Skip to main content

ATTENTION: This site is no longer active but remains as an archive.

Iraq Veterans Against the War has become About Face: Veterans Against the War. About Face can be found at aboutfaceveterans.org

Iraq Veterans Against the War

Join IVAW

Donate to IVAW

  • About
    • Founding of IVAW
    • Mission, Values, and Vision
    • War in Afghanistan
    • Why We Are against the Wars
    • Resolutions
    • IVAW Timeline
    • Board of Directors
    • Advisory Committee
    • Staff
  • Events
  • Campaigns
    • Operation Recovery
    • Winter Soldier
      • Breakdown of the Military
      • Civilian Testimony
      • Corporate Pillaging
      • Cost of War at Home
      • Crisis in Veterans Healthcare
      • Future of GI Resistance
      • Gender and Sexuality
      • Legacy of GI Resistance
      • Racism and War
      • Response to DoD
      • Rules of Engagement
      • Press Coverage
      • Press Releases
    • Right to Heal
  • Members
  • Resources
    • AWOL
    • Active Duty
    • Conscientious Objector
    • Depleted Uranium
    • History of Resistance
    • IRR Reactivation
    • Lariam
    • PTSD
    • Profiles of Resisters
    • Resources for Veterans
    • Stop Loss
    • Women's Resources
    • Mesothelioma
  • Press
  • Contact
    • Press
    • Speaker Request

Protests at Fort Campbell Over Deployment of Wounded Soldier

published by Jose Vasquez on 01/09/11 2:52pm
Posted to: 
Staff

(By Ryan Harvey, Civilian Soldier Alliance)

Civilian-Soldier Alliance organizers and members of Iraq Veterans Against the War are busy at Fort Campbell, Kentucky right now supporting Jeff Hanks, a soldier who is fighting his redeployment ordesr to Afghanistan. Jeff has been AWOL until November, when he turned himself in the help of our Operation Recovery campaign. He has been denied adequate treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and possible Traumatic Brain Injury.

Jeff Hanks Being Forced to Deploy Against Advice of Doctors and Family Members - Veteran's Group Says Commanders May Be Breaking the Law

A soldier at Fort Campbell, Kentucky is being forced to return to Afghanistan as early as tonight, amidst claims he is not fit to deploy because he has not received treatment promised by the Army for severe Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder sustained during his deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.

Jeff Hanks deployed to Afghanistan early last year with the 101st Airborne Division out of Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He returned to the base on leave from Afghanistan this past September, where he sought and was denied treatment on two separate military bases for traumatic injuries sustained in combat.

Hanks subsequently refused to redeploy and was forced to go Absent Without Official Leave in order to get medical attention from civilian professionals.

Now, less than two months after surrendering himself at Fort Campbell, the Army Specialist awaits imminent redeployment to Afghanistan against his wishes and against the advice of his team of medical professionals.

Seeking help in fighting for his right to heal, Hanks contacted Operation Recovery, a joint-campaign of Iraq Veterans Against the War and the Civilian-Soldier Alliance, which seeks to end the re-deployment of traumatized and wounded soldiers.

Volunteers from Operation Recovery came to Kentucky to support Hanks throughout November and December as he sought treatment.Yesterday, they hand-delivered an Article 138 notice of wrongdoing to several commanding officers at Fort Campbell and delivered one notice to La Point Medical Center, where Hanks was routinely denied treatment.

The notice names Captain Jason Ambrosino, the commanding officer responsible for denying Hanks’ right to heal, for violating both soldiers’ rights and military law. The group was attempting to deliver the notice to Ambrosino himself, but he was not on post at the time.

In addition to filing the Article 138 complaint demanding that his deployment be delayed, Hanks’ attorney James Branum will also be filing other formal complaints, including one with the Office of the Inspector General and another with offices of U.S. Congressional Representatives.

Fort Campbell officials could not be reached for comment as of the time of publication.

Supporters Gather at Base

Outside of the gates Fort Campbell this weekend, Operation Recovery members put pressure on Hanks’ command. “We are here today to say that troops are human beings,” said Lori Chambers, a veteran and Operation Recovery member from Nashville. “If there are issues in the civilian world, people get treatment. People in the military deserve treatment too.”

Meanwhile, Operation Recovery supporters across the country sent over 1,500 emails of protest to Captain Ambrosino. “Soldiers have a right to heal from the traumas of war,” the mass email reads, “but you have systematically denied that right in the case of Spc. Hanks. You have interfered with him receiving proper medical treatment, and you appear to be breaking the law by doing so.

Commanders had informed Hanks last this week that he was scheduled to redeploy to Afghanistan over the weekend. The Army's mandatory pre-deployment mental health screenings denied Hank's PTSD claim, contradicting positive diagnoses by three separate civilian therapists, and results of an MRI yesterday that will not be available until after he is in Afghanistan.

“Four different mental health providers have diagnosed Jeff with PTSD, have advised treatment, and he has been denied treatment every single time. I am very worried about him,” says Johanna Buwalda, a licensed clinical counselor working directly with Hanks and other veterans. “Our soldiers deserve the right to heal.”

As increasingly reported by soldiers like Hanks, the Army behavioral health specialist who screened him suggested Hanks seek treatment while deployed in Afghanistan.

“These supposed medical professionals are the ones caving into the pressure of the military,” said Jason Chambers, a U.S. Air Force combat veteran from Nashville and a volunteer with Operation Recovery. “They need to know that we are not going to let them get away with it.

Soldiers At Fort Campbell Are Speaking Out

Operation Recovery organizers say that Jeff Hanks is not the only Fort Campbell soldier that has contacted them with similar complaints, but he is currently the only one who has gone public with his case.

Operation Recovery organizers have suggested that this silence may break soon.

”The redeployment of wounded soldiers has come to underlie the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” said Jason Hurd, a U.S. Army Iraq combat veteran and Operation Recovery organizer. “As veterans of these wars, we are here to say that Jeff’s case is not isolated, and these cycles of trauma must end. And Operation Recovery is going to work to stop this cruel and inhumane practice.”

“I feel like it is important to demonstrate to Captain Ambrosino, along with all other commanders making the choice to deploy soldiers who need treatment, that we are not going to let them get away with it,” said Brad Thomson, member of the Chicago chapter of the Civilian-Soldier Alliance and an Operation Recovery organizer. “I don’t know how more clear we could be.”

These organizers say they will continue to uncover violations of soldiers’ rights at Fort Campbell and to bring to light those in the command structure there who are responsible for the abuses.

“We’re not going to stop until we bring an end to the redeployment of traumatized troops,” said Hannah Fritz, Chicago member of the Civilian-Soldier Alliance. “And after today, they know we are watching them.”

The Operation Recovery Campaign, launched October 7th, 2010, seeks to stop the redeployment of troops suffering from PTSD, Traumatic Brain Injury, and Military Sexual Trauma. More info on Jeff Hanks and Operation Recovery can be found on the campaign’s website, http://www.ivaw.org/operation-recovery.

Sources: 
Protests at Fort Campbell Over Deployment of Wounded Soldier

Rory Stewart on Afghanistan

British MP Rory Stewart walked across Afghanistan after 9/11, talking with citizens and warlords alike. Now, a decade later, he asks: Why are Western and coalition forces still fighting there? He shares lessons from past...
Aaron Hughes's picture

AVAW founding member speaks out

Brock McIntosh, one of the founding members of Afghanistan Veterans Against the War, speaks out about the ongoing occupation in Afghanistan in Asheville, North Carolina. 
Aaron Hughes's picture

IVAW Members featured in new documentary

On The Bridge: Documentary by Olivier Morel Wendy, born Mexican and sent to Iraq at 19, saw the hell of war in a combat support hospital; Jason lives with his medication, his refuge in songs, his poignant lyrics and...
Aaron Hughes's picture

Operation Recovery Update

Operation Recovery to join Bradley Manning Support Rally June 4th The Operation Recovery Campaign is traveling to Leavenworth, Kansas to join a rally in support of Bradley Manning.  A public pressure campaign forced...
Aaron Hughes's picture

Video of Operation Recover Press Conference

In the fight for service members right to heal IVAW members built a guard tower out side the East Gate of Ft. Hood to put Gen. Donald Campbell Jr. on watch. 

Operation Recovery Announces First Target

In the fight for service members right to heal IVAW members built a guard tower out side the East Gate of Ft. Hood to put Gen. Donald Campbell Jr. on watch. Read and share the local Ft. Hood papers account of the target...

Pages

  • « First
  • ‹ Prev
  • …
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • …
  • Next ›
  • Last »

Supporter Newsletter!

Donations

Make a single donation or become an IVAW sustainer by making your donation a recurring one. Please consider making your generous gift right now.
Donate Online Today!

Speaker Request

Please be advised that we get many speaker requests, but regret that we are sometimes unable to fill them.
Speaker Request

Joining IVAW

Iraq Veterans Against the War is open to Active Duty, National Guard and Reservists who have served since 09/11/2001.
Join IVAW

Navigation

  • About
  • Events
  • Campaigns
  • Committees
  • Chapters
  • Members
  • Resources
  • Contact