Showing posts with label troop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label troop. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2008

‘America’s Defense Meltdown’

Check it out.   I am saving to read later when I have more time; you might want to take a look and read it - very up to the minute.


at CDI - Center for Defense Information; newly released to and for President-Elect Barack Obama’s consideration.

         "America's Defense Meltdown"?  (pdf)

What’s in "America's Defense Meltdown" is a new anthology that gives President-elect Obama and Congress direction and will guide the United States back onto the path of an effective defense at a cost a nation in recession can afford.
Author(s): Winslow Wheeler


I haven't watched this video yet either at GRIT TV with Laura Flanders website  - it is where I found the info.

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My ‘morning reads’ are disturbing this morning

Michael Ware, CNN Correspondent, six years in Iraq.  At HuffPo the title is 'Michael Ware's Tortured World; I Am Not the Same F---g Person'...which links to the original article at Men's Journal titled ‘CNN's Prisoner of War'.


Michael Ware speaks to what he has witnessed and experienced.  He speaks to dehumanizing aspect of war, the war in Iraq in truth being now the war in Iran and was since beginning when U.S. troops crossed the Kuwait border, he speaks of  how Obama can bring the troops home and it may be at the expense of mortgaging our foreign policy in the Middle East. 


Read it for yourselves;  a few of excerpts;


"It's my firm belief that we need to constantly jar the sensitivities of the people back home," he says. "War is a jarring experience. Your kids are living it out, and you've inflicted it upon 20-odd million Iraqis. And when your brothers and sons and mates from the football team come home, and they ain't quite the same, you have an obligation to sit for three and a half minutes and share something of what it's like to be there."


It's an obligation now owed to Michael Ware, too.

excerpt from Men's Journal titled ' CNN's Prisoner of War'.


This freedom has helped Ware stay a year in front of conventional wisdom. In 2003, while others were covering the conquest of Baghdad, he talked with Iraqi policemen and soldiers, the men who would become the insurgency. Then in 2004, when Donald Rumsfeld was dismissing these insurgents as "dead-enders," Ware was reporting on their strength after seeing their training camps firsthand. Two years later, Ware was branding the conflict in Iraq a civil war while the Bush administration boasted about the results of Iraq's democratic elections. This year his obsession has been the extent of Iran's influence over the Iraqi government.


"From the moment the first American tanks crossed the Kuwait border, America was in a proxy war with Iran," Ware says. "The Iranians knew it, but it took the U.S. four years to figure it out. Now the Iraqi government is comprised almost entirely of factions created in Iran, supported by Iran, or with ties to the Iranian government — as many as 23 members of the Iraqi parliament are former members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard."

excerpt from Men's Journal titled ' CNN's Prisoner of War'.


As uncomfortable as he is with the idea of his leaving Iraq, if Ware were setting policy, American forces would be in Iraq for a very, very long time. He shudders at the idea of massive American troop withdrawals. Horrific genocide, he predicts; worse than Bosnia. "John McCain said, 'The war's going so well, so why stop now?' I say it's going so badly that we have to pay the price to prevent what's to come."


"The successes in bringing down the violence are undeniable, yet America hasn't been looking at the price to deliver these successes. Obama can bring American kids home tomorrow, but are you willing to mortgage your foreign policy future in that region? Are you willing to walk away from a stronger Iran that is gaining leverage to be a nuclear power? Are you willing to accept your diminished influence in the Middle East? As long as the American public is willing to ante up, then you can bring them home."

excerpt from Men's Journal titled ' CNN's Prisoner of War'.


"Then, for the next 20 minutes," Ware remembers, "all of us just stood around and watched this guy's life slowly ebb away in painful, heaving sobs for air, rendering him absolutely no assistance or aid. If that had been an American soldier, he would have been medevacked out and in 20 minutes would've landed on an operating table. Once an enemy combatant comes into your custody, you're obliged by the Geneva Conventions to render that wounded prisoner all aid. Even I — with my rudimentary medical training, I don't think his life could've been saved — but even I could've eased his passing.
"Instead a towel was laid over his face, making his breathing much more labored and painful, the taunts continued, and we just sat around and watched him die.


"And for some bizarre reason, it was just me and this platoon of soldiers, and I was able to see the dispassion of these kids in the way they just watched his life slip away. I was filming and worrying about the best composition of the shot, and I realized that I too was watching just as dispassionately. There's no blame to be laid here. That guy was a legitimate target who was rightfully shot in the head. But it made me realize, just once more, that this kind of dehumanization is what happens when we send our children to war."

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Monday, April 16, 2007

Air Force fills out Army ranks in Iraq

[Excerpt]

Air Force Tech Sgt. Shawn Foust and other members of the 424 Medium Truck Division take part in Basic Combat Convoy Course Training at Camp Bullis in San Antonio, Tuesday, April 10, 2007. With ranks stretched thin, Air Force personnel have been trained by the Army at Camp Bullis since 2004 to help fill some of the duties in Iraq. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
AP Photo: Air Force Tech Sgt.
Shawn Foust and other members
of the 424 Medium Truck Division...


CAMP BULLIS, Texas - A row of rumbling flatbed trucks and Humvees outfitted with
gun turrets lurches toward a mock village of cinderblock buildings where
instructors posing as insurgents wait to test the trainees' convoy protection
skills.



The training range is Army, as is the duty itself — one of the most dangerous in
Iraq these days. But the young men and women clad in camouflage and helmets
training to run and protect convoys are not Army; they're Air Force. They are
part of a small but steady stream of airmen being trained to do Army duty under
the Army chain of command, a tangible sign the Pentagon was scouring the
military to aid an Iraq force that was stretched long before President Bush
ordered 21,500 additional U.S. troops there.

"What we've seen is the Department of Defense continues to find ways to meet the

AP
Photo:
Air Force Tech Sgt.

Shawn Foust and other members

of the 424 Medium Truck Division...



requirements imposed by the commander in chief," said retired
Brig. Gen. Kevin Ryan, a senior fellow at Harvard University's Belfer Center in
the John F. Kennedy School of Government.


No plans to expand the Air Force's role in convoy operations have been announced
since Bush ordered the troop surge in Iraq, but Ryan said the Army and other
branches of service have been looking at every possible job that can be shifted
— from the Air Force performing convoy duty to the Navy setting up medical
facilities far from waterfronts.



"I can't imagine there are any jobs that they could be doing that
they aren't doing, but certainly, that doesn't mean they're not continuing to
look to find every possible instance where we can use the full military to solve
this problem and not just have this be an Army and Marine Corps issue," he
said.


Read the entire article at
Yahoo
News
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Thursday, February 8, 2007

Debate on Iraq Doesn't Hurt Morale, Leaders Say



...they both said it debate over President Bush's new plan for Iraq will not undercut troop morale ...


According to Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Congressional debate over President Bush's new plan for Iraq will not undercut troop morale. The two testified before the Armed Services Committee in the House, which will debate the issue next week.




NPR - All Things Considered, February 7, 2007
NPR : Debate on Iraq Doesn't Hurt Morale, Leaders Say

(my note; well geesh, it's only four years later and about time or past time to be 'having healthy debate/dialogue' about Iraq invasion/occupation without it having to mean it is hurting troop morale! About time the military leaders stated clearly the troops can handle the truth - they are far from shrinking violets, after all)
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