Ottawa Citizen

A retired officer found soldiers shaken by the act of killing

- TOM BLACKWELL

The aftermath of his troops’ first firefight in Afghanista­n was a rude awakening for Dave Quick.

Clearly, the soldiers were superbly equipped for the physical demands of their combat “christenin­g,” but when the Canadians approached the insurgents they had just killed, that level-headed confidence seemed to crumble.

Some giggled nervously, gagged or trembled at the sight.

“In those instances around the dead, they looked like insecure little kids," says Quick, who commanded a Royal Canadian Regiment company that would see numerous firefights over the next six months. "Their voices changed, their hands were — some of them — shaking.”

It was a harbinger of the emotional fallout — including deep unease over experienci­ng actual sexual arousal during combat — that many of Quick’s soldiers would feel around their core business: killing the enemy. Intense training made them effective at taking Taliban lives, but never prepared them for the psychologi­cal after-effects, the now-retired officer details in a surprising, unpublishe­d master’s thesis for the National Defence Department’s staff college.

As hundreds of Afghanista­n veterans grapple with mental-health troubles, and Canadian troops are again seeing action in a far-off land, Quick says training needs to ready infantry troops for what they may feel after they kill — as well teaching them how to do it efficientl­y.

“Armies succeed in tricking soldiers into killing with modern training methods,” he wrote in his thesis. “I realized that I had failed to prepare my soldiers properly when I watched them react to the realizatio­n that they had killed a man for the very first time.”

Quick, 41, has since retired as an army lieutenant colonel and is starting a new career in the somewhat tamer world of investment banking. He and his troops had lots of experience with inflicting death, however.

During a six-month stint in 2007 — assigned to ferret Taliban out of Zhari District west of Kandahar city — they had 24 planned operations and many other impromptu ones with “lethal effect.”

I briefly met Quick, then a major, when I joined India Company on one of its operations in the district’s atypically muggy and jungle-like farmland. Padding around in sandals and T-shirt between missions, the engaging, boyish-looking native of Trenton, Ont., seemed almost as much surfer dude as crack combat leader.

Remarkably, all 400 of his soldiers went home alive, a feat that helped earn him the Star of Military Valour, second only to the Victoria Cross in Canadian military honours.

But he clearly remains disturbed that a quarter were injured both psychologi­cally and physically.

Across the army, it is estimated that hundreds of Afghan veterans are suffering some kind of “operationa­l stress injury,” the blame often attributed to the trauma of being severely injured or seeing friends hurt.

The impact of having to kill others has received relatively little attention.

That impact was hard to avoid during the in-your-face combat Quick and his troops fought in Zhari. Their opponents set off bombs that killed and maimed indiscrimi­nately, terrorized civilians and pushed an uncompromi­sing, harsh brand of Islam. Yet the fighters themselves were often no more than 17, frequently jacked up on stimulants and, dead on the battlefiel­d, seemed less than fearsome.

“They’re not like our kids. They’re not strong, well-nourished people … They’re teeny,” says Quick. “When you see them laying there, it’s surreal. They’re little, frail drug addicts.”

After that first firefight, he made sure that the soldiers who did the kills would not have to “process” the same bodies — remove material that could offer up intelligen­ce and place them in body bags.

Yet even when there was no direct link between killing and the resultant corpse, the act resonated.

Fighting was so close, one of Quick’s captains dropped a grenade over a wall and virtually on top of a Talib. A Canadian sniper had to shoot an insurgent high on drugs repeatedly from close range to bring him down.

“The intimacy was always there,” Quick says. “There was very much a connection, listening to them change magazines, listening to them talk while you’re sneaking up on them. Listening to the prayers. It’s not a target at that point, it’s not a paper target.”

One time, they discovered a slain Taliban commander had been recording his own voice as the Canadians converged on his position. “He was speaking as a commander and at the same time giving thanks to Allah and finding peace. Until there was no more talking.”

Quick says some soldiers were “very freaked out” after experienci­ng a bizarre side-effect of combat: sexual arousal during firefights that can include erections.

Others, including a devout Christian who seemed to be questionin­g his faith, just “really wrestled” with having to kill.

It appears the military is addressing some of Quick’s concerns in its mental-readiness training — to a point. The 30-minute “psychologi­cal preparatio­n” module includes “understand­ing the complicati­ons of combat and killing,” and “common reactions to killing and adverse situations” — as well as eight other topics.

 ?? CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA ?? Dave Quick says with Canadian troops seeing action far away, they need better training to deal with the fallout.
CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA Dave Quick says with Canadian troops seeing action far away, they need better training to deal with the fallout.
 ?? ETHAN BARON/POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Canadian soldiers respond to incoming fire in Helmand Province, Afghanista­n in 2006. Canadian troops are again seeing action in a far-off land and the mental-health issue that emerge.
ETHAN BARON/POSTMEDIA NEWS Canadian soldiers respond to incoming fire in Helmand Province, Afghanista­n in 2006. Canadian troops are again seeing action in a far-off land and the mental-health issue that emerge.

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