War is terrible.
The senseless waste of a death at the hands of someone who was supposedly an ally reeks of something worse; an incompetence that should never have been allowed to occur.
Saying nothing will allow the tragedy to continue, which is why I was spurred to write this column for the Canberra Times . . .
TRUST
Although the fort had been
hastily erected from dirt-filled sandbags and metal containers, its design was
as ancient. Two thousand years ago, in a nearby valley, the armoured phalanx of
Alexander the Great had built forts exactly like this one – open in the centre
and with walls and towers girdled round. Then, as now, the castles served two
purposes: they dominated the surrounding ground and, critically, provided a
vital refuge for the soldiers inside. It was a space where they could relax,
talk, and rest, rebuilding after the turmoil of the day.
Today it’s diggers who are
wearing the heavy armour and helmets. Until last year they’d return from patrol,
put down their weapons, and remove their breastplates. Not any more. It’s
impossible to “partner” your Afghan allies when you don’t trust them. Instead
of representing safety the interior of those rocky compounds has become the new
killing ground in this, our longest war.
Lance Corporal Andrew Jones was
the first to die. Last May the cook woke, climbed out of his camp stretcher,
and wandered over to the latrines at patrol base Mashal. Normally two Afghan
soldiers manned the machine gun in the sandbagged tower, but at that particular
moment only Shafidullah Guhlamon was on duty. No one knows why he opened fire
on Jones; he jumped and ran as soon as the body of the Australian had hit the
dry, dusty soil of the compound. Shafidullah was later killed in a US Special
Forces raid – Jones died on the operating table after being airlifted back to
the medical facility at the base at Tarin Kowt. There was no apparent reason he
was targeted.
Three months later I stood where
Jones had been shot. The same Afghan National Army soldiers still patrolled the
perimeter, but the diggers had pulled out. Further tension had inevitably crept
into the relationship between the Aussies (blue) and the ANA (green). A couple
of days after I left Mashal, three more Australians were killed in the south of
the province by another Afghan soldier; although this time it was a
premeditated attack that appeared to have been inspired by religious reasons. Now,
another three have died, with more wounded.
Since May last year seven Aussies
died in a hail of allied bullets; three in helicopter crashes; three in action
and two from improvised explosives. Our soldiers have been told to wear
body-armour and keep a loaded rifle with them whenever they’re moving around
their bases. Trust has evaporated: it’s a simple fact. Even when those training
the ANA soldiers
You can forget the babble from
Russell Hill about the ‘marvellous relationship’ between the diggers and the
Afghans and what ‘great cultural ambassadors’ our soldiers are. No magic cloak
of wish-fullness will ever provide security from a full-metal jacket of an M-16
rifle tearing through skin and bone. That’s why our soldiers have been ordered
to keep loaded weapons nearby at all times and wear their body-armour when
moving around the bases.
When Julia Gillard says she’s
ordered “protection measures” to be put in place to give our soldiers extra
security, it sounds like a positive. The reality is, however, that it’s a
signal the Taliban are winning. Each extra barrier that’s erected between
the diggers and the Afghan soldiers they’re meant to be mentoring eats away at
the trust that’s vital to accomplish the mission.
Defence will not admit it yet,
but the requirement has subtly changed. Protecting our soldiers is now the
first priority. There’s nothing more that can be done to ‘train’ the Afghans.
They’re well aware our soldiers will be pulling out in a year’s time: no new
battalion’s been designated to replace the current rotation. This one will be
the last.
The ANA’s recruited from
different ethnic groups from all over Afghanistan. Most of the soldiers have no
desire to die, certainly not for Hamid Karzai or any of the provincial
governors. Most just want to survive long enough to return to their families in
other parts of the country. But just two percent of people manage to stay alive
to until they’re 65 and violent and sudden death is the norm. In an environment
like this the immediate becomes omnipresent. Rational calculations about the
importance of survival become warped by concepts about honour and religion. Survival
relies on cultural bonds and norms that make nonsense of the Western
enlightenment.
Two utterly different ways of
life are clashing in Afghanistan: our world and another that’s existed since long
before the Ancient Greeks first charged across the rocky ground and barren soil
on their way to the Khyber Pass. The empty promises of the politicians to “stay
the course” don’t fool any locals. They know the latest superpower will pass by
just as quickly as the last one did. American know-how and ingenuity has proved
somewhat more resilient than Moscow’s efforts two decades before – but not by
much. The local way has triumphed.
The PM’s ‘vowed’ to keep the
soldiers in Afghanistan until they complete their mission. Tony Abbott talks
similar rubbish. But lets get real. The Afghan government is corrupt. Utterly.
Discrete peace feelers have already been extended to the Taliban as part of a
desperate attempt to allow the NATO forces to depart with some dignity. At
least we’re maintaining the pretence of somehow propping up the kleptocratic
regime in Kabul. But this nonsense is only for domestic consumption back home.
Our efforts are ending with the same realisation of futile emptiness that led
the Dutch to pull out years ago.
Gillard and Defence Minister Stephen
Smith have cut short important overseas trips as a result of the killings. It’s
a triumph of form over substance. They will achieve nothing back here apart
from mollifying the Australian electorate with a reassurance that the
politicians treat the sacrifice of so many young lives seriously.
But platitudes won’t rebuild
trust. This is the one, vital commodity that’s necessary if Afghanistan is ever
to be rebuilt, yet the deaths of another three Australian soldiers will do
nothing to restore it.
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