In a phone interview on Monday, former Georgia Sen. Max Cleland was upbeat – "What's goin' on, kid?'' – and quick to laugh. But after losing his U.S. Senate seat to an opponent who ran post-9/11 TV ads that showed the decorated Vietnam vet alongside Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, Cleland fell into a depression he was afraid he might not pull out of. It was public service, he says, that had given his life shape and meaning after he left three limbs on a battlefield in Khe Sanh. But without that role, the old darkness came back. Along with his job and his bearings, he lost his relationship with his fiancée. "That's emotionally and physically over,'' he told me. "That's gone.'' And for a time, he was once again a patient at Walter Reed, where he'd first been put back together nearly four decades earlier – and was now surrounded by vets from Iraq and Afghanistan: "I cried uncontrollably for 2 ½ years.''
In his new memoir, "Heart of a Patriot: How I found the Courage to Survive Vietnam, Walter Reed and Karl Rove," written with Ben Raines, Cleland describes his journey to hell and back, twice, this last time because "Karl Rove managed to take away our service,'' he says, referring to himself and his friend and fellow veteran John Kerry. Visually, the 2002 ad for his Republican opponent, Saxby Chambliss, suggested that Cleland was in league with terrorists, while the voice-over announced that he'd voted against the Homeland Security legislation he had actually co-sponsored. Can you ever really let something like that go? "You have to have a sense of God in charge,'' he says. "Which really pisses me off.''
He only made the return trip to the land of the living at all, he says, thanks to God, Cymbalta, and "a 12-Step group that meets Tuesday nights in Washington, for people whose lives have crashed and burned.'' Asked if the faith he's talking about is new for him, he laughs and says that at age 67, "the sense that a power greater than myself could save my rear end is!''
Cleland corrects my misimpression that 12-Step groups are only for people with addictions: "I'm a recovering person, a recovering politician, but I quit drinking in '75, thank God, or I wouldn't be talking to you.'' He doesn't think of himself as a recovering alcoholic, "but I don't even want to tempt that fate. My two temptations are chocolate and beautiful women, and sometimes I can handle both.''
He is also a big believer in the antidepressants he fought so hard against taking, and the therapy sessions he never wanted to go to: "It is possible to overcome grievous injury and live the life you were supposed to lead, but you never forget and get over it,'' he says. "Then when that happens again in a massive way, that first trauma comes back.'' Though Cleland himself had pushed for mental health services for vets with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder back when he was head of the Veterans Administration under Jimmy Carter, "I had no idea I had P.T.S.D.''
Amazingly, in a world where nearly everybody is either in therapy or ought to be, it was only after Cleland's 2002 loss, he writes in the book, that "I sought psychiatric help for the first time. Thanks to those sessions, I was soon to learn that I hadn't left my war years behind me like I thought. I had just buried them under layer upon layer of scar tissue. The Senate defeat and the war in Iraq quickly ripped all of that away, leaving the great trauma of my life as bare and raw as it had been in 1968. It all conspired to transport me right back to the days of being blown up in Vietnam and lying on the ground dying.''
Seeking help was even harder, he writes, because "[m]y return to Walter Reed coincided almost perfectly with a massive increase in the number of Americans killed and wounded in Iraq. Most of the casualties from Iraq and Afghanistan are U.S. Army casualties. Walter Reed is the first place they are sent when they return to the States.''
There, for the first time, he saw women soldiers coming back in the same shape he had. "All I could think was, Oh my god, we're sending women to get blown to hell. . . . Slowly I faced up to the thing that was making my recovery so hard. I had voted to give George Bush the power to start his war. . . . When my turn came to protect another generation of young people from fighting and dying and getting maimed in another unwinnable, unnecessary war, I had blown it.''
Yet alongside the younger soldiers, he did get well, and was at home in Georgia watching Barack Obama's inauguration with his 96-year-old father when one of the most extraordinary moments of healing happened. As he describes it in the book, "Midway through, there came a point that lifted me up and changed my world. Obama was speaking of those 'who have carried us up the long, rugged path towards prosperity and freedom.' When he spoke the words 'For us, they fought and died, in places like Concord and Gettysburg; Normandy and Khe Sanh,' my heart skipped. I couldn't believe he said Khe Sanh. It was an amazing moment for me to finally get recognition, almost 41 years later to the month, for the battle that had changed the course of my life. . . . It made me feel like my sacrifice mattered after all. The war that had taken so much from me was part of America's story.''
Not that he wants to see that story repeated, of course, and that is how he sees the war in Afghanistan playing out unless we shift from a counter-insurgency to a counter-terrorism strategy there: "You cannot pump troops in with a sanctuary for the bad guys right across the border; that's Vietnam! There will never be enough troops – Alexander the Great and the Russians gave up and went home – and victory does not lie in more boots on the ground,'' but in using our air and intelligence assets to go after bin Laden, al-Qaeda, and the Taliban in Pakistan, and protect Pakistan's nuclear project. "Otherwise, you have Vietnam again, and how did that work out for us? Of course, those guys'' – Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, he means – "never learned from Vietnam because they never went.''
When I ask if he's at all disappointed that Obama's so far following Bush's military playbook, he says, "We will find out; he has not concluded anything yet.''
Obama has, however, made Cleland secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission, so he has a new job managing the 24 cemeteries where some 200,000 American veterans are buried abroad. "It's been war for me for the last six or seven years, but Obama won – the public saw that Bush was bullfeathers – and that helps me. Public service is who I am and what I do, so I'm coming back to that.''
Melinda Henneberger is the editor-in-chief of PoliticsDaily.com. She spent 10 years as a reporter for the New York Times, in the paper’s Washington and Rome bureaus... more
"War Hero" Max was not injured until after the Battle of Khe Sanh was over. He was part of a Radio Comumunications team setting up a tower in the hills outside the base. After boarding the Chopper to return, he decided to stay and have a few beers, and got out of the chopper. One of his men in the Chopper "dropped" a grenade and Cleland picked it up after the Chopper lifted off. Grenade exploded creating "War Hero" Max Cleland.
Frag - (n) Mil. Slang to intentionally kill or wound (one's superior officer, etc.), esp. with a hand grenade.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (-121)
red1531
8:35AM Oct 6th 2009
Eteeuwe, so what if he was not injured until after the battle was over. He rtied to save his comrades.
Cleland is a good man. Would you have even tried to pick up the grenade if you had been there.
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rmaurer636
4:19PM Oct 6th 2009
Your statement prooves nothing. You didn't site your source and he could have been a war hero BEFORE he even got injured.
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mallardmarina10
4:29PM Oct 6th 2009
You are right Eteeuwe. This article implys that Cleland lost his limbs in the battle of Khe Sanh, he did not. My hat's off to Cleland for going to Vietnam but it's shameful for him or anyone else like the "lady" that wrote this article to imply he fought at Khe Sanh and was some kind of hero. It takes away from from the men who left everything in that stinking jungle.
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jrsymom
4:37PM Oct 6th 2009
....thus saving the copter and the other soldiers, jerk.
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Ferocious Bob
4:42PM Oct 6th 2009
At least he served did you? I did.
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mfields435
5:19PM Oct 6th 2009
If you bothered to review Senator Clelands public service record and review the sacrifices he’s made for our country over his life – I believe that any “Christian” or decent human being would agree that he is a man of great strength and courage. I wonder how many others would throw themselves into public life (with half a body)and into the scrutiny that comes with that life to continue to serve his country. And for what – it’s not for the money or the power that comes with being a Senator. He certainly can’t get a date now can he? Or take a payoff and buy himself a new sports car.
As a past Georgia native I found Saxby Chambliss and the campaign he ran to be disgusting. He attached Clelands integrity as well as his service to our country and followed the Republican play book written by Rove and others like him. Without a single fact.
Only in a southern states like Georgia (since Yankees & Democrats are Godless) would the facts be ignored and the so called “Christians’” believe such filth.
I find it saddening that the very same people who cling to their bible so tightly never bother to read it nor practice what’s written inside it. Regrettably, Cleland is a victim of such ignorance and mean-spiritedness and rural Georgia (which elected Chambliss) abounds in it.
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timjofred
5:28PM Oct 6th 2009
eeetuwe is another swift boater. He tells the lie about the circumstances of how Max Cleland was wounded. His ilk swift boated (LIED) about John Kerry as well. These punks that are the manifestation of Karl Rove's style of politics are disgusting and a disgrace. These are the people to which Sinclair Lewis was refering to when he said that Fascism will come to America wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross. I am a Vietnam era vet. The fact that Max was wounded at all in Vietnam separates him from the cowards such as Cheney, Bush, Rice, Rove, Frist, Hastert, Chambliss, Limbaugh, Beck, Hannity, O'Reilly, Coulter, Malkin, etc., etc.
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BETTY
10:41AM Oct 7th 2009
I happen to know Max Cleland personally, and have for many years. He is one of the finest men I have ever had the honor of knowing - very bright, personable, accomplished - all in spite of many obstacles he has had to deal with over the years. If you want to know the TRUTH about what happened to Max in Vietnam, please take the time to read his book "Strong in the Broken Places" where you will find a detailed account - a real account, not one written by some of you who were not there and don't know the facts, nor written by crooked politicians with their own dishonest agenda.
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cdelaneyrn
6:20PM Oct 6th 2009
How do you know this?
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cdelaneyrn
6:23PM Oct 6th 2009
How do you know these details?
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joshua
6:23PM Oct 6th 2009
It is unfortunate that you are splitting hairs over how he was injured in service to our beloved country.
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JOSKIPPER01
6:40PM Oct 6th 2009
eteeuwe, What have you done for your country lately, DOUCHE BAG? What would you know about a "frag"? You had to look it up for Christ's sake! What have you EVER given up for anyone? It sure as hell wasnt a couple of limbs!! What were you doing during Vietnam, you PATHETIC WRETCH? Protesting it? Ohhh, your SO brave!He did what you would never do, you COWARD S.O.B.! You are 1 out 15 most sorry excuses for an American I have heard of this year! Your mom must be so proud of you bashing a Vietnam Vet! Why dont you pack your bags and move to France!
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sherri ann
6:42PM Oct 6th 2009
You know radio towers are important too, geez. and he was over there wasnt he
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treyes5270
6:48PM Oct 6th 2009
Where were you , sucking your moms breats . Where was george and dick when he was over there serving our country
RATE THIS COMMENT: (5)
blackheartrisesi
7:24PM Oct 6th 2009
Frag is also short for fragmentatation grenade. I.E. Frag-grenade. I assume you were attempting to imply that his men were trying to kill him, while standing in the killzone (blast radius) sounds pretty stupid. Cleland needs to understand, that this is what Neos do to military personnel. Proof: The attacks on Sen. McCain in 2000 by Rove and the Neo hit team. Siting that though McCain served he was not smart enough to be President. Cleland, well you know his story. Kerry, swiftboat vets claimed they saw every thing Kerry did or didn't do in his swiftboat, (another vessel), but couldn't tell what the bow and aft gunners were doing on their own vessel. Neos, don't respect soldiers never have, keep your mouths shut and they won't go after you. Marine Corp. Col. Hackett, Iraq War Vet, only joined the Marines to pad his resume for political life according to Rush Limbaugh. Republicans respect soldiers, Neocons don't, check your fire, know your enemies.
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skclay60
7:32PM Oct 6th 2009
How rediculous! do you have any idea of how unbelievable you sound? Do you work for Rove? Continue to discredit those who were in Nam - how old are you? Anybody who was over there in the service of our country for even a day is a hero! What have you done in service of our country? Are you or have you ever been in the military?
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Joe
7:57PM Oct 6th 2009
Does not matter how Mr. Max was injured, jackass, he was there unlike the wannabe war heroes cheney and rove. The way you are putting down Max Cleland, it sounds to me like your another "sunshine patriot" like the rest of the republican chick hawk cowards! Take a hike, slacker!
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mrross019
8:10PM Oct 6th 2009
Leave it up to a republican to try to discredit a war hero,Remember John Kerry being swift boated? And this from the party always saying support the troops. I don't care what Max was doing,The fact is he signed up to serve while chickens like yourself and your last president were draft dodging.
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Former sailor
8:52PM Oct 6th 2009
"Mrross019" and "Timjofred:"Leave it to a Democrat to attack the service records of people you don't even know, just because they come up with valid arguments, or just plain disagree with you! At least you mentioned Bill Clinton's draft-dodging, but, like so many of your ilk, you have completely twisted the meaning of the term "swift boated" - "swift boated" is a term used when one has lied about his exploits, for political gain, as John Kerry did. Kerry's style of politics is disgusting and a disgrace, and certainly contributed to his ignominious defeat in the Presidential race. Maybe he could pick up a few votes some other time, by describing his harrowing tale of being with Hillary when she was dodging sniper fire on the tarmac (where are her battle ribbons, by the way?)! Cleland's politics are greatly misinformed and lacking in a true understanding of Real American values, but at least he actually served in battle, and suffered real injuries while defending Freedom. Kerry's lies, and your gullibility in accepting them, put all of you in a completely different category!