What are immediate and long-term effects of experiencing combat firsthand? In this conversation we probe this question as Chris Hedges, a veteran New York Times war correspondent and author of War is a Force that Gives Us Meaning, and Anthony Swofford, a former U.S. Marine Corps sniper and author of Jarhead: A Marine's Chronicle of the Gulf War and Other Battles, describe memories they would each rather forget in a conversation moderated by David Spiegel of the School of Medicine. The truths they report are often hidden from public view, for they profoundly challenge the romantic mythology of war. The truth of war makes clear the sacrifice demanded of those sent to fight. Soldiers, their families, caregivers, and taxpaying citizens should not to be deceived about what awaits those caught in a military process that brings them face-to-face with incomprehensible violence. How might knowledge of the truth of war help to heal war's wounds?