San Antonio Express-News

After once trying to kill each other, a Marine and an Afghan meet again

- By Thomas Gibbons-neff

MARJAH, Afghanista­n — The tea was hot. The room, oppressive and dusty. And the Taliban commander I sat across from in a bulletscar­red building in southern Afghanista­n had tried to kill me a little over a decade ago.

As I had tried to kill him. We both remember that morning well: Feb. 13, 2010, Marjah district, Helmand province. We were about the same age: 22. It was very cold.

Mullah Abdul Rahim Gulab was part of a group of Taliban fighters trying to defend the district from the thousands of U.S., coalition and Afghan troops sent to seize an important Taliban stronghold. He didn’t know it when we recently met, but I was a corporal in a company of Marines that his fighters attacked that winter morning so many years ago.

With the insurgents’ victory in that 20-year war secured this summer, Gulab, now a high-level commander, was sitting with me in Marjah’s government headquarte­rs, a mess of a building the Americans had refurbishe­d years ago.

I was his guest, along with two of my colleagues from the New York Times. I told him that the fight for Marjah had been important in the eyes of the United States but that most people had heard only one version of the story — not the Taliban perspectiv­e.

It was 2010, and the Taliban were becoming a potent military force again, threatenin­g nearly every part of Afghanista­n. In Marjah, the insurgents were taxing local residents, administer­ing cruel and quick justice, and taking in a significan­t amount of income from the poppy harvest.

Operation Moshtarak, as the U.S. military called the 2010 mission to seize the district, was the first set-piece battle of President Barack Obama’s counterins­urgency troop surge, which failed.

Eleven years later, Gulab and I still remember the call to prayer that February morning in the village of Koru Chareh, a hamlet set amid half-flooded poppy fields, not far from the center of Marjah. The surroundin­g trees, leafless, looked like dead outstretch­ed hands.

“The skies over Marjah were full of helicopter­s and dropped American soldiers in different areas,” Gulab said.

I had just moved with my team of seven other Marines to a small mud brick pump house, having landed with more than 250 other troops a few hours earlier. As the sun rose, Gulab gathered his band of Taliban fighters from a nearby village.

Soon after, the mullah, loud and angry, came over the mosque loudspeake­r. Gulab and his Taliban fighters prayed.

Then the shooting started.

“It was a very tough fight,” Gulab said.

He wasn’t wrong. By the end of the day, a Marine engineer was dead and several others wounded. The insurgents suffered their own casualties.

With the war ending this August, the places where I had once fought as a Marine are now reachable again — stretches of land where my friends died and I watched my country’s military failures unfold. Now, as a journalist for the Times, I wanted to return to report on what had changed — and what had not — on and around these former battlefiel­ds.

In November, my drive back to the district, now controlled by the Taliban, was easy enough. The roads were busy with motorbikes and trucks packed with cotton. The pavement was pockmarked with craters from the roadside bombs the insurgents once had placed beneath them. Abandoned military and police outposts dotted the highway like sporadic Stonehenge­s.

Marjah was as I remembered, but some things had changed. There was a paved road. The canals were dry.

And the war was over.

The fall’s cotton harvest was underway, the sound of tractor engines and chattering field hands now audible in the absence of the background noise of gunfire, though a withering drought is threatenin­g many farmers’ financial lifelines, and the country’s economic downturn has affected everyone.

The two-story building we had once occupied as a command center, where my friends Matt Tooker and Matt Bostrom were shot that day in February, was now a midwives clinic.

On this trip back to Marjah, men weren’t allowed inside. But through the cracked door, I could see the steps where my wounded friends had sat, bandaged, on painkiller­s and smiling, before the evacuation helicopter swooped in.

Around the same time that a Taliban marksman put a burst of gunfire into my teammates, Gulab lost one of his fighters — as if the pendulum of violence that played out that day was trying to balance itself.

Gulab joined the Taliban in 2005, a year before I enlisted in the Marines. He had just lost two brothers in the fighting, both members of the Taliban.

I grew up in the Connecticu­t suburbs. Gulab grew up in an isolated and mountainou­s part of Helmand province.

“When I was child, I was going to the madrassa, and our mullah was telling us, ‘The foreigners want to occupy our country, and you guys, you should be ready to defeat them,’ ” Gulab explained. “I hoped to join the mujahedeen.”

By the time I landed in Marjah, Gulab was a seasoned fighter who had survived U.S. airstrikes as the steady churn of U.S. and NATO troops flooded into southern Afghanista­n. He was in charge of about 60 fighters and understood how to navigate the rules of engagement that kept foreign troops from killing unarmed Taliban fighters who tossed their weapons into the nearest ditch.

Gulab said his fighters would use children to spot patrols and call his men as soon as the Americans left their posts. He mentioned it as a casual aside, but a decade ago, as we started to learn that 8-year-olds were putting our friends’ lives at risk, we wondered — and argued about — how far we would be willing go to make sure none of us died in a war we already had realized we were losing.

As Gulab recounted his memories of all the ways his friends killed my friends and vice versa, I looked at his rifle next to my right arm. He had propped it in the chair next to me before I sat down. It was an American M4 carbine, much like the one I carried in 2010.

For a brief moment, I was in between time, between the beginning of my war and its end.

The rifle was a familiar tool, once an extension of myself and always within arm’s reach. But now that it was no longer needed, it was little more than a mass of plastic and steel, and it had no bearing on how I interacted with Marjah and Gulab. He was no longer an enemy but a man sitting on the floor, pondering his next sentence. He wasn’t fighting in a war that seemed like it would never end. And neither was I.

He had won his war. I had lost mine.

I went home from Afghanista­n in July 2010. Five years later, the Marjah district collapsed to the Taliban, except for a few outposts. Then this summer, roughly two weeks before Kabul fell, the Taliban seized it completely.

“I am very happy that foreigners left the country and it is over,” Gulab said. “We don’t need to kill them, and they are not killing my friends.”

Throughout the interview, I wanted to tell him I had been a Marine. That I had been in Marjah on Feb. 13, 2010, and that I had fought against him. I wanted to say I was sorry for all of it: the needless death, the loss. His friends. My friends.

But I said nothing. I stood up, shook his hand, smiled.

And I left Marjah.

 ?? Jim Huylebroek / New York Times ?? Reporter Thomas Gibbons-neff, third from right, interviews Mullah Abdul Rahim Gulab, sitting below the weapon in the window, in Marjah, Afghanista­n.
Jim Huylebroek / New York Times Reporter Thomas Gibbons-neff, third from right, interviews Mullah Abdul Rahim Gulab, sitting below the weapon in the window, in Marjah, Afghanista­n.

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