Comment of the day: Quiggle on what kind of sh*t is going down in Afghanistan


Tom: I believe this is a Best Defense first, an
author commenting
on the comments posted in response to his
original column
and being promoted to comment of the day.




"As the author scans these responses, he's
struck by how truly their tones of anger, frustration, and, especially, disgust
echo the same tones of anger, frustration, and disgust he heard so often and so
eloquently expressed by his students at FOB Fenty. Outrage and just plain-old
RAGE toward Afghans, toward the war in Afghanistan, and toward those running
the war in Afghanistan often erupted into our classroom discussions. (Most of
the time, however, we laughed our relatively clean butts off. The gift of
laughter is something that those students at Fenty gave in abundance to each
other and to the classroom. Laughter, it often seemed to me, was the only
possible human response to what the students described of war's innumerable
inhuman absurdities.) As one responder notes, such discussions were nothing but
"navel-staring." Where else does one begin a discussion about the treatment of
shit, if not by re-examining the essential nature of one's own core values?
Navel staring and even sphincter sniffing-indeed!



"Cleanliness," as another responder rightly
notes, is a core military value. And shit really is the great leveller. It
demands self examination. But after all, our own shit smells like roses,
doesn't it? Or, as one student put it, "this type of war is anything but
clean."



Behind my student's outrage was his legitimate
perception of an injustice. He smelled a turd in the milk. And it was my duty
as a professor to encourage him roll up his sleeves and fish around for that
turd. As many responders have noted here, there IS something fundamentally
unjust about U.S. soldiers being forced to use toilettes made filthy and
unsanitary by their ANA counterparts and vice versa. Like many responders here,
some of my students suggested that that student's outraged sense of justice
points to and emerges from the underlying injustice of the war in Afghanistan.
(Or, as they put it, "What the hell are we really doing here?") Others
suggested, like a few responders here, that that injustice stemmed from
unintelligent, lazy, or incompetent military leadership. ("Give the ANA
separate latrines," as one responder put it. Separate but equal?) Still
others suggested that that injustice is rooted in the purportedly barbaric
cultural habits of Afghans.



(To the responder who distrusts historical
canine analogies, the Alexander "meme" was brought forward spontaneously in
response to the student's outrage, as what we might call a "teaching moment,"
because that class happened to be Greek mythology, and I happened to have
prepared a lecture on the history of Alexander's invasion of Bactra. You make
an excellent point, though, and it would make more sense, especially right now,
to give a detailed lecture about the final days of Mohammed Najib's rule, such
as Peter Tomsen performs in The
Wars in Afghanistan
.)



That the situation U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan
face right now is fundamentally unjust cannot be denied. As recent events in
Afghanistan demonstrate, U.S. soldiers are increasingly likely to be shot by ANA
even within the supposed safety of the FOB. Fobbits must watch their backs in
Afghanistan today.



All of my students were suffering in one way or
another from multiple-deployment fatigue. And all expressed (or vented) serious
doubts about the value of our mission in Afghanistan. Morale there, as compared
to that of AFRICOM where my students held their head very high, is low.



My intention in posting the essay was to draw
attention from an increasingly indifferent civilian U.S. population to the tragic
predicament in which our servicemen and women find themselves in the war in
Afghanistan.



The trickiness of their predicament was
mirrored by what I was also hearing from my Afghan tent mates at Fenty, which
were exactly the same tones of anger, frustration, and disgust-only, they aimed
their outrage and RAGE at U.S. soldiers. Quartered in a "transient" tent that was supposed to be exclusively designated for local-national Afghan interpreters, Pashtun, Nuristanis, and Pashais, I was the only non-Afghan living in this tent. And I admit that I was not especially comfortable in that tent, chiefly because a few of them told me they didn't want me there. They didn't want any of us there, as one fellow put it. So, I asked him what would happen to Afghanistan if we were to go home immediately, as he claimed he wanted. What about Pakistan? What about the Taliban? What about the Uzbeks? And Tajiks? He responded by saying, "Afghans are not afraid to die." When I heard that, I didn't know whether to shit or go blind.




One responder rightly notes that to get compliance at the macro-level you need to gain it at the micro-level, first. I can only wonder how you gain compliance at any level from a people who are not afraid to die?




And if compliance be impossible in Afghanistan, then I very well may have been sent, as another responder put it, on a "fool's errand." I most certainly did feel like a fool much of my time in Afghanistan, but not when I was in the presence of those students. Despite the impossibility of the many tricky situations they confront daily on behalf of a nation that has largely forgotten this war; despite the frustration, the disgust, the outrage and the rage, despite shit in their showers and in their sinks, despite their deployment fatigue, they demonstrated daily the mental resiliency that General Petraeus believes is essential to becoming a competent war fighter. "We cannot," Petraeus argues, "be competent warfighters unless we are as intelligent and mentally tough as we are aggressive and physically rugged." Fool's errand or not, my students did, on the whole, demonstrate that their core values are strong and resilient enough to "take their shit."




But perhaps the really difficult part for many of my students will be leaving the shit of Afghanistan behind when the time comes to make the long odyssey back home to a nation of civilians who largely do not understand the nearly imponderable nature of the task our servicemen and women were asked to perform in Afghanistan."


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Published on January 23, 2012 02:02
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