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I guess that many soldiers have returned from Iraq to resume normal lives. The Ground Truth shows that many others have come back dented or crushed. At the beginning of the film we see them testifying in closeup; later the camera pans back, and too many of them are missing a hand or a leg. "Just the other day," Army veteran Robert Acosta recalls, "this guy asked me, how did I lose my hand? And I told him I lost it in the war. And he said, What war? And I said the war in Iraq. And he said, Thats still goin on? And I said, Yeah, dude, its still goin on."
Other wounds are invisible but palpable. The most common wound for returning soldiers is brain injury. Some of these, as in Jeff Luceys case, are undiagnosed. Other soldiers find that the military refuses to diagnose their lingering malaise as post-traumatic stress disorder. As they were not issued proper protective gear for their uniforms and their tanks while in Iraq, they are too often denied treatment for the wounds they suffered there and brought home with them.
The dozen or so main interview subjects in The Ground Truth are an attractive, articulate, thoughtful bunch; they make an American viewer proud they represented you abroad, and hopeful about the next generation of leaders. I wish that Huze and Sarra and a few others would run for Congress, to serve as the haunted, haunting conscience of the American grunt. "Many of us are realizing, the military, that fight wasnt our fight," one vet says. "This is our fight."
The Ground Truth, which is the best film Ive seen to emerge from the 9/11 attacks and the war that followed, is implicitly antiwar, I suppose. But its undeniably pro-troops the ones who went to Iraq at the countrys call, and are now speaking out, demanding veterans rights, a simple appreciation of their service and its awful cost. Some might say that to criticize the country you fought for is conduct unbecoming an officer. Huze disagrees: "[If] I didnt speak out about it, that would be unbecoming."