Anonymous ID: 8fb6fb Sept. 4, 2021, 12:26 p.m. No.95646   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5778

>>95645

 

filtered version of the Kabul rescue mission looks nothing like what really went down

 

"I haven't found a way to explain it with any words I know," one Marine said.

 

More than 1,000 photos and 60 videos were taken by U.S. military photographers during the evacuation of Afghanistan, but few captured what those chaotic days and nights must have been like for American troops as they attempted to rescue as many people as possible from a seemingly never-ending crowd of desperate Afghans outside the walls of Kabul’s airport.

 

Now, thanks to a U.S. Marine’s GoPro-shot deployment video, we can see the other side.

 

The appearance of an orderly and “responsible withdrawal” from Afghanistan comes as no surprise since military photographers are trained on what not to make public and are often told to avoid showing the uncomfortable parts of war. And even when they do capture the realities of combat operations — with the swearing, the unbloused boots and ripped trousers, the shaggy hair and gallows humor, to say nothing of the anger, confusion, and aggression — that version of events rarely makes it through the gauntlet of public affairs officers reviewing outgoing stories, photos, and videos to ensure they align with the “command message” of the day. The visual record of Iraq and Afghanistan has long been filtered through a Department of Defense website where very little goes against the “very specific narrative” the government wants to promote, as one public affairs soldier put it. No profanity or smoking, stick to the hearts and minds stuff, and absolutely no casualties….

 

https://taskandpurpose.com/news/afghanistan-withdrawal-marine-video/