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A squirter wearing dishdash runs from a quala in southern Kandahar province. He appears to be a fighting-age male and might be the HVT that headquarters wants. Much of the language used in Ben Roberts-Smith's defamation trial against Nine newspapers would be unfamiliar to most Australians, and might not make sense outside the Afghanistan conflict.
Some of it is slang coined by soldiers, formed out of their shared knowledge and experience. Most of it is made up of bland acronyms beloved of the military forces. Roberts-Smith, the year-old Victoria Cross recipient Nine accused of war crimes, has been out of the regular army for eight years but still talks like the soldier he once was.
Already his trial has had to pause several times so that unfamiliar terms could be explained to Justice Anthony Besanko, and recorded accurately for the transcript. What has not be spelt out is one of the phrases important to the Federal Court hearing - the 'rules of engagement' by which Australians fought the nation's longest and perhaps least understood war. Much of the language used in Ben Roberts-Smith's defamation trial against Nine newspapers would be unfamiliar to anyone who had not fought in Afghanistan.
Roberts-Smith is pictured with other soldiers who drank from the prosthetic leg of a slain insurgent. Some of the language used in Afghanistan was slang coined by soldiers formed out of their shared knowledge and experience. Most of it is made up of bland acronyms beloved of the military. Special forces soldiers are pictured watching over a valley. Already the Roberts-Smith trial has had to pause several times so that unfamiliar terms could be explained to Justice Anthony Besanko and recorded accurately for the transcript.
Roberts-Smith is pictured second from left in on the operation for which he was awarded a VC. Barrister Bruce McClintock SC, for Roberts-Smith, defined 'squirter' as 'a person who leaves the scene of a mission when soldiers approach. It is defined elsewhere in glossaries of the war in Afghanistan as an insurgent runner leaving a target, and as a person attempting to escape a cordoned area. A spotter is Australian Defence Force slang for 'an enemy surveillance operative who reports coalition soldiers' movements to militants.