By Steve Hynd
Today's must-read is "The Last Patrol", an account of the last day on the frontline in Afghanistan for a unit from the 82nd Airborne by imbedded reporter Brian Mockenhaupt. It's deeply harrowing, emotional and detailled - the kind of coverage of the occupation of Afghanistan that is largely missing.
Veteran Kieth Boyea tweets "I don't know how anyone could read this article and continue to think that the Afghan war accomplishes anything" other than getting young Americans killed.
Here's a short excerpt but please read the whole thing.
A thunderclap rocked the tree line, and the concussion punched our ears and rolled through our chests. Beside us, along the canal, a cloud of smoke and dirt billowed 100 feet into the air, far above the trees, against a cloudless blue sky. �IED! IED! IED!� a soldier barked over the radio. Knollinger, leading the element along the road, ran into the field between the road and the canal, toward the explosion, yelling into the hand mike clipped to his vest. �I need a sitrep! I need a sitrep!� Soldiers answered, one by one, save for the two snipers with the patrol. �Viper 4,� Knollinger said. �Are you okay? Viper 4!� Sgt. Christopher Rush responded, dazed, his voice slow. �No, I�m not okay.� Beside him, his partner, Specialist Christopher Moon, lay in a crater five feet wide and two feet deep, his legs missing. The triggerman, hidden in the pomegranate orchard, had blown the bomb under Moon, the last man. Gerhart was 75 feet ahead on the canal trail. He ran back, past a few soldiers who had been knocked to the ground, uninjured. He knelt beside Moon, 20 years old, a high-school baseball star who had been courted by the Atlanta Braves, but had chosen the Army. I�d met Moon the day before, atop an earthen barrier beside Guard Tower 2 at the combat outpost, where he had squatted on two ammunition cans and barely moved, perched like a monk for a two-hour stretch. He rested his rifle on an iron beam and watched a compound a half mile south. He�d killed two fighters there earlier, as good at sniping as he�d been at baseball.
Now his right leg ended above the knee in a thick mass of muscle, skin, and shredded pant leg. His left leg ended in a piece of jagged, shockingly white shin bone. Blood drained into the dirt. Gerhart slipped black nylon tourniquets around the stumps. The 101st medic stood nearby and stared at his first battlefield casualty, stunned. �Ah, it hurts so bad,� Moon said. Gerhart cranked the tourniquets tight. �You�re going to be okay, buddy,� he said. Much of Moon�s gear had been torn away by the explosion. Soldiers removed the rest. Shrapnel had ripped through his arms, breaking the bones in so many places that his forearms bent and sagged at terrible angles. The medic slid a needle into Moon�s arm and started an IV drip of fluids, to replace the lost blood and keep him from slipping into shock. �I�m gonna fucking die,� Moon said. Soldiers wrapped bandages around his arms. Bright blood seeped through. �No, man, you�re going to be okay,� Gerhart said. Moon winced. �I got no legs,� he said.
I am certain that if more of this kind of reporting was published, especially in the mainstream media, then the Afghan debate would be a far more prominent issue than it is now.
A short time til an important national election, war stories on every newscast, both radio and TV... and a deafening silence from everyone running for office at all levels... It's surreal that so many otherwise intelligent people remain silent. Republicans equate war with patriotism, Teabaggers expect the Rapture/End Times and Democrats are intimidated by both. Shameful. Pitiful. Terrorist attack would be redundant; the country is already terrorized.
ReplyDeleteAnd lots of toxic thinking. This comment was left in a comment thread I saw this morning.
The "wars" in Iraq and Afghanistan are not wars to be "won." They are field trials for the testing of weapons, logistics, tactics and strategy. These "wars" are simply scrimmage games.
As a superpower, the US must constantly engage in mini-wars in order to prepare for the war that matters - a world war.
China's first attempt to gain war "experience" was with Vietnam in 1979. China suffered heavy losses and learned some painful lessons. Since then, it only practices "war" with itself.
The US is preparing for war with China but it will precede it with an economic attack to incapacitate the Chinese economy. Forcing the revaluation of the Chinese "ren men bi" is the first step.
The article was about "currency wars" in global economics, not military conflict. This comment underscores irrational thinking at its most dangerous. But I'm afraid reasonable thinking is about gone and a growing subset of the population is licking its chops.
I would like to think that better reporting could turn public opinion, but opposition to the Vietnam War was driven by body bags, lots of them, in addition to the reporting. Modern war produces mathematically fewer casualties.
China's first attempt to gain war "experience" was with Vietnam in 1979.
ReplyDeleteI'm not going to put much stock in a commenter who is not even cognizant of China getting some war experience on the Korean peninsula in the early '50s. And that was against the big dog, which it fought to a still standing draw.
In any case, thanks for the link, Steve. It's a powerful read and only reinforces my believe that DoD is plain lying about casualties. And there should be a published count of major amputations.