Gold Star mothers' hearts ache after Taliban takeover of Afghanistan
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[August 17, 2021]
By Tim Reid
MIAMISBURG, Ohio (Reuters) - Jill
Stephenson lost her only child Ben Kopp, a 21-year-old U.S. Army Ranger,
when he was shot during a 2009 firefight with Taliban forces in
Afghanistan. For her, the militant group's takeover of Kabul this
weekend came as a gut punch.
Stephenson is among the American families given gold star status by the
U.S. military after losing a close relative serving in a war or other
conflict. Her son was 13 when the United States was attacked on Sept.
11, 2001, and he vowed that evening to become an Army Ranger. He
eventually deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Here we are 20 years later, and so you do question why did we even
bother," said Stephenson, one of two Gold Star mothers who spoke to
Reuters as Taliban insurgents swept across Afghanistan following
President Joe Biden's decision to end the U.S. military mission there.
Stephenson, who lives in Bentonville, Arkansas, worries many Americans
will now lose sight of the service of the nearly 2,500 members of the
U.S. military killed during the 20-year conflict. "I hope their
sacrifice doesn't get forgotten," she told Reuters.
As the Taliban emerge victorious from a conflict that started with al
Qaeda's hijacker-led plane attacks on the United States, Stephenson and
other Americans are speaking out about the sacrifice of their loved ones
and pondering the lessons of U.S. involvement in Afghanistan.
On Sunday, the American flag was lowered and removed from the embassy
compound in Kabul. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has fled the country,
and Afghans who assisted the United States are trying to escape amid
chaotic scenes at Kabul's airport.
The Taliban triumph occurred just over 12 years after Kopp saved six
fellow soldiers during a battle in southern Helmand Province in which he
was shot in the leg. He suffered cardiac arrest on the operating table
in Afghanistan and was left brain dead.
On July 18, 2009, eight days after he was shot, Kopp was taken off life
support - but not before his heart, kidneys, liver, skin, bone and
tissue were donated. His heart today beats inside Judy Meikle, 69, who
was diagnosed with congenital heart disease a few months before Kopp
died.
"It's an amazing gift," said Meikle, who spoke to Reuters from her home
in Winnetka, Illinois.
Stephenson says she copes with the loss of her son by focusing on the
blessings of his life and his organ donations. His major organs have
saved the lives of four people, said Stephenson, who is now an organ
donation advocate.
The Gold Star mother said she has never felt anger about her son's
death. At a camp for Gold Star families and other veterans in
Miamisburg, Ohio, Stephenson said: "I believe Ben's mission was
completed in the time that he was here and he would not have been able
to fulfill that mission had he not been an Army Ranger, had he not
deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, had things not turned out the way they
did and him becoming an organ donor."
THE BEATING HEART
Jean Durgin's 23-year-old son, Army Sergeant Russell Durgin, a sniper
leader, was killed by small arms fire on June 13, 2006 in Afghanistan's
Korengal Valley. He had completed a combat tour in Iraq before heading
to Afghanistan.
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Jill Stephenson wears a button in honor of her son, Benjamin Kopp,
who died to a conflict injury in Afghanistan, as she attends a camp
for Gold Star families in Miamisburg, Ohio, U.S., August 6, 2021.
Picture taken August 6, 2021. REUTERS/Megan Jelinger
His 82-year-old mother, who lives in Henniker, New
Hampshire, was saddened to watch the Taliban retake Afghanistan,
adding that she sympathizes with the Afghan people and questions the
U.S. mission there.
Her main message, she says, is one of remembrance. "It's our sons
and daughters and husbands who have gone there to fight, and so many
have lost their lives. So many have returned with the war still
battling in their minds. People mustn't forget them."
Durgin said when her son died, she questioned his commanders: "Why
wasn't there more cover? How could you leave him up on that mountain
with no cover?"
She said she was told they didn't have sufficient numbers because
fighters had been diverted to Iraq.
"That made me angry," she said. "Well, I was already angry. But that
added to it."
"If we didn't have the numbers, why didn't we leave?" she said,
adding that she believes U.S. troops should have been pulled out of
Afghanistan before her son was deployed there.
In April, as he announced America's withdrawal from Afghanistan,
Biden said the Afghan people must decide their own future and that
the United States should not have to sacrifice members of another
generation in an unwinnable war.
Durgin, like Stephenson, said her son's death was not in vain.
"It was Russell's life. He made that decision I believe out of love
for his country and because he believed we were doing the right
thing."
"His life is not wasted because he lives on. People remember him.
I'm surrounded by memorabilia, things people have sent me, things
people do."
A bridge in Henniker has been named after Russell Durgin. A banner
commemorating the hometown hero will soon adorn the town.
About 1,000 miles (1,600 km) away, Meikle keeps a picture of Kopp in
her bathroom where she speaks to him silently every morning while
brushing her teeth. "He beats stronger when I talk about him," she
says.
(Reporting by Tim Reid; Editing by Donna Bryson and Paul Simao)
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