A Poem by William H. McRaven: ‘Departing Afghanistan’

May 27, 2024
The Atlantic has usually channeled the sources of poetry—its charged and quick patterns of language—to mourn and memorialize the warfare useless. The earliest years of the journal spanned the Civil Battle, throughout which the editors revealed dirges, elegies, and ballads that instructed tales to console, to heal, to hearten. An elegy for Rupert Brooke took the sonnet into a brand new, fashionable vernacular on the time of the First World Battle. In October 1944, the journal put collectively a portfolio of Soldier Verse; 1960, The Atlantic revealed Robert Lowell’s “For the Union Lifeless,” a poem that displays on the makes use of of monuments and memorials.“Departing Afghanistan” continues and deepens this legacy. William H. McRaven, a retired Navy admiral and the previous commander of U.S. Particular Operations Command, wrote “Departing Afghanistan” in June 2021, previous to the evacuation in August.The poem emerges from a interval of deep reflection and private soul-searching: Had all of the losses, over 20 years, been well worth the combat? In its emphasis on the expertise of service members, and in its haunting chorus, “Departing Afghanistan” gives neither a protection nor a proof. In any case, the choice to go to Afghanistan and to depart Afghanistan was by no means the choice of the service members.As an alternative, for this Memorial Day, Admiral McRaven gives a probing inquiry and a sustaining melody—and a message to the service members that, as McRaven put it to me: “for twenty years they fought with braveness and convictions, they saved Individuals secure and they need to don't have any regrets as we depart Afghanistan.”— Walt HunterThe Hindu Kush will probably be quiet now,silence will come to the traditional lands.The roar of the planeswill fade within the eveningas we depart Afghanistan.The students will chide usand the pundits will pan,why did...

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