the "new angle" for me, and perhaps for others, could be the bridge the poem builds between two seemingly incompatible ways to see the army: the external perspective of death, which you say you've seen in many places, and the internal, organizational-bureaucratic perspective of everyday life in the army which are not as dramatic. If you will, it's "Tironut" meets "M.K. 46".
The bridge is the system of regulation and attention to detail, which allows for a multifaceted prism of what the army is like.
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