America ignores its wars and soldiers, except for useless hero-worship. Our deaths cost nothing.
Wilfred Alex
Author of the book "... In the Last Days of America's Hegemony" see amazon.com/author/wilfredruhega
By Steven Kerns
It was a brisk morning on Nov. 9, 2007. I was stationed at Bella, a U.S. Army outpost in eastern Afghanistan. Two of our squads were returning from patrol, less than a mile away. The Taliban ambushed them. As other soldiers and I fended off the Taliban’s assault on our base, we heard our ambushed brothers shouting over our radios. We were ordered to stay, to protect the base. Strategy, we were told. I listened to the Taliban murder my friends.
We held a memorial service a few days later. Immediately after: Move on, we were told, we’ve got patrol. We buried our fallen that day; we put our humanity into the ground too.
Even as teenagers and 20-somethings, we understood. This war was unwinnable. I questioned then as I question now: Did my friends die for nothing? Is our blood that cheap?
Our foes in Afghanistan clarified why it was unwinnable. Intercepted radio chatter confirmed we fought Afghanis, Pakistanis, and?Chechens . We got the impression the Chechens fought us to train against the Russians. And, aside from Afghanistan’s immense rare earth metal?deposits , China is likely going to?officially recognize ?the Taliban as a legitimate government because Chinese leaders will want to avoid a proxy war on their border. Smart.
Afghanistan remains a proxy war battleground. The graveyard of empires.
Invisible in Afghanistan
I returned to Los Angeles on midtour leave in 2008. Surprised acquaintances would ask: We’re still in Afghanistan? I should tell them about my unit, I thought. No running water. Choking down expired food. Killing and eating mountainside animals. Burning our waste. All while defense firms charged us for meals in inaccessible kitchens. Yes. We were still there, but we had become invisible.
America’s civil-military divide enables us to comfortably ignore our wars. This is easily proven: Ask an American how many countries we are bombing. Few know. Or look to the lack of national response when the Washington Post?reported? that the Pentagon had long manipulated information to justify continuing our war in Afghanistan. The blood of our wars is cheap. This devaluation of life is a creature of privilege – and it is lethal.
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Our civil-military divide is simple. The military is a family affair.?Less than 1% of Americans ?serve in the military, many of them have family who served. Of that 1%, about?10% have seen combat , perhaps only once. We ask the few to execute the foreign policy of the many, call them heroes, and then ignore them – like during COVID-19's outbreak. This strategy made a 20-year war politically affordable and financially profitable.
Winners and losers
Since Sept. 11, 2001,?America’s top five defense firms’ stock values? have soared, an analysis by The Intercept found. Boeing’s stock value has increased 974.97%. Lockheed Martin’s? 1,235.6%. The defense stocks outperformed the stock market by 58% since 2001. America’s defense industry won our tax dollars, some taxpayers felt we avenged 9/11, others settled for detachment, but the Taliban won Afghanistan. Is this the outcome America asked my friends to die for?
If the current discourse offers any indication, many will say “yes.” They view the military as corporate stooges, victims, or colonizers. Others will say “no, our servicemembers are heroes.” A similar cultural schism is seen with our police. Except that here, reinforcing this divide does more than swamp efforts to fix America’s policing problems, it makes endless war politically affordable by absolving commentators from doing more than parroting their political ideology. Whether our armed forces are sinners or saints, they are othered, made expendable – this attitude enabled the defense industry to capture America’s once mighty budget surplus
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"" Love me or hate me, both are in my favor. If you love me, I will always be in your heart. If you hate me, I will always be in your mind." William Shakespeare.
3 年Wilfred, thank you for posting. This is not something mainstream media want to cover. They like the Hollywood twist to everything.
berusaha untuk beradaptasi
3 年semua punya keinginan silahkan diwujudkan
Impact Investor, Operating Partner and Strategic Advisor (China & SEA)
3 年"They lost 10,000 men, we lost ONLY 4000." "2.4% mortality rate is ACCEPTABLE." Unfortunately, to politicians, human lives is just a number.
Executive Consultant Hospitality Supply Chain Sales and Marketing
3 年Not to mention the sacrifice the females make and both have family that are targeted and destroyed by perpetual denial of services under some crazy notion of the color coded cattle chute pit fights affirmative action creates by the assumption of whites getting their privilege. Pure insanity. Purposeful allergy to data is the single most gov waste program.