(Reuters) – Mack McDowell
likes to spend time at the local knife and gun show “drooling over firearms,” as he puts it. Retired
after 30 years in the U.S. Army, he has lined his study with books on war, framed battalion patches
from his tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, a John Wayne poster, and an 1861
Springfield rifle from an ancestor who fought in the Civil War.
But when it comes to the 2012 presidential election, Master Sergeant McDowell
is no hawk.
In South Carolina’s January primary, the one-time Reagan supporter voted for Ron
Paul “because of his unchanging stand against overseas involvement.” In November, McDowell plans to
vote for the candidate least likely to wage “knee-jerk reaction wars.”
Disaffection with the
politics of shock and awe runs deep among men and women who have served in the military during the past
decade of conflict. Only 32 percent think the war in Iraq ended successfully, according to a
Reuters/Ipsos poll. And far more of them would pull out of Afghanistan than continue military
operations there.
While the 2012 campaign today is dominated by economic and domestic issues,
military concerns could easily jump to the fore. Nearly 90,000 U.S. troops remain in Afghanistan.
Israeli politicians and their U.S. supporters debate over whether to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities as
partisans bicker over proposed Pentagon budget cuts.
Mitt Romney has accused President Obama of
“a dangerous course” in wanting to cut $1 trillion from the defense budget – although the
administration’s actual proposal is a reduction of $487 billion over the next decade.
“We
should not negotiate with the Taliban,” the former Massachusetts governor contends. “We should defeat
the Taliban.” He has blamed Obama for “procrastination toward Iran” and advocates arming Syrian rebels.
Romney,
along with his primary rivals Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich, had also accused Obama of “appeasement”
toward U.S. enemies – a charge that drew a sharp Obama rebuttal. “Ask Osama bin Laden and the 22 out of
30 top al-Qaeda leaders who’ve been taken off the field whether I engage in appeasement,” the
president shot back. He has reproached GOP candidates: “Now is not the time for bluster.”
If the
election were held today, Obama would win the veteran vote by as much as seven points over Romney,
higher than his margin in the general population.
FADING COOL FACTOR
The GOP’s heated
rhetoric, aimed at the party’s traditional hawks, might be expected to resonate with veterans. Yet in
interviews in South Carolina, a military-friendly red state, many former soldiers expressed anger at
the toll of a decade of war, questioned the legitimacy of George W. Bush’s Iraq invasion, and worried
that the surge in Afghanistan won’t make a difference in the long run.
“We looked real cool
going into Iraq waving our guns,” said McDowell, 50, who retired from the 82d Airborne Division in
November with a Legion of Merit and two Bronze Stars. “But people lost their lives, and it made no
sense.”
Now he worries. “I really don’t like the direction we are going, how we seem to come
closer daily towards a war with Iran.”
In Columbia, where McDowell lives in a leafy subdivision,
the streets are named for American Revolutionary war heroes, and the Confederate battle flag still
flies on the capitol grounds. Pizza parlors offer a 10 percent discount to uniformed soldiers from
nearby Fort Jackson, one of eight military bases that pump $13 billion a year into the state’s
economy.
In exit polls, a quarter of voters in January’s primary identified themselves as
veterans.
Among them were Karen and Kelly Grafton, devout Southern Baptists who live in the
small town of Prosperity, outside Columbia, and spend their vacations at Nascar races. They voted for
Santorum.
“He just came off a little bit better than the others,” said Karen Grafton, 51, a real
estate agent who served 20 years in the Air Force. “He stuck to his story about what he has done and
what he will do.”
The Graftons’ votes, however, like many veterans’, can’t be taken as
evidence of a hard-line military stance. Registered Republicans, they cast their ballots for Obama in
2008 because he promised to bring the troops home from Iraq.
“I went to war for George Bush,”
said Grafton, 48, a retired Army master sergeant who served in special operations units in Somalia and
Iraq. “But we can’t keep policing the world.”
Karen Grafton, a retired Air Force recruiter,
said she’ll be “glad when we’re out of Afghanistan.” The military budget? “I’m sure it can be cut,”
she said. “Everyone has to make concessions.” Still, many former soldiers worry that Pentagon cuts
could mean stingier salaries, pensions, and education and housing benefits.
CASUALTY STATS ARE
PERSONAL
In a squat building on a rutted street in West Columbia, three dozen former soldiers
gathered around hot dogs and sodas for the Disabled Veterans of America’s monthly meeting. Colorful
military banners festooned the walls. The talk was somber.
Could someone volunteer to help care
for “a fellow living in a dilapidated roach-infested trailer?” asked Chapter Commander John Ashmore.
Could people contribute funds to an ex-Marine whose hospital bills were “overwhelming”?
Ashmore
thanked everyone for distributing canned goods to the needy. And he had some news: “Veterans healthcare
will be exempt from federal budget cuts,” he said. “President Obama has signed a 3.6 percent cost of
living increase to your benefits.”
“I’ve already got it spent,” shouted one of the
group.
At the back, John Rush, 44, sat with a brace on an injured leg. He suffers from
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after two tours in Iraq. “The explosions, the bombs going off.
You’re scared, you’re mad. The stress wears you out.”
Rush got out of the Army in 2008, but it
took three years for the government to approve his paperwork for psychiatric treatment. He is
unemployed, and much of the time he says he feels “confused.”
As for voting in this presidential
election: “I haven’t had that spark to get out and register.”
The Pentagon counts more than
6,300 American dead and 33,000 wounded in action in Iraq and Afghanistan. A Rand Corp study estimates
that as many as 300,000 post-9/11 veterans suffer from PTSD or major depression, and about 320,000 may
have experienced traumatic brain injuries, mainly from bombs.
For combat veterans such as
McDowell, who enlisted at 19, the statistics are starkly personal.
With his direct gaze, erect
posture and fondness for war mementos, he may seem to fit the stereotype of a battle-hardened sergeant.
But this father of five shudders at the memory of the young Vietnamese-American at Fort Jackson, whose
fear of deployment was brushed off by an officer. The soldier tried to commit suicide by shoving a
pencil up his nose into his brain.
He chokes up when he recalls “the geek-faced kid” from
Oklahoma who was brought in to fix office computers in McDowell’s Iraq bomb dismantling unit. The
young man, with no combat training, was sent into the field to hack into terrorists’ laptops. Within
weeks he suffered a mental breakdown. Returning stateside, he shot his two children to death and killed
himself.
“It was sheer terror,” McDowell said of the improvised explosive devices that
guerrillas hid along roadways. “They’d strap gasoline cans to IEDs. Our soldiers burned alive. You’d
hear them screaming, and you couldn’t do anything.”
Now he is “watching the primaries very
closely to see who will be the least careless with soldiers and their families.”
IT’S THE
ECONOMY, SIR
Despite widespread disillusionment over recent wars, most veterans support some
form of military action to keep Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. That doesn’t mean they want
another ground war: Veterans lean toward a military spending policy that emphasizes special forces and
unmanned systems.
Terry Seawright, a Navy reservist who drives a Fedex truck, voted for Obama in
2008 and plans to do so again in 2012. “I like the coolness and calmness of him,” said Seawright, 46.
“I like the way he handled Egypt and Libya. He said, ‘No troops on the ground.'”
Unless a
conflict with Iran or Syria pushes foreign policy out front, economic issues
seem more likely to sway the veterans’ vote than military concerns – as is true for the country
generally. Like other Americans, former soldiers are worried about jobs, the federal deficit, and the
cost of living.
Michael Langston, a Baptist minister who served as commander of 110 military
chaplains in Afghanistan, didn’t carry a weapon but often visited the front lines. “I would go to
trauma centers where they worked on soldiers who were burned and disfigured,” he said. “We’d roll into
villages where every man, woman and child had been massacred, and the Taliban had cut off heads and
feet.”
Back in the U.S., Langston, 57, suffered nightmares and sweats. Always a mild-mannered
man, he began yelling at his kids. When a vehicle backfired in a supermarket parking lot, “I hit the
ground and rolled under a car.” He was diagnosed with PTSD.
Looking back, Langston, a graduate
of the Naval War College, sees “a failed policy. When we leave, these places go back to the way
they’ve done everything for thousands of years.”
For all his frustration over military
interventions, Langston said the election issues for him are healthcare, jobs and economic stability.
A lifelong Republican, he voted for Gingrich in the primary but now supports Romney. “The economy is
still faltering, the job rate has not gotten any better regardless of the hype, and the gas prices are
killing us,” he said.
Overall, like the rest of the nation, former soldiers are deeply concerned
about the future. Only 24 percent in the Reuters poll said the country is headed in the right
direction, with 60 percent saying it is off on the wrong track.
Langston said social issues will
not influence his vote. As for “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the now repealed policy that forced
homosexuals out of the military, he came around to supporting repeal after initially opposing it. “An
individual has a right to be who they are,” he said.
According to the Reuters/Ipsos poll, a
majority of veterans now agree with him.
With the unpredictability of foreign involvements and
the fragility of the domestic economy, it is too early to say who will eventually win the veteran
vote.
Karen Grafton, who voted for Obama in 2008 based on his promise to end the Iraq war, now
says, “I want someone to get us out of this economic turmoil. That’s No. 1. I’m not sure he is the
person to do that. But I don’t blame him. He inherited a mess.”
Asked about Obama’s handling
of his job, 27 percent of veterans approved, and 37 percent disapproved, with the rest
undecided.
In his study, below a movie poster of “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” McDowell, the
Ron Paul supporter, flipped through pages of an 82nd Airborne Division yearbook, lingering on
photographs of dead comrades. He recalled their ages, how many children they had, and how they
died.
Partly for their sake, he avidly follows the campaign. He was turned off by mudslinging
among Republican candidates, he said. And Obama? “If no one else can get their act together, I’ll vote
for that Democrat,” he said. “My concern is who will do right for the soldier.”
(Reporting by
Margot Roosevelt; Editing by Lee Aitken
and Prudence Crowther)