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Greetings! You are reading an article from The Mudville Gazette. To reach the front page, with all the latest news and views, click the logo above or "main" below. Thanks for stopping by! September 8, 2009 Quick response - and otherwiseBy GreyhawkOur friend Exum has assembled an update on reactions to the latest airstrike in Afghanistan, contrasting the response of the Afghan locals with that of the volk in Germany (until recently the location of my home). I had to read this twice to make sure I understood it: "Regardless of whether most of those killed in the bombing were civilians or Taliban fighters, there was genuine shock among many Germans that one of their military commanders could have been responsible for an attack that killed so many people." I understand (or thought I did) and admire German reluctance for war, but there's a degree of pacifism expressed there that surprised me; perhaps the use of the vague "many" renders the statement factual. (And a blinding stroke of the obvious - "many" no doubt feel differently about the Taliban, it's a big country.) As a long time advocate of swift response I see what's happening as a result of just that. On their homefront our German friends are surprised by the action, in Afghanistan they seem caught off guard by the reaction. But our Afghan friends remain friendly - for now. (And perhaps would prefer even more action on the part of their German allies than the German public would prefer to know. Fighting back does indeed present us with an untidy moral quandary or two.) Certainly an even swifter response would have spared the German defense minister the embarrassment of having denied civilian casualties in the first place, a mistake others of us have come to recognize as such from years of fighting this kind of war. We've seen one partial explanation for that delay, but today the Times (of London) offers another:
As much as I might have enjoyed a cold one from time to time in Iraq, another learned experience is that sometimes the enemy gets to decide whether you get a day off or not. So the explanation (from "one insider") that "Thursday nights are the big party nights, because Friday's a 'low-ops' day" impresses me as a bit over confident - at best. Closer to the bottom of the story we are reminded that US troops are banned from drinking and British troops are allowed to drink only at official functions with special permission. Soldiers from the rest of the 42-nation alliance are governed by divergent national guidelines on alcohol consumption.And Many of the civilian staff, who are free to leave the base, were not concerned. "It's only on HQ that they've banned it. All the other bases that served it, still do," one said. Party on, Garth. Update: Does al Qaeda sense weakness?
Posted by Greyhawk / September 8, 2009 2:26 PM | Permalink TrackBackTrackBack URL: http://www.mudvillegazette.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/16627 1 CommentLeave a comment |
July 19, 2010Dawn Patrol 07/19/2010 [Greyhawk]
Welcome to the Dawn Patrol, our ongoing roundup of information on war and other topics - from the MilBlogs and other sources around the world.
Always updating - refresh for updates.
AFGHANISTANProspects for stability in Musa Qala: challenges and possible solutions -- [Bill Ardolino /Long War Journal - in Afghanistan] Exploding Culverts -- [Kandahar Diary - in Afghanistan] Arbaki -- [Free Range International - in Afghanistan] Weather -- [A Major's Perspective - in Afghanistan] Fête Nationale -- [Field Notes: One Soldier's Perspective - in Afghanistan] Goodbye "FaST" Food (and good riddance) -- [FaST Surgeon - in Afghanistan] IRAQOn The Iran, Iraq Border -- [J.D. Johannes - in Iraq] WAR ON TERROR /TERRORISMSenators Look For Smoking Gun In BP-Lockerbie Link -- [AP] No Link Between BP And Lockerbie Release: UK Envoy -- [NPR news blog] UK's Cameron: Releasing Lockerbie Bomber Was Wrong -- [AP] U.S. AND OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLDAs Cameron and Obama Meet, BP Will Be Top Issue -- [NY Times] Afghanistan tops agenda for British PM's visit -- [Washington Times] WELCOME HOMEHomecoming -- [Rajiv Srinivasan - home from Afghanistan] STRATEGY & TACTICSISAF, SCR Address Military ROE and Tactical Directives -- [ISAF] SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGYRaytheon's pain gun finally gets deployed in Afghanistan (update: recalled) -- [Engadget] Pain Ray Recalled From Afghanistan -- [Noah Shachtman/Danger Room] The Active Denial System: the weapon that's a hot topic -- [The Telegraph (UK)] World's Fastest Helicopter Boosts Battle Against Insurgents -- [ISAF]
POLITICSIs it time for a real GI Jane? -- [CNN] HUMOR/SATIRE(Need more? Dawn Patrols Archives are here.) Iraq, Afghanistan, War, Terrorism, Military, Politics, Media, MilBlogs, dawn patrol Mudville |
The Mudville Gazette is the on-line voice of an American warrior and his wife who stands by him. They prefer to see peaceful change render force of arms unnecessary. Until that day they stand fast with those who struggle for freedom, strike for reason, and pray for a better tomorrow.
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The Thunder Run has linked to this post in the blog post From the Front: 09/09/2009 News and Personal dispatches from the front and the home front.