Friday, August 31, 2007

"Two Lights"

Thank you to CJ at A Soldier's Perspective for bringing this to my attention.

I will not comment except to say: get a Kleenex before you push play!!

Lyrics Below Video




Two Lights by Five for Fighting

What is Courage
Is it Brave
What are Lions
I've only seen them in parades
How is love supposed to read
In a footnote of history
What's a tap on your shoulder
That you're afraid to look over
A soldier's down in a fire fight
No one can look me in the eye

This is what it means to be alone.

Tear out my Heart
Feed it to Lions
For this one wish I beg you this tonight
Show me no mercy
But spare me my pride
I'm going for a drive

And if you find out he's coming home
When I come around the corner
I'll know that it's alright
Just leave me two lights

He was young just 23
Didn't have to go
But it was the man he wanted to be
Like every son he was an only one
One day he came to me, said
Freedoms nothing to look over
Till each man can stand upon its shoulder
I'll right you mountains of letters
Each one a little bit better
And know I'll never be alone

[Two Lights lyrics on http://www.metrolyrics.com]

Tear out my Heart
Feed it to Lions
For this one wish I beg you this tonight
Show me no mercy
But spare me my pride
I'm going for a drive

And if you find out he's coming home
When I come around the corner
I'll know that it's alright
Leave me two lights

Silent Angels
Light the road up ahead
As the sentries guard the way
On the avenue of borrowed time

I'm almost home
The sun's to rise
I got to know
I've been driving all the night
There's our corner up ahead
I'm alive and I am dead
I drive right through the stop sign
I turn my head
As I lift my eyes
My eyes burn

Tear out my Heart
Feed it to Lions
For this one wish I beg you this tonight
Show me no mercy
Spare me my pride

I'm going for a drive

~Tracy

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N) 2

Take a good look at the story here:

American Forces Press Service


Coalition Kills More Than 100 Insurgents in Afghanistan Engagement

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug. 29, 2007 – Afghan national security forces advised by coalition forces killed more than 100 insurgent fighters in a battle that started this morning and still continues in the northern part of Afghanistan’s Kandahar province, military officials reported.

The combined force was on a combat patrol five miles south of Chenartu Village when it were attacked by a large group of insurgents from reinforced fighting positions using small arms, heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars. Throughout the battle, insurgents continued to reinforce the area, engaging Afghan government forces in an attempt to overrun their position....


I don't know about you but even on my pre-coffee reading - this all spells good news. On many levels.

One, it serves as a reminder that there IS a battle being fought in Afghanistan and yes, American AND Canadian troops are there (and my Brits and others...of course!)

Two?
The Afghan-led force used small arms and crew-served weapons to repel the enemy attack while calling for close-air support, which destroyed the enemy hilltop positions with bombing runs....

“Afghan national security forces are maintaining constant pressure on extremists to deny them access to any support bases,” said Army Capt. Vanessa R. Bowman, a Combined Joint Task Force 82 spokeswoman. “The (Afghan troops) are effectively engaging criminal forces at work in this country and enjoying increasing success in their efforts to bring security to all Afghans. Today’s engagement shows how far they have come in their development.” ...

Yep, that's right: there IS a war zone in Afghanistan, AND it is increasingly being fought and held on the front lines by the Afghan people. We all know this of course, but someone better tell the msm. Oh - the the third reason why I nominate this as a Good News Friday story?

"...killed more than 100 insurgent fighters in a battle that started this morning and still continues..."

One hundred fewer terrorists alive to kill and maim Afghans or our troops? No question: THAT is B*N*S*N any day of the week! Read the rest here.

Brat


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Thursday, August 30, 2007

"Two years on..."

"A Ride to Remember" is by Robert Stokely. It is about his beloved son Mike. We all know Mike and Robert here. So many emotions and thoughts go through my heart and mind every time I think of Mike, of Robert and all the other warriors and their families that we know and love. So many, and this morning? "I will remember you..." goes through my head.

Robert? Thank you for allowing me to print the following; thank you for sharing your journey with us. And thank you, most of all, for your son. The world is a better place because he lived, and will always live on. There are NO 'final goodbyes'. We will always remember. You have my word on this. God bless you all.

Two years after a final goodbye - "A Ride to Remember..."

They made us have to say a final goodbye. They thought they had done a great feat. They thought they had hurt us so bad as to take away our life. They thought they had us down for good.

They hurt us bad. They hurt us worse than we could have ever imagined, or wanted to feel. They made us weep deep tears. They made us miss him so much.

Our family sat graveside grieving for a lost husband, son and brother. Friends wept with us, grief stricken in their own right. Two of his fellow soldiers, both seriously wounded in that same road side bomb explosion refused to be kept bed bound and by sheer will made it to be with us. One barely able to hobble with a cane, who but by the grace of God he would have been in a flag draped casket, his mouth sown shut, bottom gum, bone and teeth knocked out and facing a dozen or more surgeries to give him back an ability to merely chew food in a normal way. The other, crutch bound, foot in a cast, facing more surgery as well. Both thankful to be alive, yet wondering why they were and not him. I didn't know them at all, but needed no introduction as they sought me out in a mass of people. It was for me, a moment of joy to know that they were alive and I could readily see for myself that my son's brothers in battle would make it.

The sad melody of TAPS cut deep; the report of a 21 gun salute made me flinch, even feel fear at the prospect of a future without him; the folding of a flag with honor was a final heartbreak, knowing a final moment of goodbye was now at hand, and even though it was time to let him go, I didn't want to.

It was August 27, 2005, a hot day to say the least, a hard day goes without saying. It seemed at that moment we might not make it. It seemed we didn't want to. But then, we remembered what he would want and so we did that instead. We held it together, we went forward, heads up, hearts proud, and lives to be lived as fully and happily as possible.

On Saturday, August 25, 2007 - 104 weeks since that final goodbye, the Stokely family gathered with friends and strangers alike for the Mike Stokely Foundation, Inc. 1st Annual "Ride to Remember..." The thunderous roar of 215 motorcycles, 40 plus cars, one tractor-trailer minus the trailer, led by a HUMVEE with patriotic color scheme leading the way and with air support from a Blackhawk helicopter, we sent a message that we were alive and we would not fear his death nor a future without him. Instead, we were going to go forward and in doing so, we would Remember with Honor, a life well lived, well loved, and dearly missed - SGT Mike Stokely, KIA 16 AUG 05 near Yusufiyah in the Triangle of Death, south of Baghdad. We raised $20,000 net after expenses toward the $25,000 needed to fund the scholarship in Mike's name at Georgia Military College where he got to attend one year before duty called. The other $5,000 - I'll drive a truck one night a week after I get off work for the next 50 or so weeks and raise that money and I'll remember the nights Mike rode with me on such trips and the good time we had doing that.

Mike Stokely didn't get to come home to finish college, but his footprints are bigger than his boots and his legacy will ensure that others will go to college and a future is well preserved for a better America. More so, a call to action now leads us to continue the ride in future years and use the proceeds to honor each and every one of his other 25 fallen brothers from Georgia's 48th Brigade with a scholarship in their name and memory. A region has been mobilized. We are committed.

You know, if Mike Stokely had made it home alive, we would have gone on to live ordinary lives without so much as a second thought how others might go to college.

They would have been better off to have left him, and us, alone. They suffered their cause a great defeat by taking his life. They made us have a reason to stay in the fight, and go on.

DUTY HONOR COUNTRY. Romans 8:28 - from all things God can work good...

Robert Stokely
proudly remembering my beloved son
SGT Mike Stokely
KIA 16 AUG 05 near Yusufiyah
USA E Troop 108 CAV 48th BCT GAARNG


Brat

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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Wednesday Hero

This Weeks Post Was Suggested By Randy Thorsvig

Ken Leonard
Ken Leonard (On The Right)
From High Point, North Carolina

Every once in a while you run across one of those "feel good stories". Those stories that show us just what a person can do when they really want it bad enough. And Ken Leonard has one of those stories.

In 2005, Ken Leonard left his job as a police officer in High Point, North Carolina to go to Iraq to work with a private security firm. In December of that year, Ken, along with five other men in his vehicle and six others in the vehicle behind him, was hit by a roadside bomb outside of Baghdad. "After the bomb went off, I knew exactly what had happened," Leonard recalled. "My feet got jarred, so I knew they were hit." While others in his vehicle were injured, he had received the worst of it. He had lost both his feet.

The vehicle behind them pushed Leonard's to a safer area. But flames were coming out of the air conditioning vents and they had to get out. Leonard crawled from the car and fell to the pavement. "That’s when I saw my feet," he said. "I could tell they were gone. They were still attached, but they were shredded."

On July 19, 2007, Ken Leonard went back to North Carolina to get his job back with the police force. To do that he needed to pass the Police Officers Physical Abilities Test, which, among other things, consisted of a 200-yard run to be finished in under 7 minutes, 20 seconds. And he did just that with 24 seconds to spare.

"Somebody told me one time they said, 'You know, what you've lost is just bone and muscle. You've still got heart, and you've still got, you know, what's up here,'" Leonard said, pointing to his head.


These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. To find out more about Wednesday Hero, you can go here.

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"Sets a bad precedent....."


South Korean hostages held by Taleban (file photo)
The South Korean Christians were doing voluntary work in Afghanistan


Ya think?????? Am I the only one totally gobsmacked by the South Korean government giving in to Taleban
demands in order to secure the release of these hostages?







Taleban militants say they have agreed to free 19 South Koreans held hostage for more than a month in Afghanistan.

Seoul said the agreement was reached on condition its troops were withdrawn as scheduled by the year's end.

South Korea also agreed to end all missionary work in Afghanistan and stop its citizens from travelling there. (source)


That is from the BBC site, but I first heard it on CBC radio. Needless to say, relatives of the hostages are thrilled, with one saying: "I would like to dance." I am sure that was in response to the usual standard question that every neophyte journalist is taught to ask: 'How are you feeling?' Well, duh! No surprise there, BUT what does surprise me is the capitulation of South Korea, or any country, to the Taleban demand to withdraw all of their troops, etc etc, in exchange for the freedom of the remaining hostages.

My educational background is not in politics, or even international relations, (lol)but you really don't need to be a student of history to understand what a stupid move this is. The implications go far beyond these few missionaries. I am no genius in political shenanigans, but even I can foretell dangerous days ahead for any foreigner - missionary or otherwise - now that open season has been declared.

As I was listening to the 'experts' pontificate tonight - and yes, the title of this post is from one such luminary...lol - I was remembering the episode a while back in Iraq with the Canadian/British missionaries that were held hostage. Members of the Christian Peacemakers Team (or whatever the name is), they were ultimately rescued by the British forces (SAS?) As far as is publicly known, no ransom was paid nor deals made for their release. An interesting aside since then. One of the Canadians rescued has given quite a few interviews now he is back in Canada, and does have the good grace to admit the irony that the Brits were armed with weapons of war and prepared to use all necessary force to rescue this decidely anti-war group. Indeed, he speaks with great respect for the job that the soldiers did in rescuing them from their captors. But yes, still avowing anti-war sentiments. Good for him!

Since the CPT missionaries were rescued, there has been much speculation - unconfirmed - that a ransom was paid. There is also conjecture that money has been paid in this deal today. What has been reported is that the Taleban has also demanded, as part of the deal:


... the Afghan government and the U.S. military release Taliban prisoners in exchange for the safe return of the South Koreans....(source)

Now there is talk that the South Koreans were planning to pull out their 200 non combat personnel by the end of the year anyways. Whatever! Does this mean that the US has to, also, agree to this deal that says they are going to release terrorists being held? And will they? Say it isn't so.

To me, non-expert, this is all wrong, wrong, WRONG! Yes, I can understand the jubilation of the families and the South Korean people, but the message this sends to the terrorists is so obvious, it boggles my mind. No government has asked my opinion (now there's a shocker!) but I can tell you, with no hesitation, that if I was a hostage there, I would not expect ANY deals to be made. I am on the record as saying I would go to any of these places in a heartbeat. But would I expect deals to be made, lives to be risked to rescue me if I got taken hostage? Not on your life. The BBC journalist that was kidnapped and held in Gaza was eventually released. We know that contacts were maintained with his captors, but we also have no confirmation that any deals were made, or ransom paid.

From the pictures I have seen of these South Korean hostages, they were all adults, and I have to assume they have at least a few brain cells among them. They had to have known the risks they faced, just as the CPT crew knows when they go to spread the gospel in war zones. All well and good to go to these places on their own missions of spreading whatever gospel they preach, but what about a thought for the bigger picture? Really.

However the experts spin this in the coming days and weeks, the damage is done. I forsee more hostages taken, more risks needing to be taken by our troops. This single 'stone' thrown will ripple in ways so far unseen. Let the insanity prevail.. This war we are all in has just taken another turn, for the worse, as the Taleban and Al-Qaeda flex their muscles with this latest apparently effective weapon. Nuts!!!

Might as well put up a sign saying "Open season - let's make a deal."

Brat

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

"Mama said there'd be days like this.."


















Divine Timing came aknockin' at my door yesterday - well actually in my Inbox. The two pictures above were part of a series that our pal Chuck sent to a whole bunch of us. Although this blog is not about me personally, I think some of you know that lately I really have been struggling. Not struggling about my commitment to our troops and the mission - that will NEVER be in question. The struggle for me lately is based on the "what" and the "how"...(we already know the "where"...lol)

Because of where I live (far away from the hub of the war effort,) I often feel totally isolated and out of touch with the "who" and the "why". And then, this morning I had an early, early morning call from one of "my" veterans. (Yep - you ARE mine - deal with it...lol) And I have to tell you, the lightbulb went on - again!

I realised that all the training, education, in the world (and yep - those darn 5 W's!!) don't amount to a hill of beans - *grin* - if they are not combined with a heart and a soul. We all see, daily, supposedly well educated, articulate commentators, who have no friggin clue. Nada! And they drive me nuts.

And then, and then, I see pictures like the two above, and I am reminded of the "who" and the "why". The "who" is the little Iraqi child and the US soldier. Not just any soldier, not just an anonymous "number". OUR soldier. And not just any anonymous child, but a child who is heartwise enough to know that this soldier is safe, trustworthy, a friend(even behind all that gear Chuck's heart shines through...lol)

And I am grateful for the Divine Timing that sends me these reminders of MY "who", "what", "why", "when" and "how".

And I start to sing my usual song - loud! - to Chuck, and all the "Chucks" (and MG's and Cav's.lol) - and to "my" veterans and all their colleagues. The song I sing for ALL the children - both known and unknown to me? My theme song:

" Don't tell me it's not worth tryin' for
You can't tell me it's not worth dyin' for
You know it's true
Everything I do - I do it for you.."
(Yep, Bryan Adams. Good ol' Canadian boy!)

I know it's true. It really IS that simple for me.

I "soldier on" with each of them. Thank YOU Chuck and Gabe, always. Safe journey. And thanks - always - to "my" early morning veteran.

I do it ALL for you.

Brat

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Monday, August 27, 2007

"New Glass" which is B*N*S*N!


Yes, I DO know it is not Friday, but I have to share this with you. I almost missed this story. I doubt very much you have seen it on msm; it is another of those Good News stories that the msm manages to miss on a regular basis. "New Glass" is the title of a post from last Thursday on "Badgers Forward: A milblog from the front lines of the War against Islamofascism." I would have missed it, 'cept that Uncle Jimbo on BlackFive - you know, over here! - has a post up titled: Badger 6 with a sign of optimism among Iraqis:

It is the very simple things that carry the most weight. Go read what CPT Colson saw while on jackal escort duty....

That's it! Probably one of UJ's shortest posts, but that one sentence of the "very simple things" says volumes. For the people of Iraq, we KNOW that it is the very simplest things that herald a new dawn, a new optimism. Badger 6 is boots on the ground. He is witness to the every day miracles of progress that are evident in places like Ramadi and Fallujah.

"New Glass" is Badger 6 eloquently describing what, I am sure, most msm 'journalists' would miss (even if they did venture outside the Green Zone!)

...There at the first corner, I see it. New glass. Someone has put new glass in a shop. Someone only installs new glass when they think it won't get broken. New glass is confidence.

As we roll though Ramadi I see more stores and small shops open. And more new glass....

That's it. NEW GLASS. Hard to imagine as we sit here in our safe havens in north America. Hard to fathom that this simple act of installing new glass is a beacon of hope - a declaration of confidence - by the people of Fallujah and Ramadi.

New glass. Such a basic item; such a simple necessity to us. Yet to the Iraqis this is their way of saying: "We believe we HAVE a future. We have faith in our future." As Badger 6 says:

Several days later we return to Ar Ramadi. We take the western highway this time which takes us north and around the city of Falluja. The north and east sides of Falluja are the most devastated. That is the direction from which US Forces attacked during Phantom Fury in November 2004.

As we round the northeast corner, I see one house that looks different from the others. People are living there. Coming and going. It has something the other places don't.

New Glass.

Every day, our troops share with us what they see on the ground. They tell us of the unstoppable progress happening all over Iraq. The msm may have you believe that Iraq is a disaster, unsalvagable. Our troops - boots on the ground - tell us different.

"New Glass" is a simply written, powerful description of a simple, yet powerful metaphor of Iraq. If you read nothing else this week, go read Badgers Forward here. And because it is NOT Good News Friday, I designate today as Badger 6*N*S*N!

Thank you, Badger 6, for your service. AND for sharing with us what you see in Iraq.

(h/t to Uncle Jimbo at B5) Brat

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Sunday, August 26, 2007

"Bias in Media?"



No way! Can't happen! Not during this war! I have something to say about it:

So begins CJ in his latest piece over at VA Mortgage Center....(Yes! I can spell 'American' when I need to - Don please note!! lol) As regular readers here at Tanker Bros know, we are always finding differences in what the msm chooses to present as facts, and what the real story is. This is not 'news'. What is also not news is that many op/ed pieces in msm are written by clueless 'writers', who prove their ignorance on a daily basis as to what is really happening in Iraq.

The focus of CJ's latest is a piece written by members of the 82nd Airborne. Published in the New York Times, this is their perception of current events.

To believe that Americans, with an occupying force that long ago outlived its reluctant welcome, can win over a recalcitrant local population and win this counterinsurgency is far-fetched. As responsible infantrymen and noncommissioned officers with the 82nd Airborne Division soon heading back home, we are skeptical of recent press coverage portraying the conflict as increasingly manageable and feel it has neglected the mounting civil, political and social unrest we see every day.

In his piece, titled "Honesty in Media" (can we say 'oxymoron'????), CJ has something to say about this published op/ed.

All these Soldiers are Staff Sergeants and below in the infantry and EOD fields. Based off their AKO accounts, they appear to be in the same unit, perhaps even the same squad. That is not a problem. These Soldiers have earned their opinion, narrow as it may be. However, it fits the media’s agenda and was, therefore, published in a prominent newspaper and spread throughout the land and blogosphere. It does not end there....


Needless to say, CJ has more to say on this. For the rest of his well thought out - EARNED! - opinion, spend a few minutes today and go here.

"Soldier on", CJ! Thank YOU.

Brat

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Saturday, August 25, 2007

Today is Patrick's birthday ...


Beloved son, brother, brother in arms....He would be 37 years old today.

OutSide The Windows

By: Deborah Tainsh 3/04 (In memory of Sgt. Patrick Tainsh, KIA Baghdad 2/11/04)

We watch out the windows, your dad and I,

wanting your easy walk towards the house

the wrap of your hand around the brass knob.

Instead we see the chaplain’s footprints

we have not been able to scrub from the concrete,

his knuckle prints branded against the door.

Any moment now we will break

through the matrix, reach you,

and pull you back into the kitchen where you’ll

show us the proper way to prepare the scallops.

You chose to trade-in your surf board and snowboard

for what you said was something

that would make a difference.

The last time you spoke with your brother

you said, “Don’t thank me, it’s my job.”

You always told your dad and me, “Don’t Worry.”

You climbed in rank faster than most

to reach sergeant; lead and taught those

drawn to you like apostles.

On top of the TV we keep the photo of you in

helmet and flack jacket with Iraqi children.

You believed them worth the fight.

You mourned their poverty.

Once defiant, later than most, you followed

steps of your father now accepting with

bitter-sweet pride your folded flag,

Cavalry Stetson, silver saber, and bootless spurs.

The Purple Heart, Bronze, and Silver Stars carry

the message we want the world to know about You.

We have been reminded, your dad and I, that

God’s son began his service at age thirty and at thirty-three

sacrificed himself for human kind.

What coincidence…

In our search we know you dwell in sixty-foot

waves from the North Shore to Australia,

the rain and breeze against the lighthouse chimes.

And outside the family room on a branch of the great oak

you dwell in the noble

heart of the hawk

watching through the window our gradual steps

moving beyond the chaplain’s footprints,

his knuckle prints branded against the door.


Patrick - I light a candle in your honour. Deb and Dave? Thank you. Keeping you all in my heart, and in my prayers.
Brat

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Friday, August 24, 2007

Good News Friday (B*N*S*N)1


Staff Sgt. Corey West, of Pelhan, Ga., a platoon sergeant in Company B, 1st Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment, hands out a humanitarian aid bag to local teenagers during a medical operation Aug. 16, in the town of Wuerdiya, in al-Ja’ara. Photo by Sgt. Natalie Rostek, 3rd HBCT Public Affairs.
Staff Sgt. Corey West, of Pelhan, Ga., a platoon sergeant in Company B, 1st Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment, hands out a humanitarian aid bag to local teenagers during a medical operation Aug. 16, in the town of Wuerdiya, in al-Ja’ara. Photo by Sgt. Natalie Rostek, 3rd HBCT Public Affairs.

Yes, I know we are used to seeing such pictures as this one, but this is a definite Good News Friday contender. This was posted last Monday, but we know these stories do happen every day of the week. Every day of ANY week, our troops are out among the local Iraqis giving aid.

FORWARD OPERATING BASE HAMMER — Task Force Marne Medics and Soldiers braved 120-degree heat Aug. 16 to bring medical care to 76 patients in the al-Ja’ara town of Wuerdiva.

In addition to providing medical attention to residents in need, Soldiers and Medics passed out 126 humanitarian aid bags, 97 book bags and 132 soccer shirts to the families.

“The humanitarian bags should support a small family for a little while,” said Cpl. Paul Bliss, of Willits, Calif., Company B, 1st Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment. “This will hopefully build some good will between 1-15 and the families that live in the area.”...


And building good will is what our troops do so well. This particular story was in an area with a history as an insurgent stronghold, so any gesture of goodwill from our troops, helps to break the hold the terrorist thugs may have had there. These stories DO happen every day, far away from any media scrutiny. Our troops helping Iraq, one teenager, one family, one neighbourhood at a time. Go read the rest of this B*N*S*N story here.

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Good News Friday (B*N*S*N)2


Concerned Iraqi men from all across North Babil turned out in droves to enlist in the Iraqi army.  Photo provided by 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division.
Concerned Iraqi men from all across North Babil turned out in droves to enlist in the Iraqi army. Photo provided by 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division.


If it's Friday....it must be good news! Actually this story came out last Monday, but I know you didn't see this anywhere in the msm. This is yet another example of how Iraqis really ARE stepping up and demanding a say in how their country is run.

KALSU — As concerned citizens stand up and secure their homes and communities against terrorists and militias all across North Babil, they are also standing up and leading the push for legitimate security forces in the area.

Iraqi Army recruiting has reached a near record in the city of Iskandariyah and the surrounding areas thanks, in large part, to concerned citizens wanting to do more to help their families, friends and neighbors in the fight against militants.

“More than 1,400 people have made the decision to join the Iraqi Army during the five-day recruiting drive,” said 1st Lt. Tyler Mitchell, of Wasilla, Alaska. “Due to sectarian violence, this is the first recruiting drive we have had this year.”...


And, it was a HUGE success. Imagine that. This article highlights a programme called "Concerned Citizens Program", and directly links the drop in violence to the confidence the locals feel in volunteering to stand against terrorism in their area brought upon them by the Sunni insurgents and the Shia militia.

“The men who signed up are the same men who have lived under the threat of murder and intimidation for nearly a year,” [1st Lt. Tyler Mitchell, of Wasilla, Alaska] continued. “They are tired of being scared and they want to be a part of something bigger. They want a change and they realize that the time is now.”...

"Recruiting has reached a near record high..." Any way the msm would try and spin such a story, THIS definitely qualifies as B*N*S*N, and you can read the rest here.

Brat

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

"I always looked up to you, Dad"


The LA Daily News had a heartwarming article about a father and son.

Drew Smith was promoted to Captain in the Navy SEALs. His dad was too ill to attend the official promotion ceremony in Coronado so the Navy SEALs brought the ceremony to him.

With Duncan's wife of 56 years, Dorothy, looking on, Capt. Roger Herbert - commanding officer of the Naval Special Warfare Center - re-enacted the ceremony for Drew's dad and some of his old World War II and Korean War buddies.

This article was just so amazing to me because of the obvious respect between father and son:

The past may slowly be slipping away from Duncan Smith, but it paused long enough Wednesday for the Woodland Hills man to find a smile and whisper congratulations to his 48-year-old son as he was promoted to captain in the elite Navy SEALs.

They say tough guys aren't supposed to cry, but Drew Smith cried.

Standing beside his father's wheelchair, the 1976 Chaminade High School grad wasn't the 22-year combat veteran and special ops officer with the Navy SEALs on Wednesday.

He was a little 8-year-old boy again, wanting nothing more than to make his ailing father proud.

"I always looked up to you, Dad," Drew said quietly, leaning down with tears in his eyes to give his father a hug at the Canyon Oaks Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Canoga Park.

"Everything I learned about service to my country I learned from you. This is a day both of us have been looking forward to for a long time. I love you, Dad."


There is nothing more I can add to that!

~Tracy

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Soar, Kory and Cooper! Soar!

My K9 is SAM... Kory was in my unit. Cooper, Sam and Us had a very successful tour.

Kory & Cooper touched so many lives!

This video was made so that the legacy will live on!!
MoE.

I came across this video with NO warning - and was totally overwhelmed. It is so hard to watch this video, but watch it we must. It is a beautiful tribute to Kory and Cooper, made by someone who knows them well. I promised MoE that - as long as I breathe - Kory and Cooper and all the other heroes will never be forgotten. NOT on my watch! Thank you so much MoE. Soar with the Angels Kory and Cooper.



TRIBUTE TO KORY & COOPER WIENS


I am praying this works - Thank you MoE

Brat

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Wednesday Hero

This Weeks Post Was Suggested By Kasee

SSgt. John Self
Click Image For Full Size

SSgt. John T. Self
29 years old from Pontotoc, Mississippi
314th Security Forces Squadron
May 14, 2007


A kindhearted patriot. That's how SSgt. John Self was described by those who knew him. "John was a good boy, a good boy who loved his country and who loved Christ and for that he’ll move on to a better place," said Laron Self, Sgt. Self's grandfather, fighting back tears.

SSgt. Self was killed, and three other airmen wounded, when an IED hit the Humvee they were traveling in while on his 79th patrol in Baghdad, Iraq. "John volunteered for this deployment while he was deployed to (Southwest Asia)," said Chief Master Sgt. Keith Morris, 314th SFS security forces manager. "We discussed this deployment via e-mail. He said he made his decision to deploy again to gain experience."


"He could always find the humor in anything regardless of the situation," said Senior Airman Daniel Hunsperger, a member of Self's fire team. "He believed in everything he did. This was obvious to us after learning he had only spent two weeks home between his last deployment and volunteering for this one."

On May 23, SSgt. Self was laid to rest with a crowd of hundreds to pay their respects. People lined both sides of the highway for more than 5 miles waving flags as the hundred-car procession traveled to the burial. Shouts of, "We love you John," and "Thank you, John, could be heard as the train of cars passed by. "That’s a hero," Susan Chambers, one of the many mourners, said to her son as she pointed at Self's casket.


These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. To find out more about Wednesday Hero, you can go here.

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Marine Corps Marathon!

Check this out - and follow the links to see how YOU can support them!

Dear family and friends, As you know I have been in the Army now for 22 years. It is a mission and a passion that I believe in and will continue to support for as long as I can. You also are aware that I am a devote runner. Well....I have a confession. I have not been running like I used to. I still consider myself a runner...but am not logging the miles that I once did when I was younger. In an effort to get back on track again I signed up to run the Marine Corps Marathon with the Armed Forces Foundation. The Foundation supports Active Duty, Reserve, National Guard, retirees and their families. Specifically, the Foundation provides accommodations to families who are traveling to the MDW area to be with their wounded family member (whether they are hospitalized at Bethesda or Walter Reed). They also have done great work on providing remodeling to make homes wheel chair and handicap accessible. This is where you come in....in my effort to get myself back into fighting shape as a runner....I want to help by giving back to the Foundation who has helped hundreds of military service members from all branches. Please consider making a donation (which is tax deductible)....to do so, visit http://www.armedforcesfoundation.org/run/. On the right side you will see a list of other runners. Scroll down until you see my name (listed as Glover, C. Craig ), highlight it and click submit. You will be taken to my site to make your donation. There is a little link that says sponsor C. Craig now that will be your guide. The Armed Forces Foundation does great work. I want them to be able to continue providing the servies that they do to our military members and their families. Help me to make that happen. To view more about the Armed Forces Foundation mission and on going projects, go to The Armed Forces Foundation. Thank you for your support, Craig

Thanks to CJ for passing this along to us at Tanker Bros. Always happy to support ALL our troops.:)

Brat

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Goodnight Irene, Goodnight


Mrs. Kirkaldy was never interested in any fame, a granddaughter said.

Mrs. Kirkaldy was never interested in any fame, a granddaughter said.

Photo Credit: Family Photo


Do you know who Irene Morgan Kirkaldy is? You really should. Up until this last week I had never heard of her. And then I heard a piece on CBC radio, and being me (lol) I went looking for more. On CBC radio there was coverage of her passing last week at age 90, and a reflection on her life. What an amazing American woman.

On the July morning in 1944 when she boarded a Greyhound bus in Gloucester bound for Baltimore, Mrs. Kirkaldy was not thinking about tackling racial segregation. Instead, the 27-year-old mother of two, who was recovering from a miscarriage, just wanted a comfortable seat for her lengthy ride home to see a doctor.

She settled into an aisle seat in the fourth row from the back -- in the section designated under Virginia's segregation laws for black passengers. Beside her sat a young mother cuddling an infant...(source)


And in that minute - on that bus - Irene Morgan Kirkaldy's life, and the lives of all Americans I suggest to you, irrevocably changed.

I heard a clip of a radio interview Irene gave to CBC radio back in 2000 (I think it was). Even then, I could hear the dignity, the twinkle in her voice (really I know that sounds absurd, but you had to hear it.lol) An unassuming woman, despite accomplishing great things in her life after that pivotal day in 1944, she still seemed somewhat bemused that she gained such attention from her simple act of refusing to give up her seat - 4th row from the back - to a white couple. In the interview, and as has been written up in the numerous articles I have since found, she talks of how the bus driver told her: " I'll have to have you arrested." Her reply? "That's perfectly alright."

The Greyhound bus driver, however, thought otherwise. He drove to the jail in Saluda, Va., in Middlesex County, where a sheriff's deputy boarded the bus and gave Mrs. Kirkaldy a warrant for her arrest.

In a daring and dangerous move, she tore up the warrant and threw it out the window. The deputy then grabbed her arm and tried to yank her off the bus. She didn't go peacefully.

"He touched me," she recounted to The Post. "That's when I kicked him in a very bad place. He hobbled off, and another one came on. He was trying to put his hands on me to get me off. I was going to bite him, but he was dirty, so I clawed him instead. I ripped his shirt. We were both pulling at each other. He said he'd use his nightstick. I said, 'We'll whip each other.' "...(source)


When she said in the interview I listened to, "I kicked him in a very bad place," I must admit I laughed out loud. Here is this refined voice telling the world that she had kicked a man in a place that a lady never should. AND that she would have bitten the next sheriff, but "he was dirty".

But, as history shows, Irene was dragged from the bus and carted off to jail. What began as a very tired young woman quietly insisting on her right to a seat she had paid for, developed into a cause celebre with Thurgood Marshall and other lawyers answering the clarion call for justice for ALL. It is well documented that Irene lost the first round in court but, not to be intimidated ever again, she took the case all the way to the Supreme Court. She ultimately won, and became the catalyst for changing the course of American history.

Image: Irene Morgan Kirkaldy
Kyndell Harkness / AP
Irene Morgan Kirkaldy
(source for pic)

We all know who Rosa Parks is, and we all honour her memory as a pioneer, but Irene's arrest was a full decade before the fateful day that saw Rosa Parks become a lightening rod for the civil rights changes that Irene Morgan began in 1944.

We often ask each other "where do we find such heroes?" as all our troops today quietly go about the business of ensuring that people in other lands know the same freedoms as we do.
Yes, we are all very blessed to be born and raised where we were, in the "land of the free", but as stories like Irene Morgan Kirkaldy's show, our land was not always so free for all Americans. There were many stories this last week in numerous media outlets reflecting on the life and times of Irene Morgan. Just by "googling"(yes, it's a verb. lol) her name, lots of references came up. I COULD cite them all for you, but they are not hard to find. But, as I read the articles, I was soooo grateful. Grateful for women like Mrs Kirkaldy who, when the call came to make a difference, she didn't hesitate. It apparently didn't occur to her to cave to oppression and submit quietly to an injustice. Of such women is the backbone of America built, and I was humbled as I read about her.

This child of slaves went on to a full lifetime of selfless work as a proponent of justice, while going back to school herself and earning two degrees. She gained her undergrad degree at the age of 63, and her Masters at age 73. She also received the Presidential Citizens Award under President Clinton. The citation for that read:

....that she "took the first step on a journey that would change America forever."...(source)


Indeed she did - and as always, I could write more than one book about the life of this remarkable woman. But that is for others to do. I have noted a few sources on here. Start with those, and go learn about an extraordinary woman who accomplished great things born of what at first appeared to be an ordinary moment in time. For me, I will continue to draw inspiration from her life, and give thanks that such women lived among us. A mother, grandmother, hero, Irene saw a need and set about fixing it. Such unflinching role models can be found in every corner of our lands. We would do well to remember, and emulate their great examples in our own lives.

Thank you Irene. Rest well. YOU don't have to ride Jim Crow no more.

Brat

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Monday, August 20, 2007

"Star Spangled Banner"


I first heard the Star Spangled Banner at a July 4 community barbeque many years ago. Fresh from my homeland just two days previously, I stood in small town America and watched, and listened, as everybody joined to sing this anthem. (And yes - that was my first exposure to that great American institution: barbeques!)To this day, whenever I hear this, I remember that first July 4 and am reminded of the amazing display of patriotism, unity.

Those were the days when America was torn apart by the Vietnam war, when neighbour argued with neighbour over the back fence about the validity of the US involvement in a land far away. But, at that barbque, celebrating a most American holiday, there was no evidence of the tears in the fabric of American society. For those few shining moments, there was a unity, a common bond of purpose.

Many years have passed since that first time. I have travelled many miles of the heart, and learned many things - worked with thousands of children from around the world in both America and Canada. You have to know that I was raised with a visceral love of my country. To this day I get goosebumps whenever I hear MY national anthem, no matter the miles separating me from my homeland. I can sing every word, and taste, and feel, and smell the land of my birth.

So here we are in another war in a land far, far away (for now! We all know that in reality, THIS war is already in our own backyards.) And yes, the Star Spangled Banner is still sung in small towns, and big cities across the land. Today though, because of what I have seen, I often pause and wonder: do these people really REALLY understand, mean, what they are singing? Do Americans today LIVE the meaning of the words? Sure, we all teach our children to recite the Pledge of Allegiance (at least until it is totally outlawed by the dimtwits), and we still raise the young people of our nations to revere the flag - that symbol of what their forefathers and mothers fought for, bled for, and died for. My daughter is blessed. She has been nurtured in the love of two countries. For her, it is as natural as breathing to know all the words of MY national anthem, and sing them with pride and allegiance. She also, because of her birthland, is able to sing another national anthem (in both official languages no less!) and understand what every word means. She LIVES them, because we have been discussing what the words mean - the concepts behind them - since she could talk. Years ago, James Clavell was struck when his young daughter came home from school and proudly recited what she had learned that day. Word perfect, she recited rote fashion:

I pledge allegiance to my Flag,
and to the Republic for which it stands:

one Nation indivisible,
With Liberty and Justice for all.

October 11, 1892


A really interesting history of the origins of the Pledge of Allegiance here.

Clavell asked his daughter what that all meant after she had finished. She had no clue. Imagine that. Clavell then wrote a short story (by his prolific standards anyway. lol) called "The Children's Story." You can find the text of the whole story online - I did. Please, go read that here. I came across a copy of this a few years back, and I remember how it resonated for me. At the time, I had worked with many kids, was a mother myself, and was currently working in a classroom of impressionable 5 year olds. Is there anything more precious? That may sound like a throwaway comment, question, but it really is not.

And then just last week I got an email about the Star Spangled Banner from an American friend. In it, is a speech which Isaac Asimov gave in 1991 about The Star Spangled Banner. And yes, I went and actually found a copy of this speech on the Freepers site (lol) You can go here for that. Is well worth a look for the comments alone. However, because I think it is important, I am going to copy and paste the entire email my friend sent me - with HER comments as a preface...;)


"When I was a teacher, I taught English and reading, but for several years I taught history. I was very familiar with the national anthem, and my students enjoyed when I told them the story of how it came to be written. I, too, told it in story form and the kids loved it when I pretended to peer into the early morning fog while asking, "Can you see it? Whose flag is it? Who won?" I think they understand it better now. It has some.....uh..ahem..rather antiBritish sections, but that was a loooooong time ago! We're buddies now! LOL" (my note: Yes - we ARE!!!)

NO REFUGE COULD SAVE : BY DR. ISAAC ASIMOV

I was once asked to speak at a luncheon. Taking my life in my hands, I announced I was going to sing our national anthem -- all four stanzas. This was greeted with loud groans. One man closed the door to the kitchen, where the noise of dishes and cutlery was loud and distracting. "Thanks, Herb," I said.
"That's all right," he said. "It was at the request of the kitchen staff"

I explained the background of the anthem and then sang all four stanzas. Let me tell you, those people had never heard it before -- or had never really listened. There was a standing ovation. But it was not for me; it was the anthem.

More recently, while conducting a seminar, I told my students the story of the anthem and sang all four stanzas. Again there was a wild ovation and prolonged applause. And again, it was the anthem and not me.

So now let me tell you how it came to be written.

In 1812, the United States went to war with Great Britain, primarily over freedom of the seas. We were in the right. For two years, we held off the British, even though we were still a rather weak country. Great Britain was in a life and death struggle with Napoleon. In fact, just as the United States declared war, Napoleon marched off to invade Russia. If he won, as everyone expected, he would control Europe, and Great Britain would be isolated. It was no time for her to be involved in an American war.

At first, our seamen proved better than the British. After we won a battle on Lake Erie in 1813, the American commander, Oliver Hazard Perry, sent the message,
"We have met the enemy and they are ours." However, the weight of the British navy beat down our ships eventually. New England, hard-hit by a tightening blockade, threatened secession.

Meanwhile, Napoleon was beaten in Russia and in 1814 was forced to abdicate. Great Britain now turned its attention to the United States, launching a three-pronged attack.

The northern prong was to come down Lake Champlain toward New York and seize parts of New England.

The southern prong was to go up the Mississippi, take New Orleans and paralyze the west.

The central prong was to head for the mid-Atlantic states and then attack Baltimore, the greatest port south of New York. If Baltimore was taken, the nation, which still hugged the Atlantic coast, could be split in two. The fate of the United States, then, rested to a large extent on the success or failure of the central prong.

The British reached the American coast, and on August 24, 1814, took Washington, D.C.Then they moved up the Chesapeake Bay toward Baltimore. On September 12, they arrived and found 1,000 men in Fort McHenry, whose guns controlled the harbor. If the British wished to take Baltimore, they would have to take the fort.

On one of the British ships was an aged physician, William Beanes, who had been arrested in Maryland and brought along as a prisoner. Francis Scott Key, a lawyer and friend of the physician, had come to the ship to negotiate his release.

The British captain was willing, but the two Americans would have to wait. It was now the night of September 13, and the bombardment of Fort McHenry was about to start.

As twilight deepened, Key and Beanes saw the American flag flying over Fort McHenry. Through the night, they heard bombs bursting and saw the red glare of rockets. They knew the fort was resisting and the American flag was still flying. But toward morning the bombardment ceased, and a dread silence fell. Either Fort McHenry had surrendered and the British flag flew above it, or the bombardment had failed and the American flag still flew.

As dawn began to brighten the eastern sky, Key and Beanes stared out at the fort, trying to see which flag flew over it. He and the physician must have asked each other over and over,
"Can you see the flag?"

After it was all finished, Key wrote a four stanza poem telling the events of the night. Entitled "The Defense of Fort McHenry," it was published in newspapers and swept the nation. Someone noted that the words fit an old English tune called, "To Anacreon in Heaven" -- a difficult melody with an uncomfortably large vocal range. For obvious reasons, Key's work became known as "The Star Spangled Banner," and in 1931 Congress declared it the official anthem of the United States.

Now that you know the story, here are the words. Presumably, the old doctor is speaking. This is what he asks Key:

Oh! say can you see, by the dawn's early light,

What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?

Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the perilous fight,
O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming?
And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof thro' the night that our flag was still there.
Oh! say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave,
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?


("Ramparts," in case you don't know, are the protective walls or other elevations that surround a fort.)

The first stanza asks a question.

The second gives an answer:


On the shore, dimly seen thro' the mist of the deep
Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes,

What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep.
As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam,
In full glory reflected, now shines on the stream
'Tis the star-spangled banner. Oh! long may it wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

"The towering steep" is again, the ramparts. The bombardment has failed, and the British can do nothing more but sail away, their mission a failure. In the third stanza I feel Key allows himself to gloat over the American triumph. In the aftermath of the bombardment, Key probably was in no mood to act otherwise? During World War I when the British were our Staunchest allies, this third stanza was not sung. However, I know it, so here it is:


And where is that band, who so vauntingly swore

That the havoc of war...and the battle's confusion.

A home and a country should leave us no more?
Their blood has washed out their foul footstep's pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave,
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.


(The fourth stanza, a pious hope for the future, should be sung more slowly than the other three and with even deeper feeling):

Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand

Between their loved homes and the war's desolation,

Blest with victory and peace, may the Heaven - rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, for our cause is just,
And this be our motto --"In God is our trust."
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.

I hope this will help you to look at the national anthem with new eyes. Listen to it, the next time you have a chance, with new ears. Pay attention to the words. And don't let them ever take it away ... not even one word of it.


So back to my question: Is there anything more precious than young children earnestly reciting the words on which your country was founded. My answer? Yes - there sure is. More precious than the recitation, is the teaching ALL our children what love of country means. Concepts like loyalty, honour and duty to one's country seem to be in short supply in some schools these days. But I suggest to you that it is critical today, that we each read, re-read words like this, and the Pledge of Allegiance. Not just read, or mouth the words, but really understand, feel and taste the importance of what our founding fathers gave us. Now it is imperative that we stand firm at the gates. Now - as parents, educators of the precious young minds we are charged with moulding, it is vital that we instil in every child what 'country' means. Today, just as throughout our history, we must remind ourselves what we stand to lose if we are negligent in OUR duty. We dare not abdicate our responsibility for our young ones. We MUST teach our children well.

Brat (with thanks to my American friend Sylvia!)

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Sunday, August 19, 2007

Letter from Baghdad by the River


'Letter from Baghdad by the River' was sent to me by Deb Tainsh(thanks Deb!) Sent to her via a friend in the military. A lot of people choose to listen to the msm and uninformed politicans: the 'experts' who have never been near the sandbox. As I have proved often, those actually in Iraq have a far different sense of what is really going on. I have shared a few such letters here at Tanker Bros. What follows are the thoughts of someone else who is there. An expert? Good enough for me! Read on:

The following is a letter I received from a friend of over 30 Years who is on his first deployment to Iraq. He is training the Iraqi's internal defense units and is a native San Franciscan. His comments are telling. I was also struck by his comments concerning what the folks at home are (or can be) doing to support the effort.

From Baghdad by the River

Hello good friends.

This is just the latest news (from what I see and do) so
here goes. This month marks a year I've been on the road and I've got four more months to go. It's still a long way but coming home to my family and great friends as you've been in my life makes it all worth it.

It's 122 degrees out and it's been, well, busy in the middle of this
surge business. I suppose this is what one would call high-stakes
politics on steroids. We've all been quietly doing our jobs here
shredding Al-Qaeda and their twisted logic by the numbers and rebuilding the joint. Don't be fooled by all that glorious martyrdom stuff they preach; they cut and run at the slightest possibility of contact with us. Their bravery is demonstrated time and again by sawing off the heads of innocent civilians and their children when we're not in the area. The determination of these common folks is refreshing and they are just trying to eak out a meager living for themselves, hoping these thugs will go away. Their fears are beginning to turn to anger and confidence to fight them in greater numbers each day. We're getting more tribal and community leaders to stand up against these bandits or tell us where they are hiding. I don't hear what the American public is being told by the media and Al Qaeda but we are definitely beginning to see signs of progress in this long and difficult fight.

The backing from my family has sustained me here and I've had a support group holding it all together until I finish my tour of duty. The leadership here is intelligent, professional and superb. You can feel the teamwork ethos throughout the 168,000 strong bunch of Americans and the additional coalition partners who've jumped in to help. By sheer numbers and resources, it's true the U.S. does the heavy lifting here but that is in direct portion to our capabilities and commitment to this effort. You see it on the faces of our young (and not so young) troops here everyday. If it weren't for the few politically appointed boobs in blue neckties placed here with their fast-food mentalities several years ago, this would have been a much different and better place than it is now but that is only my opinion.

I am not wrapping myself in the flag; in fact, for most of us it's quite
the opposite. Most of the ill-informed politicians use it and this war
as a security blanket to wrap themselves in to shield them from their cold unpredictable future and I'll leave it at that. I believe that most of the troops here or those who have served in uniform would quietly and humbly agree. My 19-year-old daughter enlisted is now serving along with the rest of us in this terrible war and I'm
conflicted with both fear and pride. These kids are so much wiser and braver than I was at their age so, as a consolation; I know that as a country we're still in pretty good hands. I know we're going to be in good hands because there's some great folks still running around giving it their all on the home front too like the cops, J-keys, and special people like this guy I used to work with: Marine, combat vet, ex-cop, still going flat out in retirement helping out fellow disabled vets who don't ask for much but have given so much more; they don't come better than that-never a go-getter, always a go-giver. I just needed to say that, (Name Deleted)-sorry.

Supporting our troops, it's much more than sticking a $1.25 yellow ribbon decal on the car. Just giving a couple of hours
out of your schedule to stop by a VA hospital and talk with them for a while-everyone benefits. Running an errand, writing a letter for them, or just stopping by does so much to restore hope, character, and value for both parties-regardless of one's feelings toward war-whether you've served or not. I couldn't be less succinct, knowledgeable, and sure as I am at this point in my career about all this but I guess that type of understanding is a small reward that comes with geezerhood.

I don't' get on the net much and when I try, there's a waiting line so
you get to stand around in the shade drinking water and shoot the breeze in the absence of one. I did find out how to get the SF Chron online and see what's going on in Baghdad by the Bay. The latest crisis there: Syringe needles in Golden Gate Park? That's just shocking and terrible, where's the sporting green? I did hear about Bonds chasing and passing Aaron's homerun record and the government still chasing him. I think they've got more important guys to chase over here in these parts. ...

Well, this letter is just about cooked and I didn't want to wear out my welcome. Fingers crossed, I should be home sometime after between turkeys and Christmas trees. I want to extend to everyone my best wishes and I'll see you all then and the drinks will be on me.

Cheers,

S****** (name removed by Brat)

Thanks to ALL our troops.... Brat (h/t to Deb)

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Friday, August 17, 2007

Coalition Country - Latvia















"The Parliament of the Republic of Latvia has taken the decision 'On the Support of the Implementation of the UN Security Council Resolution No. 1441' pledging support to and readiness to join the efforts of the international coalition aiming at disarmament of Iraq. We support the military forces of our coalition partners who, in risking their lives, are averting threats to peace and international security."
03/26/03 WHITE HOUSE

Latvia, slightly larger than West Virginia, was a part of the USSR. Although the USSR claimed and annexed Latvia in 1940, the USA and many other countries did not recognise that claim. Part of eastern Europe, Latvia has seen much oppression under the USSR regime. A personal note (six degrees of separation? lol) I went to school with a woman from Latvia. In those days, she lived in Canada, but most of her family remained in Latvia. She often talked about wanting to return to her homeland and visit her relatives. Going would not have been a problem, but getting back OUT would have been.

Latvia sits in eastern Europe between Estonia and Lithuania. An old civilisation, Latvia has seen it's share of oppressors. With a population of about 2.6 million people, Latvia is comprised of Latvian 57.7%, Russian 29.6%, Belarusian 4.1%, Ukrainian 2.7%, Polish 2.5%, Lithuanian 1.4%, other 2% ethnicities. (source)

View of city and Daugava River from spire of St Peter's Church, Rīga

View of city and Daugava River from spire of St Peter's Church, Rīga (Photographer: Jane Sweeney)(c) Lonely Planet


Latvia is the small, flat and largely boggy meat in the sandwich between its Baltic neighbours. It packs a lot in though: start with Rīga, its vibrant coastal capital, and move on to photogenic castles, music festivals and scenic river valleys. (source)

The Republic of Latvia re-established it's independance in 1991 following the breakup of the Soviet Union, and is now a parliamentary democracy. Latvia became a member of NATO and the EU in 1994. There are three main religions: Lutheran, Roman Catholic, Russian Orthodox. The official language is Latvian, but Russian is a close second, (37.5%), reflecting its ties to the former Soviet Union. Based on a civil law system. Latvia boasts a literacy rate of 99.7%.

...most notable because it contains the very first published sample of the Latvian language, the Lord's Prayer. Tantalizingly, frustratingly, our single sheet ends right in the middle of it:


Talking literacy, I found this in my search and think it is fascinating to see this early example of Latvian culture. You can find that site here.

What of Latvia's economy?

Latvia's economy experienced average GDP growth of more than 7.0% over the past several years. In 2006 it reached 10.2% real GDP growth. The majority of companies, banks, and real estate have been privatized, although the state still holds sizable stakes in a few large enterprises. Latvia officially joined the World Trade Organization in February 1999. EU membership, a top foreign policy goal, came in May 2004. The current account deficit - more than 15% of GDP in 2006 - and inflation remain major concerns. (source)

With an unemployment rate of 6.5%, Latvia's labour force breaks down: agriculture: 13%
industry: 19% services: 68% (2005 est.) Main exports? : wood and wood products, machinery and equipment, metals, textiles, foodstuffs.. Latvia's main export partners are, naturally enough, it's neighbours: Lithuania 14.1%, Estonia 12.2%, Russia 11.6%, Germany 9.8%, UK 7.7%, Sweden 6.3%, Denmark 4.8% (2006).. Latvia relies on Germany 15.4%, Lithuania 13%, Russia 8%, Estonia 7.7%, Poland 7.2%, Finland 5.7%, Sweden 5%, Belarus 4.7% (2006) for the import of machinery and equipment, chemicals, fuels, vehicles. (source for all of that data here)

Skarnu Street
Skarnu Street
by A. Tenass
(source)



What about a military? Of course, with it's history with the USSR, Latvia does indeed have a military. Found a very cool site on military flags:


image by Talis Tomass, 21 June 2002

Zemessadze Is a kind of National Guard, see <www.mod.lv>:
"The Zemessardze Organized in 1991 as the first defense force of the newly independent Latvia, Zemessardze's roots can be traced to a pre-WWII National Guard organization. An all-volunteer force, its initial strength was approximately 16,000 men with very little in the way of weapons, but with a fierce determination to defend the newly formed democratic Latvian government. Over the years the Zemessardze has retained its volunteer status, but has under-gone a number of reorganizations, retiring some of its older members, streamlining its organization, and closing some of its first military bases which were inherited from the Soviet Union. Today the Zemessardze consists of approximately 14,000 men. To meet planned mobilization requirements, the Zemessardze will be undergoing still more organizational changes, which will ultimately increase its combat capability and streamline its structure. Beginning in 1993, the Zemessardze formed a partnership with the United States Michigan State National Guard, providing the Zemessardze with enormous help in organization and training. The high degree of support by the officials of the Michigan National Guard and by the State."
Jarig Bakker, 21 June 2002 (source)

Who knew of the connection between Latvia and the Michigan National Guard? Not me...lol...

Latvia's military consists today of
Latvian Republic Defense Force: Ground Forces, Navy, Air Force (Latvijas Gaisa Spelki), Border Guard, Latvian Home Guard (Latvijas Zemessardze) (2007) and is comprised of conscription (19 yrs old) and volunteer (18 yrs old). The military budget is 1.2% of the GDP.

...12-month conscript service obligation; conscription to be abolished in 2007; under current law, every citizen is entitled to serve in the armed forces for life (2006)...(source)

A Latvian army soldier from the maneuver group, Multi-National Division - Central South, Camp Echo, Iraq, waits to start a mission to provide security for Bosnian army explosive ordnance disposal technicians in Diwaniyah, Iraq, December 19, 2006. Photo credit: Tech. Sgt. Dawn M. Price, USAF

Yes, Latvia is in Iraq as one of the active coalition partners:


Since 2003 Latvia has provided a total of 1,022 troops to Iraq Initially deployed to Kirkuk, Iraq for a year, the Latvian forces were later transferred to Camp Charlie in Al Hillah, then to Camp Delta in Al Kut, and finally to Camp Echo in Ad Diwaniyah where there are currently stationed. The Latvian infantry are tasked with providing a QRF force as well as conducting security patrols around the camp. in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. (source)

And yes, Latvia has it's share of casualties. According to various sources I found, Latvia has lost three soldiers to the GWOT currently in Iraq.

27 Dec 2006 18:36:19 GMT

Dec 27 (Reuters) - Two Latvian soldiers were killed and three were wounded in Iraq on Wednesday when a bomb exploded under their patrol vehicle near Baghdad, the Latvian Defence Ministry said....(source)

I also found an interesting piece (on a blog, where else?) about the msm and a Latvian unit:

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Latvian troops in Iraq dodge yet another IED

From the Latvian MoD webpage (my translation) :

On the morning of 4th may, as the Latvian company's second platoon was conducting a patrol near Diwaniyah, an IED was detonated on the right side of the road. No casualties were incurred.
The 2nd infantry coy/2nd infantry battalion dodges yet another IED blast without serious harm.

Again, the MoD release went completely unnoticed by the media. In this case thats probably positive, a sign of phlegmatic maturity - omnipresent danger and close calls to the troops no longer count as news. (source)

Latvian Army soldier in Diwaniyah during the Iraq war
Latvian Army soldier in Diwaniyah during the Iraq war
(source)

Over at Wiki, there is also lots of info (taken with a pinch of salt mostly!) but found this interesing piece on uniforms:

Latvian armed forces uniform

In 2006 the whole of the Latvian armed forces received new uniforms. According to the Latvian Ministry of Defence the new uniforms will be able to withstand temperatures of -30C to +50C.The uniforms incorporate a unique kind of digital camouflage.
(source)


In November 2006, President Bush visited Latvia as part of a NATO summit. It was his second visit to Latvia.

President George W. Bush stands with President Vaira Vike-Freiberga of Latvia, and NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer during a photo opportunity Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2006, at the start of the 2006 NATO Summit in Riga, Latvia. White House photo by Paul Morse
President George W. Bush stands with President Vaira Vike-Freiberga of Latvia, and NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer during a photo opportunity Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2006, at the start of the 2006 NATO Summit in Riga, Latvia. White House photo by Paul Morse

Not far from where we meet today stands Riga's Freedom Monument. It was erected in 1935, during this country's brief period of independence between the two world wars. During the dark years of Soviet occupation, the simple act of laying flowers at the foot of this monument was considered a crime by Communist authorities. In 1989, the monument was the scene of one of the most remarkable protests in the history of freedom. Hundreds of thousands of people stood together and formed a human chain that stretched nearly 400 miles across the Baltics -- from Tallinn in the north, through downtown Riga, and into the heart of Vilnius. By joining hands, the people of this region showed their unity and their determination to live in freedom -- and it made clear to the Soviet authorities that the Baltic peoples would accept nothing less than complete independence.

President George W. Bush delivers remarks Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2006, at Latvia University in Riga, Latvia. The President thanked the people of Latvia for accommodating the world leaders to the NATO summit and thanked President Vike-Freiberga and her government for a "spectacular job." White House photo by Paul Morse





This speech is so eloquent about the price that is sometimes asked of all people who value freedom. If you need reminding just how blessed we are, and a reminder of what some countries have paid to attain their own freedom from tyranny, go read the rest here.

Countries such as Latvia know full well that freedom is NOT free; they choose to stand with us, firm in the face of the current threats.

"Paldies" Latvia!

Brat

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Good News Friday (B*N*S*N)


"Summertime, and the living is easy........". Sumertime for kids is typically a time of long, lazy days, hanging in the 'hood with your buds, maybe spending the day at the park with family. For some kids, summertime might be a carefully planned vacation with mum, dad and whatever siblings you just *have* to tolerate for the long weeks away from your every day school friends. Summer time is freedom from daily routine, a time and space to make shared memories of the heart to last a lifetime.

For some kids, summer marks that first time away from home: summer camp. Typically, the rite of passage which is summer camp focuses on shared interests, age groups and a whole bunch of other unifying criteria. All fine and dandy, but for military kids, summertime can be especially hard if one or both parents are deployed and not physically available. For the child of a military family, often these interests, life experiences are what separate them from their peers. I have always been acutely aware, as are you all, that when a solider deploys, their family also serves, also makes huge sacrifices. Today's Good News Friday story is about one way the military acknowledges that for the precious children of our deployed servicemembers, summer time brings it's own very special challenges:

Children participating in Operation Purple at Upper Marlboro, Md., were able to experience part of their parents' jobs by exploring a Humvee brought by members of the Army Reserve’s 312th Psychological Operations Company. Photo by Elizabeth M. Lorge

Camp Lets Kids of Deployed Parents be Kids

Aug 16, 2007
BY Elizabeth M. Lorge

Washington (Army News Service, Aug. 16, 2007) - "He had to save us. He had to save all of us," said 10-year-old Savana Bucklewn of her father's three-year deployment to Iraq, a deployment so long she didn't recognize him when he did come home.

For Savana and more than 155,000 other military children, the war on terrorism means long, often multiple, absences from dad or mom (or both), fear, loneliness, uncertainty and some very adult responsibilities.

But the National Military Family Association's Operation Purple has given 10,000 of them the opportunity to bond with other military kids at free summer camps where they can be kids again, where they can laugh, play games and learn more about their parents' jobs in the military....


At these camps, kids get to be kids with other kids who know what it feels like to have their loved one in harm's way for months on end. Kids like Cydny and Carly, who know their classmates have no clue what they go through.

...[they] said their friends and classmates don't understand how it feels to have a parent in harm's way.

"They were like, 'You don't miss your dad at all, you've always seen him.' And I was like, 'Yeah, I really do miss him,'" said Carly, 10.

"We couldn't really relate to them," added Cydney, 12. "But when we come here, we can relate to people who have had the same experiences. It's really important because all the kids here can talk to other people."...

Only another military brat would understand what 1o year old Ian Bridson goes through during the weekly phone with his dad, as he actually hears an enemy attack:

..."We were talking, then I heard a guy in the background saying 'Incoming! Incoming! Incoming!' I could hear the rockets exploding on the ground," he said, adding that he didn't know his father was safe until half an hour later....

As adults, we find those situations hard enough to cope with. (Yep - been there, done that one.) How much more traumatic for the little ones. There are now quite a few programmes addressing the needs of the military's children who also serve. Operation Purple may be just a small part of a huge effort. For me, any programme that let's the children be children, recognising their particular needs brought about from this war, really does qualify as B*N*S*N!

Read the rest here.

Brat

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

"...the good news is getting out...it is undeniable..."

Those few words above are just a tiny piece of an exclusive interview that Pete Hegseth of Vets for Freedom gave to Spree over at Wake Up America.

***EXCLUSIVE***Interview with Executive Director of Vets For Freedom, Pete Hegseth

By Susan Duclos aka Spree

Vets for Freedom is a nonpartisan organization established by combat veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Our mission is to educate the American public about the importance of achieving success in these conflicts by applying our first-hand knowledge to issues of American strategy and tactics—namely "the surge" in Iraq. We support policymakers from both sides of the aisle who have stood behind our great generation of American warriors on the battlefield, and who have put long-term national security before short-term partisan political gain.

Pete Hegseth, Executive Director

First Lieutenant Pete Hegseth served in Iraq with the 3rd Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division for their deployment to Iraq from 2005-2006. Lt. Hegseth served as an infantry Platoon Leader in Baghdad during the nationwide elections in October and December 2005, and as a Civil-Military Operations officer in Samarra. Lt. Hegseth also served in Guantanamo Bay for a year on a security mission with his National Guard unit and currently serves in the 1-69 Infantry, New York Army National Guard. He holds the Bronze Star for his time in Iraq. Pete is a graduate of Princeton University and plans to pursue a Masters in Public Policy at the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton in the fall. Lt. Hegseth originally hails from Minnesota, but now lives in New York City with his wife.

The Washington Times has published some key excerpts to this 25 minute interview with Mr. Hegseth, so please head over and read those excerpts dealing with what the Vets For Freedom does and why, as well as giving a “face” to the Iraqi people and their hopes and desires for their country, what he is hearing from the soldiers and interpreters still on the ground in Iraq and he speaks to why Victory in Iraq is so important to America....


The Washington Times heads their article:

A veteran with a voice

Lt. Pete Hegseth photograph/
Special to The Washington Times Lt. Pete Hegseth (right), seen here patrolling Samarra, Iraq, with Capt. Pete Carey, said he joined the Vets for Freedom group, which was begun last year, to get other veterans "out there talking about why it is important that we complete the mission." (my emphasis).

"...important that we complete the mission." Whether the politicians like it or not, even if they want to play deaf, dumb and blind, OUR soldiers, our veterans are this time speaking out. Veterans and those currently serving are THIS time making sure that their voices are heard, that their truths are heard. Pete Hegseth speaks for many in this interview with Spree. This man knows exactly what he is talking about, having been there, done that. Our politicians would do well to start paying attention (and I had to excerpt this next part, seeing as how it is about one of 'our' faves - even though the polls show him not so much a favourite of his own constituents anymore - but I digress!)


SD (Spree) : You mentioned Harry Reid. When you first saw that they confirmed General Petreaus unanimously, what was your initial reaction when you first heard Harry Reid say the words, Iraq is lost”?

Hegseth: (Laughter) Unfortunately I wasn’t surprised and that is just because I know he has said things like that in the past, but it is moral outrage, its how can you, after having voted, in an 81-0 vote, unanimously confirm and Harry Reid was one of those that voted yes, so he was not a non voter, how can you vote for this General and this strategy that he openly talked about using, and then three months later before he is able to implement it, declare his strategy lost and the war lost?

It’s irresponsible. I don’t understand it and like you said, it reeks of politics and it reeks of the way that some think that they will benefit politically from our failure in Iraq and you heard it from the majority whip, most recently, he said, you know, “if success comes out of Iraq, then that is really going to hurt us and fracture our base”, so it shows you how invested they are in defeat....

Hmmmm....."irresponsible..." "..invested in defeat..." That nails it. Yep - that's Harry. But there is more, and Lt. Hegseth has much to say on many aspects of today's war. Bottom line: Why is victory important for America in Iraq? And yes, Spree asks Lt. Hegseth that:

Hegseth: ... Our strategic interests are directly linked to the outcome of what the Iraqi people do there and what we allow them to do, because if we don't, if we don't bring about a successful outcome, we will leave behind a haven for al Qaeda and those affiliated with them. We will leave behind a region that is unstable, where Iran thinks it can impose its will. Where outside state actors become involved in the outcome in Iraq because of the power void, and it is unstable.

Our interests are directly linked, and it is incredibly important, the largest, I think the more overarching argument to why it is important to America is victory or defeat in the eyes of al Qaeda. If al Qaeda thinks they have won in Iraq, that will be a propaganda bonanza for them and embolden them for years and years to come.

People tell me all the time, "American soldiers are creating more terrorists." In some ways, sure, our president aggravates a lot of insurgents in Iraq. But you don't think our defeat would embolden them even more and create even more of a problem?

So, that, for me, is the big prize in this. It is a war of perception, and how would this war be perceived by our enemies and by our public. Because ... history will judge us, not on when we leave, but on what we leave behind. ...

So then Spree has the next obvious question. You know, the one about what the future would look like for Iraqis if we all leave before the mission is completed:

SD: Why is it important for the Iraqi people that we see victory there now?

Hegseth: For basic humanity as we talked about before, the mass bloodshed that would ensue if we left before that country was stable, I don’t know if we have ever seen the likes, I mean I know we have in world history, but I don’t think Americans would be accustomed to seeing the kind of bloodshed that American soldiers would have to step back and watch. Our allies, people that stepped up, innocent families, women and children, we have already seen at a low level, no, at a high level, what that violence looks like, but if we pull back before the Iraqi government could protect itself both within and without, the bloodshed would be, would be, unimaginable.

So, there is a responsibility there, plus, I think they have been given a great opportunity, in these last months, to stand up and create a stable government, so I think Iraq would have lost an opportunity to really become one of the more stable governments, in the future, obviously it is a long term consideration, but, a consideration nonetheless....

There is much more in this interview, and Spree has it all posted on her site . Go read the rest of it here. After you have done reading Spree's interview, then go below this post, and see who you need to be talking to on the phone today. I am sure your local politicians are just waiting to hear from you personally (yes, including Harry!) Let us all make this day really matter.

Thank YOU Lt. Hegseth! And thanks Spree - awesome job!

Brat

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Your mission today!


Vets for Freedom needs all of you to get on your phones today(Thursday, 16th) and call your politicans. As usual, I am late on this one, but TODAY is the day you need to be doing this. Read on:



WEEK 6: "Cost of Defeat" Call-in Campaign


It has been brought to our attention that some of you may not have received the entire e-mail when it was originally sent. Below is all the pertinent information you will need for this week.

In the past two weeks, Vets for Freedom has released television advertisements in 5 states (read about them here & here) and stood up State Chapters in 26 states. We plan to release 5 more TV ads this week, and formally announce 5 additional State Chapters. And every day, our membership numbers expand rapidly.

Without question, we are on the offensive throughout America - communicating to members of Congress and the American people a very clear message: give General Petraeus, and his counter-insurgency strategy, the time, troops, and resources necessary to succeed in Iraq.

But rest assured, Washington DC-based, anti-war radicals are also active, and they plan to make their next political statement on Thursday, August 16th. According to a MoveOn.org strategy memo, they will "release a hard-hitting report to local media on what the war has cost your congressional district. This will happen on August 16th."

MoveOn.org will send out press releases in every congressional district stating how much the Iraq War is costing American taxpayers. But, of course, they fail to ask a more fundamental question: what is the cost of defeat in Iraq? And what will it ultimately cost America-in lives, treasure, and reputation-if we declare defeat at the hands of Al Qaeda & Company?

What You Can Do This Week!


On Thursday, August 16th, as a direct response to MoveOn.org's crass attempts to politicize the Iraq War, Vets for Freedom is asking all of its members to participate in our "Cost of Defeat" Call-in Campaign.

And we are not alone in this effort. We are proud to be partnering with Families United for the Troops and Their Mission, a grassroots coalition of thousands of Gold Star and Blue Star families including some with loved ones currently in harm's way. Both the troops-and their families-will be making calls this Thursday!

So mark your calendar and call your members of Congress to explain the "Cost of Defeat" in Iraq. Tell them that defeat in Iraq would mean the following things:

  • A bloodbath in Iraq, costing hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi lives and possibly destabilize the entire Middle East region.

  • A failed state in Iraq and a safe haven for Al Qaeda to plan future attacks against America and her allies.

  • An emboldened Iran in pursuit of nuclear weapons and a victorious Al Qaeda in pursuit of new ways to kill Americans at home and around the world.

For more tips and information about what to say when you call, please read the "Call Tips" section at the end of this email. We have provided a word-for-word script.

Call Instructions:

  1. On Thursday, call your 2 Senators and 1 Representative. Call their offices in your home state and remind them of the "Cost of Defeat" in Iraq. Use the links below to find the phone numbers for your members of Congress:

    Contacting your U.S. Senators
    Contacting your U.S. Representatives

  2. After you have called your members of Congress, call the following 10 Senators and remind them what the "Cost of Defeat" would look like if they vote to undercut General Petraeus and the mission in Iraq in September. Phone numbers are provided below for phone numbers in their home state:

Senator Chuck Grassley R - Iowa 515-288-1145
Senator Sam Brownback R - Kansas 785-233-2503
Senator Pat Roberts R - Kansas 785-295-2745
Senator Ben Nelson D - Nebraska 402-391-3411
Senator Mitch McConnell R - Kentucky 502-582-6304
Senator Norm Coleman R - Minnesota 651-645-0323
Senator John Sununu R - New Hampshire 603-647-7500
Senator Judd Gregg R - New Hampshire 603-622-7979
Senator John Warner R - Virginia 540-857-2676
Senator Mark Pryor D - Arkansas 501-324-6336


When you're done with the calls on Thursday, please shoot a quick email to info@vetsforfreedom.org and let us know. And if you had any particularly interesting exchanges, we'd love to hear about it.

What Else Can You Do This Week?


  1. Attend Your Senator's Town Hall Meetings. We need pro-mission veterans and citizens at every single town hall meeting in August, encouraging members of Congress to support the mission in Iraq. If you find out about a Town Hall meeting in your state, do two things: 1) Attend! 2) Let us know at joel@vetsforfreedom.org.

  2. Sign Up to Show Up in September. We still need more veterans to sign up early and join us on September 17 & 18 at our nation's capitol. Just send an email to events@vetsforfreedom.org with your name, military bio, your home state, and contact information. Once we receive this information we can start the process of arranging your travel and scheduling your appointments in Washington, DC.

  3. Visit our "Live From Iraq" Blog. Check daily for updates from Jeff Emanuel, Iraq war veteran and Vets for Freedom member, who is reporting from the front lines in Iraq. He will provide daily "on the ground" updates from inside the surge.

    Our comrades in Iraq have Al Qaeda on the run-and it's up to us to keep radical anti-war groups on the defensive for their ill-informed and partisan viewpoints.

Move out and draw fire!

Regards,



Pete Hegseth
Iraq War Veteran 2005-2006
Executive Director, Vets for Freedom

Click here for more information on Vets for Freedom's "10 Weeks to Testimony."

Call Tips


When you call the senators, a few important things to remember:

  • Always be courteous. The person answering the phone is likely a young staffer.

  • If you are calling a Senator who represents your home state, say "I am from [City, State] and am a member of Vets for Freedom. I recently returned from Iraq [or insert relevant experience] and I respectfully request to speak with Senator [name]." When they ask to take a message, say "I'm calling to tell Senator [name] that I oppose MoveOn.org's attempts to undermine the mission in Iraq and to remind the Senator what the "cost of defeat" in Iraq would be. Defeat in Iraq would mean [cite three reasons above]... Please pass along this message to the Senator."

  • If you are calling a Senator who is not from your state, say "I am a veteran of the Iraq War [or insert relevant experience] who served with [insert unit] in [insert location] from [insert dates]. I am a member of Vets for Freedom and I'm calling to tell Senator [name] that I oppose MoveOn.org's attempts to undermine the mission in Iraq and to remind the Senator what the "cost of defeat" in Iraq would be. Defeat in Iraq would mean [cite three reasons above]... Please pass along this message to the Senator."


© 2007 Paid for by Vets for Freedom
PO Box 314
Woodstock, VA 22664

www.vetsforfreedom.org


I might even call a few myself from waaaaaaay over here in Bratville. Let's get 'er done!

Brat

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

In Memory of Sgt. Mike Stokely...

On August 16, 2005, Sgt. Mike Stokely, from my hometown of Loganville, Georgia, was killed in action while serving our country in Iraq. Earlier today, I received these words from his father, Robert Stokely. Please read what he has to say, check out the website he has listed, and watch the YouTube video he's linked.... it will be worth it. Mike, I never had the privilege of knowing you this side of Heaven, but I can promise you that you will NEVER be forgotten...
Kat & Family, Loganville, GA.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

As we come upon the eve of the 2nd year of Remembrance of the death of my beloved son, SGT Mike Stokely, KIA 16 AUG 05 near Yusufiyah Iraq, I wanted to do something to remember this event with my friends in the blogosphere. I am a little tapped out on words as I am so busy coordinating the last minute push to have a successful car and motorcycle "Ride to Remember..." in his honor on August 25, 2007. I am driven to have a successful event, not just to honor Mike and raise money for a scholarship in his name at his college, but to set the stage to do this in coming years and use the proceeds to honor each and everyone of the other 25 fallen GA National Guard Soldiers from Georgia's 48th Brigade Combat Team GAARNG with a scholarship in their name and memory.

At the road dedication ceremony last October 6, Abbey produced a video on the lap top at home as a tribute to Mike. The song "American Soldier" by Toby Keith is set to photos Abbey selected as a tribute to her beloved brother and fallen hero, SGT Mike Stokely. Toby Keith most likely will never know who Abbey Stokely or Mike Stokely are, or just how much this song means to a younger sister who lost her American Soldier, Hero and Brother in war. He certainly couldn't envision how many times I have replayed Abbey's video tribute and cry each time, for the words and his melody are so "Mike" to me. To say the least, American Soldier is a fitting song chosen by Abbey to sum up Mike's life as a soldier with but one exception - he never got to have children with his high school sweetheart (Niki) who he married just ten days before he went to Iraq. Mike Stokely was a great husband, and would have been a great Dad. Obviously, he was a great brother. As a dad, I can say he was a great son as well as a most dear friend.

I would hope Toby Keith wouldn't mind this use of his song. I wish that one day I might have the brief chance to thank him in person and tell him the real "value" of his song and what it means to me and our family. But, for now, I'll just say thank you Toby Keith in cyberspace.

Now, I'll turn it over to 15 year old Abbey Stokely and invite you to take four minutes and go to the YOUTUBE link below, and see an up close and personal view of what the cost of freedom is to our family - A Lifetime of Love.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNA0oovayLk

It is no wonder we remember with honor and and on August 25 we will "Ride to Remember..." Mike Stokely (www.mikestokely.com).

When asked what I would say to those who built the bomb that killed Mike, my answer is "They would have better served their cause by leaving him alive to have come home to a family who would have gone on to live ordinary anonymous lives. Instead, by their acts which caused Mike's death, an enemy has brought our family and entire generation of friends alive for the cause of freedom, without bitterness, anger, or bent for revenge, as we Remember with Honor what Mike Stokely gave. We have not wavered, we shall not retreat, nor shall we forget."

Robert Stokely
proud to be the dad of Wes and Abbey Stokely and
proudly remembering my beloved son, SGT Mike Stokely
KIA 16 AUG 05 near Yusufiyah
USA E Troop 108 CAV 48th BCT GAARNG

Wednesday Hero

This Week's Soldier Was Suggested By Kat

Sgt. Michael J. Stokely
Sgt. Michael J. Stokely
23 years old from Sharpsburg, Georgia
1st Battalion, 108th Armor Regiment, 48th Brigade Combat Team
August 16, 2005


Next Saturday, August 25, the town of Peachtree City, Ga. will be holding it's inaugural Ride To Remember for Sgt. Michael Stokely who lost his life two years ago tomorrow in Baghdad, Iraq when an IED detonated near his position. The patrol he was with had stopped and the NCO in charge had everyone take a rest while he walked back down the road with a Corporal to check out something suspicious. Sgt. Stokely refused to to rest, and instead took up a flanking position at the rear of his truck to watch their backs. Which, as a Cav Scout dismount, he saw as his job. The NCO and Corporal heard cracking noises and made their way to the sound when they were hit by an explosion. The NCO was seriously wounded but the Corporal made it through without a scratch. Sgt. Stokely, however, wasn't so lucky.

You can read more about Sgt. Michael Stokely here and here.


These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. To find out more about Wednesday Hero, you can go here.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

"Suffer the little children..."


(c) Johan Spanner for The New York Times...
Staff Sgt. David D. Highsmith took his turn with little Fatima, who was found under a metal sheet after her mother was killed.


BAGHDAD, Aug. 12 — Fatima Jbouri should be dead.

Johan Spanner for The New York Times

Staff Sgt. David D. Highsmith took his turn with little Fatima, who was found under a metal sheet after her mother was killed.

Nine months old, underweight, malnourished, fatherless and half Sunni, half Shiite, she already had enough deadly handicaps growing up in Saydia, a battlefield suburb that has become one of the worst sectarian killing zones in Baghdad.

On July 25, a death squad shot her mother and uncle — each three times in the head — in their dilapidated half-finished squat. E.J.K.’s, in American military shorthand: extrajudicial killings.

Fatima’s 7-year-old brother fled and flagged down a joint patrol of the Iraqi National Police and American soldiers. The Iraqis found the bodies and collected up Fatima’s siblings from neighboring houses. But the 7-year-old kept asking, “What about my sister?”...


What about his sister? Little Fatima is an innocent victim of the terrorists in Iraq. Little Fatima is alive because of the tenacity of her big brother, and the compassion of our troops. Every day children in Iraq are paying a terrible price in the ongoing attacks in their homeland. And yes - just about every day we hear stories of our troops reaching out and saving these kids. We know that what separates our troops from the terrorists is their willingness to snatch children from the jaws of bombs and the mayhem that is going on. What we do not see every day is the msm actually telling stories such as this one. But this was in the NY Times. Really! I don't know who Stephen Farrell is, but his byline is on this story. Mr Farrell actually has been seen to report on the great things our troops are doing, and this story made it into print.

Capt. Mushtaq Hassan, the Iraqi policeman who found her, said he believed that Fatima’s mother hid her. However, the American patrol leader, First Lt. Eric Laflin, wrote in an e-mail response to a reporter’s questions: “I do not think the mother hid the child to protect her. By looking at the murder scene, the two were killed very quickly. The bodies were close together, I do not think anyone would have had time to hide the baby. It is very possible the baby was left to die.”

Such is the unconstrained sectarian hatred here that even a baby is assumed to be a target. Accordingly, Maj. Andy Yerkes, an American police adviser who happened upon Fatima in an Iraqi police station the next morning, decided that the girl also needed yet one more piece of luck: not to be sent to an Iraqi hospital.

Fatima is a Shiite name. (The Prophet Muhammad’s daughter Fatima married Ali, who Shiites believe should have led the Islamic world instead of the Sunni Caliphate.) But the widowed mother and uncle were Sunnis, and the baby had their surname, Jbouri.

Painful experience had already taught Major Yerkes that Sunnis would not be safe in the health care system because it is under the control of Shiites loyal to the Mahdi Army militia....


Little Fatima was left to die, and is now under the care of the coalition medical staff in Baghdad. We cannot know what her future may hold, but this little girl has been given a chance. This is great news, and just as great is that the msm is choosing to tell the story. You can read the rest of her story here.

Bless our troops, who do this work EVERY day. Look at the face of this little girl. SHE is the face of the future of Iraq. We cannot fail. All the Fatimas of Iraq depend on our mission.

Brat

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Thanks to the sheepdogs!


You really should give 'Thanks' to the 'sheepdogs'. As regulars know I often post stuff I receive via email. The following arrived this week, but it struck me as timeless. I don't know when it was originally written; I don't think it matters. There also seems to be some controversy about who DID really write it. I went to snopes and yahoo to get the facts, and found different claims for authorship. I am going to leave the original name I got in this one, even though if you google etc, you will find other names as author.

Regardless of authorship, or timeframe of the creation, this one strikes a chord and got me asking myself if I am a sheep. The fact IS, that today, at this pivotal time in all our history, is a very good time to ask yourself: which are YOU? A sheep or a sheepdog?

This letter was written by Charles Grennel. Grennel is an Army Reservist who spent two years in Iraq and was a principal in putting together the first Iraq elections, January of 2005. It was written to *****, a student at the University of Washington who did not want to honor Medal of Honor winner USMC Colonel Greg Boyington. Ms. **** and other students (and faculty) do not think those who serve in the U.S. armed services are good role models.
_________

To: ****** (student, UW)

Subject: Sheep, Wolves and Sheepdogs

Miss ****, I read of your student activity regarding the proposed memorial to Col. Greg Boyington, USMC and a Medal of Honor winner. I suspect you will receive a bellyful of angry e-mails from conservative folks like me.

You may be too young to appreciate fully the sacrifices of generations of servicemen and servicewomen on whose shoulders you and your fellow students stand. I forgive you for the untutored ways of youth and your naiveté. It may be that you are, simply, a sheep. There's no dishonor in being a sheep as long as you know and accept what you are.

William J. Bennett, in a lecture to the United States Naval Academy November 24, 1997 said: Most of the people in our society are sheep. They are kind, gentle, productive creatures who can only hurt one another by accident.
We may well be in the most violent times in history, but violence is still remarkably rare. This is because most citizens are kind, decent people who are not capable of hurting each other, except by accident or under extreme provocation. They are sheep.

Then there are the wolves and the wolves feed on the sheep without mercy. Do you believe there are wolves out there who will feed on the flock without mercy? You better believe it. There are evil men in this world and they are capable of evil deeds. The moment you forget that or pretend it is not so, you become a sheep. There is no safety in denial.

Then there are sheepdogs and I'm a sheepdog. I live to protect the flock and confront the wolf. If you have no capacity for violence then you are a healthy productive citizen, a sheep. If you have a capacity for violence and no empathy for your fellow citizens, then you have defined an aggressive sociopath, a wolf. But what if you have a capacity for violence, and a deep love for your fellow citizens? What do you have then? You have a sheepdog, a warrior, someone who is walking the unchartered path; someone who can walk into the heart of darkness, into the universal human phobia, and walk out unscathed.

We know that the sheep live in denial; that is what makes them sheep. They do not want to believe that there is evil in the world. They can accept the fact that fires can happen, which is why they want fire extinguishers, fire sprinklers, fire alarms and fire exits throughout their kids schools. But many of them are outraged at the idea of putting an armed police officer in their kid's school. Our children are thousands of times more likely to be killed or seriously injured by school violence than fire, but the sheep's only response to the possibility of violence is denial. The idea of someone coming to kill or harm their child is just too hard, and so they chose the path of denial.

The sheep generally do not like the sheepdog. He looks a lot like the wolf. He has fangs and the capacity for violence. The difference, though, is that the sheepdog must not, can not and will not ever harm the sheep. Any sheep dog who intentionally harms the lowliest little lamb will be punished and
removed. The world cannot work any other way, at least not in a representative democracy or a republic such as ours. Still, the sheepdog disturbs the sheep. He is a constant reminder that there are wolves in the land. They would prefer that he didn't tell them where to go, or give them traffic tickets, or stand at the ready in our airports, in camouflage fatigues, holding an M-16. The sheep would much rather have the sheepdog cash in his fangs, spray paint himself white, and go, Baa. Until the wolf shows up; then the entire flock tries desperately to hide behind one lonely sheepdog.

The students, the victims, at Columbine High School were big, tough high school students, and under ordinary circumstances they would not have had the time of day for a police officer. They were not bad kids; they just had nothing to say to a cop. When the school was under attack, however, and
SWAT teams were clearing the rooms and hallways, the officers had to physically peel those clinging, sobbing kids off of them.

This is how the little lambs feel about their sheepdog when the wolf is at the door. Look at what happened after September 11, 2001 when the wolf pounded hard on the door. Remember how America , more than ever before, felt differently about their law enforcement officers and military personnel? Understand that there is nothing morally superior about being a sheepdog; it is just what you choose to be. Also understand that a sheepdog is a funny critter: He is always sniffing around out on the perimeter, checking the breeze, barking at things that go bump in the night, and yearning for a righteous battle. That is, the young sheepdogs yearn for a righteous battle. The old sheepdogs are a little older and wiser, but they move to the sound of the guns when needed, right along with the young ones.

Here is how the sheep and the sheepdog think differently. The sheep pretend the wolf will never come, but the sheepdog lives for that day. After the attacks on September 11, 2001, most of the sheep, that is, most citizens in America said, Thank God I wasn't on one of those planes. The sheepdogs, the
warriors, said, Dear God, I wish I could have been on one of those planes. Maybe I could have made a difference. You want to be able to make a difference. There is nothing morally superior about the sheepdog, the warrior, but he does have one real advantage. Only one. And that is that he is able to survive and thrive in an environment that destroys 98 percent of the population.

There was research conducted a few years ago with individuals convicted of violent crimes. These cons were in prison for serious, predatory crimes of violence: assaults, murders and killing law enforcement officers. The vast majority said that they specifically targeted victims by body language:
slumped walk, passive behavior and lack of awareness. They chose their victims like big cats do in Africa, when they select one out of the herd that is least able to protect itself. Some people may be destined to be sheep and others might be genetically primed to be wolves or sheepdogs. But I believe that most people can choose which one they want to be, and I'm proud to say that more and more Americans are choosing to become sheepdogs.

Seven months after the attack on September 11, 2001, Todd Beamer was honored in his hometown of Cranbury, New Jersey. Todd, as you recall, was the man on Flight 93 over Pennsylvania who called on his cell phone to alert an operator from United Airlines about the hijacking. When they learned of the
other three passenger planes that had been used as weapons, Todd and the other passengers confronted the terrorist hijackers. In one hour, a transformation occurred among the passengers, athletes, business people and parents from sheep to sheepdogs and together they fought the wolves,
ultimately saving an unknown number of lives on the ground.

There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men. Edmund Burke.

Only the dead have seen the end of war. Plato

Here is the point I like to emphasize, especially to the thousands of police officers and soldiers I speak to each year. In nature the sheep, real sheep, are born as sheep. Sheepdogs are born that way, and so are wolves. They didn't have a choice.

But you are not a critter. As a human being, you can be whatever you want to be. It is a conscious, moral decision. If you want to be a sheep, then you can be a sheep and that is okay, but you must understand the price you pay. When the wolf comes, you and your loved ones are going to die if there is not a sheepdog there to protect you. If you want to be a wolf, you can be one, but the sheepdogs are going to hunt you down and you will never have rest, safety, trust or love. But if you want to be a sheepdog and walk the warrior's path, then you must make a conscious and moral decision every day to dedicate, equip and prepare yourself to thrive in that toxic, corrosive moment when the wolf comes knocking at the door.

This business of being a sheep or a sheep dog is not a yes-no dichotomy. It is not an all-or-nothing, either-or choice. It is a matter of degrees, a continuum. On one end is an abject, head-in-the-sand-sheep and on the other end is the ultimate warrior. Few people exist completely on one end or the other. Most of us live somewhere in between.

Since 9-11 almost everyone in America took a step up that continuum, away from denial. The sheep took a few steps toward accepting and appreciating their warriors and the warriors started taking their job more seriously. It's ok to be a sheep, but do not kick the sheep dog. Indeed, the sheep dog may just run a little harder, strive to protect a little better and be fully prepared to pay an ultimate price in battle and spirit with the sheep moving from baa to thanks.

We do not call for gifts or freedoms beyond our lot. We just need a small pat on the head, a smile and a thank you to fill the emotional tank which is drained protecting the sheep. And when our number is called by The Almighty, and day retreats into night, a small prayer before the heavens just may be in order to say thanks for letting you continue to be a sheep. And be grateful for the thousands, millions of American sheepdogs who permit you the freedom to express even bad ideas.

Thank you to all the sheepdogs. Now and always.

H/T to Lori. Brat

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Saturday, August 11, 2007

The Art of Survival - Part III of the Butler’s Bums Story


We have been following CJ's story of his grandfather. They are posted over at Vanmortgagecenter here., where you can go leave a comment, but we have it here too..Thank you CJ!!!

Going through all my grandfather’s paperwork, I came across an interview he did with the Reichelt Oral History Program at Florida State University. Instead of writing the last post on this topic like I mentioned before, I’m going to sort of backtrack and fill in some pretty cool holes that I found. This personal interview helped me get a little more into his head and see some of the peripheral things going on at the time.

My grandfather, James A. Stuthers, Sr., was born on July 20, 1925 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He had great parents - his mother was of German descent. After the war, he would realize that he was actually bombing some of his own forefathers and relatives that were still living in Leipzig, Germany. In April 1943, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps. In order to sign up so early, he had to obtain his father’s signature and get their permission. He didn’t actually enter service until after high school in October of the same year. There was a lot of talk about joining the military at the time and the fact that his friends were joining only heightened his desire to join. He initially wanted to become an officer and join the Air Cadets, but washed out of the Nashville tryouts after ending basic training.

He went to basic training in Greensboro, North Carolina where he spent ten or eleven weeks. He wanted to be a pilot. They weren’t supposed to tell him why he failed out of the Air Cadet program, but his math scores were low, which prevented him from becoming a pilot, navigator or bombardier. He ended up going to Lowrey Field armorer school to become an armorer-gunner. At the school, he would learn everything about bombs and how to load the bombs on airplanes and how to wire them. The school was three months long and from there he was sent to gunnery school at Fort Myers, Florida. There are worse places to get trained!!

While he was in school, WWII was being waged across the globe. When asked if he was worried about what was going on in Europe at the time, he responded: “A lot of us were afraid that we weren’t going to get over in time to even fly any missions, you know, towards the end.” After training, they were sent to meet up with their crew at Westover Field, Massachusetts and to obtain their crew training and certifications.

One of the reasons he was worried he wouldn’t make it over to Europe was that they were having “very, very bad experiences.” Before he got to Europe, he was trained to crew a B-24. The B-24s weren’t exactly the darlings of the Air Force at the time. On one particular day, he was coming in from a training flight over Cuba. It was sometime between 1800 and 1900. His crew was following a plane in to land at Chatham Field (now Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport) and the plane he was following exploded right in front of him. He was waved around and had to circle for the better part of an hour while they cleaned up the wreckage. His friend Al Tochman and crew were killed. They shared the same barracks together. Each barracks held four crews - 24 enlisted men. Six of those men died that day. A few weeks later, another crew that was with in the barracks blew up. If that wasn’t enough to spook my grandfather, the following is. The first crew to blow up was crew #297. The second crew was crew #298. My grandfather was in crew #299!! All bad things happens in threes and they all knew this. Was it coincidence that they were blowing up in sequential order? They were all afraid, but got away, finished their training, and later found out that a third crew had blown up on the base shortly after they left. Three crews killed before ever seeing combat within the span of a few months.


Brat

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A boy takes shelter!


Yes! I know today is s'posed to be Coalition Country day - and I AM working on it. Instead though, I want to share with you all an email I got this morning. Says it all, and nothing I can add would say what we all know, any better. Read on:

The kid took shelter behind a hero.
The boy knows who will not kill him but w
ill save him. An amazing and touching set of photos! Look at the soldier standing upright and alert while everyone else runs! Some news photos are so rich in symbolism they're almost like Renaissance paintings in how much they communicate.

Such a photo appeared on the front page of the
New York Times's national edition, a picture of the scene after a bombing in Baghdad yesterday. Adding to the chaos of the bombing which killed at least 21 people and injured at least 66 was a shooter, maybe targeting people in the crowd. Amid all the Iraqis who are running from the gunfire was a soldier, standing tall, perhaps looking in the direction of the gunshots, not apparently looking for cover.


An Iraqi boy seeks shelter behind the soldier, a member of the
82nd Airborne Division. The first picture shows it all. The kid's face shows he is scared to death, and he's running to the safest spot he can find: this soldier who stands between him and danger.


It would be difficult to stage a picture that provides a more potent metaphor for the role played by United States in this wretched world.


That kid just did a virtual essay on "What America Means To Me".

"Such a photo appeared on the front page of the New York Times's national edition, a picture of the scene after a bombing in Baghdad yesterday."... Holy cow! 'Front page'?????????? 'national edition'????????? Do I dare begin to think that SOME in the msm are finally getting a clue? Do I dare welcome them to the winner's circle? Even as I well know that one headline does not a victory in any war make, would be great - and long overdue - to have the msm come onside. I can dream can't I?

(h/t to Susan) - Brat

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Thursday, August 09, 2007

Good News Friday(B*N*S*N)1


Remember a while back how the msm vultures were all over the stories of how bad things were at Walter Reed? The media fell all over each other in their haste to inform the public of whatever negative stuff they could dig up. Here, of course, we shared a letter from a Chaplain who was there and knew Walter Reed well. This week, there was a good news story out of Walter Reed that I only found on the Army site. I don't waste my time scouring the msm, but often it is hard to avoid. No surprise - this story hasn't made it to msm as far as I can tell:

Walter Reed Names Building After Fallen Combat Medic

Ray Vaccaro and his daughter, Ava, admire the plaque for the newly dedicated Vaccaro Hall building at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., Aug. 2. The building is named for Ray Vacarro's brother, Cpl. Angelo J. Vaccaro, an Army medic who was killed in Afghanistan. Photo by John J. Kruzel

WASHINGTON (American Forces Press Service, Aug. 6, 2007) - About 50 Family members, friends and fellow Soldiers of Cpl. Angelo J. Vaccaro, an Army medic killed in Afghanistan, gathered for a dedication ceremony at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here Aug. 2, as "Building 38" was renamed "Vaccaro Hall."

The hall will serve as the headquarters for the new Warrior Transition Brigade, a center aimed at improving the Army outpatient-care system, which was criticized for various shortcomings earlier this year. Cpl. Vaccaro, who struggled to overcome his own flaws, and the building named in his honor, are both stories of redemption, a general said....

Cpl Angelo Vaccaro sounds like the kind of person we would all be proud to call family. And whilst I am really sad that he lost his life serving his country, I am so grateful that he lived. How wonderfully appropriate that Angelo's work as a medic is being honoured at one of the military's main medical facilities.

No, you probably won't find this in the msm, but you can read more about Cpl Angelo Vaccaro here. Go - now - and get a glimpse of a truly extraordinary hero. We will never forget that such men lived, and now Cpl Vaccaro's name and honour lives on at Walter Reed.

And that truly is B*N*S*N!

Brat

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N)2


By the numbers! The msm is always quick to trumpet the number of our fallen heroes. (And yes, we here know They Have Names..see the link to CJ's site on the left), but rarely do they feel the need to share when our succeed in sending the terrorists off to meet their 72 virgins. By telling the public of the sheer numbers of terrorists killed, the msm might have to concede that the mission is succeeding. Can't have that, can we? Okay, yes - typical brat sarcasm, BUT I did find the following this last week:

Al-Qa'ida's shrine bomber is killed by US soldiers


By Bob Jackson
Monday August 06 2007

US troops killed the al-Qa'ida mastermind of the bombing that destroyed the golden dome of a famed sacred Shia shrine last year and set in motion an unrelenting cycle of sectarian bloodletting, the military said yesterday.

Haitham Sabah Shaker Mohammed al-Badri, the group's Salahuddin province emir, was killed in a US operation east of Samarra on Thursday. He was responsible for the June 13 bombing that toppled the Askariya shrine's twin minarets, the military said.

Rear Admiral Mark Fox, a US military spokesman, said al-Badri had been among insurgents spotted by US aircraft moving into "tactical fighting positions".

"Al-Badri's body was positively identified by close family members," Fox said.

Another 80 suspected insurgents were detained in US and Iraqi raids in the Samarra area over the past week, the US military said....

Take note of the last sentence there, and go read the rest here. EIGHTY (yep, 80!) suspected insurgents detained. So with Al-Badri gone, and MANY other insurgents being rounded up every day, this military non-expert calls this definite B*N*S*N!

Brat

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N)3


I am sure that most Americans know more about the Haditha case than I do. I am also sure the ignorant 'experts' in the msm will prove THEIR ignorance and spend copious miles of newsprint arguing on this. Rather than confirm my own ignorance, I will just post this as a perfect example of B*N*S*N*(and no, no apologies from me for three B*N*S*N stories this week!):

Charges dropped against Marine

Lance Cpl. Justin L. Sharratt was accused of murder in the deaths of three brothers in Haditha, Iraq.
By Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
10:57 AM PDT, August 9, 2007

Marine Lance Cpl. Justin L. Sharratt
Marine Lance Cpl. Justin L. Sharratt
The Marine Corps announced today that it had dropped charges against Lance Cpl. Justin L. Sharratt, who was accused of murdering three Iraqi brothers in Haditha in November 2005.

Sharratt was one of eight Marines originally accused in the incident, in which 24 civilians were killed after a roadside bomb killed a Marine. Four enlisted Marines were accused of the killings, and four officers were accused of dereliction of duty for not ordering a war-crimes investigation.

Lt. Gen. James N. Mattis, commander of Marine Forces Central Command, said he dropped the charges out of a firm belief that Sharratt acted within Marine Corps standards when forced to make a split-second decision while searching a house for insurgents.

Sharratt's attorneys, Gary Myers and James Culp, said Mattis, in his letter to Sharratt, "has eloquently and accurately described the extreme demands placed upon combat Marines and soldiers in insurgency warfare."

Mattis wrote that Iraqi insurgents often hid behind civilians and that "where the enemy disregards any attempts to comply with ethical norms of warfare, we exercise discipline and restraint to protect the innocent caught on the battlefield. Our way is right, but it is also difficult."...

"Our way is right, but it is also difficult..." We know this. I am presuming that this will be all over the place, but I found it here. Lance Cpl Sharratt: THANK you for your service.

Brat

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Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Thirty-eight years to get peace in Iraq?

Lest we forget

"The scene was truly something from a nightmare. Severed limbs, decapitations, human remains everywhere. Most of these were very close friends and associates. Taff Jones, the medic, did a sterling job in very difficult circumstances. I don't know what was the average age of the dead, but it couldn't have been much more than 25, pro(sourcebably less."

(source for that picture, here) and a good article to start at for history about Warrenpoint here

Brits in Northern Ireland: Mission Over


You may have missed both these items above. Even if you did not, you may be wondering why I am posting them together, or even what this has to do with the current war we are all engaged in today. No, I have not totally lost my mind.

A few days ago, I shared with a friend here in North America how an article on the BBC site really brought back a whole myriad of emotions for me. I am happy, and yet I am so sad because I am really aware of the high, high price paid to bring peace to Northern Ireland. That first picture above is of the brave men - paras - who were killed by the IRA terrorists in Narrow Waters, Warrenpoint on August 27, 1979. Of twenty men there, only two survived to tell the tale, to relive the nightmare over and over. That day saw the largest number of British troops murdered in a single incident. ('Incident' is the official word still used in news items.) And my intimate connection to that first picture? Regular readers here may remember a dedication I did on the RVF a while back. Of the two men that survived Warrenpoint, I have been blessed to have one as a dear friend. I call him "my Yorkshire pud," (an inside joke that a Brit would readily understand!) This veteran of the British paras is the most amazing man.

By the time of Warrenpoint I was living in Canada, and this news barely made a ripple on the Canadian news scene. But, when I saw the(perhaps) 2 line 'filler', my memory, my heart went right back to London. The London I left in 1973 was under siege from the IRA who were determined to bring "The Troubles" to mainland England. Often on my daily commute to work, I remember vividly wondering if I today would be the day when I would not make it to work. The weapon of choice for the IRA, on the mainland at least, was letter bombs. None of us knew where the next 'delivery' would be, and the BBC was full of reports of the latest atrocity, the latest innocent victims.

Belfast Northern Ireland British troops

Belfast Burning
A soldier watches fires set by Loyalist rioters September 27, 2001 in the Glenbryn area of North Belfast.

In 1974, after living for 18 months in America, I was back in London for a few weeks. Walking along Oxford Street with my mother for what would be (unknown to me at the time), my last Christmas in England for a looooooong time. Mailboxes all plyboarded shut, famous stores on this central hub of London's commerce with their windows boarded over, so as not to give the terrorists any easy targets. None of the usual Christmas display windows that year.

Belfast Northern Ireland British troops

Bloody Sunday
January 30, 1972: British paratroopers in Londonderry opened fire on a civil rights march, killing 14 civilians. Here, a youth is seized from the crowd.


I was in Canada by Christmas 1974, just days after that last walk down Oxford Street. Life for me then meant all the freedom of living in a land far from terrorists.

Despite the miles, geographically, I determinedly sought out, and devoured, any and all news of "The Troubles". In the midst of the madness that was Ireland there came this:

Betty Williams Mairead Corrigan
Betty Williams Mairead Corrigan

You are excused if you don't know these two women. Mairead was the sister-in-law of the woman who was run over, along with three of her children, by an IRA killer in a car accident. A Roman Catholic, in the aftermath of those childrens' deaths Mairead joined forces with Betty, who was raised in a Protestant family. Betty was there that day and witnessed the deaths of a part of Mairead's family. That started these two women on a journey which saw them jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976. Joining forces, they became the public face of how protestants and catholics, the opposite sides of a war fought on religious grounds COULD work together, and demand peace. (You can read more on them both here and here.)

On August 10, 1976, a remarkable incident occurred in one of the streets of Belfast in Northern Ireland. A man, in an attempted getaway, comes tearing down the street in his car, trying to shake off his pursuers. Suddenly a shot rings out, and with a mortally wounded driver slumped over the steering-wheel, the vehicle swerves into a fence, knocking down a mother and her three children. The mother, though badly injured, survived, while her three children were killed on the spot....

The event in Belfast on that August day in 1976, however, gave rise to something entirely different, and it is for this reason that it was so remarkable.

In the area where the three children were killed lived a housewife: she heard the thud as the car crashed into the fence, and as she hurried to the spot she took in the whole horror of the scene. At that moment something happened in that woman's mind: it was like the bursting of a dam.

What she saw shocked her profoundly; but even more, she was overwhelmed with a passionate desire to make a stand against all violence and terror. Now, for heaven's sake, something must be done! There was no time for deliberation and planning: she never even thought of anything like that, but acted intuitively, as her heart dictated. She started to go from door to door in the actual street where the tragedy had occurred. The cup of horrors had now run over: the time had come when the ordinary man and woman must rise in protest against this senseless use of violence. It was no longer a question of political attitudes or religious convictions. There was only one remedy: the people themselves must cry halt. ...

...their courageous action cast a fresh light on the very essence of the grievous conflict that racked Northern Ireland. More clearly than ever before it appeared in its true light as a disease that ravaged the whole nation...

The conflict in Northern Ireland springs from noxious roots deeply embedded in history. Countless attempts have been made to resolve it, so far in vain. Those who endeavoured to speak in the name of moderation appeared to speak to deaf ears. A mood of hopeless resignation prevailed: terror and violence became part and parcel of people's everyday lives. Barricades were thrown up in the streets. Sharp boundary lines divided one part of a town from another. An ominous silence developed between neighbours; even children were trained and committed to the use of violence. Society was at war with itself, ...

There is something unreal about the turmoil in Northern Ireland, something nightmarish. ...Even schoolchildren are fair game. In homes, in shops, in offices, and in pubs and factories the very air is poisoned with suspicion and hatred. No struggle can be more bitter than one fought between people who in reality are so close to one another. ...
(presentation speech of the Nobel Peace Prize here)

These women said "Enough!", and they were born in a country with a long history of women stepping up on both sides of the barricades of Ireland, and getting involved in the political process. (In a sad footnote, in my research for this piece, I learned that the mother who survived the accident which took 3 of her children, committed suicide; was found by her 9 year old son.) Years ago, I did a research paper on Irish women and their important place in the divide that has historically been Ireland. Constance Markewitz at the turn of the twentieth century, on to Bernadette Devlin, who ran for - and was elected - a Member of Parliament in Whitehall in the late 1960's. Recently I was wondering what had happened to her, and today I came across this interesting article/interview:

Bernadette Devlin: "I'm uniquely qualified to bring lasting peace to Northern Ireland"

She was the youngest woman ever elected to Parliament; she's been demonised, locked up and gunned down for her political views. Now, as her daughter faces extradition on terrorism charges, Bernadette Devlin says she has a plan to bring lasting peace to Northern Ireland.

Interview by Peter Standford

Published: 29 July 2007

The Northern Ireland peace process has thrown up some odd role reversals. The Rev Ian Paisley, the man who howled "No" to the Good Friday agreement of 1999, is now First Minister of the power-sharing government it eventually produced. Martin McGuinness, second-in-command of the Provisional IRA in Derry in the early 1970s, is the democratically elected Deputy First Minister.

When McGuinness was still putting his faith in the gun, mainstream Nationalist hopes for progress in the North via the ballot box were pinned on a psychology student from Queen's University in Belfast with long, dark hair, short skirts and compelling eyes. Bernadette Devlin was elected to Westminster in April 1969 in a famous by-election at the age of just 21. She remains its youngest ever woman MP, while the turnout that day in the Mid-Ulster constituency of 91.5 per cent has never been bettered.

For the generation which was the first to take to the streets to demand civil rights – an end to the exclusion of Catholics in the north of Ireland from jobs, decent houses and political power – Bernadette Devlin was an icon. Her maiden speech in the Commons was described as "electrifying" by the Tory minister and parliamentary historian Norman St John Stevas. When she travelled to New York in September 1969, she was carried shoulder high by crowds in Gaelic Park as a demonstration of Irish Americans' support for the Nationalist struggle which she had come to embody (the picture became a famous Private Eye cover).

And so inevitably to Protestants of similar vintage, she became almost the devil incarnate. In 1980 and 1981 she was prominent in rallying support for the IRA hunger strikers held in prison in the north. It was a provocation too far for her enemies. In February 1981 Loyalist gunmen broke into her remote home in Co Tyrone and came within an inch of murdering her. There was controversy because the British Army was said to be watching the property at the time of the attack. Indeed it was an Army doctor who saved her life....

And controversy has continued to follow her. In 2003 at Chicago airport, she was refused entry to the United States – the country that had once lionised her – on the grounds that she posed a risk to national security. And she continues to spearhead a high-profile campaign against the extradition to Germany of her daughter, Róisí* McAliskey, who has been accused – wrongly her mother says – of having links with an IRA cell that carried out a 1996 mortar attack on a British military base at Osnabrück. Though the warrant was refused by Britain in the late 1990s, and in 2000 the Crown Prosecution Service dismissed the evidence as insufficient to mount a case at home, it has recently been revived and a full court hearing is due in September....(Read the rest of this in The Independant here)


Bernadette Devlin may indeed proclaim to be 'uniquely qualified to bring lasting peace to Northern Ireland', but she certainly wasn't the first, or last, to make that declaration. Throughout even the last forty years, many stumbles, many 'Agreements', mega funds from Americans to fund the 'cause', all in the name of, pursuit of, a seemingly elusive peace. Yes - I am biased, and yes, I was horrified when Clinton welcomed Gerry Adams to the White House. Many murders of those - even non-Irish - who have always stood unafraid in their criticism of the IRA's methods. A friend of mine - a famous Englishman - dared to openly criticise the IRA method of pushing their agenda. He was gunned down on his front doorstep. Because of who he was/is, his murder did warrant front page news in England. I came across it in a small paragraph near the back of a Canadian newspaper.

When I mentioned the second news item above to my American friend the other day, she said "just like Iraq." At first I was taken aback. But, you know? She makes a good point.

Both Ireland and Iraq have seen centuries of violence, of killing their own fellow countrymen in the name of religion. We all know that the current war is not JUST about religion, just as Ireland never was - that is a cloak the terrorists of today, and then, wrap themselves in. Just because.

If you read articles from the time when the British forces went into Northern Ireland in the current "troubles", there are pictures of them being welcomed as saviours by some, offered tea. Same thing in Iraq. The toppling of Saddam by the Coalition forces was welcomed by the majority of Iraqis. Yes, just as in Ireland with the arrival of the Brit forces, so in Iraq, some resisted with escalating violence. Obviously, throwing out the old order of business does not sit well with the terrorists in ANY killing regime. We know this. In another interesting parallel (to me, anyways) are the news reports and pictures from Ireland of kids throwing rocks at the British soldiers. I remember, oh so well, being absolutely shocked that the terrorists would put even their own kids in harm's way to push their agenda. I was naive back then. Today we have Iraqi terrorists using their children as suicide bomb decoys, or even as the bombs themselves, in another very sick, depraved twist on that theme..

Belfast Northern Ireland British troops
Missile Attack
British Soldiers in riot gear come under attack from nationalist youths throwing rocks, paint and petrol bombs in May 2002

In Northern Ireland, it has taken 38 years to come to last week's withdrawal of the main bulk of British forces:

Army ending its operation in NI

A soldier clears up after a loyalist riot
Soldiers have spent the last 38 years in action in Northern Ireland
The British army's operation in Northern Ireland will come to an end at midnight on Tuesday after 38 years.

Operation Banner - the Army's support role for the police - has been its longest continuous campaign, with more than 300,000 personnel taking part.

A garrison of 5,000 troops will remain but security will be entirely the responsibility of the police.

British troops were sent to Northern Ireland in 1969 after violent clashes between Catholics and Protestants.

When the first soldiers were deployed in August 1969, commanders believed they would be in Northern Ireland for just a few weeks.


Soldiers in Northern Ireland
The Army melted away, rather than marched away
Kevin Connolly,
BBC Ireland correspondent


But the Army quickly became involved in what came to be known as Operation Banner.

A total of 763 military personnel were killed during the campaign.

At the height of the Troubles, there were about 27,000 soldiers in Northern Ireland. From Wednesday, there will be no more than 5,000....(BBC here)


Thirty eight years, people! And here we have the msm in the current war saying "Bring the troops home" now, and the politicians demanding unrealistic - absurd! - timetables for the withdrawal of the US (and the rest of us! lol) forces. And yes, I know very well that uninformed, ill-informed, IGNORANT politicians demanding withdrawal of their troops before the mission is complete, is not unique to America. As I have documented within other coalition country profiles, it seems every ally is faced with the same *bull*. (Nobody says I have to be unemotional about this, do they?!)

After many spluttering mis-steps, it appears that Northern Ireland has (maybe) cobbled out a political solution and framework for their country, that satisfies all political and religious ethos. Time for the British military to pack up their guns and go home. Just as is the hope in Iraq, ultimately the citizens of Ireland have come together; old enemies are now sitting in political office together (who ever said politics made for strange bedfellows?!), and making real efforts to govern the disparate factions within the country. IF our militaries are given the chance they are demanding, maybe, just maybe, the political structure of Iraq will take firm enough hold that, no matter what religion any Iraqi is, they can all work together for a peaceful Iraq.

Just as the "ordinary" citizens (yes, I know. No such thing as 'ordinary'...lol) of Ireland - the majority - rose up and said "no more violence, we refuse to live like this anymore", so, too, in Iraq, are the "ordinary" citizens choosing peace. And yes, as has been noted in other posts, women are stepping up too, demanding their place in the future of their country - just as the Irish women always have. Regular Iraqis are firmly onside with the coalition troops, because they know that with them lies a future of peace for all of Iraq.

Our military, (the US, the Brits, the Canadians, Aussies et al) now in Iraq and Afghanistan, are prepared to give their all - and some have - just as the Brits did in Ireland, to enable a peaceful political process to take hold. If the defeatists will just get out of the way, shut up, sit down and let our military do their job, peace WILL reign across the middle east. The scourge of "religious fanatics", terrorists, CAN be wiped out. Ireland is proof positive that this can happen.

So today, whilst I hold all of our troops fighting on our behalf around the world in my prayers, I also have thanks and prayers for ALL my British countrymen who gave their all in Ireland so that Ireland might, thirty eight years on, have peace. I have a special place in my heart for the young heroes of Narrow Waters. My prayer is that peace DOES hold in Ireland. Peace in Ireland now and for all time, means that the heroes of Narrow Waters, and all their brothers in arms, died FOR something. Likewise, my prayer is that an Iraq built on the rock solid principles of freedom and democracy will also mean that our brave men and women gave their all for something worth having: a lasting democracy.

Will it take thirty eight years for peace to come to Iraq and the Middle East? I don't know. BUT I do know that our troops are dedicated to this mission. And I will support them, for however long it takes. They - and Iraq - deserve at least that.

Brat

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Wednesday Hero

This Week's Soldier Was Suggested By Gary

Col. James W. Harrison Jr.

Col. James W. Harrison Jr.
47 years old from Missouri
U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Combined Forces Command Afghanistan
May 6, 2007


Duty, Honor, Country. Col. James Harrison Jr. embodied that ethos, said his family. He was committed to the mission of the United States in Afghanistan and spoke with great pride about the accomplishments of the men and women with which he served

Col. Harrison was killed on May 6 when a Taliban fighter, dressed as an Afghan police officer, shot him at point blank range at Pul-e-Charkhi prison near Kabul. Also killed along side Col. Harrison was Master Sgt. Wilberto Sabalu Jr. and two other soldiers were wounded. All four men were working as mentors to Afghan troops providing external security for the prison.

Harrison graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1981. He also graduated from the Military Police Basic and Advanced courses, the Combined Arms and Services Staff School, the Command and General Staff College, the Army Inspector General Course, and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He earned a Master of Business Administration from Syracuse University and a Master of Science degree in national security and strategic studies from the National Defense University. Before going to Afghanistan in December 2006, he was assigned to Fort Leavenworth as director of the School for Command Preparation at the Command and General Staff College.

He is survived by his wife and three sons.

To read a letter from the Afghan general in charge of the detention facility, visit Amy Proctor's site.



These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. To find out more about Wednesday Hero, you can go here.

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"Against all Enemies"


The more things change, the more they stay the same. Over at Soldiers Angels Germany, Mary Ann had a great piece up yesterday about the propoganda war we are currently waging. She points us to an editorial from Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, the highest-ranking intelligence official ever to have defected from the Soviet bloc. She begins:

"The moment you give up your principles, and your values... the moment you laugh at those principles, and those values, you are dead, your culture is dead, your civilization is dead. Period." - Oriana Fallaci


Fascinating - and, frankly, depressing - WSJ editorial today from Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, the highest-ranking intelligence official ever to have defected from the Soviet bloc.

During the decades he spent scrutinizing the U.S. from Europe he learned that international respect for America is directly proportional to America's own respect for its president. Therefore,
Sowing the seeds of anti-Americanism by discrediting the American president was one of the main tasks of the Soviet-bloc intelligence community during the years I worked at its top levels.

Here's some of the many examples he cites, and much of it sounds frighteningly familiar (and there are many more in the column):..

"Frighteningly familiar..." Indeed it does. Deja Vu all over again. If you missed it yesterday, go now and read. Remind yourselves exactly what it is we are fighting against on the homefront.
In the comments section to that post, Mary Ann says "frightening and depressing" Frightening? Only inasmuch that we seem to have learned nothing from history. Depressing? Maybe, since it clearly demonstrates that that the public (foreign and domestic) is still open to such propoganda tactics. BUT, I refuse to stay depressed. Evidence like this inspires me - motivates me, to keep in the fight. Go read the rest of Mary Ann's excellent post here.

And repeat with me: NOT ON MY WATCH!

Brat

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

On his own dime, and his own time


I have seen the horror

Al Qaeda is guilty of monstrosities in Iraq - no matter what anyone says


That's the title of a column by Michael Yon that I found in the msm this past week. Michael Yon HAS seen the horror of Al Qaeda's actions on children, women and men. As a regular reader of Yon's, I have come to rely on what he tells me. On his own dime and own time, Yon is reporting what is really going on wherever our troops are deployed. He is always a truthful antidote to the msm. A former soldier himself, Yon goes to places our big buck 'reporters' will never be found: outside the Green Zone and into battle with our troops. Last Sunday the NY Daily Times actually printed a column by Yon.


Major Mark Bieger, an American soldier, holds a wounded child after a suspected Al Qaeda car bomb exploded in Mosul in 2005.


Amid all this talk of timetables for the War in Iraq, blurred as they are by a strange lemming-like compulsion to declare the "surge" strategy a failure almost before it actually began, one deadline looms larger with each passing day: It's time for a reckoning with the truth.

The problem is that almost none of those who have cast themselves as truth-tellers have the requisite credibility for the job. The one man who does was told he had only until September to evaluate progress.

I'm not suggesting that I make a worthy substitute for the commanding general, David Petraeus, on this or any subject, but since December of 2004, I have spent roughly a 1½ years on the battlefields of Iraq....


Michael Yon has 'street creds' that most msm 'reporters' (yes, I will ALWAYS use quotes..lol) can only dream of. He HAS been there, done that. His work matters. Go check out his site here - and maybe make a donation.

If you do nothing else today though, go read the rest of this piece begun above. When you have read it, perhaps photocopy it, or email it to every one of your favourite politicians. Regular readers of Tanker Bros don't need me to tell them who to send this 'eyes on the ground' piece to. You know what needs to be done! Go now - HERE!

Thank you Michael.

Brat

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Alaska troops need help


A soldier's wife out of Alaska sent a mass email this week. 2,000 single soldiers based at Ft Richardson, Alaska are coming home at the end of September.

To whom it may concern,

I am writing this letter to ask for help to make a warm welcome for the single soldiers of Anchorage, Alaska. The married soldiers have their spouses and children to make them feel welcome, but the single soldiers really do not have anyone. Alaska is a long way for Parents, siblings and friends to travel to welcome their [our] soldier home. As it stands right now, the single soldiers are assigned a room with a bed. [Military did away with issuing bedding to single soldiers, because they wanted a more personal touch to their room]
There will not be linens, towels, bathing soap or laundry soap. Just an empty room. Their belongings and vehicles are in storage. With so many soldiers coming home it will take time to get their belongings....


There follows a long list of the most basic of goods that we all take for granted every single day: stuff like toothpaste, deodorant, fresh sheets for a bed. I won't post the list here, but you can find all the details in a post by Terri over at A Soldiers Mind here,.

Otherwise, you all know where to find me. IF you are on my email list, watch your inbox. You will be seeing this list! Let's get 'er done.

Brat

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Monday, August 06, 2007

"...a knock on the door..."


Those five words jumped out at me from a letter that a Chaplain had sent to Deb Tainsh. This letter writer has been with our troops to places we on the home team have never been. He has talked to Iraqis and Afghanis; people you and I will probably never meet. I am using the letter with his - and Deb's - permission. Those five words are talking about how the Iraqis respond when THEY hear a knock on their door these days.

As I read the letter, I wondered how Americans (and Canadians, Brits, Aussies etc.,) will respond when the knock comes on THEIR doors. For most of us, when we hear a knock on the door, we don't usually have to hesitate and ask ourselves 'is it safe to open the door?'. We are safe in our homes, on our streets. Answering the door will probably never mean that we could killed for that one simple act. At least, not yet! But the Chaplain, and our troops, know very well that if they do not finish the job in Iraq and Afghanistan, we may never again feel safe to open our own doors. What we know, and what most of the blind and deaf "average" Americans et al, can't - or won't - seem to wrap their brain cell(s) around is, that if the troops are brought home now by the 'support our troops' bunch, opening our own doors could ultimately mean OUR own deaths. The Chaplain writes:

...interestingly when I was last leaving Iraq in early June I met a Major who was in command of a transition team (training Iraqi Army units) and he said when the Iraqi's hear a knock on the door, they won't answer until they know who is on the other side of the door. If they then hear an American voice they quickly answer because they expect the Americans will treat them fairly. They do indeed look at our soldiers as fair and trustworthy. I had an Afghani, who is now living in the US, tell me the other day, "Thank you for your sacrifices. Although it is tough right now, you did the right thing. The Taliban are bad people and nearly destroyed my country." No, as far as I'm concerned, the only question that really matters is are we as a nation doing the right thing to be in Iraq and Afghanistan right now? And the more I speak with Iraqi's and Afghani's who know how it was and how the Islamo-Fascists have destroyed their countries, I learn the answer to that question is a resounding yes.


Among other things the media and political left refuse to give proper credence to is the fact it is our soldiers and their families who want and hunger for peace more than any 100 of the rest of America who have never served in the military or had close family who did, and therefore often, perhaps usually, have an incomplete understanding of what freedom requires and what is really necessary to see peace in the first place. Until there is justice there can be no peace. And until justice is accomplished in the Middle East, and I don't mean the Islamo-Fascists false notion of justice, there can be no peace. Perhaps our involvement in that part of the world will allow justice to flourish in the Islamic world so that a true and lasting peace can grow. If we pull our military out of Iraq now we will lose our opportunity to accomplish this.

We can learn much from history. The British and French refused to militarily confront Adolf Hitler in 1937and 1938 when they had the power to do so relatively inexpensively and he could not have long resisted. No, they consoled themselves with the fiction that Hitler was doing what he did only because the West had treated Germany so badly after WWI and surely if he was treated properly he would prove to be reasonable. This was a fiction given credence by the political left of the West at that time. If this sounds familiar today, it is because the political left in the West today, like the political left in the 1930's blamed the excesses of foreign tyrants on the mistakes and perceived mistakes of western governments. Now as then, our political left blames not our enemy, but us, for the barbarism of our enemy. Many persist in even blaming 9/11 on our own government, not the fascists of the Islamic world. They paid a heavy price for their folly then. I pray we don't have to pay the same or greater price for the folly of the left today. I think that depends on whether we listen to them or not.

You and Dave have indeed taken your great and grievous loss and channeled it into positive actions for the good of the nation you both love and serve, and your brave and courageous son served. I pray your words will challenge and encourage our people to do the right thing. Thank you!

Blessings,

Col J. (Chaplain)


"...rest of America who have never served in the military or had close family who did, and therefore often, perhaps usually, have an incomplete understanding of what freedom requires and what is really necessary to see peace in the first place. Until there is justice there can be no peace..."

The Chaplain says "...we can learn much from history...". Frankly, some days I doubt that the "average" citizen will learn the very obvious, and harsh, lessons of history until the knock comes on their own doors. By then it will be too late. Much too late.

Most people seem oblivious as to how critical this mission is. Most people seem quite content to repeat - ad nauseum - that what happens 'over there' has nothing to do with us. Not our business. But, a piece in a Canadian newspaper, that our Tanker Sister Mary*Ann sent me, set alarm bells going off for me. This article reminded me how little time we have left. This article highlights for me - again - how the time for such complacency is OVER!

Landmines found in creek
By JONATHAN SHER, SUN MEDIA
The London Free Press





This mine, likely an anti-vehicle model, experts said, was found by two teens out with their mother and dog for a walk Friday. A bomb-disposal team found another nearby yesterday.


STRATHROY -- A country creek where children swim, fish and frolic was instead swarmed by police yesterday as Canadian Forces explosives experts detonated two live landmines.

The mines, found in a culvert that runs under Inadale Drive between Strathroy and Mt. Brydges, appeared to have timers and were likely the type used to blow up tanks, Strathroy-Caradoc police say....

he creek is popular with families, so police suspect the mines were put there to maim and kill, or in callous disregard of that possibility.

"The senseless loss of life or grievous bodily harm that could have taken place at this creek -- it's reprehensible," Strathroy-Caradoc police Sgt. Mike Overdulve said.


The potential for devastation was evident yesterday as a military team detonated the mines from a safe distance.

The force of the blast ripped bark and limbs from a tree and sprayed water so high it could be seen by observers a kilometre away....


I have asked here before: "What's it going to take?..." When will the defeatist 'bring the troops home now' wake up to reality? Is an IED in rural Ontario going to be enough? I somehow doubt it. But, the threat to our existance is here on our shores already. To me, this article just about screams that what happens 'over there' is no longer 'over there'. It is HERE, now!

...It appears someone likely rigged and deliberately placed landmines in a country creek outside of London, experts and authorities say.

Anti-tank mines that are filled with explosive material -- as is suspected with the two found between Strathroy and Mt. Brydges -- weigh a couple of kilograms, Bill Rawling, a former Canadian Forces reservist and military historian, said yesterday...(source)


This was in a small creek used by many local families, and while the experts are so far speculating that these mines may be old, to me it is a reminder that time IS running out for all of us. This article, and the Chaplain's letter, are once again a clarion call. Too bad the politicians are so wrapped in their own agendas that they choose to ignore - discount - what to us is so blatantly obvious.

But I know that if these ignorant, and yes, treasonous politicans have their way, it will never again be safe for ANY of us to go to our local creeks. If we do not stay the course, and complete the mission - over 'there' - it will never again be safe for any of us here to answer 'the knock on the door'. We choose to ignore the words of people like this Chaplain, at our own peril.

Brat

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Sunday, August 05, 2007

Ensuring Military Readiness Through...Whew! What a Title


Our friend CJ has another post up at VA Mortgage Center, and the whole title of the Act about which his commentary speaks is (you may not be ready for this...lol):

Ensuring Military Readiness Through Stability and Predictability Deployment Act

He tells us why he is opposed to this Act, which narrowly passed with a vote of 229-194. Now, I must admit, that I really don't keep up with all the Acts that are passed in the US - seriously, I just can't - but for this particular one, CJ sets it all out so clearly that even this alien understands!

The what Act?! That’s what I’m saying. Is there some other law in effect I don’t know about called the “Ensuring All Bills Are Rhythmically Named And Excessively Long and Redundant Naming Act”? This act is a piece of work too. It just passed the House, narrowly, with a 229-194 vote margin. And what does it do for us?

The law would require the services to guarantee troops as much time at home as they spend deployed. While this sounds all wonderful and hunky dory, I have to admit I’m opposed to it. As a Soldier, I think I can express my opposition to a bill meant to help me and my family out. As someone who has deployed and will do so again, I also feel qualified to feel this way. I also realize I’m not going to get a lot of support for my way of thinking on this.

You may recall that I wrote about my grandfather’s time in WWII as a gunner and togglier in a B-17. Back in WWII, and later in Vietnam, there was no such thing as this “stability and predictability” crap. What’s so predictable about the enemy? If they were predictable, we’d be done by now. I’m offended that politicians who haven’t served a day in uniform think that I’m not strong enough to handle a deployments to a combat zone. Have our Soldiers become so weak and whiny that we now need Congress to tell us how much combat is too much? I thought we were Army Strong? The Few and the Proud? Aiming High? and Full Speed Ahead? (forgive me if some of those slogans are out of date. You get my meaning).

Thankfully, the President has threatened to veto such a bill and he should. It’s not the right thing for our military, though I’m sure many family members would disagree with me. We’ve already softened up our fighters with PC basic training, the abolition of uniform standards, the watering down of our NCO Corps (in the Army) by promoting without leadership school, etc. Now, we’re going to be coddled with our deployments. I wonder if Al Qaeda has the same policy of pulling their fighters out and giving them downtime for each day spent in combat. Probably not since they usually get killed or blow themselves up before they get the chance....


CJ says right up front that readers may disagree with his stance. As we know, CJ has been deployed, and IS a serving member of our military, so in my books that gives him ample rights to have an opinion, and voice them. To read the rest of this well thought out, well articulated opinion piece - and maybe even leave CJ a comment, go here.

Thanks for ALL that you do, CJ.

Brat

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Friday, August 03, 2007

Coalition Country - Kuwait



Map of Kuwait

...Prague, 1 August 2002 (RFE/RL) -- Just before dawn on 2 August 1990, an army of some 100,000 Iraqi troops supported by tanks stormed into

Kuwait and seized the country in just five hours.

The capture of the oil-rich emirate was immediately proclaimed by Baghdad as "The Revolution of 2 August" and as Kuwait's rightful return to Iraqi sovereignty. Amid scattered resistance by the Kuwaiti Army, Iraqi troops encircled the capital of Kuwait City and abducted several members of the ruling Sabah family. The rest of the 1,000-member royal family fled, with the emir speeding across the Saudi border in a limousine minutes before Iraqi troops reached his palace.

But if the Iraqi state press presented the seizure of Kuwait as a revolutionary eviction of a royal family that had been illegally occupying Iraqi land, the rest of the world saw the events as simple aggression by a large state against a small one. The international community rejected Baghdad's argument that Kuwait was historically part of Iraq and demanded that the Iraqi Army withdraw immediately.

Baghdad refused, even after being slapped with United Nations economic sanctions, and instead formally annexed the oil-rich emirate as one of its provinces. At the same time, Iraqi security forces cracked down on anything that looked like Kuwaiti resistance, arresting thousands of people and interrogating many under torture.

The occupation ended some six months later, when a U.S.-led international coalition drove Iraqi troops back across the border. The coalition included Western states and many of Iraq's neighbors, including Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, and Persian Gulf states. ... (source
Kuwait is a small, oil-rich country nestling at the top of the Gulf, flanked by large or powerful neighbours - Saudi Arabia to the south, Iraq to the north and Iran to the east.


Kuwait Area Maps

Kuwait
, one of the world's leading oil producers, is apparently slighter smaller than New Jersey! (and yes, I had a 'Joisey boy' source confirm that!) A muslim country, Kuwait is predominantly Sunni (70%). However, Kuwait is decidedly pro-western.

Britain oversaw foreign relations and defense for the ruling Kuwaiti AL-SABAH dynasty from 1899 until independence in 1961. Kuwait was attacked and overrun by Iraq on 2 August 1990. Following several weeks of aerial bombardment, a US-led, UN coalition began a ground assault on 23 February 1991 that liberated Kuwait in four days. Kuwait spent more than $5 billion to repair oil infrastructure damaged during 1990-91. The AL-SABAH family has ruled since returning to power in 1991, and reestablished an elected legislature that in recent years has become increasingly assertive ....(source)

And who can forget the images of the oil fields ablaze?

Credit: Sebastiao Salgado (read a really interesting article here)

And another one on Desert Storm, on a military naval site, right here.
More than 100,000 Iraqi soldiers invaded Kuwait in 1990

Kuwait does have a fascinating history. Over on the BBC site, there is a very detailed chronology, from the 1600's on to present day.

Independence

Kuwaiti machine-gunner at a checkpoint near the Iraqi border

A Kuwaiti soldier keeps watch near the Iraq border

1961 June - Kuwait becomes independent with the end of the British protectorate; the sheikh becomes an emir. The country joins the Arab League. Iraq renews claims that Kuwait is part of its territory but backs down after British military intervention.(source)


June 19th is celebrated as Independence Day as that's the day Kuwait gained independence from Britain. Something I found on the CIA site: of the 2,505,559 estimated population of Kuwait, there are 1,291,354 non-nationals. (source) Kuwait is obviously stategically placed in the Persian Gulf and does have a rich history of pro-western alliances. The interior political life of Kuwait is interesting (to me, anyways!) and it is stated that even though there are no political parties there: formation of political parties is in practice illegal, but is not forbidden by law.

...a number of political groups act as de facto parties; several legislative blocs operate in the National Assembly: tribal groups, merchants, Shi'a activists, Islamists, secular liberals and pro-government deputies; in mid-2006, a coalition of Islamists, liberals, and Shia campaigned successfully for electoral reform to reduce corruption... (here)

A constitutional emirate, Kuwait has some of the world's largest and most sophisticated desalination facilities. It is thriving economy:

Kuwait is a small, rich, relatively open economy with self-reported crude oil reserves of about 96 billion barrels - 10% of world reserves. Petroleum accounts for nearly half of GDP, 95% of export revenues, and 80% of government income. Kuwait's climate limits agricultural development. Consequently, with the exception of fish, it depends almost wholly on food imports. About 75% of potable water must be distilled or imported. Kuwait continues its discussions with foreign oil companies to develop fields in the northern part of the country. High oil prices in recent years have helped build Kuwait's budget and trade surpluses and foreign reserves. As a result of this positive fiscal situation, the need for economic reforms is less urgent and the government has not earnestly pushed through new initiatives
. (here)

Despite that, it is only since 2005 that women have had the right to vote. This strikes me as long overdue for many reasons, but one of the main reasons is that, according to the BBC, Kuwait has "some of the most outspoken newspapers in the Arab world, often aggressive in their coverage of politics and the government." Really fascinating article - honest! - on the media in Kuwait (among other topics) here.

Another interesting fact (this time from CIA which was updated July 17, 2007. Can't get much more current than that...lol): In a labour force of 1.136 million, 80% of that is non-Kuwaiti. Major industries in Kuwait? petroleum, petrochemicals, cement, shipbuilding and repair, water desalination, food processing, construction materials. And their main export partners? " Japan 20.2%, South Korea 16%, Taiwan 11.5%, Singapore 9.6%, US 8.9%, Netherlands 5.1%, China 4.1% (2006)", which changes slightly for the import partnerships: "US 14.1%, Japan 7.8%, Germany 7.7%, Saudi Arabia 6.8%, China 5.7%, UK 5.4%, Italy 4.6% (2006)" (source)

Military service is Kuwait is a combined voluntary and conscription for men and women over 18 years old. I also read somewhere(!) today that while in the military Kuwaitis are not allowed to vote. Military expenditures account for just over 5% of the GDP. Four branches of the military - Land Forces, Kuwaiti Navy, Kuwaiti Air Force (Al-Quwwat al-Jawwiya al-Kuwaitiya), National Guard (2007), and yes, Kuwait is still very much an active partner in the GWOT coalition.

Interesting article about a bunch of US civilians being taken to Camp Buehring and Udairi Range Complex in the Kuwait desert as guests of Third Army/U.S. Army Central, over at Army Times.

Friday May 4, 2007 10:17:33 EDT

Top of Form

Bottom of Form

Forty-five American leaders in education, government and industry were recently given a ride to Kuwait to “experience the life of a soldier,” according to an Army press release.

Nominated by the military, the civilians were ferried to training grounds at Camp Buehring and Udairi Range Complex in the Kuwait desert as guests of Third Army/U.S. Army Central.

For nearly 60 years, the Joint Civilian Orientation Conference has helped civilians understand and appreciate what service members go through on a daily basis.

“What’s most impressive is how committed the soldiers are and how proud they are to serve their country,” said Chris J. Kanazawa, president and chief executive officer of Parker Ranch in Hawaii, the fifth-largest cattle ranch in America. “This allows us to go back and share with our respective communities how well-trained our soldiers are [and] how dedicated they are to the mission.”

During two days of orientation and training with Army Central, the civilians gained an overall view of Third Army’s mission from the service members they met at the chow hall and firing ranges.... [Go read the rest!]


And from GlobalSecurity here,
is an indepth look at the co-operation between the US and Kuwait.

Facilities

Eventually, the US provided the bulk of the troops and equipment that were used by the multinational coalition that liberated Kuwait. The US-Kuwaiti relationship has remained strong in the post-war period.

The United States has provided military and defense technical assistance to Kuwait from both foreign military sales (FMS) and commercial sources. All transactions have been made by direct cash sale. The US Office of Military Cooperation in Kuwait is attached to the American Embassy and manages the FMS program. US military sales to Kuwait total $5.5 billion over the last 10 years. Principal US military systems currently purchased by the Kuwait Defense Forces are Patriot missile system, F-18 Hornet fighters, and the M1A2 Main Battle Tank.

The Army component of US Central Command (USCENTCOM), US Army Forces Central Command (ARCENT), maintains a forward presence in the region. Government-to-government agreements were negotiated with the Qatar and Kuwait to allow the prepositioning of military assets. The Army has met major milestones in its security strategy in the Middle East by completing a prepositioning facility in Qatar, and by the rapid pace of construction on a new installation in Kuwait. (read the rest at Global Security link above)

Make no mistake. Kuwait is crucial to the war effort that is being fought in iraq right now. Great article, from DefenseLink. From 2005:

Kuwait Central to Coalition Logistics Chain

By Jim Garamone

American Forces Press Service

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait, Jan. 10, 2005 -- "Amateurs study strategy. Professionals study logistics."

It's an old saw, but that doesn't mean it's not still appropriate -- and the U.S. military has taken it to heart.

More than 20,000 American servicemembers and civilians are serving in Kuwait to support the combat effort "up north," as they say here.

Troops in Kuwait are responsible for getting thousands of gallons of fuel to Iraq daily. Humvees, tanks, armored personnel carriers, forklifts, generators, and countless other systems couldn't work without their constant efforts. In short, troops in Iraq couldn't move without that logistical support.

Servicemembers in Kuwait also ensure thousands of gallons of water reach the forces in Iraq. "Our guys are spoiled," said a logistics professional in Kuwait. "They want bottled water, and we make sure they get it." That's a tall order with 150,000 U.S. troops in Iraq.

Servicemembers in Kuwait also ensure forces going north have the right equipment and facilitate last-minute training at Udairi Range in Kuwait.

They are also responsible for getting those troops home. Following scheduled Jan. 30 elections in Iraq, about 250,000 U.S. troops will be rotating in and out of the country.

Logisticians in Kuwait also maintain the camps, ensure portable latrines are cleaned, feed thousands of soldiers and Marines passing through, and work with their Kuwaiti hosts.

The Coalition Forces Land Component Command's chief of staff, Army Col. Louis Yuengert, praised the Kuwaitis for their cooperation with coalition forces. The coalition uses a good portion of the port facilities at Doha, free of charge. The coalition also does not pay landing fees at Kuwaiti airports. And, Kuwait provides all the fuel coalition forces use in Kuwait and much of the fuel used in Iraq.

Servicemembers in Kuwait also have spearheaded the move to armor all wheeled vehicles used in Iraq. This is a massive undertaking. There are 2,000 trucks on the road each day delivering supplies to Iraq. While many are civilian vehicles hired to deliver supplies, many are military vehicles with military crews.

Facilities in Kuwait, along with five in Iraq, add armor onto these vehicles.

Shops in Kuwait also rebuild vehicles damaged in battle or just worn out because of heavy use.

Kuwait also serves as the logistics hub for operations in Afghanistan and Djibouti. "People forget that we have those missions as well," Yuengert said.

Officials are always trying to find ways to make things more efficient. They plan, for example, to open water- bottling plants in Iraq. This would mean fewer convoys on the road and would be easier from a logistics standpoint.

Years from now, when amateurs are studying the strategy used in Operation Iraqi Freedom, professionals will be studying the way logisticians supplied the fighting force. (source)



The fact is, Kuwait has much to gain by being WITH us in this Global War on Terror, and much to lose if they do not co-operate.
Vice President Dick Cheney meets with Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmed Al-Jaber Al Sabah in Kuwait City, January 17, 2006. The Vice President delivered condolences to the Al Sabah family following the death of Emir Sheikh Jabir al-Ahmad Al Sabah on January 15. White House photo by David Bohrer
Vice President Dick Cheney meets with Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmed Al-Jaber Al Sabah in Kuwait City, January 17, 2006. The Vice President delivered condolences to the Al Sabah family following the death of Emir Sheikh Jabir al-Ahmad Al Sabah on January 15. White House photo by David Bohrer

President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah al Ahmad al-Jabir Al Sabah of Kuwait walk along the colonnade after the two leaders met with reporters in the Oval Office Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2003.  White House photo by Paul Morse






THE PRESIDENT:

It's my honor and honor of senior members of my administration to welcome you, sir, to the Oval Office. Kuwait is a steady and strong friend of the United States. I thank you for your friendship.

This country led a vast coalition to make the world more secure and more peaceful, and Kuwait was steadfast in your support of our common desire to respect human life, to promote peace, and I want to thank you for that very much. We called upon you to make some difficult choices, and you made those choices, and the world is better off as a result of the decisions your government made....

PRIME MINISTER SABAH:

...I would like to assure you that this friendship and the alliance between our two countries and our two peoples will continue. And it will not be limited to the official government levels, but it will be also, and continue to be between the people. This relationship will continue to exist because we strongly believe that it's in the interest of the peoples in both countries, as well as the region....(go - now! - and read the rest of the transcipt of this news conference here.)

And so it is. Partners in this global war we will not lose, as long as the allies stand strong together.

Brat


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Good News Friday (B*N*S*N) 1


As Tanker Sisters in the western world, we have many opportunities that some women take for granted. For women in Iraq and Afghanistan life is very different. We all know that women, historically, in those countries have been kept in the shadows, with roles as second class citizens.

Found a story a couple of days ago that shows a group of women in Afghanistan fighting to change history. In their own small way, they are stepping into the ring and demanding an active role in the affairs of their country.

Afghan women 'fighting for peace'
By David Loyn
BBC Developing World correspondent

Woman boxing
Some of the women aspire to take part in the Olympics
The barked instructions and sounds of feet running round on a matted floor are like any team anywhere in the world warming up.

But this training session is unique.

The people running round to warm up before putting on their boxing gloves are women - and this is Afghanistan.

A new generation is challenging the usual stereotype of Afghan women as shadowy figures concealed from head to foot behind powder-blue burqas.


It is said that the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world, and I have often half-jokingly said that if a bunch of us women went to Iraq or Afghanistan , and had 'words' with those terrorists who kill to maintain the status quo (you know, murder and mayhem!), then war would be OVER!

Women practice boxing


...But in agreeing to come to box these young women are doing more than exorcising the ghosts of a dark period in Afghan history....

Maleeha...points out that the boxers come from all corners of Afghanistan, not divided by tribal loyalties that have split Afghanistan in the past....

Kanishka Nawabi:

He says they are teaching women to be confident and regain self-respect in a male-dominated society.

"Afghanistan has been through a very violent conflict, and sport was not excluded from this process. What we are trying to do is to promote peace for this group, as a role model for society...

He says they are teaching women to be confident and regain self-respect in a male-dominated society.

"Afghanistan has been through a very violent conflict, and sport was not excluded from this process. ...


To me, this story definitely qualifies for the B*N*S*N category. Wouldn't be the first time in the history of war that local women have kicked butt and demanded peace. You can read the rest here.

Brat

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Good News Friday (B*N*S*N) 2


Soldiers from the 4th Iraqi Army march during a ceremony held for their graduation of the 4th Iraqi Army Training Academy Primary Leadership and Developement Course in Tikrit, Iraq. Photo by Sgt. Jennifer J. Eidson.
Soldiers from the 4th Iraqi Army march during a ceremony held for their graduation of the 4th Iraqi Army Training Academy Primary Leadership and Developement Course in Tikrit, Iraq. Photo by Sgt. Jennifer J. Eidson.


FORWARD OPERATING BASE RUSTAMIYAH
— Iraqi




























Take a look at that picture. I haven't seen a picture anything like it in the msm, BUT we know it is now commonplace in Iraq. It IS proof that the Iraqis are stepping up and reclaiming their country. It IS proof that while the assinine US politicians hold slumber parties, and the Iraqi politicians take a month's vacation from the business of running their fledging democracy, other Iraqis are taking care of business.

Iraqi Soldiers and police officers creep in file along the dusty path, ignoring or pretending to ignore the escalating heat. Their boots hitting the dusty trail are the only sound, the lonely road the only scenery....

It’s all part of a training day at a leadership course for Iraqi Army Soldiers and Iraqi national police officers. The course is vaguely similar to the U.S. Army Warrior Leaders Course, but it’s Iraqi-conceived and Iraqi-led. U.S. Soldiers are present, but only in observer and controller roles.

It is believed to be the first Iraqi-conceived and led leadership course since Operation Iraqi Freedom began....

While the msm and the US media are busily bleating "defeat", the brave - hell, heroic (I refuse to call them 'ordinary'!) - Iraqis, ARE making history. This story shows Iraqis taking charge. The US military is in a support role - period.

U.S. Army Master Sgt. Donald Marshall of Miami, team medic for 1-4-1 NPTT, said attendees are showing slow, steady progress.

“It’s a building process,” he said. “It’s the first time it’s been done. This class right here is history. The guys stay motivated and they still hang in there. We had 100 percent that finished the six-kilometer run we did on Monday.”

The U.S. role is in the background, Jones continued.

“They have the right ideas, but they still have to be guided,” he said. “They’re eager to learn, they just need that direction and that’s why we’re here.”...


So, let's get this straight: The Iraqis know what needs to be done, and are doing it. The US troops know what needs to be done, and are doing it. Day in, day out, these groups are busting their buns to make sure the democracy holds in Iraq. Maybe someone should tell the msm and the politicians here on the homefront. Naaaaaah, they are not wiiling - or capable, it seems - to listen to B*N*S*N stories. That wouldn't fit their agendas. You, however, can read the rest of this story here.

Brat

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Thursday, August 02, 2007

Good News Is So Hard To Listen To


Especially when it doesn't fit into your perspective on something.

H/T to Cpl M at ASP.

Rep. Nancy Boyda (D-KS) had to walk out of the room while being briefed by Retired Army Gen. Jack Keane about the good things happening in Iraq. Yeah, because good things are so hard to hear. But I suppose when you don't want anyone to believe good things are happening, then yeah, you don't want to hear it. Cpl M says it best:

All I could think of was someone holding their hands over their ears while screaming, "La la la la la! I can't hear you!"

Good word picture Cpl M!! How old are people that generally do what Cpl M suggested? Usually not old enough to be elected officials, that's for sure.

Here is part of the transcript from what Rep. Boyda said when she was able to stomach coming back into the room: (by the time she spoke Gen. Keane had left)

I was certainly hoping that General Keane would be able to be here as well. Let me just say, thank you for your testimony, so much, Mr. Korb.

And I just will make some statements more for the record based on what I heard from — mainly from General Keane. As many of us — there was only so much that you could take until we in fact had to leave the room for a while. So I think I am back and maybe can articulate some things — after so much of the frustration of having to listen to what we listened to.

But let me first just say that the description of Iraq as in some way or another that it's a place that I might take the family for a vacation — things are going so well — those kinds of comments will in fact show up in the media and further divide this country instead of saying, here's the reality of the problem. And people, we have to come together and deal with the reality of this issue.
(emphasis mine)

For the rest of the transcript follow this link to ASP.

"Frustration of having to listen to what we listened to"? Listening to good news is such a struggle? I am seriously not understanding this. I have not seen what Gen. Keane said, but I highly doubt he made Iraq sound like a place you could take your family for vacation!!

The fact that some people have such a hard time listening to good news regarding Iraq that they have to leave the room (and effectively shout "lalalalalalalala I can't HEAR you! as they leave) leaves me speechless!!

~Tracy

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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

The Price of Freedom





Over at A Soldier's Mind, they are running another contest. This one asks for essays on the topic of "What Does Freedom Mean To You and What Would YOU Be Willing To Do, To Ensure You Could Maintain Your Freedom?

As Terri says:

... we’ve discussed many times the fact that the Freedoms that we so easily take for granted are not without cost… that Freedom Isn’t Free. It comes with a price. That price is something that many men and women, over the course of history, have paid for, with their blood, their sweat, their tears and in many cases even their lives. Freedom is a very precious gift that these men and women have been willing to give to us, their fellow human beings, not because they had to, but because they so loved this country and it’s people, that the thought of any of us not having Freedom, was reprehensible to them....(A SoldiersMind here)

This time, the contest will be judged, not by ASM's readers, but by deployed troops. Soldiers at FOB Warhorse will be the judges of the 5 best entries. And yes, there ARE prizes. The prizes are signed copies of Marcus Luttrell's Book "Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10".

Most who read milblogs know of the incredible story that Marcus has to tell (and yes, I will be doing a book review for Tanker Bros soon...lol), and Terri has been able to meet him and have copies signed. A awesome prize in my opinion!

On the publisher's site they have this to say about Marcus' book:

Four US Navy SEALS departed one clear night in early July, 2005 for the mountainous Afghanistan-Pakistan border for a reconnaissance mission. Their task was to document the activity of an al Qaeda leader rumored to have a small army in a Taliban stronghold. Five days later, only one of those Navy SEALS made it out alive.

This is the story of the only survivor of Operation Redwing, SEAL team leader Marcus Luttrell, and the extraordinary firefight that led to the largest loss of life in American Navy SEAL history. His squadmates fought valiantly beside him until he was the only one left alive, blasted by an RPG into a place where his pursuers could not find him.... (source)


We know that freedom most certainly is NOT free, and I am sure all of us have thought about what WE would do to maintain our freedoms. Now, is your chance to share with the world what you would do - AND win a signed copy of Marcus Luttrell's chronicle of how he survived.

The deadline has been extended to August 15, so start writing!

Brat

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Wednesday Hero

his Weeks Soldier Was Suggested By Cynthia

Master Sgt. Michael Wert
Master Sgt. Michael Wert (Left)
35 years old from Saginaw, Michigan
2nd Marine Aircraft Wing
May 5, 2007


Master Sgt. Michael Wert, an intelligence chief for the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing at Cherry Point in Havelock, N.C., was vacationing on an early May weekend with his family at the beach when he saw two boys struggling in the surf.

His wife, Debbie, said her husband rushed into the water to help while she went to call 911. Their daughter, Katrina, grabbed a boogie board and followed Wert into the water. She managed to help the boys onto the board, but didn't see her dad with them. One of the boys told her that he (Wert) had to let them go and had died.

The rescue team found Wert, brought him to shore and tried to revive him. As they worked, strangers prayed with the family and comforted the Wert children.

Wert was six days shy of celebrating his 36th birthday.

Wert joined the Marines in 1989 after graduating from Alma High School, in Saginaw, MI, where he was a cross-country runner. He served in Operation Desert Storm and supported Operation Iraqi Freedom.

As the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing intelligence chief, he gracefully accepted the role as the go-to guy for his Marines. He was the one who helped his major’s son build a pinewood derby car while the officer was deployed. He knew when babies were born in the command. He kept up with birthdays and anniversaries. He was the first to greet Marines getting off the plane after a tour in Iraq. "He was always there to help," Lt. Col. William Conley, commander of Marine Wing Headquarters Squadron 2 said at a memorial service for Wert. "Master Sergeant Wert responded to the need for help. As always, he didn’t hesitate — he went to help. He tragically lost his own life in doing so."

"I admired him for his commitment to service and the Marine Corps," said Col. Kathy Tate. "We know he was a hero every day."


These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. To find out more about Wednesday Hero, you can go here.