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“I called Uncle Sam on Sept. 13, when I saw the president standing on top of the rubble in New York, saying that we were going to get those responsible, which I wanted to do. After a short time at Fort Hood, Texas, it became clear that we in fact were going instead to Iraq.”— Tomas Young, Kansas City, Mo., of Iraq Veterans Against the War

On April 4, 2004, his fifth day in Iraq, 23-year-old Army soldier Tomas Young was sent on what he describes as a poorly planned mission in an uncovered, unarmored 5-ton truck. He was hit by two rounds from an AK-47, which severed his spinal cord and paralyzed him. The title “Body of War” refers not just to Young’s body, but the U.S. Congress, which put him in harm’s way.

The documentary begins with an image of the Capitol dome, and a famous quote from James Madison: “In no part of the Constitution is more wisdom to be found, than in the clause which confides the question of war or peace to the legislature, and not to the executive department.”

Young says his own life stands as a warning against making “impetuous decisions.” He’s speaking of the war on terror and of the rush to war that was rubber- stamped by the 77 U.S. senators and 296 U.S. representatives who voted to approve House Joint Resolution 114, to “authorize the use of United States Armed Forces against Iraq.”

“Body of War,” written and directed by TV personality Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro, uses the structure of a roll-call ballot to hold each lawmaker accountable.

It juxtaposes the difficult post-service life of Young, a T-4 quadriplegic and Purple Heart honoree, with excerpts from speeches by President Bush and by elected officials on the floor of the Senate in October 2002. On some level, however abhorrent it may seem, we can understand that a soldier could be brutally injured in combat. How, though, do we comprehend the reasoning of those who put him in that situation? If the evidence for war is so convincing and so certain, then where is it?

We now know, and Tomas Young knows, that the evidence was never what it was made out to be. No “proof” of weapons of mass destruction. No link between Iraq and 9/11. No plan for the “liberation of the Iraqi people.” No reason to expect an invasion of Iraq would stabilize the Middle East. (Quite the contrary.) How could we have been so wrong?

Young is passionately concerned with these systematic governmental failures, but closer to home, he also lives with physical and emotional issues most of us can barely imagine. We see how tough it is for him to get to speaking engagements and anti-war events, fighting constant pain from his injuries and the side effects of his medications. And we see his wit and eloquence when he does speak.

“Body of War” shows that we Americans still have some bitter truths to face.


“Body of War”

Unrated. 1 hour, 27 minutes. Written and directed by Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro. With Tomas Young, Cathy Smith, Nathan Young, Brad Friedman and Sen. Robert Byrd. Opens today at the Chez Artiste.

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