he says. “I will never get
over this.”
For
the world, the “Collateral Murder” video was another black mark
on an unpopular war. For Ethan McCord, though, it was a catalyst that
made him question the entire purpose of the war.
“You
know America, we were John Wayne, we were wearing the white hat.
Americans were always trying to help people, that’s what we do, we
try to spread freedom and democracy,”
he says. “With the barrel of
a gun.”
History
will be the ultimate determinant for how the Iraq War is viewed, but
for Ethan McCord and so many soldiers suffering from post-war stress,
the future is far and the past is too much to cope with.
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