WHAT IS AN AMERICAN LIFE
WORTH?
By
Maj.
Gen. Jerry R. Curry, US Army, Ret.
CurrforAmerica.com
To
the American people an American military life is
worth far more than the life of an Afghan soldier or
civilian. For the current occupants of the White
House and the Administration’s staff it seems to be
just the opposite. It appears that to them Afghan
civilian’s lives are more highly valued than
American soldier’s lives, though this could never be
publicly voiced in the politically correct game of
semantics that combat commanders are forced to play
these days. Still, to a military commander in the
thick of battle the unintended killing of enemy
civilians is collateral damage, one of the
unintended consequences of war.
An
Afghanistan soldier walks into an American
headquarters. One of the American officers doesn’t
like the Afghan’s looks and starts to draw his
weapon. The senior American officer present says,
“You know the new rules of engagement; put your gun
away. We are to trust members of the Afghani
military unless they draw a weapon or show other
signs of overt hostility.” The American officer
returns his weapon to its holster. The Afghani
soldier smiles, draws his pistol and shoots both
Americans dead.
Since
the French and Indian War rules for combat have been
consistent. The first and foremost rule is that
soldiers have the right to defend themselves.
Second, a commander’s actions in battle should be
directed toward saving the lives of his troops. He
should try to avoid causing civilian casualties, but
if saving civilian lives is not possible without
endangering American military lives; his first
consideration should be directed toward saving the
lives of his troops. Death is a normal consequence
of war. That is why decisions on the battlefield
should be made by combat tested warriors, not by
rear guard head quarter’s types.
If in
battle you as the commander make a mistake, you
should always try to make it in favor of your
soldiers, not enemy civilians. No soldier in combat,
with the lives of his men threatened, should have to
play a computer war game over and over in his mind
as to who is a civilian and cannot be killed and who
is military and, thus, can be killed. Saving his own
life and the life of his men is more important than
saving the life of a civilian who may later turn out
to be an enemy; such is the carnage of war. To the
best of my knowledge the military’s newly weakened,
politically correct rules of engagement were
introduced during the Iraq War. Since then U. S.
casualties have more than doubled. Is this what the
adoption of these new rules of engagement was
supposed to do; I don’t think so.
Starting with the war in Vietnam, America’s rules of
engagement have been slowly changing from doing
whatever it takes to win; toward soft rules of
engagement such as trying to be politically correct
at all times, even if it unnecessarily costs
American lives. These soft new rules
inevitably get our soldiers killed. If the
situation is such that a U.S. Commander is forced to
disobey these new rules of engagement and replace
them with common sense rules, he will be court
martialed, imprisoned, drummed out of the service,
or all of the above.
Under
the new rules, airstrikes cannot be launched against
enemy positions unless the person calling for the
airstrikes is willing to declare, on the record,
that no civilians will be killed by the strike; that
there will be no collateral damage. Similarly
Taliban terrorists cannot be engaged unless the one
directing the fire at them is willing to certify
that no civilians will be harmed.
The
seeds of this over control of combat actions were
planted many years before. I recall once when I was
controlling an airstrike in Vietnam – my radio call
sign was CatKiller Six -- that I couldn’t get the
fighter-bombers to attack the target I marked with
my rockets no matter how hard I tried. Finally, in
disgust, I called off the airstrike and told them to
go home saying, “It shouldn’t be that hard to level
a few mud huts in a village.”
“You
want us to bomb the village,” the strike leader
asked?
“Yes,”
I said, “Since late last night all friendly
civilians have been evacuated out of the village.
Only Viet
Cong enemy forces are left. Since you can’t hit the
houses they are hiding it, the South Vietnamese will
have to clear out the village by fighting house to
house, and they will take a lot of casualties.”
“Village, CatKiller Six?
Why didn’t you say so … Flight, this is
flight leader … follow me. We’re going to attack the
village.”
Which is exactly what they proceeded to do,
but only after insisting that I give my name, in the
clear, as the person authorizing the strike.
In
Afghanistan under the new rules of engagement
airstrikes cannot be launched against enemy forces
unless the person authorizing the strike is willing
to declare for the record that no civilians will be
killed. Similarly no Taliban terrorist can be fired
upon unless the one directing the fire is also
willing to certify that no civilian will be harmed
during the action. This
is nonsense. The result is that it is not unusual
for units in contact with the enemy to have to wait
for hours for an airstrike to clear bureaucratic
authorization hurdles and be launched.
The
White House and the Pentagon need to declare to the
American people for the record, for the sake of
military lawyers, judges and prosecutors that the
lives of our military, those who defend the policies
and principles of this great nation in battle, are
more important than the lives of the Afghan military
and civilians fighting against them. Then, the
Pentagon should tailor its war policies, rules and
regulations toward supporting that statement of
truth.