1st Edition

Soldier Repatriation Popular and Political Responses

By Kaare Dahl Martinsen Copyright 2013
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    Soldier repatriation from Afghanistan has impacted debate about the war. This study highlights this impact with particular focus on Britain, Denmark and Germany. All three countries deployed soldiers soon after the 9/11 attacks, yet their role in Afghanistan and the casualty rates suffered, have been vastly different. This book looks at how their casualties influenced the framing of the war by analysing the political discourse about the casualties, how the media covered the repatriation and the burials, and how the dead were officially recognised and commemorated. Explaining how bodies count is not done exclusively by focusing on the political leadership and the media in the three countries, the response from the men and women in Afghanistan to the official framing of the war is given particular weight. Martinsen contributes to our understanding of European strategic culture by showing how countries respond to the same security challenges.

    Preface, Kaare Dahl Martinsen; Chapter 1 Private Grief and Public Mourning, Kaare Dahl Martinsen; Chapter 2 Sending Off the Living, Kaare Dahl Martinsen; Chapter 3 Homecoming for Heroes?, Kaare Dahl Martinsen; Chapter 4 Commemorating the Dead, Kaare Dahl Martinsen; Chapter 5 Killed on Our Behalf?, Kaare Dahl Martinsen;

    Biography

    Kaare Dahl Martinsen

    ’In this sensitive and carefully-argued study, the author persuasively questions part of the conventional wisdom on the changing relationship between war and society in the West: the widespread belief that public support for military operations overseas has become uniquely sensitive to the level of casualties sustained on the battlefield. Martinsen has produced a fascinating and deeply thought-provoking book.’ Mats Berdal, King’s College London, UK ’This fascinating book meets the need to analyse how European countries receive, discuss and remember the soldiers brought back from Afghanistan in body bags. Lucid, informative and hard-hitting, the book focuses on the real cost of war, the loss of life, and how this impacts both serving men and women and contemporary society.’ Heidi Reisinger, NATO Defense College, Rome