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The Army's Graveyard Disgrace

by James Carroll Info

James Carroll
 
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BS Top - Carroll Arlington Mark Wilson / Getty Images News that the Army misplaced remains at Arlington horrified veterans. James Carroll on the cemetery where his parents are buried and its problematic place in the American conscience.

My father and mother are buried at Arlington National Cemetery, at the top of a small knoll to the north of the Tomb of the Unknowns. I love the place, and not only because of them. At Arlington, the tragic beauty of America, and of life on the Earth, is palpable. Some days, the tragedy weighs far more than the beauty. From my parents’ grave, the vista opens across the tidy field of stones and white tablets, a hillside that rolls down toward the Potomac River, with the low skyline of Washington in the distance. Arlington—a green parkland of mourning—stamps perception with an impression of rare order, yet reports come now that the cemetery is woefully mismanaged, leading to hundreds of problematic sites, including mismarked graves, and even the disappearance of some remains of the honored dead. “That all ends today,” Secretary of the Army John McHugh said.

A military force that does not faithfully care for its fallen members is in far worse shape than even its antiwar critics imagine.

But where did it begin? That the order and beauty of Arlington may conceal darker elements of the human condition is suggested by its less-than-hallowed origins as a burial place. Union soldiers were shockingly routed at the first Battle of Bull Run in July 1861—the first major North-South engagement of the war. The retreating Union fighters were carrying the corpses of brothers who’d died, and as they crossed through Robert E. Lee’s estate on the Virginia side of the Potomac, they uprooted Mrs. Lee’s prized rose garden and buried the dead right there, in the shadow of Arlington House. Eventually, that rose garden became the mass grave of more than 2,000 unidentified soldiers. And why would the Lee family ever return to that place? By the war’s end, the estate had been officially (if illegally) requisitioned by the U.S. government as a main burial place for Civil War dead. The beautiful cemetery began as an act of revenge against Robert E. Lee.

In fact, the mass death of the U.S. Civil War (its nearly 700,000 dead would be, as a percentage of population, something like 7 million today) traumatized the United States far more than is commonly realized. The contemporary red-blue political divide that paralyzes Washington politics has its roots in the gray-blue war between the states, and marks the very nation as suffering a permanent case of PTSD. Arlington, for all its loveliness, is a symptom of the American disorder—and that was so even before the current mismanagement came to light. The Civil War’s unimagined plunge into absurd mortality required an urgent reinvention of the meaning of death—for soldiers certainly, but also for all Americans. That reinvention consisted mainly in the elevation, in historian Drew Gilpin Faust’s phrase, of the dead to the Dead. In that sanctification, the "Union" of the disparate states was, at last, fully realized—and heroic self-sacrifice became a pillar not only of patriotism, but of national purpose. That is why the Dead must never be treated as if they are only dead.

But such absolute valorizing of those killed in war guarantees that war will continue, whether necessary or not. That is because once military casualties are suffered in battle, however valiantly, the fallen will be taken to have “died in vain” if their country steps back from the killing. That dynamic alone accounts for tens of thousands of American war dead during Vietnam—and for still mounting numbers of those killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Those heroes are not dying for “America,” or for the successive failed rationales its leaders offer, but for their comrades who are already at Arlington.

There is nobility in such love, one soldier for another—the living for the dead. I saw it in my father, the way he carried his command like a chain, linking him forever to those he lost. An army’s duty is to guard such love, respect and honor it, which is done through the proper honoring of remains. That is why the mismanagement of Arlington is repugnant. A military force that does not faithfully care for its fallen members is in far worse shape than even its antiwar critics imagine. But there is a trap in the impulse to enshroud the dead in glory, for the hallowed aura of the sung heroes can take on more importance than actual lives. In that sense, the glory, now like the beauty of the lawns rolling down toward the river, was already a lie.

James Carroll's recent book is Practicing Catholic, a story of American belief. He is a columnist for the Boston Globe and Distinguished-Scholar-in-Residence at Suffolk University. His other books include An American Requiem, which won the National Book Award, House of War, winner of the PEN-Galbraith Award, and Constantine's Sword, now an acclaimed documentary.

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June 11, 2010 | 10:09pm
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Comments ()

teachermom

And we want to entrust our healthcare to the government?
Good luck! No wonder there are so many skeptics.

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8:13 am, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

What a stupid comment. First, a couple switched-around dead bodies aren't a big deal and second, it's INSURANCE REFORM. Duh.

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8:33 pm, Jun 12, 2010

clemmieo

Well, that is very sad and very upsetting. Five of my immediate family members are buried in Arlington; my Father, Mother, Ernest and Michele from WWII, and we just buried Frank, another decorated soldier, from the Korean War in April. I am happy to say that I feel sure that they are all in the right graves.

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10:01 am, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

It doesn't matter. Honestly. They're there someplace and you have a marker to look at and so on.

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8:33 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Dylan Knapp

If there was ever going to be a good time to bring back public floggings, it is right now for the administrators at the VA's burial/memorial branch.

I think everyone, pro- or anti- war, can get behind finding out what bureaucratic creep couldn't be bothered to put people in the right graves

Right now there is zero mention of this issue on the VA's website. They are, however, on Facebook, so if you feel strongly about this issue, "friend" them and then leave your nastiest thoughts. I'll be doing it right now.

I wonder if my GI Bill payments will start arriving late in retaliation?

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10:41 am, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

They're dead. It doesn't matter. Let's attend to the living, shall we?

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2:46 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Dylan Knapp

The VA consists of three branches -- the Benefits side, which takes care of veteran disability payments and the like, the Health Care side, which takes care of veterans who are ill. These first two "take care of the living."

The Burial/Memorial side has only one responsibility: to take care of the remains of the dead. It isn't doing it's job. It needs to be corrected.

I don't see how you can be so dismissive. If one of your relatives was unceremoniously plunked in a random hole, I'm sure you'd be bothered. Even atheists (like me) think the dead should be treated with some form of reverence. Given that Arlington is itself a living, and sadly growing, memorial to the human cost of war, as an atheist I am appalled and revolted by your extreme and negative point of view.

Not being irritated that a large government agency misplaces dead citizens makes me think that you regard humans as something less than cattle. Save your "the dead are worm food" garbage for your debates at the local Unitarian church.

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8:44 pm, Jun 12, 2010

booga20

"Could there be a connection to how well other things are running with our new "savior administration?"......I can't even laugh at this it's so pathetic, insulting and embarrassing!!......In a "flash" of two years we have become a joke to the rest of the world........just ask Olberman??......lol.......

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12:58 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

Nope. No connection. Thank Bush for loading up the government with incompetent cronies and leaving a staggering mess everywhere we look. Thank Bush.

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2:45 pm, Jun 12, 2010

This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.

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7:42 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Samjon


THESE FALLEN MEN SERVED OUR COUNTRY , AND DIED,THEY DESERVE MUCH MORE THEN THIS.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!

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2:00 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

It doesn't matter. They're buried somewhere and there's a marker with their names on it to visit. Not a big deal. Dead is dead.

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2:44 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Samjon


MEWZEPPA,
YOU SAY, NOT A BIG DEAL. DEAD IS DEAD. [N MY BOOK WE MUST SHOW RESPECT TO OUR DEAD . OTHERWISE THE DIGNETY OF MAN IS GONE.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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5:06 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

No, Sir. Dignity is for the living. Apply the memories, and the lessons. Everything else is worm food.

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8:35 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Samjon


YES, SIR, WE BARIE OUR DEAD IN A DIGNEFIED MANNER , TO SHOW RESPECT. WHY SHOULD,NT WE SHOW RESPECT TO OUR DEAD HEROS?SORRY , WE ARE ON TWO DIFFERENT TUNES ON THIS ONE!!!!!!!

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9:05 pm, Jun 12, 2010

sophia5

Is it any surprise there were misplaced fallen heroes,
considering at one time there were deplorable conditions at
one of America's "premier" VA, Walter Reed ?

Brave men and women of the U.S. Military are apparently treated
as disposable numbers . . . and this government, and it's many
incompetent bureaucrats will be running everybody's healthcare.
Good luck to us.

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5:07 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Boyaca

The real crime is the absolute adoration and reverence for all things military in the USA. No wonder you have a perpetual war economy. It seems American leaders do not have the intelligence to run any other type of economy.

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5:24 pm, Jun 12, 2010

Maezeppa

THANK YOU.

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8:35 pm, Jun 12, 2010

clemmieo

Please remember that the history of the world is the parallel history of warfare. Even if we evolve into robots, there will be good and bad ones and they will fight with each other. We should always have a reverence for all things Military in my opinion. So many countries right now are involved in warfare and for far more egregious reasons than we have been in Iraq and Afghanistan.

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10:17 am, Jun 13, 2010

afveteran

Some of you obviously don't read all the article, you just pick out bits and pieces to nash your teeth on. Arlington NC is under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Army. VA has NOTHING to do with it, until now. The Army Secretary has asked a 30 year National Cemetery Administrator to oversee Arlington. That should speak volumes regarding the obvious confusion concerning VA National Cemeteries and Arlington. Make no mistake, they are ALL National Cemeteries and all persons deserve the dignity and respect of anyone they come in contact with in the burial process. If you've never visited one of the 131 VA National Cemeteries, met with staff or talked to volunteers, or simply asked a grieving widow about their experiences there, you've got nothing to judge. Arlington will be fixed, but it's going to take the NCA to fix it. That speaks volumes to me. That says VA/NCA is doing it right. I'm good with that. As for VBA and VHA I can't speak to that, I have no experience since I get my medical through Tricare.

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6:19 pm, Jun 18, 2010
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