"They Kill Alex"

by: Chris Hedges  |  Truthdig | Report

"They Kill Alex"
Lance Cpl. Alexander S. Arredondo, 20, a Marine killed in Iraq in 2004. (Courtesy of the Arredondo family.)

Carlos Arredondo, a native Costa Rican, stands in a parking lot of a Holiday Inn in Portland, Maine, next to his green Nissan pickup truck. The truck, its tailgate folded down, carries a flag-draped coffin and is adorned with pictures of his son, Lance Cpl. Alexander S. Arredondo, 20, a Marine killed in Iraq in 2004. The truck and a trailer he pulls with it have become a mobile shrine to his boy. He drives around the country, with the aid of donations, evoking a mixture of sympathy and hostility. There are white crosses with the names of other boys killed in the war. Combat boots are nailed to the side of the display. There is a wheelchair, covered in colored ribbons, fixed to the roof of the cab. There is Alex’s military uniform and boots, poster-size pictures of the young Marine shown on the streets of Najaf, in his formal Marine portrait, and then lying, his hands folded in white gloves, in his coffin. A metal sign on the back of the truck bears a gold star and reads: “USMC L/CPL ALEXANDER S. ARREDONDO.”

“This is what happens every week to some family in America,” says Carlos. “This is what war does. And this is the grief and pain the government does not want people to see.”

Alex, from a working-class immigrant family, was lured into the military a month before Sept. 11, 2001. The Marine recruiters made the usual appeals to patriotism, promised that he would be trained for a career, go to college and become a man. They included a $10,000 sign-on bonus. Alex was in the Marine units that invaded Iraq. His father, chained to the news reports, listening to the radio and two televisions at the same time, was increasingly distraught. “I hear nothing about my son for days and days,” he says. “It was too much, too much, too much for parents.”

Alex, in August 2004, was back in Iraq for a second tour. In one of his last phone calls, Alex told him: “Dad, I call you because, to say, you know, we’ve been fighting for many, many days already, and I want to tell you that I love you and I don’t want you to forget me.” His father answered: “Of course I love you, and I don’t want—I never forget you.” The last message the family received was an e-mail around that time which read: “Watch the news online. Check the news, and tell everyone that I love them.”

Twenty days later, on Aug. 25, a U.S. government van pulled up in front of Carlos’ home in Hollywood, Fla. It was Carlos’ 44th birthday and he was expecting a birthday call from Alex. “I saw the van and thought maybe Alex had come home to surprise me for my birthday or maybe they were coming to recruit my other son, Brian,” he says. Three Marine officers climbed out of the van. One asked, “Are you Carlos Arredondo?” He answered “yes.”

“I’m sorry, we’re here to notify you about the death of Lance Cpl. Arredondo,” one of the officers told him. Alex was the 968th soldier or Marine to be killed in the Iraq war.

“I tried to process this in my head,” Carlos says. “I never hear that. I remember how my body felt. I got a rush of blood to my body. I felt like it’s the worst thing in my life. It is my worst fear. I could not believe what they were telling me.”

Lance Cpl. Alexander S. Arredondo, 20, a Marine killed in Iraq in 2004.

Courtesy of the Arredondo family.

Carlos turned and ran into the house to find his mother, who was in the kitchen making him a birthday cake. “I cried, ‘Mama! Mama! They are telling me Alex got killed! Alex got killed! They kill Alex! They kill Alex! They kill Alex!” His mother crumbled in grief. Carlos went to the large picture of his son in the living room and held it. Carlos asked the Marines to leave several times over the next 20 minutes, but the Marines refused, saying they had to wait for his wife. “I did this because I was in denial. I think if they leave none of this will happen.” Crazed and distraught with grief, the father went into his garage and took out five gallons of gasoline and a propane torch. He walked past the three Marines in their dress blues and began to smash the windows of the government van with a hammer.

“I went into the van,” he says. “I poured gasoline on the seats. I pour gasoline on the floor and in the gas tank. I was, like, looking for my son. I was screaming and yelling for him. I remember that one day he left in a van and now he’s not there. I destroy everything. The pain I feel is the pain of what I learned from war. I was wearing only socks and no shoes. I was wearing shorts. The fumes were powerful and I could not breathe no more, even though I broke the windows.”

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As Carlos stepped out of the van, he ignited the propane torch inside the vehicle. It started a fire that “threw me from the driver’s seat backwards onto the ground.” His clothes caught fire. It felt “like thousands of needles stabbing into my body.” He ran across the street and fell onto the grass. His mother followed him and pulled off his shirt and socks, which were on fire, as he screamed “Mama! Mama! My feet are burning! My feet are burning!” The Marines dragged him away and he remembers one of them saying, “The van is going to blow! The van is going to blow!” The van erupted in a fireball and the rush of hot air, he says, swept over him. The Marines called a fire truck and an ambulance. Carlos sustained second- and third-degree burns over 26 percent of his body. As I talk to him in the Portland parking lot he shows me the burn scars on his legs. The government chose not to prosecute him.

“I wake up in the hospital two days later and I was tied with tubes in my mouth,” he says. “When they take the tubes out I say, ‘I want to be with my son. I want to be with my son.’ Somebody was telling me my son had died. I get very emotional. I kept saying ‘I want to be with my son’ and they think I want to commit suicide.”

He had no health insurance. His medical bills soon climbed to $55,000. On Sept. 2, 2004, Carlos, transported in a stretcher, attended his son’s wake at the Rodgers Funeral Home in Jamaica Plain, Mass. He lifted himself, with the help of those around him, from his stretcher, and when he reached his son’s open casket he kissed his child. “I held his head and when I put my hands in the back of his head I felt the huge hole where the sniper bullet had come out,” he says. “I climbed into the casket. I lay on top of my son. I apologized to him because I did not do enough to avoid this.”

Arredondo began to collect items that memorialized his son’s life. He tacked them to his truck. A funeral home in Boston donated a casket to the display. He began to attend anti-war events, at times flying the American flag upside down to signal distress. He has taken his shrine to the Mall in Washington, D.C., and Times Square in New York City. He has traveled throughout the country presenting to the public a visual expression of death and grief. He has placed some of his son’s favorite childhood toys and belongings in the coffin, including a soccer ball, a pair of shoes, a baseball and a Winnie the Pooh. The power of his images, which force onlookers to confront the fact that the essence of war is death, has angered some who prefer to keep war sanitized and wrapped in the patriotic slogans of glory, honor and heroism. Three years ago vandals defaced his son’s gravestone.

“I don’t speak,” he says. “I show people war. I show them the caskets they are not allowed to see. If people don’t see what war does they don’t feel it. If they don’t feel it they don’t care.”

Military recruiters, who often have offices in high schools, prey on young men like Alex, who was first approached when he was 16. They cater to their insecurities, their dreams and their economic deprivation. They promise them what the larger society denies them. Those of Latino descent and from divorced families, as Alex was, are especially vulnerable. Alex’s brother Brian was approached by the military, which suggested that if he enlisted he could receive $60,000 in signing bonuses and more than $27,000 in payments for higher education. The proposed Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, or DREAM Act, is designed to give undocumented young people a chance at citizenship provided they attend college—not usually an option for poor, often poorly educated and undocumented Latino youths who are prohibited from receiving Pell grants—for at least two years, or enlist and serve in the military.

The military helped author the pending act and is lobbying for it. Twelve percent of Army enlistees are Hispanic, and this percentage is expected to double by 2020 if the current rate of recruitment continues. And once they are recruited, these young men and women are trained to be killers, sent to wars that should never be fought and returned back to their families often traumatized and broken and sometimes dead.

A mobile shrine dedicated to Lance Cpl. Alexander S. Arredondo, 20, a Marine killed in Iraq in 2004.

Courtesy of the Arredondo family.

Alex told Carlos in their last conversation there was heavy fighting in Najaf. Alex usually asked his father not to “forget” him, but now, increasingly in the final days of his life, another word was taking the place of forget. It was forgive. He felt his father should not forgive him for what he was doing in Iraq. He told his father, “Dad, I hope you are proud of what I’m doing. Don’t forgive me, Dad.” The sentence bewildered his father. “Oh my God, how can I forgive you? ... I love you, you’re my son, very proud, you’re my son.”

“I thought, when he died, my God, he has killed somebody,” Carlos says quietly as he readied for an anti-war march organized by Veterans for Peace. “He feels guilty. If he returned home his mind would be destroyed. His heart would be torn apart. It is not normal to kill. How can they do this? How can they take our children?”

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The way military recruiters

The way military recruiters are depicted here, it sounds like they're no different than street gang recruiters.



Thank you Chris Hedges for

Thank you Chris Hedges for once again showing us the ugly underbelly of war. There is nothing good that will ever be accomplished by the Bush/Obama wars. These young men and women who have to fight pay a horrible price for their service, but all America has lost it's soul. When will this madness end?



The wars we perpetrate in

The wars we perpetrate in the middle east don't have to be fought. Only the military industrial complex wants these wars, but they are unnecessary for protecting us from terrorism. Their cost far outweighs the benefits. These wars create more terrorists than they stop. These wars are irrational. My condolences to the Arredondo family.



as a mother of a child who

as a mother of a child who has passed on, I know their grief.
I also know that every person in the united states needs to see stories like this, front page, every day, until they wake up from their national stupor.
bring the kids home.
end the wars.



Kinda hard to sympathize

Kinda hard to sympathize with someone who travels half-way around the world to kill people in a country that has never done anything to us.

We haven't had to fight for this country since the War of 1812.



very strong story and the

very strong story and the truth/reality of what happens around us comes out even stronger!
This stupid/fake war will end someday like the Vietnam war did, 'till the next one, for whatever reason not just oil! The government needs to advertise its new weapons get rid of the old stock and the factories need to keep working. Its a mass production game..



Johnnie Got His Gun. For

Johnnie Got His Gun. For every person killed in action, 12 to 20 are injured.



@Erich von Freemason, I'm

@Erich von Freemason, I'm not sure that Alex went into it with that mission to "kill infidels". Keep in mind these are 16-17 year old, very impressionable kids who are fresh meat for military manipulation. Maybe he went into it with the naive "defending America" thing, but once signed on he was brainwashed into believing lies and propoganda, and brainwashing is precisely what our military does to our youngsters who don't know better, and they do it intentionally, consequences be damned.

Now, I have an old friend from high school who is in the national guard and is going on his second tour. Enlisting when he was around 30, he is as old as me (40) and does go into it with a "kill infidels" mentality, which is really the mentality of an xenophobic ogre. I'm not certain Alex, who was 16 or 17 when he enlisted, went into it that way.



Your story brought tears to

Your story brought tears to my eyes, as would the story of any of our young men and woman killed in these senseless and unnecessary wars. I'm both a father who has lost a won and a combat veteran, which helps me to empathize with both Alex and his father.

However, I must tell you that I resent your use of the words "prey" and "lured" both of which clearly imply that the Marine Corps' recruiters did something immoral or dishonest. They did no such thing.

The benefits that they promised Alex were real, the opportunities that military service offers are substantial. Alex had to have known that in agreeing to receive these benefits he was entering a risky occupation.

No one "preyed" on him. No one "lured" him. Those benefits are designed to attract new recruits in exactly the same way that the benefits of a college education attracts young people to college. And hundreds of thousands of young men and women have earned and prospered from them.

I'm deeply sorry that Alex couldn't. But that is NOT the fault of the recruiters who offered him the opportunity to be a U.S. Marine.



The beat goes on, and on and

The beat goes on, and on and on...I can remember sitting in History class in 1965 listening to the deluded young men in my class foaming at the mouth to join the Marines, Army, whatever, so they could go and "kill gooks" (their words, not mine). Rah, Rah, sis boom bah. Little did they know the horror that was in store for them. Having been raised on movies like "Battle Cry", and "From Here to Eternity" they saw only Romance and glory, but none of the gore ever sunk into their infantile brains about what WAR really IS. Bush's War, is especially hard to stomach considering that it was TOTALLY unnecessary. Luring kids in with promises of money and education obliterated the possibility that they would be killed or grievously maimed in the process. When will we EVER learn?



Gotta call you on that, Mr.

Gotta call you on that, Mr. Moser.

Nobody's brain is capable of making informed decisions before they are in their mid-20s. To compare the effects of a college education with those of joining the Marines is misleading. Recruiters have been documented as having been instructed on how to approach boys of high school age, including wearing the dress uniform, and have certain incentives offered them when they are successful.

Providing cannon fodder is the aim. If they live through the horrors of the armed services, and come out of it physically whole, their minds need to be restructured to live among people who aren't out to kill them.

This is not an inexpensive venture for the rest of us either, though war is a great opportunity for a few to make a lot of money at everybody else's expense.



Thank you, Chris Hedges, for

Thank you, Chris Hedges, for another excellent piece of work!



QUIT YOUR CRYING! None of

QUIT YOUR CRYING!
None of you did a damn thing to stop Bush and Company from going into Iraq.
They lied, lied, and lied about WMD's.
They lied and lied and lied about the threat Iraq was to America.
Well they gave you what you wanted.
1. They CUT TAXES.
2. They INCREASED SPENDING
3.More THEN DOUBLED THE NATIONAL DEBT.
4. They DIDN'T HAVE A DRAFT.
5. So NONE OF YOU WERE IMPOSED UPON.

I remember when it came out in the news that he set fire to the Marines van.
BUT THAT'S OK! THERE'S MORE WHERE HIS KID CAME FROM!
WAR ON THE CHEAP
Bush and Company SUCKERED YOU FOOLS INTO IT.
And here's what it cost one family.
OH!? I'm a rotten person?
Well I'm a VET. And there's nothing that pisses me off more then a Bush or Republican Chicken hawks supporter say, "..But they volunteered...."
So QUIT YOUR CRYING.
You clowns wanted to kill innocent people in Iraq and this is what you got.
Thousands upon thousands of innocent killed and BILLION AND BILLIONS SQUANDERED.
So in short, this is what I say to you...
DEAL WITH IT



To Carlos Arrendondo: When

To Carlos Arrendondo: When I read your story my eyes welled up with tears. My throat grew thick and I could barely keep my composure. This is the face of war ... any war. The price is supremely high.

I wish I could tell you all of the good things we are fighting for. And I would tell you if only I knew what they were. It breaks my heart that I can appreciate your loss to a small degree. But your broken heart is likely the result of no noble cause. That fact is what I continually revisit. Why? We have burned through staggering sums of money and spilled obscene amounts of blood ... and for what? What did we gain that we did not already have? Your son paid the highest price possible and I am unaware of anyone getting some amount of benefit from that. That is vulgar.

I am "AngryMan" and this is one of the main reasons I am angry. I cannot even convey proper condolences by framing your loss against the backdrop of what we gained. I honestly do not know what we gained. That makes it hurt so much for so long. My shared pain will go away far faster than will yours. All I can say is that I am deeply sorry for your loss. I hope that one day we will all know the reasons so many lost so much. Until that day, there are no satisfactory answers.



I think it's time America

I think it's time America gave up using 9/11 as a standard bearer for hate and war. Those who think of themselves as very Christian seem to have the highest approval ratings for the wars (and also think that Iraq was about 9/11). I cannot fathom that those who believe in heaven think that the 3,000 people who died are jonesing for us to destroy the world in their names for revenge - and murder nearly 5,000 of OUR OWN.

I was told by an LDS blogger in a fever that I should be proud to sacrifice my son like Abraham was asked to sacrifice Isaac.

Maybe if God asked me personally, but not for George Bush and Dick Cheney. But truly? I don't think I'd give up one of my kids to anybody. My son has a TBI with permanent and irrevocable blindness and after going through this with him, I cannot imagine the immensity of my grief and anger had he died. My heart breaks for these parents; Americans should insist that it all end NOW. Supposedly, we are the majority with the power.

As a side note: When my local businesses started displaying huge 3 dimensional posters for the National Guard recruiters, I began turning them to the face the walls. It is surprising how many people stood up to help - until the posters have nearly disappeared from our small town.



THE PITY PARTY WOULD NOT BE

THE PITY PARTY WOULD NOT BE TAKING PLACE IF ALEXS FATHER HAD NOT BROKEN OUR IMMIGRATION LAWS...HE NEEDS TO TAKE SOME RESPONSIBILITY...AND MAYBE THERE IS AN IRAQI FATHER GRIEVING OVER HIS SON KILLED BY ALEX..



Time to end all wars. Learn

Time to end all wars. Learn Peace! Speak up for peace!
Read Gen. Eisenhower's "Beware the military, industrial complex." and Gen. Butler's "War is a Racket."

Patriotism begins with resolving conflicts peacefully.
And becoming friends with the "enemy"
Fran



cheyennebode, what the f**k

cheyennebode, what the f**k is wrong with you? Where in that story does it say that the Arredondos broke ANY immigration laws? Are you really that ignorant that you assume anyone born in another country is in this one illegally? Where are YOUR great-grandparents from?

And Mr. Moser, if you really think military recruiters don't lie, I've got some swampland I'd like to sell you...



Mr. Moser, et.al., my

Mr. Moser, et.al., my brother was a Navy recruiter
for over 8 years after 12 years in the regular Navy.
This from an insider to the truth, you are deluded and wrong.



Well written essay here.

Well written essay here. Thank you for this story.

Attention all US soldiers: It will be solely up to you to end these wars. Every moment you spend working for the federal tyranny is time spent destroying what is left of America.

Put down your weapons, refuse to murder for the feds, and be guilty of doing the right thing.

The politicians will send you to your deaths as long as you are willing to go along with them.

Without soldiers there would be no war.

Stop being a soldiers and start standing up and thinking for yourselves!



Sorry, Anonymous on 9/9 at

Sorry, Anonymous on 9/9 at 14:57 - you have it sightly wrong: it's easy to have war without soldiers - there are so many exploitable criminals in the world, after all. No, it's "without GENERALS there would be no war".



Dear Mr. Hedges: Your

Dear Mr. Hedges: Your articles are always hard; by "hard" I mean "difficult". Your articles are always also vitally necessary for the survival of anything remotely resembling American Values. Only the vacant-chested, brain-dead like Erich and CHEYENNE (someone teach this freak how to capitalize, 'k?) fail to be moved by the photo of the young (so young) man in uniform . . . in the coffin. As a mom, I have to force my stomach back down below my ribs, make myself witness it. Keep doing what you do, Mr. Hedges, until all the moms in American rise up and take away the war toys.



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