Preface: LtCol S.x MacTemplar -Shadow Warrior

Where to begin? It seems that war is just too big of a topic for Hollywood to handle in 90-110 minutes. Go figure. I know I can’t do it justice in 300-plus pages, either, but it will be more accurate than anything Hollywood can dish up.

I suspect what people want from Hollywood is to take the viewer from innocent civilian to battle-hardened soldier and back again. Do we really want Hollywood to tell us about Charlie’s war in Afghanistan or are we more interested in the conflicts within the soul of the Lion of Panjshir?

Modern war movies seem to be more about telling the story within the story. The other problem with movies is that there is no smell, except of popcorn and spilled fountain drinks. Try to imagine the real smells of war. Then smell the “imagined” ones of fear and death. Do death and fear have a scent? Is it a bad thing if you don’t know the answer to that question?

We are all fascinated with war. It is tribalism at its worst and unveils the darkness within each of our souls. That is why scenes from The Deer Hunter are so hard to watch. We realize that war can take good, decent, and normal people to dark places from which they never can fully return. The movies that touch us the most are those that teach us new ways to think about the common man turned warrior. What makes him take on these unbearable loads? Imagine the burden of command, the weight of a nation upon your very flawed and weak mind and body.

What if, after great personal sacrifice and loss, your president gives away with the stroke of his pen the victory soaked in the blood of your friends and the Marines who believed in you enough to follow your not-always-perfect orders?

Why is war hell? you ask. War is hell because of how the Ruling Class mocks the sacrifices of our warriors. Then there is survivor’s guilt thrown in for good measure.

The best modern war movies do not try to explain war or even human nature. What they do is try to provide a glimpse into the impenetrable psychic conflicts that modern warfare weighs upon the American grunt. One reason that Saving Private Ryan did not really work after the opening scenes is because Tom Hanks was miscast in his role as an infantry officer. He could not and did not give us any sense, other than a shaking hand, of what it is like to order good men to their deaths. The only relief from the burden of command in combat is one’s own death, but in dying what if your replacement is an even more flawed human specimen?

In other words, you have asked me, the Soldier, to go to places and do things for you there that you cannot do for yourself. I have been there and done things as ordered. I am forever changed and not always for the better.

Before spending nearly 30 years in the defense of the greatest nation on Earth’s history, I enjoyed the life of a carefree vagabond with nine lives to give. Now I battle 24/7/11 with tyrants. Tyranny is a beast that cannot be killed but only brought to heel.

Your dilemma is whether or not to accept me as I now am or pretend that you have nothing to do with what I have become. I did not start out this way. I know freedom is not free and that our nation is worth the sacrifice but at what human cost? There is no butcher’s bill too great, physically and/or psychologically, we are unwilling to allow our warriors to pay.

Finally, how do you make sure that America will remain worthy of my efforts to defend her? Will I be mocked in the end by my fellow citizens turning the greatest nation on Earth into something that was not worth fighting, killing, and dying for?

16 thoughts on “Preface: LtCol S.x MacTemplar -Shadow Warrior

  1. Thank you is so inadequate, but Thank you for everything you have done, Simon, and Thank you for writing about it. The world needs desperately to hear what you are saying.

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    1. The ‘world’ is a lot more interested in stalking, deplatforming, slandering, libeling, and generally lying about me while completely forgetting any good deed and/or miracle (His power not mine) they may have observed me perform.

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  2. Love this. Now,.let’s see the book. Do NOT be discouraged, your story must be told. I can’t think of any other work we have that could rival it. Excelsior!!

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    1. The good news about this is that kind and loving revisionists all over the blogosphere are already hard at work debunking my (his)story.

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    2. Thanks Hypatia but I get the feeling more people are interested in cockblocking me than learning the real history of the US DOD’s counterdrug riverine mission in the five Andean ridge nations.

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      1. Judging by the reaction I’ve seen to Doug Kimball’s book about your avatar’s adventures, I really don’t think this is true, sir…..

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  3. I am thinking we need to disband the Green Berets due to their complete and utter failure to free the oppressed in Cuba, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Venezuela just to name a few in the western hemisphere.

    Change my mind.

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  4. Truth that gets more true every day, ST! I’m with Hypatia: Get the book out there in the world! (If Andy Milburn can do it, so can you.) 🙂 if we disband the Green Berets, does the same thing need to happen with other Special Operators? (Question asked out of interest; I’ve been listening to various podcasts during my convalescence.)

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      1. RESPECT, in both the cited instances, ST, point taken….concerns about the cultural climate since then….More in the other reply in answer to your question about podcasts.

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      1. Re; learning from podcasts/news coverage over the last couple years here: The Eddie Gallagher court-martial; and DJT’s restoration of his trident. A SEAL platoon recalled from Iraq in ’19 for alleged sexual assault and drinking. More concerns about lack of discipline, that could impact operational success….Civilian perspective, grant you, that’s why I’d welcome yours, if you want.

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