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				Veteran's Reflections: 'I Wish I Had Stayed In'(November 22, 2010)
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							|  Saint Silver, an Army veteran of the Vietnam War, poses for a photo during a visit to the National Mall in Washington, D.C., July 30, 2010. DOD photo by Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class William Selby
 |  | WASHINGTON, Nov. 20, 2010 – Saint 
							Silver is considered a disabled veteran. 
							Post-traumatic stress disorder, sleep apnea, and 
							diabetes related to Agent Orange exposure have 
							affected him since he served in Vietnam. But he 
							doesn't look back in anger. He looks back with 
							appreciation for the service. 
 In fact, he said, serving in the Army was the best 
							thing that happened to him.
 
 “Being in Vietnam ... you can't forget it. It's 
							something that stays with you for the rest of your 
							life,” Silver said. “Being a veteran is the best 
							thing that happened to me.” He's grateful that he 
							was able to serve his country, he said.
 
 “I think that every young man, when he turns 18, 
							should be obligated to serve the country,” he said. 
							“I think we'd have less crime, less killing 
							one-on-one. The military gives you some stability, 
							and you learn to grow up and be a man.”
 |  |  | The Henderson, N.C., resident said serving in the Army 
					helped to shape him as an adult, and his service abroad 
					taught him to appreciate the things some take for granted in 
					the United States. 
 “Once you get back home, you realize how much you love our 
					country, and how much freedom you have in a democracy versus 
					communism over there, where you're told what to do and when 
					to do it,” Silver said.
 
 Silver served as a clerk in the Army from 1968 to 1971, 
					though he said he never worked in his specialty. Instead, he 
					was a utility supervisor, advising Vietnamese in the Mekong 
					Delta, where he never thought he'd end up.
 
 “They told me I passed the physical in January, and I'd be 
					drafted the next month,” Silver said. “So I volunteered, 
					thinking I'd miss Vietnam. But right after [specialty 
					training], I went straight over to Vietnam.”
 
 Vietnam was a good cause, Silver said, and the lessons 
					learned there should be kept in mind when considering 
					drawdowns and missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. He said he 
					believes the United States pulled out of Vietnam too soon, 
					resulting in continued problems for the Vietnamese people.
 
 “If we do like we did in Vietnam, leaving before the job is 
					finished, other countries will think they can't depend on 
					us,” he said. “If you consider yourself an ally of another 
					country, you should be able to stay and help them through 
					what they're going through before you leave. Americans never 
					really lost the war over there. It was the counterparts that 
					lost. We didn't lose.”
 
 The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan shouldn't deter people 
					considering military service today, Silver said. The 
					benefits, both tangible and invisible, outweigh the risks of 
					combat, he added.
 
 “Once I got out, I wish I had stayed in,” he said. “Where 
					can you go and get 30 vacation days a year? You get 
					hospitalization, and you don't have to worry about it. Plus, 
					it makes you grow up. You get a skill. After 20 years you 
					can retire to another job. It has so many opportunities, and 
					positives, in spite of the war.”
 
 All young people don't think that way, he acknowledged. “But 
					as you get older, you realize all of the things you missed 
					by not staying in,” he added.
 |  | By Ian Graham Emerging Media, Defense Media Activity
 American Forces Press Service
 Copyright 2010
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