Tag Archives: war

One soldier: five reports of his death

How many times do we ‘kill’ our casualties in Afghanistan? Last Friday, the 100th British soldier this year from the Helmand theatre of war was buried with full military honours at St Mary’s Lowe House Church in St Helens, Merseyside.
Christopher Davies was a 22-year-old Irish Guardsman killed in a Taliban ambush in Helmand Province on 17 November.

He’s now a poignant statistic in the increasingly unpopular Western war against the Taliban insurgency. Yet his death – and that of fellow soldiers – may be reported up to five separate times each, leading to public perceptions of the casualty list being bigger than the reality thanks to the ‘media multiplication effect’. Writes John Mair…

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The Railways of War: “Longer, Bloodier and More Extensive”

Christian Wolmar, one of the leading commentators on transport matters, gave a special treat last Thursday to the Coventry Conversations audience.

Wolmar has an interesting array of work, from Unlocking the Gridlock (1997) to Broken Rails (2001) to name of a few, of which he gave the audience a preview of his latest book Engines of War (2010).

Engine’s of War explores the ignored aspect of military wars; railways. Wolmar revealed that almost all wars in the 19th century used railways as the primary method of transport. Railways changed the logistics of war, but did we really know that until now? Writes Natasha De Silva…

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