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Tuesday
Feb152011

Michael Yon to return to Afghanistan

Band-e-Amir in Bamyan Province is Afghanistan's first national park; it consists of six spectacular turquoise lakes separated by natural dams of travertine. [CIA World Factbook; photo and caption.]Michael Yon just wrapped up a series of dispatches from Nepal, Afghanistan, Thailand and Burma, and he will return to Afghanistan in February. It’s been almost a year since he was last embedded with troops there, but he hasn’t exactly been away from action. He left Afghanistan in 2010 and headed to Southeast Asia. Then he returned to Afghanistan alone.

Thailand had its moments. “There was actually some serious combat,” he said. “My hotel was hit with an RPG three floors above me. Roughly 90 people were killed and maybe 1,800 wounded. So it was not exactly peaceful where I was. However, Yon said most of Thailand was “very safe.”
 
Aside from covering conflicts, Yon dealt with the usual controversies in the blogosphere over some of the things he’s written or said (and some that he neither wrote nor said). The milblogger community comprises numerous personalities, all of them passionate about their subjects.

Yon’s the kind of writer other writers argue about, sometimes to the point of absurdity. One fracas started over a writer who mentioned Yon in an article—a sentence or two max.  The story was actually about a critically wounded soldier Yon had emailed a civilian support group about. Pretty soon the boys in the blogosphere were in a verbal dustup over Yon. Some accused Yon of writing things he never wrote. Yon said many of the milblogs are known more for shouts than research.

Meanwhile Yon kept doing the kind of reporting that’s given him a top perch in the arena of war reportage. Few milbloggers—actually come to think of it few nonfiction writers in any sphere—achieve the level of recognition Yon has earned.

He’s done that largely with his pen. When he chooses to tell a story, he does it well. One of his latest dispatches, River of Tears: Snapshots from the Edge of a War, is a journey into villages in the jungle where there are enough parasites and germs to earn the place the name “Dirty Jungle.” The photo essay is creatively rendered with carefully composed shots accompanied by commentary and description—the war, the villagers, the displaced and the children with ever-hopeful looks on their faces despite adversity. Local color is an understated description for what Yon includes in his account.

Yon has a particular strength for composition when he’s blending photos and narrative—he has a sharp eye for light. There’s a photo of a boy who’s apparently not in school when others are. Knife slung in a sheath across his shoulder, he carries on his back the cane he has cut. There are some photos of children of all ages in school—and a few of sick children whose images tug at the heart.

Yon said he’s returned to Afghanistan to about six provinces since McChrystal’s crew "mysteriously" ended his embed. Yon confronted criticism for calling things as he saw them in Afghanistan during his last embed. He singled out both Brig. Gen. Daniel Menard (Canada) and Gen. Stanley McChrystal.  Canada replaced Menard in June, 2010, and McChrystal resigned that month as well.

McChrystal was heavily criticized after publication of a feature in Rolling Stone magazine. The magazine even took credit for it, with a headline saying the controversial profile of McChrystal “changed history.”

Yon had also reported on a suicide bombing of a key bridge in March, 2010. Civilians and one US soldier were killed; others were wounded. Yon raised questions about who was responsible for the security breach, accusing Menard of incompetence. Yon also broke unrelated information that eventually led to the firing of Menard who now faces a criminal charge and possible prison.

Yon said during a trip to Afghanistan after his embed ended, he declined to embed. “I was unilateral. I’ve had many invitations to embed since the problems with McChrystal’s people, but have not actually embedded since then.”

“Nobody needs to embed with the military to discover the underlying currents of the war,” Yon explained. “In 2006, I wrote twelve dispatches derived from my unilateral time in Afghanistan, and if anyone wants to see how Afghanistan is today, they can just go back and read those dozen dispatches.”

He said he took heavy criticism for those dispatches. “But they have proven accurate. I did not need the military to find the truth of the situation in 2006 or 2010, and I don’t need them today. When I go back in February, I will start off alone and in the most dangerous places. I will not hide in the rear with milbloggers who are afraid to go alone, but instead will go to places where truth can be met face to face.”

Asked whether his readers will be glad to see him return, Yon said many of them are happy about it. Yon has more than 42,000 supporters on his Facebook page. “Gen. [David] Petraeus has personally welcomed me, so I think it’s time to get back,” he added. "I respect Gen. Petraeus immensely for his wisdom and his honesty."

Yon seems to be positive about a good outcome in Afghanistan. “With Gen. Petraeus,” he said, “we have a solid chance at some form of success. How that success will look is like trying to guess next month’s weather.”

(Filed by Kay B. Day/Feb. 15, 2011)

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Reader Comments (9)

Roughly 75% of this article is inaccurate. Yon never broke any of the aforementioned stories, regurgitating only what he read in the MSM. Nor did he have anything to do with ending Menard's career. What he has posted is opinion, not fact that has been substantiated.

As far as the milbloggers go, those milbloggers are in large part also veterans, having served honorably both stateside and in combat. His denigration of their service serves only to speak of his character, or lack thereof.

Were I the author of this publication, I would seriously reconsider publishing anything this egomaniac states without verifying tenfold.
February 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterBee
The comment by Bee is typical of Mr Yon's detractors among some of the so-called milkooks. His body of work, extending back through the Iraq War, stands on its own. Is he a human being with opinions, a point of view, a body of life experiences?-Of course. Do all of us who read his dispatches agree with his every word?- Of course not. Does he present a unique window into dangerous and complex happenings in hard parts of the world?-Damn right!
February 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterCush
Yon brought concerns about Menard to the surface by March.. Menard was relieved in June, 2010. Yon was very vocal about the Tarnik Bridge suicide bomber that killed one US Army paratrooper and civilians. His concerns made sense if you follow his explanation closely.

1)Yon's post:
http://www.michaelyon-online.com/the-bridge.htm

2)CBC story about Menard's departure
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/06/01/menard-leave.html

3)The US Report story about Spc. Ian Gelig and the Tarnik Bridge
http://www.theusreport.com/the-us-report/war-correspondents-reportage-shows-so-much-depended-on-a-sim.html
February 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKay B. Day
Additional note from the editor. I substantiated the facts that are in the article. --best, KBD
February 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKay B. Day
yon is a self absorbed pompus blowhard that goes in attack mode of anyone that doesn't worship him. Since he violated OPSEC by publishing base security shortcomings, tweeting troop & aircraft movements several times. No soldier wants him embedded with their unit. He latest attacks on veterans & active duty soldiers with PTSD because they didn't agree with him on his OPSEC violations if further proof that he only wants to embed to belittle soldiers serving honorably & make headlines. He threatens to sue anyone that publishes info on his OPSEC violations. He needs to stay in Thailand with his transvestite friend Ms. Heng Heng & let us big boys fight the wars without his hindrance.
February 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterBuzzy
Gosh Buzzy, chill.

Can you give citations to support your multiple allegations? Or are you just another "self absorbed pompus (sic) blowhard that goes in attack mode"?
February 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterJohnII
I did attempt to locate actual facts about allegations Yon violated OPSEC. I found no verification of that claim. It's useful to remind that Yon is technically a journalist and not a current member of the armed forces.

@Buzzy: if you have specifics, feel free to share. Please refrain in future comments from personal attacks.--KBD
February 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKay B. Day
"One fracas started over a writer who mentioned Yon in an article—a sentence or two max. The story was actually about a critically wounded soldier Yon had emailed a civilian support group about."
~~~~
Wow! You really glossed over that one. His contact at the "civilian support group" in question is the one who set the story straight. She was one of the fist "Milkooks" he banned. But don't worry, she's fine, picked up a Presidential Citizen's Medal and everything for her constant good work.

It should also be noted that these "dustups" between bloggers and Yon come about when Yon needs funding and attention. His whole enterprise got off the ground largely because of support from the MilBlog community. He had their backing because he was writing and doing great things. However, in the last year or so, something has gone wrong. Some suggested PTSD. It would be completely understandable were Mr, Yon to suffer in reaction to what he has seen/experienced. However, when many cared to reach out to him, he rebuffed tham and this Milblog fued is the result.
February 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMaggie Miller
My summary of the fracas is accurate. These controversies in blog communities are common. Disagreements happen in print media as well--several Pulitzer winning poets come to mind.
February 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKay B. Day
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