Camp Bastion, Afghanistan was in the news last weekend when it was attacked by the Taliban who managed to infiltrate the base in US Army uniforms, kill several marines and destroy six harrier jets. My little brother spent 6 months in Camp Bastion in 2009-2010 and during that period I used to blog some of his photographs when he would email them to me. I thought I'd repost a couple of the pics for those of you who dont have the patience or insanity to scroll through all my old posts. My little brother is the balding chap in the second one and that fuzzy one at the end is his charming accomodation. Every guest bed should come with an SA-80 assault rifle on the pillow, don't you think? My little brother is back home safe now of course and because he's done two tours in Iraq and Afghanistan does not have to deploy overseas again.
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13 comments:
I'm glad he wasn't there this past weekend, but I am sure it affects him nonetheless.
Seana
If Camp Bastion which is the middle of the desert can be successfully infiltrated and attacked then its pretty clear to me that nowhere in Afghanistan is safe and the current allied policy isn't close to working...
I recently read a book about the Russian occupation of Afghanistan called Afgantsy: The Russians in Afghanistan by Rodric Braithwaite. He's not the smoothest writer, but it's obvious the West is making some of the same mistakes the Soviets did. An even better recent book about AfPak is the 9/11 Wars by Jason Burke. Glad your brother's back in one piece.
Cary
It seems to me that Afghanistan is one of the worst countries in the world to try and impose a counterinsurgency strategy upon. Its too tribal, too backward, the border is too porous, opium production is endemic and our nominal ally Pakistan is actively working against us.
All of what you said. Not exactly how I spent my summer vacation pics. Glad he's back safe. Someone close to me said, it felt a lot like Vietnam-not the weather, but that one never knew who the enemy was. Is there a solution? I won't even pretend to think I know.
It isn't just Vietnam, but the whole Russian experience there that should have been a warning. Even a not terribly aware Westerner like myself knew that Afghanistan had been a quagmire for them, and I don't know why that was so invisible to the government. But then, I've thought that about a lot of things over time, and I have to conclude that power (or hubris) makes certain obvious realities invisible.
But yes, the whole infiltration aspect of this is completely demoralizing.
Lil
Of all the countries in Asia to be bogged down in a war, probably Vietnam and Afghanistan are the two you wouldnt choose.
Seana
Well the Afghans beat Alexander the Great, the Persian Empire, the Russian Empire, the Chinese, the British, the British again, the Soviets and finally the US and Brits again if history is any guide.
I was remembering a book that resurfaced around the time the U.S. was contemplating the war, which was Doris Lessing's The Wind Blows Away Our Words, which had some sympathy for the Afghani situation. It came in for a drubbing for some of its inaccuracies, but no one disputed it for the description of the toll the Russian war took on the Afghan population. As the NYT article said when it was reviewed, half the Afghani population was either dead or displaced by the ninth year of that war.
That accommodation looks luxurious.. Long, long ago I was supervising excavation of an Inca building. Accommodation was a six-man army tent which I shared with my team of three blokes -two serving soldiers - a bombadier and a Royal Engineer (who were on adventure training) - and an American archaeologist in the remote Peruvian Andes at 10,000 feet, with puma prowling.. Canvas campbeds on the bare earth, a tilly lamp and tins of cold British Army rations, that was the life!! No locals trying to shoot us though (Marxist Sendero Luminoso guerillas/ terrorists/ fighters (depending on your viewpoint at the time) were a fair few hours away through the mountains.. I really should save this stuff for my memoirs, if I can get off my arse and write more than a few disconnected sentences...
Seana
The abandonment of the policy of Afghanistation this week will probably be scene by future historians as the week we finally admitted we had lost the war over there.
Deb
Very very cool. And I forgot to say very cool that you know JG Ballard's daughter. Ballard is one of my role models in literature and life. As brave a writer as there has ever been in England and a heroic dad who raised those 3 kids after the tragic death of their mother.
Afghanistation is an interesting portmanteau word. Joyce would have liked it--and probably stolen it.
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