April 9, 2013 - The yellow ribbons and the sounds of trumpets will fade — too fast if experience is any guide — once the last of the U.S. troops leave Afghanistan.On the day the last of the troops step off the transport, there will be a collective sigh of relief that will be immediately followed by an intense desire to resume “normal” lives — whatever “normal” means.
The veterans who come home with physical and psychological wounds, however, won’t ever leave the war behind. Advances in medical care and technology mean that this generation of combat veterans will continue to remain a significant factor in policy and budget decisions for the next half-century at least.
And as has been widely reported previously, the complexity of the wounds will demand complex and expensive treatment. We owe the veterans that care, but that’s what every generation of Americans has said about its soldiers. read more>>>
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