In some of my earlier posts I made references to the
changing face of warfare in association with globalization. I made an argument more towards the fight
against idea’s and traditional states. I also made the case towards needing to
reeducate the military and civic leadership around types of conflicts they
would need to manage on a go forward basis, and as a part of this I called out
the probable need for additional special forces vs large traditional armies.
I recently read Operation Certain Death by Damien Lewis (and
highly recommend it) about the SAS rescue of British Soldiers held captive by
drug-crazed the drug crazed rebel group The West Side Boys in the Sierra Leone
jungle.
http://www.amazon.com/Operation-Certain-Death-Damien-Lewis/dp/0099466422/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/105-6828698-5270064?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1181703192&sr=8-1
If you saw the movie Blood Diamond, then you were introduced
to the concepts of Blood Diamonds, Mercenary Soldiers and Child Soldier all
struggling together in the torment that has become Africa.
http://www.cinemanow.com/Buy/Movies/1007,0,5,,1,2,0/1001,0,5,,1,2,147974/Blood-Diamond-(WB).htm
It is interesting that earlier this year was sitting with a
friend of mine is very close friends with the former head of the SAS and found
our thinking to be remarkably aligned. I have included sections of Appendix 1:
Analysis here from the book Operation Certain Death along with my comments as
think they are incredibly relevant to debate on globalization.
Appendix 1: Analysis
Everything changed with the end of the Cold War. Up to then
we knew what we had to do and we knew who the potential enemy was and we could
train and prepare accordingly. Now it’s all guesswork.
- General Sir Peter Inge, Chief of Defense Staff, 1996
The Sierra Leonean hostage crises and Operation Barras was a
huge media story at the time. But when starved of material to report, the press
can be fickle, and the attention of the world media soon moved on to other
events. It was hardly surprising. In the aftermath of the assault, none of the
eleven British hostages was at any time presented to the news-hungry press
pack. And few, if any, of the British soldiers who comprised the Operation
Barras assault force were inclined to talk to the media, either. The
journalists reporting the story at the time secured their ‘eyewitness accounts’
of the assult on Gberi Bana either from the West Side Boys’ survivors (even
Foday Kallay himself, speaking from prison), or from other Sierra Leoneans –
namely Corporal Mousa and the village ‘recruits.’ No press access was given to
the British side of the story. In this world of instant news the attention span
of the public is increasingly short-lived, and the press soon lost interest.
And that, it seemed, was to be the end of the story.
Note: British SAS and Para forces raided the West Side
Boys compound early in the morning when they were hung over. Foday Kallay was
their self proclaimed leader, Corporal Mousa was captured along with the
British soldiers and being held captive and the village ‘recruits’ were young
people who were being forcefully inducted into the West Side Boys rebel group
and were identified by the special forces and spared where ever possible during
the raid.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Side_Boys
The hostage-taking and subsequent rescue placed the British
establishment on the horns of a dilemma: it was a daring and audacious assault
by Britain’s finest troops that showed the British military at its best; but at
the same time the capture of eleven, heavily armed British soldiers by a
renegade band of rebels did quite the opposite. At the time, the British
establishment’s position on the hostage crisis and rescue assault appear
confused. Was this to be a chapter in British military history to be
celebrated, or shunned? Was it something of which the British people should be
proud, or somewhat ashamed? Did the “Barras” of operation Barras stand for the
embarrassment of the West Side Boys, or of the British forces taken hostage (as
a Sierra Leone newspaper had suggested)? When the furor of the capture and
rescue had died down, the story looked set to fade away into obscurity. And the
British soldiers involved – hostages and rescuers alike – went quietly back to
their regiments to continue to do their duty.
The press reports at the time were often, and somewhat
understandably, inaccurate. Newspaper articles has ‘SBS frogmen emerging out of
the river to attack the rebel base’’ the SAS abseiling through the roof of the
hostage building’, and Foday Kallay ‘strutting about in the captured British
soldiers’ uniform’. In the research that I have carried out for the writing of
this book, I have come across just one authoritative account of the assault,
written a year after the event. Richard Connaughton, formerly the British
Army’s head of Defence Studies and now a security consultant, wrote a short
article entitled “Operation Barras’ in the academic journal Small Wars &
Insurgencies. It is a brief and somewhat dry account of what he describes as
‘an audacious and brilliantly executed joint operation’. At the same time, he
points to the ‘serious and embarrassing setback when 11 British soldiers and
their Sierra Leonean liaison offer were taken hostage by a bandit group’. Other
than that far from widely read publication, the story of the hostage crisis and
Operation Barras seemed to have disappeared without trace.
Which is a pity, because this is a story that needs to be
told. In fact, it demands to be shouted from the rooftops, not just because it
is a compelling human tale, but because men risked their lives and were injured
– and died – doing their duty. Clearly, there were acts of great and
exceptional fortitude and heroism among the men of the British assault force,
who went into the rebel base heavily outnumbered and succeeded in rescuing the
hostages. But the real courage that emerges from the pages of this book lies as
much with the hostages themselves – ordinary soldiers thrown into a horrific
situation, who rose to the terrible challenges they faced with a dignity and
integrity of which they should feel proud.
There are perhaps two types of courage in this world:
physical courage and moral courage. Whereas the men who assaulted the rebel
base did what they had been trained to do, and exhibited immense and
extraordinary physical courage in the process, the British soldiers taken
hostage were thrown into a completely alien environment for which their
training could never have prepared them. As such, they had the choice to
proceed with moral cowardice or moral courage, and almost without exception
they chose to do the latter. Despite the powerlessness of their situation,
despite the depravity and terror they faced from the rebels on a daily, almost
hourly, basis, they retained their principle, their values, their solidarity
and their beliefs, even when they could have been killed for doing so. Not for
one moment did they ever allow their actions or behaviour to sink to the same
level of meaningless horror and evil as the rebels. And it would have been so
easy for them to have done so. That is what saw them through their terrible
ordeal, and that is what helped save them.
In the telling of their story there is also the opportunity,
indeed the need, to discuss the wider issues thrown up by this short chapter on
the history of suffering in a country like Sierra Leone. That discussion in
part concerns our response to the demands of international peacekeeping in
strife-torn regions across Africa and in the wider, conflict-torn world. In
fact, the story of the British military intervention in Sierra Leone has many
lessons to offer us in an increasingly insecure world…