Inherently, war involves sacrifice. Lives are interrupted, altered, and cut tragically short. It is unavoidable. As such, war itself must be unavoidable. A nation that too avidly or cavalierly calls for the greatest of sacrifices—or does so recklessly or unnecessarily—is a less than honorable nation. Such actions dishonor the lives of those who serve with honor.
Here are some tales of sacrifice, as reported in the Washington Post:
With Iraq War Come Layers of Loss
“Grenade!”
Manning a .50-caliber machine gun in the turret of a Humvee, Pfc. Ross McGinnis could see the insurgent on a rooftop fling a hand grenade at his vehicle. He shouted and tried to deflect it, but it fell inside. Four of his buddies were down there.
What followed was a stunning act of self-sacrifice. McGinnis, a 19-year-old from rural Pennsylvania and the youngest soldier in his unit, threw himself backward onto the grenade, absorbing the blast with his body. He was killed instantly. The others escaped serious injury.
With the death toll for U.S. service members in Iraq past the 3,000 mark, McGinnis’s heroism, on Dec. 4, stands as one extreme in the vast spectrum of how Americans are experiencing the Iraq war.
Like an emotional manifestation of the laws of physics, the casualties have rippled across the American psyche — those close to the events have been profoundly moved, while those at some distance, the majority of Americans, have been largely unaffected. Concentric circles of loss spread outward, starting with grieving parents, spouses and children — many so young they will not remember the father or mother who was killed in war. Families of the severely wounded face a future they never planned for and financial hardships they never imagined. In small towns, which supply much of the nation’s fighting force, one death can send an entire community into mourning. Tens of thousands of U.S. troops continue to brave the war zone, while their friends, families and sweethearts worry at home. [full text]