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Authors: Mary Roach

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In days past, this man’s glorious pectorals could have been a party to his demise. One of the pieces of feedback AFMES gave to the field was this: The pectoral muscles of the modern, weight-lifting soldier or Marine are often so bulked up that the needle inserted into the chest to relieve air pressure in cases of collapsed lung—if, say, the lung is shot through and air is building up outside of it—isn’t long enough to clear the muscles. This was the case in about half of all male patients. Because of Feedback to the Field, longer needles are used on buffer soldiers.

The last case is a woman shot from behind. The ME is narrating. “The larger of two penetrating gunshot wounds crosses through the heart into the right lung. . . . Proper location of sternal IO. Proper location of tibial IO.” There isn’t much else to say. There wasn’t much else to be done.

The woman’s underwear has been left on. It is pale yellow
*
and plain. The image guts me. It’s the clothing thing—the innocence of the unsuspecting. In a second slide, the body lies facedown. The back side of the underwear, I notice, is pink. It takes a moment to process why. Yellow plus blood equals pink.

T
HE AUTOPSY
room smells like summer. The exhaust system has an air intake from outside, explains AFMES public affairs officer Paul Stone, who is taking me around this afternoon. “They just mowed the grass out there.” The room is large enough to accommodate twenty-two autopsies at once. Stone was here the week a Chinook helicopter was shot down in Afghanistan, killing thirty-eight people and a military working dog. Then, it smelled like jet fuel and burned flesh, so powerfully that Stone’s dry cleaner charged him double. “He said, ‘What were you
doing
?’” Stone used to be a spokesperson at the Office of the Secretary of Defense. It’s tough to rattle him. At one point I asked if people tell him he looks like Vladimir Putin, and not even that did it.

At the peak of the Iraq war, twenty or thirty bodies passed through this room each week. Since 2004, around six thousand autopsies have taken place here. Every person (and dog) who dies in the service of the US military is autopsied. It was not always this way. Before 2001, autopsies were reserved for cases in which there was no witness to the death, or the cause was not obvious. Stone gives the example of a suspected homicide, then pauses. “Though technically it’s all homicide.”
Homicide
, from the Latin
homo
, for man, and -
cidium
, the act of killing. He means murder: prosecutable homicide.

Six thousand
homo
s
cidium
ed in the prime of their lives. What does this job do to a person? For one thing, it makes him very tired of that question. “We’re doctors, and these are our patients,” was the stock answer I got. I imagine it’s a tough kind of doctor to be. Most people study medicine with the hope and intent that their work will restore health, end pain, extend lives.
Save
lives. Because of Feedback to the Field, the work of these medical examiners does save lives. But not the ones they interact with day to day.

Stone brings me over to the H. T. Harcke Radiology Suite, where dead men and women are given CT scans. A whole-body CT is a heavy dose of radiation, but the dead don’t have to worry. Certain things like bullet trajectories and angles of entry are easier to see in the clean, gray-scale imagery of a CT scan than they are in a flesh-and-blood autopsy. Colonel Harcke himself is on hand to show me the basics of forensic radiopathology. He is the Harcke for whom the lab is named. I assumed that this was in tribute to his pioneering contributions to the field. “There’s two ways that happens,” he says when I mention it. “Die or give two million dollars. I’ll let you figure out which it is.”

Using a mouse, Harcke scrolls through the topography of an anonymous body. As we travel from scalp to boot heel, IED fragments flare like supernovae. Metal reads as bright white against the grays of muscle, blood, and bone.

The contrast is stark and telling. In the face of velocitized steel, even the strongest among us are mush. Fragility is evident even in the terms MEs use—
soft tissue,
an
eggshelled skull
.

On the way back to Stone’s office, we stop to talk with Pete Seguin, the statistics guy. On his desk is a sheaf of photographs, printouts of the cases from the combat mortality meeting. “They don’t look real,” he says of the bodies. “They’re like dolls.” I’m not sure where he’s buying his dolls. I look at Stone.

“He means porcelain dolls,” Stone says. “The white skin.” Seguin explains lividity, the pooling of blood in a corpse. When the pump shuts down, gravity takes over. Because the dead are transported on their backs, they come to autopsy white as geishas, the blood drained from the face, chest, the tops of the legs.

“But then you see them back there . . .” Seguin means in the autopsy room. “That’s a whole different experience. It’s too sad.” I can barely hear him. “These are all young people. Our kids. It makes you ask questions. Like, Was it worth it?”

In the autopsy room there’s a pair of platformed aluminum stepladders on wheels. I thought the ceiling was being repaired. “No, it’s for perspective,” Stone had said. The autopsy photographers need to get up high to get the whole body in the frame. I guess war is like that. A thousand points of light, as they say. Only when you step back and view the sum, only then are you able to grasp the worth, the justification for the extinguishing of any single point. Right at the moment, it’s tough to get that perspective. It’s tough to imagine a stepladder high enough.

___________

*
Female soldiers, unlike males, receive vouchers to shop for their own underthings. The US military is gearing up to buy uniforms embedded with photovoltaic panels—
shirts that can recharge a radio battery
—but it is not up to the task of purchasing bras for female soldiers. “I’ve done that sort of shopping with my wife,” said an Army spokesman quoted in
Bloomberg Business
. “It’s not easy to do.”


Usually the victim’s, but occasionally a fragment from a suicide bomber. According to Stone, there has not been a documented case in which a piece of a terrorist’s bone was the cause of death. (Medical examiners do not use the term “organic shrapnel.” That originated in
Falling Man
author Don DeLillo’s cranium.)

Acknowledgments

This book began with an email from a reader: Brad Harper, a retired Army pathologist. In the course of our correspondence, I mentioned I’d been toying with the idea of a book on military science but had assumed that access would trip me up. Should I try it anyway? Yes, insisted Harper. He brought me to the military morgue in Dover and introduced me to colleagues. He took me to USUHS to see his friend Sharon Holland, who has contacts all over the military medical world. When I allowed that one of the things I wished to write about was genital trauma, Holland did not flinch. She picked up the phone and called James Jezior at Walter Reed.
Hey, Jim, might you have a surgery this writer could observe?
Yes, said Jezior. Though he’d need to ask the patient. And surely here would be my first no:
Hey, Captain White, could some strange writer lady come out and watch your operation?
But White, too, said yes.

And so it went. Over and over, when the easy answer, the sane answer, was no, people said yes.

Hey, Jerry Lamb, ridiculously busy technical director at the Naval Submarine Medical Research Laboratory, could you find someone to approve my spending a few days at sea on a Trident submarine? Though it’ll take fourteen months and two-hundred-some emails to make it happen? Yes, said Lamb.

And might that submarine be yours, Chris Bohner and Nathan Murray of the USS
Tennessee?
Though I’ll be traipsing through the missile silos with no security clearance? Yes, they said. Bring your notebook and your dingbat questions. Kick Kedrowski out of his rack. Tie up the head every morning.

Hello, Mark Riddle, could I follow you to Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, even though it means you’ll have to escort me all day every day for an entire week? And then later will you spend your holidays reviewing my manuscript?

Hey, Randy Coates, and hey, Rick Redett, I hear you’re doing some cadaver trials. Could I join you?

Hey, Kit Lavell, hey, Eric Fallon, could you work me into combat simulations where I don’t belong?

Again and again, I expected to hear no
,
yet yes was what I got. These fine people put their reputations on the line. They spent time they could not spare. They spoke openly on issues more comfortably left alone. For all of this—to all of you—I am deeply, humbly, gobsmackedly grateful.

I have no background in medicine or the military, and this fact made me an exasperating, time-sucking presence in people’s days. Certain individuals must be thanked for the hours spent explaining their work and, in some cases, the most basic elements of the science: Rob Dean, Christine DesLauriers, Molly Williams, Benjamin Potter, and Stacy and Mark Fidler at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center; Doug Brungart, Ben Sheffield, George Peck, Dan Szumlas, and Pete Weina at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research; Natalie Pomerantz, Sam Cheuvront, Peggy Auerbach, Rick Stevenson, and Annette LaFleur at US Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center; Alan Hough and Eric Nabors at the US Navy Submarine School; Kate Couturier, Ray Woolrich, and Shawn Soutiere at Naval Submarine Medical Research Laboratory; Dianna Purvis, Patty Deuster, and Dale Smith at Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences; Mark Roman at Aberdeen Proving Ground; Ken Tarcza, Jason Tice, and Patti Rippa of the Warrior Injury Assessment Manikin project; Nicole Brockhoff in the Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation; Aaron Hall and Dave Regis at the Naval Medical Research Center; Theodore Harcke and Edward Mazuchowski at the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System; John Clark of the Royal Navy, and Michael White. I came to you all as an ignoramus and an outsider, and you treated me as neither.

Outside the military, I made a pest of myself, most notably, with David Armstrong, Charlie Beadling, Greg Belenky, John Bolte, Robert Cantrell, Joe Conlon, Damon Cooney, Pam Dalton, Jeff Dyche, Jerry Hogsette, Andrew Karam, Malcolm Kelley, Darren Malinoski, Chris Maute, Ekaterina Pesheva, Bruce Siddle, Terry Sunday, and Ronn Wade. I am grateful for the patience and unflagging good humor accorded to me by all.

The stereotype of the military spokesperson—the obfuscating spin-doctor who prefers to pass the buck—was nowhere in evidence during the writing of this book. The public affairs people I contacted were accommodating and no-bull. A few stand out for the extreme diligence and tolerance they applied to my off-the-grid inquiries: David Accetta at US Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center; Seamus Nelson at US Navy Camp Lemonnier; Dora Lockwood at the Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery; Doris Ryan of the Naval Medical Research Center; Paul Stone at the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System; Joyce Conant at US Army Research Laboratory; Joe Ferrare at US Army Research, Development and Engineering Command; and Jenn Elzea and Sue Gough at the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

Vast troves of military images and archival material are available to those who know where and how to look. I knew neither. I am beholden to Andre Sobocinski, able historian at the US Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, for helping me navigate the National Archives and Records Administration and cheerfully photocopying entire folders for me. Likewise, I owe an outsized debt of thanks to Stephanie Romeo for chasing down the images that open each chapter. Her generous nature and zeal for the task led her to spend far more time than she had any good reason to spend.

Yet again, I have benefited from the unerring instincts of some extraordinary people in the publishing world. I am so very lucky to have Jill Bialosky as an editor and friend. Erin Lovett and Louise Brockett, Bill Rusin, Jeannie Luciano, Drake McFeely, Ingsu Liu, Steve Colca, Laura Goldin, and Maria Rogers at W. W. Norton make my job a joy and my books the best they can be. Jay Mandel’s support is the bass line that runs through my career, and Janet Byrne is the best copy editor imaginable.

No matter how well things fall into place and how smoothly the writing goes, a book will send you to the couch in occasional fits of doubt and self-pity. Everlasting love and gratitude to my husband, Ed Rachles, the man who gets me off the couch.

Bibliography

BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION

Beason, Robert C. “What Can Birds Hear?”
USDA National Wildlife Research Center—Staff Publications,
Paper 78, 2004.

Lethbridge, David. “‘The Blood Fights on in Other Veins’: Norman Bethune and the Transfusion of Cadaver Blood in the Spanish Civil War.”
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History
29, no. 1 (2012): 69–81.

Speelman, R. J. III, M. E. Kelley, R. E. McCarty, and J. J. Short. “Aircraft Birdstrikes: Preventing and Tolerating.” IBSC-24/WP31. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH: Air Force Research Laboratory, 1998.

1. SECOND SKIN

“DOD Should Improve Development of Camouflage Uniforms and Enhance Collaboration Among the Services.” Report to Congressional Requesters. Washington, DC: US Government Accountability Office, 2012.

Oesterling, Fred. “Thermal Radiation Protection Afforded Test Animals by Fabric Ensembles.” Operation Upshot-Knothole Project 8.5: Report to the Test Director. WT-770. Quartermaster Research and Development Laboratories, 1955.

Phalen, James M. “An Experiment with Orange-Red Underwear.”
Philippine Journal of Science
5, no. 6 (1910): 525–46.

White, Bob. “How Your Meat Helps Your Men.”
Breeder’s Gazette,
July–August 1943, 20–21.

2. BOOM BOX

Balazs, George C., et al. “High Seas to High Explosives: The Evolution of Calcaneus Fracture Management in the Military.”
Military Medicine
179, no. 11 (2014): 1228–35.

Warrior Injury Assessment Manikin (WIAMan) Project Boot Fitting Procedures, version 1.2. Warrior Injury Assessment Project Management Office: November 10, 2015. Distribution Statement, W0060.

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