Related Posts with Thumbnails

Thursday, August 07, 2008

A deadly milestone is surpasssed in a war that was almost forgotten

The death toll for U.S. troops in Afghanistan has surpassed 500. This war was largely forgotten by the Bush/Cheney regime as they rushed to invade Iraq. But, if my memory serves me, it was Afghanistan that housed and supported the terrorists who attacked the United States on September 11, 2001. George Bush will leave office without finishing the job, but many Americans made the ultimate sacrifice trying to do the job. The New York Times has the report and the faces of those who died serving in Afghanistan:

Not long after Staff Sgt. Matthew D. Blaskowski was killed by a sniper’s bullet last Sept. 23 in eastern Afghanistan, his mother received an e-mail message with a link to a video on the Internet. A television reporter happened to have been filming a story at Sergeant Blaskowski’s small mountain outpost when it came under fire and the sergeant was shot.

Since then, Sergeant Blaskowski’s parents, Cheryl and Terry Blaskowski of Cheboygan, Mich., have watched their 27-year-old son die over and over. Ms. Blaskowski has taken breaks from work to watch it on her computer, sometimes several times a day, studying her son’s last movements.

“Anything to be closer,” she said. “To see what could have been different, how it — ” the bullet — “happened to find him.”

For months, the Blaskowskis felt alone in watching their son die in an isolated and nearly forgotten war. And then, in June, the war in Afghanistan roared back into public view when American deaths from hostilities exceeded those in Iraq. In the face of an expanding threat from the Taliban, the conflict is becoming deadlier and much more violent for American troops, who three weeks ago reached their highest deployment levels ever, at 36,000.

June was the second deadliest month for the military in Afghanistan since the war began, with 23 American deaths from hostilities, compared with 22 in Iraq. July was less deadly, with 20 deaths, compared with six in Iraq. On July 22, nearly seven years after the conflict began on Oct. 7, 2001, the United States lost its 500th soldier in the Afghanistan war.

(The Pentagon says that 563 American service members have died in Operation Enduring Freedom, the umbrella term for the global American-led antiterror campaign that has the Afghanistan war at its center and includes deployments in the Philippines and Africa. Of those deaths, according to an analysis by The New York Times, 510 have occurred in Afghanistan or are directly linked to the war there.)
It will take a new president to finish this war in Afghanistan. John McCain joined the rush to ignore Afghanistan by invading Iraq. Seven years later, it's still far from over and U.S. soldiers continue to die.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Recent Archives