![]() |
|
|
Home
WGT Blog The Saga Archives Wild Geese Shops Bookstore Classifieds Heritage Key Dates Events WGT Forum Gallery Lands of Exile Living History Resources Bibliography Contact WGT About Us THE WILD GEESE TODAY / AMAZON CIVIL WAR BOOKSTORE THE WILD GEESE TODAY / AMAZON IRISH HISTORY BOOK STORE
PROUD SPONSORS OF WGT:
For the latest headlines about "Bloody Sunday" and Northern Ireland, visit Newshound, at Nuzhound.com VISIT THESE OTHER FINE IRISH SITES: Tara Hall, Headquarters for 'Fighting 69th' and Irish Brigade Memorabilia, online at Fighting69th.com. Irish Culture and Customs: Traditions, folklore, and more.
|
It is not surprising that the Warwickshire-born Loach should make a film about Iraq, but what is surprising is that this film comes so many years after the United States-led invasion in 2003. During a question-and-answer session after a preview screening of "Route Irish," held at the University of Warwick, Loach was asked why he had delayed tackling this controversial subject. He explained that for some time he had wished to confront the public's apathy, war weariness and compassion fatigue and "reignite people's anger" against the occupation of Iraq, the overarching tragedy of which was not "our boys" returning home in body bags but the 1 million dead Iraqis and 4 million displaced persons.
Loach therefore sets his Iraq war film not in that country but in Liverpool, which is representative of the underprivileged, working class, industrial centers from where the majority of Britain's 'squaddies' and security contractors are recruited. The choice of Liverpool owes nothing to the link between Loach and Laverty's previously expressed sympathy with the Irish Socialist/Republican cause and the Irish heritage of a significant proportion of Liverpool's population. The filmmaker, now 74, explored imperialistic Britain's attempt to pacify nationalist Ireland in such hard-hitting films as "Hidden Agenda" (1990) and "The Wind That Shakes the Barley" (2006). With "Route Irish," he again places the protagonists at war, and explores the crucible it represents for those deigned to wage it.
Fergus, brilliantly played by Mark Womack in his first leading role, refuses to accept the 'official' version of events provided by the slick, Tony Blair-like boss of the security firm, that Frankie was just "in the wrong place at the wrong time." Fergus then begins a one-man crusade in which he employs the skills he acquired during his military career, including water boarding, to uncover the truth about Frankie's death. Although Fergus' expensive riverside apartment, designer clothes and fast car suggest that he is an Iraq War success story, in reality he is a shell of a man, clearly suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and haunted by flashbacks of the horrors he witnessed. To portray these flashbacks, Loach employs harrowing, real-life news reports and combat footage and skillfully allows the images of charred corpses and limbless torsos to explain the reality of Iraq's occupation with greater eloquence than if he had resorted to the device of political discourse, which is the trademark of his films. Loach succeeds in his goal of bringing the war to the doorsteps of the British public by showing that men like Fergus have brought the conflict home with them in the nightmares replayed in their traumatized minds. These security contractors are victims of the conflict, too, but for them there is no heroes' homecoming parade, no rehabilitation for the blinded and crippled in an MOD hospital, and no guard of honor and flag-draped coffin for those who gave their lives. They are the casualty statistics the government can ignore. They personify the awkward questions the government can evade. "Route Irish" can stand comparison with any fast-paced conspiracy thriller a remarkable feat considering that its budget was only £3 million Sterling yet in Loach's hands it becomes a savage indictment of the privatization of the Iraq war, the governments who abrogated their responsibilities and the security companies who were at the heart of the occupation yet answerable only to their shareholders. "Route Irish" opened in the United Kingdom on 18 March, after hitting festival circuit in Norway, Sweden, Serbia, Greece and Brazil, since its premiere at Cannes in May. It is unlikely to be seen in the United States outside of film festivals. As Loach explained with a mischievous glint in his eye, "Britain and America have a different tradition of filmmaking, and my style of filmmaking doesn't appear to be popular there." WGT
The highway, the principal road between Baghdad's
international airport and the city's heavily fortified "Green Zone,"
was named before the 69th's service there. American forces had
designated many of the principal roads in the area of Baghdad with the
names of American football teams. "Route Irish" was named for the
"Fighting Irish" of Notre Dame. Nevertheless, for six months in 2005,
the regiment's 1st Battalion did patrol the sector, so confusion about
its naming is understandable. The 1st Battalion of the 69th was assigned to patrol "Route Irish" on Feb. 12, 2005. Then, it was known as the most dangerous road in Iraq. The battalion was the core unit of Task Force Wolfhound, named for the 69th Regiment's Irish Wolfhound mascots, "Gentle when Stroked, Fierce when Provoked" (per the regimental motto). The battalion was led in Iraq by Lt. Col. Geoffrey Slack and Command Sergeant Major George Brett, and became part of the 256th "Tiger" Brigade Combat Team ("Les Tigres Louisianais"). As an aside, Slack is also descended from at least one of those Irish-born Louisiana Tigers that faced the 69th across more than one Civil War battlefield.
The second tactic Colonel Slack adopted was to partner with an Iraqi police battalion, especially to run check-points controlling access to "Route Irish," in order to stop the car-bombings that had been endemic. On one occasion, a patrol led by Capt. Mike Drew of "A" Company, hearing the firing of mortars, was able to react quickly enough to engage and destroy the enemy sniper-and-mortar team. While deployed in Iraq, Wolfhound headquarters flew a 3-foot-by-5- foot reproduction of the 1st Color (Green Flag) of the 69th New York Volunteer Infantry of the American Civil War Irish Brigade.
During the battalion's service along "Route Irish," John Dunleavy, chairman of the New York Saint Patrick's Day Parade Committee, sent special St. Patrick's Parade pins to the 69th in Iraq, one for every soldier in the unit to wear on Saint Patrick's Day, including those on patrol. By Aug. 31, 2005, when the 69th had completed this assignment, "Route Irish" had become the safest road in the Baghdad area. After the battalion's return from Iraq, the 69th's next commander, Lieutenant Colonel Chuck Crosby, the unit's executive officer in Iraq, established a special relationship between the 69th and the Army ROTC unit at Notre Dame. As a result, each March 17th, the Notre Dame Army ROTC Unit has a marching component with the 69th, which leads the parade. WGT RELATED RESOURCES:
This feature was edited by Gerry Regan and produced by Joe Gannon. Copyright © 2011 by Kieron Punch and GAR Media LLC. This article may not be resold, reprinted, or redistributed without prior permission from the author. Direct questions about permissions to permissions@garmedia.com.
E-mail us for more information about The Wild Geese Today
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||