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Afghanistan
A Change in Mission
2009-06-21
Lt. Arthur Karell and his Marine battalion were sent to Now Zad, Afghanistan, to train Afghan police. Instead, they had to fight the insurgents who had taken over the town.

"Fix bayonets."

Not long after giving that order, 1st Lt. Arthur Karell was hunched in a dirt trench crowded with Marines. The hushed darkness bristled with eight-inch blades fitted beneath the barrels of dozens of M-16 assault rifles.

You fix bayonets when you expect to need the aggressive combat mind-set that's produced by the primal sight of massed blades. You fix them when you expect to search hidden places. You fix them when you expect the fight could push you within arm's reach of your enemy -- gutting distance. In modern warfare, that's extraordinarily rare.

The problem was, Karell didn't know what to expect. He was from Arlington. He'd traveled the world. This place, though, was like nowhere he'd ever been. The 2nd Battalion of the 7th Marine Regiment had deployed to Afghanistan last spring to train Afghan police. But when Karell's platoon arrived in Now Zad, the largest town in a remote northern district of Helmand province, they'd rolled into a ghost town. ...
Posted by:ed

#4  Solid article. Washington Post - surprise. Kristin Henderson, a reporter to watch for.
Posted by: Glenmore   2009-06-21 12:32  

#3  Afghanistan actually used to export wheat to the region, once upon a time.
Posted by: OldSpook   2009-06-21 10:53  

#2  Well, expect the worst, I'd say.
Posted by: Uloluns Scourge of the Bunions1692   2009-06-21 05:10  

#1  Interesting Article.

opium poppy production exploded -- drug money bankrolling the violence. The United Nations estimates Afghanistan now produces more than 90 percent of the world's illicit opium, the raw ingredient in heroin. Half comes from Helmand, one of Afghanistan's biggest and most fertile provinces. Helmand should be this hungry country's breadbasket
Posted by: OldSpook   2009-06-21 02:01  

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