Reader Response Example A
Anonymous
Mr.
Koch
English
9
March
2015
Lone Survivor: A Tribute, and
Analysis
Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of
Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10 is a non-fiction book
written by novelist Patrick Robinson and former SEAL Marcus Luttrell, the only
survivor of a mission in Afghanistan in 2005. Seal Team 10 was tasked with
three other SEAL members to kill a high-profile Taliban commander . His story
eventually became the basis of his book, which has now turned into a movie.
The book starts with Luttrell describing
his childhood in Texas training to become a Navy SEAL, with Billy Shelton, a
neighbor and former Green Beret. After joining the U.S. Navy, and finishing
BUD/S training to become a SEAL, Luttrell heads to Afghanistan, undergoing
several operations around the country before heading to the Hindu Kush
mountains of the Kunar province for Operation Red Wings. He and his team,
consisting of Lieutenant Michael “Mikey” Murphy, Gunner’s Mate Second Class
Danny Dietz, and Sonar Technician Second Class Matthew “Axe” Axelson, were
tasked to gather reconnaissance on a village and capture or kill a head Taliban
member, who was said to be affiliated with Osama Bin Laden and the 9/11 attack.
On a night during their mission, while
hiding out, the team was discovered by three sheepherders, including a boy. The
team debated killing the shepherds silently and hiding the bodies, which was
the most millitary sound way to not compromise their mission. However, after
considering the rules of engagement, they decided to let them go (the shepherds
were unarmed and not posing a threat currently). However, the shepherds
notified their presence to the Taliban, and about an hour later, SEAL Team 10
was surrounded by dozens of armed warriors under heavy fire. Three of the four
men were killed, leaving Luttrell the only one to survive the firefight, but
not after one of his attempts to contact the SEAL combat operation centers
succeeded. A quick-reaction rescue team consisting of 16 special forces
soldiers were sent to extract SDV-1; however, their Chinook helicopter was shot
down by the Taliban with a RPG-7 rocket propelled grenade to the chopper’s rear
rotor assembly, leaving no survivors. Luttrell was left unconscious and
sustained a number of fractures and other serious wounds. After he regained
consciousness, he was rescued by local Pashtun villagers, who treated his
wounds and ultimately saved his life.
One of the main motifs shown in this book
is Luttrell’s frustration at the rules of engagement (RoE) which, indirectly,
resulted in the death of 19 American lives. These rules state that no force
should be used against unarmed civilians, if they are not presently posing a
threat to your safety. When SDV-1 was discovered by the sheepherders, Team
Leader Mike Murphy decided to hold a vote in which SDV-1 decided to let them
go, since the team may have been considered violating the RoE and possibly
being sentenced to life in prison for their actions. If the team did kill the
shepherds, then at the very least they would have been ridiculed and criticized
by the media, even in the circumstances they had. When describing the situation
and his vote, he states, “I had turned into a f-----g liberal, a half-a----d,
no-logic nitwit, all heart, no brain, and the judgement of a jackrabbit… At
least, that’s how I look back on those moments now. Probably not then, but for
nearly every waking hour of my life since.”
Marcus
Luttrell’s story also shows that war is not glorious but evil, no matter which
way you put it, and people will die on both sides of the conflict. He also
makes a point that when you try to make war “clean,” and “civilized,” you won’t
win. Terrorists will stop at nothing to achieve their cause, we can see that
everywhere from the acts of ISIL to the Taliban and Al Qaeda. Were it so easy
to make that decision, for SDV-1 to be sure with the fact that the most
militarily sound option was also the “right” option, this book would have been
very different. Luttrell believes that if there was no fear of what may happen
to them back home in the United States, SEAL Team 10 would have made it out
alive, mission accomplished. However, nothing can change the fact that his team
is gone, and so, deeply rooted in this book is his deep sorrow for his friends
and his guilt as the sole survivor. Going on a long journey across America,
Luttrell visited every family whose son, and in some cases, father, died to
honor him and tell them of his last moments. The book closes with a word from
Luttrell, saying, “I will never give up on the memory of those nineteen men who
lost their lives on the mountain that day, because they never gave up on me.”
Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of
Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10, is a stirring tribute to
Axe, Mikey, Danny, and the rest of the fallen soldiers who made the ultimate
sacrifice for their country, and I would recommend this book to anyone who has
relatives in the military services, or is aspiring to join the military. It’s
very well-written, yet easy to read, and is very powerful. The only problem
some people have with the book is regarding the actual numbers of Taliban
forces (it’s disputed whether there were actually 120 to 200 Taliban, or if
that was an exaggeration. Nevertheless, Lone Survivor is an amazing and riveting
book. Hospital Corpsman Marcus Luttrell went back into the tour of duty in
Afghanistan after he recovered from his wounds until he was medically
discharged from the Navy in 2007. Mohammed Ismail, the target of Operation Red
Wings, was killed during a firefight in 2008.
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