Thursday, December 20th, 2018
Stephan: The endless war in which America has been engaged for almost three decades rarely gets much media coverage, the current coverage on Trump's madness about Syria being a rare counter-example. It is quite different than the Viet Nam war which dominated the news day after day.
How is this present silence possible? The answer I think is that the Viet Nam war was a conscription war, in which the draft spread awareness of the war across the population whereas the Endless War is being conducted in an era of all-volunteer armed forces in which only about one per cent of the American population is involved. As a result, we don't have much conversation about what the war experience is like for the men and women who are embroiled in it. My own view is that we ought to be having a lot of conversation about what is going on, and here is a place to start.
Credit: Training exercises in a replica town at the US Marine Corps base in Twentynine Palms, California. Photograph: AB Forces News/Alamy
My first and only war tour took place in Afghanistan in 2010. I was a US Marine lieutenant then, a signals intelligence officer tasked with leading a platoon-size element of 80 to 90 men, spread across an area of operations the size of my home state of Connecticut, in the interception and exploitation of enemy communications. That was the official job description, anyway. The year-long reality consisted of a tangle of rearguard management and frontline supervision.
Years before Helmand province, Afghanistan, however, there was Twentynine Palms, California. From the summer of 2006 to the summer of 2007, I was trained as a lance corporal in my military occupational specialty of tactical data systems administration (a specialty I would later jettison after earning my officer commission in 2008). My schoolhouse was the Marine Corps Communication-Electronics School, which was abbreviated as MCCES, pronounced “mick-sess”. For many, the wider location became […]
Extremely interesting and well written. Thanks for finding this one, Stephen