in the the news…

Posted on Sunday 14 February 2010

Recall when we went into Afghanistan and Iraq, there was a reporter "embedded" with every unit. Then the direct reporting stopped, almost like the wars were impersonal exercises lost in terms like "insurgency" and "the surge." Looks like we’re back to personal G.I. Joe stories:
The Marines move on Marja: A perilous slog against Afghanistan’s Taliban
Washington Post

By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
February 15, 2010

MARJA, AFGHANISTAN — For the Marines of Charlie Company’s 3rd Platoon, Sunday’s mission was simple enough: Head west for a little more than a mile to link up with Alpha Company in preparation for a mission to secure the few ramshackle government buildings in this farming community. It would take nine hours to walk that distance, a journey that would reveal the danger and complexity of the Marines’ effort to wrest control of Marja from the Taliban. The operation to secure the area, which began with an airlift of hundreds of Marines and Afghan soldiers on Saturday and continued with the incursion of additional forces on Sunday, is proceeding more slowly than some U.S. military officials had anticipated because of stiff Taliban resistance and a profusion of roadside bombs.

In perhaps the most audacious Taliban attack since the operation commenced, a group of insurgents firing rocket-propelled grenades attempted to storm a temporary base used by Bravo Company of the 1st Battalion of the 6th Marine Regiment on Sunday evening. The grenade launch was followed by three men attempting to rush into the compound. The Marines presumed the men to be suicide bombers and threw grenades at them, killing all three. The attack on the Bravo patrol base was one of several attempts to overrun Marine positions Sunday. All were repelled. "The enemy is trying last-ditch efforts," said the battalion commander, Lt. Col. Cal Worth…

So at 7:30, they set off by foot, accompanied by a contingent of Afghan soldiers fresh out of boot camp. To avoid homemade bombs, they walked across the fields, trudging through mud and over small opium-producing poppy plants. They hadn’t been walking 15 minutes when the first shots rang out. Everyone dropped to the ground. They looked for the shooter. But there were no more shots, just the crowing of a rooster.

There would be no straight path to the destination. The adobe-walled compounds along the way — and for hundreds of feet to the north and south of their route — would have to be cleared. The plan was that the Afghan soldiers would knock on doors whenever possible. In this counterinsurgency operation, the Marines have been told that the people of Marja are the prize. Don’t alienate them. Don’t knock down doors unnecessarily.

A few minutes later, another shot echoed across the poppy field. Word quickly made it down the line: A Marine ahead fired on a menacing dog while searching a housing compound. Before anyone could find the owner to make amends, a rattle of gunfire came toward the Marines from the west. The Marines and the Afghan soldiers returned fire with M4 carbines and belt-fed machine guns. Eighteen minutes later, what sounded like a lawn-mower engine could be heard overhead. A small, unarmed drone, launched from a nearby base, circled above. It revealed what the Marines couldn’t immediately see from the field: Three insurgents, one of whom was carrying a walkie-talkie, had been killed.

As a squad from the 3rd Platoon moved gingerly forward, unsure if there were more insurgents unseen by the drone, Worth received a report over his radio: The Marines from Bravo had just hoisted the Afghan flag at a bazaar to the northwest. Each of his companies have been given Afghan flags, he said. He made it clear that the Stars and Stripes was not to be raised in Marja. "No end-zone dances," he said. "This is their country."

By then it was safe to approach the owner of the dog, a middle-aged farmer named Jawad Wardak, who was standing in front of his spacious mud-walled house with five young men who he said were his sons and nephews. There were large stacks of dried poppy plants on his driveway, and his fields were filled with small poppy saplings, which will grow to harvest height by spring. "I’m very sorry about your dog," Worth said. "Hopefully we haven’t done any damage to your home." Wardak shrugged. "It’s no problem," he said…
I’ve had the uncomfortably paranoid idea that these wars were orchestrated to keep them off the public radar. No photos allowed of the caskets. No stories like this one. Few battlefield reporters. No draft. Mercenaries [contractors]. Keeping the cost of war out of the budget figures. It has felt to me like there was an active program to avoid the kind of opposition to the wars that accompanied in the Viet Nam War. Whether I’m right about that or not, I’m glad to have the stories about what’s actually happening back in the the news…

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