Quote:
	
	
		
			
				
					Originally Posted by  SOTB
					 
				 
				Damn.When I was in, I never saw a situation where units were denied support.  I'm not about to state that it never happened or would never happen -- just that I never once saw it. 
 
Fast forward a decade or so, and I'm a civvie in a strange situation.  I have people working for me that are armed, I'm in a war zone, and I am not a mil guy nor on any fixed contract with fixed rules -- and beholden to no one.  I have had the opportunity on more than one occasion to respond to mil units needing support and fortunately, everything worked out OK.  Still, when we went in -- it never dawned on me not to.  This has nothing to do with being a badass -- I simply didn't even have the possibility of refusing assisting in my BHG -- call it stupidity or whatever. 
 
Granted, having no rules isn't a great way to run a war -- but I certainly would not have wanted to be on the opposite end of the extreme and in the situation that Capt Swenson and his men were.... 
			
		 | 
	
	
 I think part of the problem was we were fighting a war that had no clear measurable objectives.  A lot of commanders failed to grasp the importance of taking the fight to the enemy and killing as many of those motherfuckers as possible(which experts are now saying is a key part of making COIN work - but I'm not claiming to be an expert).  They started seeing it as a two-way live fire JRTC rotation.  Emphasis was placed on safety and OERs instead of war fighting.  Reflective belts are a good example.  Another would be that under 4-4 we had to wear eye protection anytime we were outside of a building.  So in a warzone, we had to put on safety glasses to go take a piss at 3 AM - even if we were on a secure FOB.
I think that mentality had a trickle down effect, and it caused a lot of officers(and senior NCOs) to focus too much on "the rules" and not enough on fighting a war.  That mentality then pervaded down to the platoon level in some cases, and that was it.
I didn't get a chance to work with too many other platoons downrange, but I know that had it been any of the three rifle platoons in my company we would have went in.  The officers were pretty squared away and a lot of the NCOs were on their second or third deployments and were short timers.  If they wanted to bring us up on UCMJ for disobeying a chickenshit order in order to help out fellow Americans in a dire situation then so be it.  And like you said, it's not about being a badass - it's just incomprehensible that you would do anything else.  When I heard that the mounted platoon didn't move in one of the first things I thought of was, "How the fuck do you live with yourself after that?"  I'd rather die trying than live with the shame.