Posting news of the eight US troops reported killed in Afghanistan today in the deadliest month of fighting since this war began, I had what one might call a slip of the eye.
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Reading the Associated Press report, I read the following
Eight American troops were killed in multiple bomb attacks Tuesday in southern Afghanistan, making October the deadliest month for U.S. forces in the Afghan War.
I was struck by seeing the capitalized โWโ. As a guy who deals in words and phrases, this jumped out at me. Upon further inspection, the โwโ in question had not been capitalized. But in my mind, the trail had been blazed.
After eight years, itโs hard to continue to think of this as โthe war in Afghanistan.โ
People may think of such phrasing as an afterthought, merely an arbitrary use of long-form language. But itโs not. Itโs a spelled-out phrasing that softens the reality of the blood being spilled on both sides. โThe war in Afghanistanโ sounds heroic; adventurous in the way Lawrence of Arabia does. โThe war in Afghanistanโ sounds noble.
A control of Language is power and in this instance, itโs being made just long enough, just soft enough, to keep us from doing the wartime mathematics that shortening and capitalization tends to bring about.
The Afghan War.
The Afghan War? It still sounds kind of interesting because โAfghanโ is kind of fun to sayโlike Aflac, but notโbut the endingโwarโis so abrupt that it adds a splash of cold reality and to the whole thing. Just say โthe Afghan Warโ aloud. Sounds a lot more serious all of a sudden, right?
In reading, itโs somehow more ominous. The Afghan War. Capital โwโ wars are so much more historic, so much more factual and lack that triumphal feel.
(Of course the exception here is World War II, but thatโs due to: using โworldโ before warโwhich only helps add to the theatrical element, being a sequel, America not having to sacrifice any of its land, two atom bombs, America emerging as a superpower and the suppression of what really, really went down until long after the whole thing was well over. But I digress.)
Capital โwโ wars have winners ans losers and consequences. Capital โwโ wars can define legacies. And they totally lack the righteously expeditious qualities of a war in Afghanistan.
But this isnโt a righteous expedition. Itโs a War.
This is the Afghan War. Itโll be in textbooks and everything.
โJONATHAN PITTS-WILEY
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