Posted on 06/17/2006 5:42:15 AM PDT by Valin
David Danelos new book, Blood Stripes, comes on the market at exactly the right time. Just as Americans are trying to understand what might have happened at Haditha, where Marines may have killed as many as fifteen Iraqi civilians, Danelo offers a thoughtful and insightful look into the Iraq war through the eyes of enlisted Marines. Until recently a Marine Corps infantry captain, Danelo served at Fallujah and obviously thought a great deal about what he saw there.
Unusually for a first-hand, live reporter style author, Danelo picks up quickly on one of the most important issues in military theory, the contradiction between the military culture of order and the disorderliness of war. In Blood Stripes first chapter, he writes,
Non-commissioned officers assume responsibility for imbuing the (Spartan) Ways sacred tenets of Order and Disorder into every young boot that crosses their path. Finding the balance within this dichotomy is tricky; both cultures exert a strong pull on Marines. The twins call like sirens from opposite banks of a river, singing for the Marine to listen to their virtues and ignore their vices.
The culture of Order is the Marine in dress blues, spotless and pristine, medals perfectly measured, hair perfectly trimmed these types of things comprise the culture that is Orderly, functional, prepared and disciplined
However, combat is filled with uncertainties, half-truths, bad information, changing directives from seemingly incompetent higher headquarters, and unexplained explosions. War is chaos, the ultimate form of Disorder.
Blood Stripes quickly immerses its reader in the chaos of infantry combat in Iraq, which, too often, is combat against an unseen enemy.
Barely three weeks into their deployment, 3rd Platoon had already discovered several IEDs throughout Husaybah. Thus far, they had managed to find a couple of them using an unconventional, dangerous, and effective technique: kick them .
(Sgt.) Soudan approached the plywood. He was standing about eight feet away.
BOOM!!!
Everything went black
Because the explosion was close to the base, the medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) happened quickly .
The patrol stepped off. They were heading east, father away from base camp.
Three minutes passed.
BOOM!!!
From the sound of the explosion, Soudan knew this latest IED had hit south, on the street 3rd Squad was patrolling .
Link called Soudan. Were on our way.
Ten seconds passed.
BOOM!!!
Links squad.
Experiences like these at the small unit levelby the end of the patrol, these Marines had been hit by five IEDsprovide some context in which those of us stateside can put events like the supposed massacre in Haditha. So does a story later in the book, where Marines engaged mujahideen in a prolonged and vicious fire-fight:
Sergeant Soudan, Corporal Link, and Lieutenant Carroll were standing in the back of a humvee. After triaging the wounded from the dead, they had placed the bodies of Gibson, Valdez, and Smith in the humvee with VanLeuven. The Recon Marines ran up, muscling the body of the other dead Marine into the vehicle.
Soudan, Link, and Carroll looked at their fallen comrade.
Their faces went white.
Captain Gannon.
Lima Six was dead.
They killed our company commander. Pain switched to fury and an immediate demand for vengeance. These -------- killed Captain Gannon.
Blood Stripes does not paint a picture of an easy war. As a Marine officer said to me many years ago, If your unit is the one getting ambushed, its not low intensity war. The Marines whose stories Danelo ably chronicles, and the thousands of others like them, have gone through hell in Iraq, a Fourth Generation hell where enemies are nowhere and everywhere. No military, not even the Marine Corps, can endure that kind of hell endlessly without beginning to crack, at least around the edges. It should not surprise us that cracks are now appearing, three years into the war.
One personal note: Danelo rightly reports that Marines, inspired by Steven Pressfields brilliant novel Gates of Fire, like to see themselves as Spartans, which in some ways they are. As an Athenian, I have to point out that the battle of Themopylae, however deathless a tale of valor, was nonetheless a Persian victory in the end. In contrast, at Salamis, Persia was decisively defeated by Athenian deception and maneuver. Sometimes, it helps to think as well as fight.
William S. Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation
I am not trying to understand it, I pretty much have figured it out and if I can do that from Singapore, it should be easier in America: the Marines had to secure a building/house that was spraying them with machine gun fire; when they entered to secure the building, one of the rooms was locked and the Marines strafed it, killing the civilians.
This is war and I have total moral clarity concerning that event.
it should be easier in America
Would that be the Real America (Red State) or somewhere over the rainbow (Blue Sate)?

For sure the Blue Cities will try to create their own reality.
Your take from afar is clear and concise.
Oh, what the hell am I getting my blood pressure up for? The domestic enemy needs to have the war fail so that they can have it as an issue come election time, so they are running out the usual propagandists. But they are going to lose again-better brace for more bitterness.
Deep within the brain of most humans, resides the Moron chip. This chip, when working properly, is constantly observing the person's behavior. In the event of dangerous or stupid behavior, it will go into alarm mode. Historically, this chip may be what helped the smarter cavemen to not become "food" or "stuff on a rock".
They are suffering from a Moron Chip Failure
That doesn't really bother me. This looks like it might be a good read.
I'm down to "only 4 books" so I'm due to make a run to the bookstore.
This type of clarity is too simple and would never sell many papers or excite viewers of the MSM. Let's make up something really really dastardly and sensational instead. Oh wait. They already did.
Too simple a concept for the naive masses to comprehend! The vast majority of folks constantly decry the fact that police had to use a gun, taser or nightstick to subdue a deranged, hopped up druggie that was shooting at them! Heaven forbid that explosives and supressing fire would be utilized in a war zone!
That said..., imagine living for the rest of your life with the images of finding that "non-combatants" were in the space you just decimated! Ever wonder why combat veterans don't want to talk about such experiences (regardless of the war involved)?
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