Guest guest Posted March 9, 2004 Report Share Posted March 9, 2004 Hi y'all, The below is, for most civilians, a little known but important mission of American forces. It is not a secondary mission .. but a primary mission for certain elements. It was common to have 15-20 CIVAC/MEDAC Teams in the bushes during any given day in Vietnam. I have accompanied many such teams and I always respected the dedication of the medics. Are they appreciated? Generally they are .. but its difficult to cross cultural barriers and in some cases, difficult to gain the confidence of peoples who for generations have feared officials of any government. It is, however, a welcomed approach from some other campaigns they have witnessed prior to American teams arriving in the area .. which were more like, " Let us win your hearts and minds or we will slaughter your stock and burn your homes down. " There is nothing political about this .. its informative .. like it or not its reality .. and I hope it will interest some people on the list. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Army Veterinarians Make a Field Call Whirlwind Treatment of Afghan Herds Aims to Win Hearts of Rural People By Pamela Constable Washington Post Foreign Service Sunday, March 7, 2004; Page A16 GOSHTA DISTRICT, Afghanistan -- The village square seemed deserted when the U.S. military convoy arrived, except for a dog or two snoozing in the sun. But as word started to spread, a lone boy approached on the back of a rickety donkey. Then a girl appeared pulling a balky heifer on a rope. By noon Monday the spot was swarming with herds of sheep and goats, the air was filled with panicked bleats and cowboy whoops, and mayhem reigned. American and Afghan veterinarians chased runaway oxen, wrestled recalcitrant cows and straddled goats like bicycles, expertly squirting syringes of yellow goo into the animals' mouths and then letting them go. The chief targets of the mission in this remote rural district of Nangahar province were intestinal worms, liver flukes and especially foot-and-mouth disease, the highly contagious virus that is the scourge of Afghan livestock. In some areas, it is reported to kill up to 40 percent of all infant sheep, goats and cows. " The Afghan herds have been devastated by years of war and drought, and we can only treat a fraction of the animals. But if we can boost the calf and lamb crop by 10 percent, it will have a measurable impact on the economy and on the lives of thousands of families, " said Col. Lyle Jackson, the chief veterinarian on the four-day mobile mission that aimed to win Afghan hearts and minds in this agrarian region through the treatment of hooves and muzzles. The project, which took a U.S. Army civil affairs team to several villages and nomad camps, served multiple purposes for U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. By providing free medicines to impoverished herdsmen and farmers, it sowed goodwill in a politically sensitive area near the Pakistani border, which Islamic terrorists are widely believed to use as a safe haven. As the doctors squirted de-wormer and injected liver fluke vaccine, accompanying troops also distributed leaflets in Afghan dialects that encouraged people to support the U.S.-backed central government, brush their teeth and wash their hands, learn English and oppose terrorism, especially the burning of schools. At one point, an American civilian who identified himself as the regional counterterrorism director drove into the middle of a noisy and chaotic roundup. Flanked by armed agents, he schmoozed with the district police chief and posed for photos with a flock of goats. " It's all part of the same picture. If people cooperate with us and make their areas secure, we help them, " the man explained. It was clear that Goshta, poor and parched but no needier than many other rural Afghan districts, had been rewarded for promising to keep out or inform on any American enemies. The mission was fully prepared for attack, with armored Humvees leading and following the convoy of SUVs and trucks. Before setting out each morning from Jalalabad, the provincial capital three hours' drive to the west, a sergeant reminded the team what to do in case of ambush. Jackson said that on a previous mission in southern Afghanistan, an explosive device had been detonated as his convoy passed. But this time, the radio chatter from the lead Humvee warned of purely pastoral obstacles on the dusty, jolting roads of Goshta: a camel caravan on the right, a cargo truck stuck in the mud, a file of ducks crossing the road. At each village or camp, medical treatment for humans was offered as well, with Army doctors setting up makeshift exam sites near the veterinary operations and giving cursory exams to hundreds of people. But many patients were suffering from chronic problems the doctors could not treat, from cancer to infertility. A teenaged nomad girl was carried from the hills on a donkey; she crawled into a tent clinic on legs shriveled from polio. Dozens of children suffered from badly stunted growth, and elders said malaria and tuberculosis were common. An old man had an enormous tumor on his hand. Many children had worms, and half the patients said they had never been vaccinated. While privately alarmed at much of what they saw, the American visitors refrained from criticizing local practices, such as tattooing joints to cure arthritis. Women surrounded by a half-dozen filthy children were greeted with sympathetic smiles and simple questions like, " Where does it hurt? " In most cases, the doctors reached into their portable medicine chests and handed out packets of vitamins, aspirin, allergy pills or cough medicine. For serious illnesses they advised people to travel to the hospital in Jalalabad, three hours away in a fast truck, though they knew few would ever make the trip. " I've been married 10 years, but I have no children, " whispered one nomad woman, reluctantly lifting her veil so a female doctor could see her. The doctor shrugged and gave her an extra-large package of vitamins. Outside the tent, illiterate women compared the mysterious pills and children fought over their brand-new toothbrushes, the first they had ever seen. " People do have unrealistic expectations when they see us, " said Col. Dalton Diamond, the senior Army doctor on the mission. " There is only so much we can do. With the animals, we are giving medicine. With the people, we are mostly giving hope. " Focused on the revival of herding as a mainstay of Afghanistan's devastated rural economy, the team set out to de-worm and vaccinate as many sheep, goats and cattle as possible. Working at a hectic pace for four days, they ran out of medicine twice and ultimately treated more than 10,000 quadrupeds. In addition to short-term immunization, Jackson said there were two long-range benefits to the project. First, if Afghan herds are replenished, it may help deter families from growing opium poppies, a major source of farm income nationwide. Last week, as the convoy wound through Nangahar's isolated roads, it passed endless fields of green poppy plants ripening in the sun. Second, the team collected animal blood samples to be analyzed in the United States so a more efficient vaccine can be developed to fight Afghan strains of foot-and-mouth disease, which mutates constantly and is considered the country's top agricultural problem. In one Goshta village, a farmer shyly approached the team and said he had a cow at home with " tabak, " as Afghans know the disease. Jackson hopped in his SUV and drove out to investigate. As it turned out, the cow was suffering from foot rot as a result of standing in mud and water, but Jackson took a blood sample anyway while an Afghan vet, Mohammed Qasim, swabbed iodine on the cow's sore feet. Although their primary purpose was to treat ruminants, or grazing livestock, the vets made a diplomatic point of trying to help all four-legged patients the villagers brought in, including dogs with bloody stumps for ears and donkeys with deep hip sores from carrying too many heavy loads. Here again, the Americans tried not to be openly critical of local customs, such as burning marks on donkeys to prevent lameness, slicing their nostrils to make them breathe more deeply, and cutting off dogs' ears to make them fight better. The trickiest animals to treat were camels, the ships of Afghan nomad culture. As a practical matter, Jackson and other strapping male soldiers tackled those ornery patients with plungers full of goop, while Maj. Trudy Salerno, a petite veterinarian in the Army Reserve, helped newborn calves find their mothers and start nursing. This was also no easy task, since the nervous herds kept darting in different directions while their owners argued over whose turn for de-worming was next, and leathery nomad women in swirling dresses threw rocks at the animals to keep them from mingling until each had been medicated and sprayed with bright purple paint. When the work was done, the herdsmen seemed satisfied, though some asked whether the vaccines would damage their animals' milk. Elders sipping tea in their tents expressed other concerns, saying landowners no longer let them graze freely, and that they felt more pressure to settle down. " We don't want to bother anyone, but our life gets harder and harder, " said Sun Dai, a nomad leader who had gathered a dozen herdsmen and their flocks for the clinic on a barren, rocky plain. " We cannot find land and water. The rain comes into our tents. Our children can't go to school. " People want to leave this life now. " But for the American visitors, camped for a few days in the Afghan wilderness, with no sounds but tinkling goat bells and lowing animals for miles in any direction, the harsh beauty of the surroundings seemed like a brief and faraway dream. " Yesterday we treated more than 3,000 animals and delivered a baby camel, " Jackson said as the convoy prepared to set out at dawn one morning. " This is the most exhausted I've ever been, and the most fun I've ever had. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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