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Home Front: Culture Wars
This Week in Books, November 19, 2017
2017-11-19
Horse Soldiers: The Extraordinary Story of a Band of U.S. Soldiers Who Rode to Victory in Afghanistan
Doug Stanton
Scribner, 2009

In case you missed it:
Movie Trailer: 12 Strong (youtube)

So of the books I have mentioned in this column, "If they made a movie, nobody would believe it." Well, here is a book for you.

From the introduction:

Horse Soldiers is the dramatic account of a small band of Special Forces soldiers who secretly entered Afghanistan following 9/11 and rode to war on horses against the Taliban. Outnumbered forty to one, they pursued the enemy across mountainous terrain and, after a series of intense battles, captured the city of Mazar-i-Sharif, which was strategically essential if they were to defeat the Taliban.

There are a lot of big names associated with this upcoming film, which always makes me cringe a bit, as sometimes star power can interfere with the story. The book gets into detail about those who participate in this mission.

Page 71

Like most everybody on the team, Bennett spoke Arabic and had been trained in the art of sniper fire, mortar launch, and high altitude parachute jumps from 25,000 feet, during which he would breathe from a mini tank of oxygen strapped to his arm. He and Diller were keeping an eye on an eager group of younger gunfighters, average age thirty-two, each with about eight years in SF. "This is your first rodeo," Diller had told junior weapons specialist Sean Coffers, who had joined the unit from the 101st Airborne. "You're sticking with me." Nearly everybody was married and had children; there were more than a few broken marriages in the rearview mirror. Sitting next to Bennett was Vern Michaels, the good-humored senior communications officer, and junior engineer Patrick Remington. These six guys were the A-Team, the Alpha cell, of the twelve-man detachment.

The book preceding and following the quote goes on to detail all the members of the group.

Those of you who have ridden will be able to fill in the gaps about riding long distances when not in horse shape. The book does a fine job describing the ailments of being out of horse shape or the plain never-been-riding-before joys.

Page 181

The ride was exhilarating, at first. It seemed to Spencer that every few steps his horse would turn and look at him and say, "You're sure a big bastard. Why don't you get off and walk?"

Spencer believed the horse was actually huffing and puffing, as if to be melodramatic. The stirrups were short and Spencer's knees were practically in his chest. The horse ambled along the rocky path. Spencer's back started to ache. He was wearing his load-bearing vest crammed with ammo, grenades, water. It weighed about forty pounds. His M-4, which weighed another seven pounds, was slung across his chest.

The story leads up to events in Mazar-i-Sharif.

Pages 272-273

Soon after moving into the fort, nearly everyone on the teams grew deathly ill. When fresh water had failed to arrive on a resupply drop, they'd taken their chances drinking from the local tap, and now everyone regretted the decision. Ben Milo was struck with a case of diarrhea that he felt would kill him (it would last nine days). He and the rest of his team were camped in the three miserable rooms in the northern end of the fort, on the second floor. At one point, Milo grew so sick that he had to sleep in the bathroom, hurriedly scuttling between his sleeping bag and the dark hole in the floor a few feet away.

The very air in the fort seemed diseased. The men explored its maze of dank rooms and dark passageways, the halogen beams of their flashlights passing over rough mud walls that sprouted tufts of animal hair and straw - crude building materials - and revealed odd sights. Some rooms were filled floor to ceiling with small sticks; others were piled high with shoes; some seemed to have been the scene of horrific struggles, the floors tracked with heavy boots and dried pools of blood. After a half hour of wandering, the men would step out of a doorway and into another part of the fort without any idea of how they'd arrived there. The Magic Castle, some of them called it.

So with any book turned into a movie, the book is able to get into the gritty details which movies are unwilling, unable, or just do not have the time to account. I read this book many years ago, and it is a fantastic read on its own. I would suggest the book to anyone interested in the movie so that the movie is more than Thor giving Leonidas' 300 liners, and I mean that as no insult to Mr. Hemsworth; as I said sometimes star power can get in the way though if anyone can pull this off, it will be him.

Link is to Amazon.


Looks at Movies
I came across a fine documentary the other day: Task Force Faith. It covers the activities of Regimental Combat Team 31 during the fighting surrounding The Chosin Reservoir. It is a straightforward play by play of the various actions with accounts from American survivors.


This Week in Emergency Preparedness
I missed by bi-annual nag about checking smoke detectors and electronic safe batteries at the last daylight savings adjustment. Quite a bit has happened since the last discussion. I saw that 'first responders' were mentioned here and there during Veterans Day, you know, whatever. Not saying LEO/EMT/Fire don't see the crap, but I want to talk about that term, First Responders.

In my book, First Responder means the first to show up to a bad deal with specialized training and equipment. That is, not the first on scene.

When something bad happens to you, you are the first responder. How involved and how well trained you want to be is up to you. Being able to communicate a situation goes miles for those who will be responding. Example, fence builders started a fire. Calling it in promptly, with an accurate location and approximate size and travel direction saved a whole lot of headache as the nearest department was able to get to it in short order, and it was out before the front moved in. Same with a car wreck; nobody expects you to leave the kid in the car, grab the JAWS from the trunk, and start extricating a rollover in the ditch. Even if that is you, call it in and get help rolling before putting on the cape. Something to think about in case you find yourself in a spot where hell is breaking out like a cat from a washtub.
Posted by:swksvolFF

#5  Water filter straws sure would have been a smart thing to have in the ‘Stan kit.
Posted by: KBK   2017-11-19 22:15  

#4  Since wife just tried to start a grease fire in the oven...yup...remember to check your extinguishers as well. And in case you missed it, the Kidde brand fire extinguisher had a mass recall. If you have this brand, go to their website to see if your model and serial number is part of this recall.

This video has a little of everything (youtube).
Posted by: swksvolFF   2017-11-19 18:29  

#3  You must train to maintain situational awareness in the rain of adrenaline.

Absolutely.

Seems like every Safety First segment I have been through leads with, "We didn't get the traffic control right." Used to be Joe twelve-pack and his barley soup breakfast coming 'round the bend, now it is lit'l Bobby and his smart phone.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2017-11-19 14:42  

#2  Great writeup! Bought the book.
Does Rantburg get Amazon cred from the book links?

and start extricating a rollover in the ditch
NEVER start until you examine the scene!
Unstable rollover in a ditch will also drown rescuers when it turns. Gas dripping onto a hot manifold will boom both the trapped driver AND the hasty hero. Blind traffic from the rear will sever your legs when you try to get the jack out of the victim's trunk!

You must train to maintain situational awareness in the rain of adrenaline.
Posted by: Skidmark   2017-11-19 11:23  

#1  where hell is breaking out like a cat from a washtub.

Oh hell yes!
Posted by: Shipman   2017-11-19 10:54