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        <title>Taliban | Tags | The Punch</title>
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        <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <title>In Afghanistan trust no one and question everything</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-afghanistan-trust-no-one-and-question-everything/</link>
            <description>In yet another attack by a &#8216;rogue&#8217; Afghan soldier, four French troops were shot dead last week. 



Proponents of the current post&#45;modern war fighting doctrine continue to believe we can make people love us.&amp;nbsp; Counterinsurgency has been a convenient doctrine swallowed by Western leaders as a politically correct way to fight a war. But it is built on the well&#45;meaning principle of &#8220;hearts and minds&#8221; when it is nothing more than an unhealthy blend of social engineering and pork&#45;barrel politics.&amp;nbsp; 

The fact is in Afghanistan they love you until the money stops and even then, as the latest incidents show, nothing will bridge the cultural divide.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-afghanistan-trust-no-one-and-question-everything/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/Roguethumb.gif" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-afghanistan-trust-no-one-and-question-everything/#item7586</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>We are doing the right thing in Afghanistan</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/we-are-doing-the-right-thing-in-afghanistan/</link>
            <description>Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/we-are-doing-the-right-thing-in-afghanistan/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/afghan-80897.gif" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/we-are-doing-the-right-thing-in-afghanistan/#item6995</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Maybe Dave just shouldn&#8217;t have joined the Taliban</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/umm-maybe-he-shouldnt-have-joined-the-taliban/</link>
            <description>In her excoriating review of David Hicks&#8217; memoir My Journey, ABC reporter and author Leigh Sales begins with the following assessment of the blame&#45;shifting psychology of the former Taliban recruit:



&#8220;A sentence near the end of this controversial book encapsulates David Hicks&#8217;s attitude to his stay at Guantanamo Bay on terrorism&#45;related charges:&#8216;Any and all inconvenience . . . was brought about due to my incarceration and treatment and that was at the hands of others.&#8217; 

&#8220;In other words, Hicks eschews personal responsibility. Guantanamo: My Journey is a flawed memoir, chiefly because of an astonishing lack of self&#45;reflection.&#8221;</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/umm-maybe-he-shouldnt-have-joined-the-taliban/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/anglehicksthumb.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/umm-maybe-he-shouldnt-have-joined-the-taliban/#item6549</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Pakistan has a long history of supporting terrorist groups</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/Pakistan-has-a-long-history-of-supporting-terrorist-groups/</link>
            <description>American special forces not only assassinated Osama bin Laden in their precision strike on Abbottabad. They also shot holes in Pakistan&#8217;s status as a credible and trustworthy ally in the fight against terrorism.



With the now&#45;famous words &#8220;Geronimo EKIA&#8221;, the USA&#8217;s elite SEAL Team Six gave President Barack Obama the solution to a problem that had dogged the world&#8217;s major military power for close to a decade.

However, the success of the clandestine raid also handed Obama a new dilemma which may remain with the United States for an equally long period &#8211; the question of whether it can trust Pakistan as an ally in the fight against terrorism.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/Pakistan-has-a-long-history-of-supporting-terrorist-groups/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/pakistan_thumb.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/Pakistan-has-a-long-history-of-supporting-terrorist-groups/#item5827</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Gillard deserves the benefit of the doubt on Afghanistan</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/gillard-deserves-the-benefit-of-the-doubt-on-afghanistan/</link>
            <description>Here&#8217;s some of what the Prime Minister Julia Gillard told the Parliament on October 19 this year (you can read her whole speech starting on page 692 here):



To ensure the new international strategy can be delivered, last December the United States committed to a military and civilian surge in Afghanistan. The elements  of this surge are now reaching full strength. Once fully deployed, this will take coalition force numbers to roughly 140,000. US forces on the ground have tripled since early 2009. The total force now has the resources required to deliver a comprehensive international strategy focused on counterinsurgency and designed to deliver transition.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/gillard-deserves-the-benefit-of-the-doubt-on-afghanistan/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/gillard-afghanistan-thumb.gif" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/gillard-deserves-the-benefit-of-the-doubt-on-afghanistan/#item4667</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>We&#8217;ve got the watches, they&#8217;ve got the time</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/weve-got-the-watches-theyve-got-the-time/</link>
            <description>A common saying in Afghanistan is &#8220;we&#8217;ve got the watches they&#8217;ve got the time.&#8221;&amp;nbsp; A perfect metaphor to describe the Western obsession time and the Taliban&#8217;s eternal patience.&amp;nbsp; That is why U.S Secretary of Defence, Robert Gates&#8217; statement that the United States will not be leaving Afghanistan is exactly the message to send to the Taliban.&amp;nbsp;   If you don&#8217;t have the time don&#8217;t start a war in Afghanistan. 



The simplicity of life in Afghanistan is also a camouflage for the Afghan&#8217;s ability to withstand asymmetrical threats from the climate, terrain or a foreign military.&amp;nbsp; We have failed to recognise their historical capacity to adapt.&amp;nbsp; Ahmed Rashid, one of the best contemporary authors on Afghanistan, suggests that the devastation of the Soviet invasion and subsequent civil war influenced the Taliban state of mind.&amp;nbsp;  The longer we engage the more they evolve &#8211; both politically and violently.

They know they don&#8217;t have to win the war.&amp;nbsp; They just have to outlast our domestic time constraints and out&#45;govern Karzai and his corrupt Provincial representatives.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/weve-got-the-watches-theyve-got-the-time/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/gates-smith-thumb.gif" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/weve-got-the-watches-theyve-got-the-time/#item4467</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Ending Afghanistan will aid a monstrous regime</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/end-afghanistan-and-aid-historys-most-monstrous-regime/</link>
            <description>I have listened with great interest to this week&#8217;s parliamentary debate about Australia&#8217;s involvement in Afghanistan, just as I have listened with great interest to this debate for the past nine years, since October 7th, 2001, when Operation Enduring Freedom was launched by the United States and its allies, including Australia, so that freedom so bravely won by the people of Afghanistan from communist oppression, and so cruelly lost over the following decade to civil war and Taliban misrule, may indeed return, and this time endure.



I have listened to this debate and heard many arguments that we should abandon our mission in Afghanistan.&amp;nbsp; 

Some of these arguments are passionate, others cold and rational; some seem sincere, while others callous. And all of them are wrong.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/end-afghanistan-and-aid-historys-most-monstrous-regime/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/afghanistan2_thumb.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/end-afghanistan-and-aid-historys-most-monstrous-regime/#item4360</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Nine years on, it could be another ten in Afghanistan</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/nine-years-on-it-could-be-another-ten-in-afghanistan/</link>
            <description>The beginning of the debate into Australia&#8217;s commitment to the war in Afghanistan is a refreshing exercise. 



For a cynical electorate it has provided impassioned and well reasoned political debate &#45; albeit one in which the major parties agree &#8211; and the best thing the new paradigm has provided to this Parliament. 

While Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott agreed to the need for Australia to stay in Afghanistan there were subtle differences in the arguments that they made in support of it: one given by somebody with the responsibility for the military commitment, the other from somebody with a firm belief in its ideological commitment.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/nine-years-on-it-could-be-another-ten-in-afghanistan/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/gillardafghanthumb.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/nine-years-on-it-could-be-another-ten-in-afghanistan/#item4284</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Whatever the wrongs, Blair is still right on Afghanistan</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/whatever-the-wrongs-blair-is-still-right-on-afghanistan/</link>
            <description>It is fair to say that there is a growing sense of unease in Australia about our commitment in Afghanistan. Twenty&#45;one Australian soldiers have now died. 



The latest casualty, Lance Corporal Jared MacKinney, was laid to rest just nine days ago. Five hours after his burial his widow Beckie gave birth to their second child. 

Beckie&#8217;s friend, Courier Mail journalist Jane Fynes&#45;Clinton, wrote a heartfelt but forthright column  about the broader meaning of this family&#8217;s private tragedy. She argued on behalf of her friend that Australia should honour Jared&#8217;s memory by staying the course in Afghanistan.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/whatever-the-wrongs-blair-is-still-right-on-afghanistan/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/blairthumb.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/whatever-the-wrongs-blair-is-still-right-on-afghanistan/#item4071</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Into an Afghan hot zone with a &#8216;Dustoff&#8217; crew</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/into-a-hot-zone-with-a-dustoff-crew-in-afghanistan/</link>
            <description>Advisory: The following post contains graphic content which some people may find distressing.

Everyone suffers in war. No exceptions. I have been travelling to Afghanistan now for over three years. Covering the conflict from an outsider&#8217;s perspective, not getting involved or emotionally attached to the people I photograph. This is hard. Maintaining perspective and impartialility each day is challenging.



Watching soldiers die on the battlefield for a belief in something so far remote from them, is at times very difficult. They fight because they are told to and because if they do not, they will probably be killed by an ill&#45;equipped and under trained Afghan insurgent &#45; or a farmer with a grudge and no money to feed his family.</description>
            <author>feedback@thepunch.com.au (Tory Shepherd)</author>
            <category>Article, Behind the picture</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/into-a-hot-zone-with-a-dustoff-crew-in-afghanistan/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/gra14_100.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/into-a-hot-zone-with-a-dustoff-crew-in-afghanistan/#item3971</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 01:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/taliban/">Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It&#8217;s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.

 

What are &#8216;we&#8217; doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That&#8217;s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to &#8216;win&#8217; in the first place. But before that the question is: who&#8217;s &#8216;we&#8217;? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It&#8217;s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if &#8216;we&#8217; should be there.

When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn&#8217;t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.</source>
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