When War Becomes This Personal

Last week was the deadliest one for U.S. soldiers since this war began. We know this because the headlines told us of the seven Marines who died when their KC-130 Hercules slammed into a mountain in Pakistan. But we know more than this.

We know that Staff Sergeant Scott Germosen's widow Jennifer had bought him a new wedding band, to surprise him when he came home. That Captain Daniel McCollum was a star wrestler in high school, voted "best looking" in his class. That Sergeant Jeannette Winters was the first servicewoman to die in this war. That Lance Corporal Bryan Bertrand had just re-enlisted for another tour because he didn't want to sit on the sidelines at a time like this. Last week Green Beret Nathan Ross Chapman was buried by his family: we met his widow Renae on the Today show, saw the broken-heart necklace that he had given her. And last week Lisa Beamer, widow of Todd, hero of Flight 93, had her baby, Morgan Kay, 7 lbs., 21 in. We saw the first baby pictures.

We know the children's names. We meet the parents, the best man at the wedding, the football coach, in the newspapers and on morning television. Whatever taboo made grief a private matter is for now a casualty of war. Has there ever been so intimate a reckoning as this--and not just on our side? Mohamed Atta was a scrawny kid who liked chess and got upset if someone killed a bug. Osama bin Laden was devoted to his mama and liked to drive tractors and watch nature videos. We compare his pallor from video to video to assess his failing health. This is indeed the devil we know.

When war becomes this personal, does it become harder or easier to fight? Vietnam, the first televised war, inspired as its memorial the granite wall etched with 58,175 names, an antidote to the memory of nameless nightly body counts. Since then the experts have chronicled America's "casualty aversion" through Lebanon, Somalia, Kosovo. The first President Bush was so concerned about maintaining public support during the Gulf War that shots of flag-draped coffins arriving at Dover Air Force Base were banned. The Pentagon expected tens of thousands of casualties; 148 died. The blessing of a swift victory was its curse; so few soldiers perished that it left the impression that war had been made safe, childproofed by the high-tech, high-altitude, hands-free campaign. And that this is what it takes to maintain public support.

In his speech on the Sunday the air campaign in Afghanistan began, President Bush read a letter from a fourth-grade girl. "As much as I don't want my dad to fight," she wrote, "I'm willing to give him to you." Americans, he said, were acquiring a new understanding of freedom's cost in duty and sacrifice. He acknowledged that the soldiers he was sending into battle were not just warriors but daddies; and he was sending them to fight a suicidal enemy in a country that was a garden of mines, abuzz with old U.S. Stinger missiles waiting to bring down a helicopter. No one expected them all to come home alive. But hardly anyone said not to send them.

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ESFANDIAR RAHIM-MASHAIE, head of staff for Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, after five British sailors were detained for drifting into Iranian waters

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