We lost': Some U.S. veterans say blood spilled in Afghanistan was wasted
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[July 20, 2021]
By Tim Reid
GARDEN GROVE, Calif. (Reuters) - Jason
Lilley was a special operations forces Marine Raider who fought in
multiple battles in Iraq and Afghanistan during America's longest war.
As Lilley, 41, reflects on President Joe Biden's decision to end
America's military mission in Afghanistan on Aug. 31, he expresses love
for his country, but disgust at its politicians and dismay at the blood
and money squandered. Comrades were killed and maimed in wars he says
were unwinnable, making him rethink his country and his life.
"A hundred percent we lost the war," Lilley said. "The whole point was
to get rid of the Taliban and we didn't do that. The Taliban will take
over."
Biden says that the Afghan people must decide their own future and that
America should not have to sacrifice another generation in an unwinnable
war.
Al Qaeda's 9/11 attacks on America triggered a nearly 20-year conflict
that led to more than 3,500 U.S. and allied military deaths, the deaths
of more than 47,000 Afghan civilians, the killing of at least 66,000
Afghan troops, and over 2.7 million Afghans fleeing the county,
according to the nonpartisan Costs of War project at Brown University.
"Was it worth it? It's a big ass question," said Lilley, who was on the
front lines of America's Global War on Terror in Iraq and Afghanistan
for almost 16 years.
He said he deployed believing troops were there to defeat the enemy,
stimulate the economy and uplift Afghanistan as a whole. They failed, he
said.
"I don't think one life was worth it on both sides," Lilley said as he
described his service and his perspective in an interview at his home in
Garden Grove, southeast of Los Angeles.
Lilley is not alone in reflecting on the U.S. withdrawal after nearly 20
years of war. Many Americans are. The perspectives of Lilley and other
veterans can help inform the country about the costs of entering war and
the lessons to be learned from Afghanistan.
Lilley's opinions are his own and some veterans differ, just as
Americans generally have different estimations about a war that improved
women's rights and led in 2011 to U.S. Navy SEALS killing al Qaeda
leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.
'VIETSTAN'
Biden's withdrawal has bipartisan support. A July 12-13 Reuters/Ipsos
poll showed only about three in 10 Democrats and four in 10 Republicans
believe the military should remain.
Lilley and other Marines who served in Afghanistan and who spoke to
Reuters compared it with the conflict in Vietnam. They say both wars had
no clear objective, multiple U.S. presidents in charge, and a fierce and
non-uniformed enemy.
Part of Lilley's support network is Jordan Laird, 34, a former Marine
scout sniper who described completing combat tours in Iraq and
Afghanistan, which Laird and others called "Vietstan."
"You have a deeper understanding of the plight of the Vietnam vets who
came home with lost limbs and being completely and utterly tossed to one
side," said Laird, who now campaigns to improve veteran care.
He served in Sangin Valley in Helmand Province, one of the most fiercely
contested parts of Afghanistan, from October 2010 to April 2011. In his
first three months, he said, 25 members of Laird's unit were killed in
action and more than 200 were wounded. His best friend bled to death in
his arms.
While in Afghanistan, Lilley said he grew to understand why historians
have called it the "graveyard of empires."
Britain invaded Afghanistan twice in the 19th century and suffered one
of its worst military defeats there in 1842. The Soviet Union occupied
Afghanistan from 1979 to 1989, leaving after 15,000 of its troops were
killed and tens of thousands were wounded.
Lilley says he was particularly disillusioned by the U.S. military rules
of engagement in Afghanistan. He and other units were not allowed to
make night raids on the Taliban, for example.
"Marines aren't designed to kiss babies and pass out flyers. We are
there to eradicate. We can't do both. So we tried and failed," Lilley
said.
The U.S. Marine Corps referred Reuters to U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM),
the military command in charge of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, when
asked about Lilley's comment.
In an email, CENTCOM had no comment about Lilley's criticisms.
A turning point in Lilley's thinking came when a Taliban prisoner told
him the Taliban would wait out the United States and knew Americans
would lose faith in the war, just as the Soviets did.
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A U.S special forces veteran Jason Lilley is shown during his
deployment in Farah, Afghanistan in 2009. Jason Lilley/Handout via
REUTERS
"That was 2009. Here we are in 2021, and he was
right," Lilley said. "Why did we lose guys? Why?"
RETURNING FROM AFGHANISTAN
Back from the battlefield, Lilley, physically fit and heavily
tattooed, said he could not even look at the U.S. flag for several
years because he felt so angry that his country had sent him and his
colleagues to an unwinnable war. He says he has seen several mental
health counselors, but his greatest support network is fellow
veterans.
Lilley is vice president of the veteran-operated Reel Warrior
Foundation, which gives veterans a chance to break from the
struggles of re-adapting to civilian life by taking them on fishing
trips.
He said he is disappointed that the United States does not seem to
have learned lessons from Vietnam, where 58,000 American troops were
killed in a war that failed to stop Communist North Vietnam taking
over the entire Vietnamese peninsula.
"We should avoid war at all costs," Lilley said. "Don't rush into
the racket of war, into the machine of making money, contracts. A
lot of people made a lot of money off of this."
He said it took him years to let go of his anger.
"I mean I knew what I was getting into, I mean I grew up on Rambo. I
wanted to honor my family in the sense my grandfather fought in War
World Two, I wanted to go down that same route and do the selfless
thing, but it turns into reality quickly."
Another of Lilley's Iraq and Afghanistan veteran buddies is Tristan
Wimmer, also a Marine scout sniper. Wimmer's brother Kiernan, also a
Marine veteran, died by suicide in 2015 after receiving a traumatic
brain injury in Iraq before deploying to Afghanistan.
Wimmer, 37, now runs "22 Jumps," holding fundraising events where he
does 22 parachute base jumps in a day to raise awareness about the
scourge of veteran suicide. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
estimated in 2012 that 22 U.S. veterans die by suicide each day.
A VA spokesperson said via email that the department is dedicated to
former veterans' physical and mental health. This starts with a
program called VA Solid Start (VASS), which ensures all veterans
returning to civilian life are aware of and have access to an array
of help and benefits. Contact is made with them three times in their
first year out of the military.
Help under VASS is tailored to a veteran's individual needs and
includes access to mental healthcare and resources to ease the
stress during the transition to civilian life.
Wimmer said of Afghanistan: "By any metric you choose to measure it,
it was a fruitless effort. Getting rid of al Qaeda or the Taliban -
we didn't succeed. Increased peace and prosperity for the Afghan
people? We didn't succeed.
"In the process we sacrificed a lot of wealth, we sacrificed a lot
of time, we sacrificed a lot of lives, not just American lives, but
coalition lives and especially Afghan lives, to walk away
essentially having accomplished not a lot. That's a really hard
thing to stomach."
(Reporting by Tim Reid; Editing by Donna Bryson and Daniel Wallis)
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