Sunday, March 30, 2008

SSGT Matt Maupin's Remains Found in Iraq


DNA tests confirm that remains found in Iraq are that of missing Army SSG Matt Maupin.

20-year-old Maupin was captured on April 9, 2004 when his fuel convoy, part of the 724th Transportation Company, came under attack near the Baghdad International Airport. A week later, the Arab television network Al-Jazeera aired a videotape showing Maupin sitting on the floor surrounded by five masked men holding automatic rifles. On June 28, a video purporting to show his execution was released, but Army officials said the quality was so poor that it could not be verified.
His parents have been told and an official statement should be released on Monday.

In a Sunday evening press conference, Staff Sergeant Maupin's parents Keith and Carolyn said they were told of the news around around 1 p.m. Sunday.

"My heart sinks, but I know they can't hurt him anymore," Keith Maupin said.

Lt. Lee Packnett, an Army public affairs officer in Washington, confirmed that the Maupins were notified Sunday that their son's remains had been identified. Packnett said an official statement about the identification would be released Monday.

"It hurts, it hurts," Carolyn Maupin said outside the Yellow Ribbon Support Center in Union Township.



“Matt is coming home; he has completed his mission,” said Keith Maupin, outside the Yellow Ribbon Support Center in Eastgate. “After years of prayer and hope, we learned today that Matt died while in captivity. While this is not what we had hoped for, at least we know.”

My thoughts and prayers go out to the Maupin family.



~Tracy

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Every Day Heroes


Meet Spc. Monica Brown:

Vice President Dick Cheney speaks with Silver Star recipient Spc. Monica Brown and her brother, Spc. Justin Brown, following an award ceremony at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, March 20. Photo by Sgt. Jim Wilt

2nd Woman Since WWII Gets Silver Star

March 21, 2008) --The second female Soldier since World War II was awarded a Silver Star Thursday for her gallant actions during combat in Afghanistan last year.

Spc. Monica Brown, 19, a Lake Jackson, Texas, native was presented her Silver Star by Vice President Dick Cheney during a ceremony at Bagram Airfield.

It was dusk April 25, 2007, when Brown, a medic from the 782nd Brigade Support Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, was on a routine security patrol along the rolling, rocky plains of Paktika's isolated Jani Khail District when her convoy was attacked by insurgents.

"We'd been out on the mission for a couple of days," said Brown, who at the time was attached to the brigade's 4th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment's Troop C. "We had just turned into a wadi (empty river bed) when our gunner yelled at us that the vehicle behind us had hit an (improvised-explosive device)."

They all looked out of their windows in time to see one of the struck vehicle's tires flying through the field next to them. Brown had just opened her door to see what was going on when the attack began.

"I only saw the smoke from the vehicle when suddenly we started taking small-arms fire from all around us," she said. "Our gunner starting firing back and my platoon sergeant yelled, 'Doc! Let's go.'"

Brown and her platoon sergeant, Staff Sgt. Jose Santos, exited their vehicle, and while under fire, ran the few hundred meters to the site of the downed Humvee.

"Everyone was already out of the burning vehicle," she said. "But even before I got there, I could tell that two of them were injured very seriously."...

Go - now - and read the rest of this amazing story, here.

Thanks to incredible men and women like this for their service, every single day.

Brat

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Friday, March 28, 2008

Congratulations CAV TANKER!!



I've heard that someone is engaged!!

Congrats Cav!

This picture was taken at MG's Wedding. There will be another picture like this one in the future, just a different groom! :o)


~Tracy

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



This was too good NOT to share:

Free Rides for Military Members
What a way to say thank you. Via Rail is offering Canadian Forces and Department of National Defence employees free, unlimited travel for the entire month of July.

Veterans, retirees, current service personnel and civilian employees will all qualify to ride the rails free, anywhere Via travels. They'll also be able to bring along five family members, who will all get tickets at half price.

They are expecting thousands of people to take them up on their offer and say July is already a busy month because of all the holiday travellers.

Via officials say the offer is just a small way of saying thank you to the members for everything they do for our country...(source)


That qualifies as B*N*S*N to me. ALL ABOARD!

Brat

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"Then they came for me..."


"Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak." That comes from a piece made famous after WW2, and in today's climate in Tibet, it is STILL relevant.

As I have watched the last two weeks' violence unfolding in Tibet, I have really marvelled at how far we have come in the world. Today, unlike in WW2, we have global internet. We have NO excuses for pretending we don't know what is happening in Tibet. The converse of the marvelling at our global connectedness, is absolute despair at our total LACK of progress. How ingrained the old patterns of international response still reverberate around the world.

I have read a whole lot on Tibet this last couple of weeks, and really, the international community STILL doesn't have a clue. And, to me, our ignorance is wilful, inexcusable.

Go read the rest of this here....

Brat

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Thursday, March 27, 2008

In case you missed this.....(1)


A piece called "Notes from the Iraqi Front:

Notes from the Iraqi front (and rear)

POSER - An Iraqi girl poses for a photograph while her mother washes dishes in a canal on the suburbs of Samawa in southern Iraq. Iraqi children are precocious, and nothing gets their attention more than a U.S. soldier on patrol. Soldiers both love it and hate it. (Kyodo via Newscom)

FOB NORMANDY, Iraq -- FOBs and COPs are acronyms that appear frequently in news stories on the war in Iraq. The phrase or concept they represent are defined, but seldom explained. Here is a bit more detail, as well as a few glimpses of the life soldiers live in Iraq.

FOBs, or Forward Operating Bases, are the backbone of U.S. military presence and operations in Iraq. They are the large-to-humongous logistics and support areas where munitions and supplies are stored, vehicles are maintained or repaired, headquarter detachments are based, mail is received, medical care is available, and life support activities – such as showers and recreation centers – help relieve the stress of deployment and missions "outside the wire." They go by names like Marez, Balad, Warhorse, Q-West and Falcon....



I found this on Soldiers' Angels forum, but you can read the rest here.

Brat (H/T Ros - the other one..lol)

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In case you missed this...2


"Shoot first, ask questions later" is the title of a post by Subsunk at BlackFive as he introduces a soldier blogging from the frontlines::


If you read nothing else today, you really MUST read this one. Telling it like it really IS, you can find Lt. G here.

Brat(H/T Subsunk)

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Wednesday Hero

(added by Brat - copyrighted by SA)

This Weeks Hero Was Suggested by Kathi

Soldiers' Angels Living Legends Team
Soldiers’ Angels Living Legends Team
May No Soldier Go Unloved

Living Legends began in May 2005 with a very small team of seven dedicated angels. The team’s mission was to let the families and friends of fallen heroes know that we were here to support them and to honor their loved one. At the same time, they had to make sure that they were sensitive to what the family was going through. While this team has grown tremendously, they have worked very hard to maintain that same level of dedication and sensitivity. This team is staffed with trained volunteers who carry out a very difficult mission for Soldiers’ Angels. Due to their dedication, Soldiers’ Angels is able to honor those heroes who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our nation and to pay their respects and offer their deepest sympathies to the families and loved ones grieving the painful loss of their son or daughter; husband or wife; brother or sister; mom or dad; aunt or uncle; their friend.

For more information on the Soldiers’ Angels Living Legends Team, you can visit their site.

Sometimes a hero is one who sacrifices everything in their life to help others. And sometimes a hero is one who sacrifices nothing more than their time.
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. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.


Indian Chris
http://rightwingrightminded.blogspot.com
http://hooahwife.com

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Waving the flag in Berkeley


This last weekend, while Code Stinko slept...lol... troop supporters gathered in Berkeley to show support for OUR Marines. You all must remember how the Mayor and Council decided the USMC was "unwelcome intruders" there.

From Melanie Morgan last Friday:

Details, Details on Red, White and Blue in Berkeley
Written by Melanie Morgan
Friday, 21 March 2008

Troop Support Rally


Ok folks, this is the call to arms. It doesn't matter where you live, Northern California, the Western States, east coast, where ever - tell everyone you know, forward this email, call them, whatever - get the word out. It doesn't matter if you ride a bike or drive a cage. This is a call to arms for all veterans, all patriots, and all that truly respect the military.
...

Due to the garbage in Bezerkeley, we've made a decision to have a Massive show of support for the Marine Recruiters, and Veterans everywhere. Bezerkeley, the City Council, the Mayor, Code Pink and the other moonbats want to step all over veterans, past, present and future. We need to show them we're not going to allow that in Berkeley or anywhere else.
I'm not using the term "demonstration" for two simple reasons - "demonstration" is tied together with "counter demonstration". Neither of those terms come in to play in this instance.(here)

And show up they did! Go read Melanie Morgan's post rally report.

Our strategy worked.

Only a few rabid pink weasel stoners showed up, and we owned the street with our pride and patriotism, waving flags, singing patriotic songs, cheering for the Marines as well as all military men and women, their families and our country.

Doug Lyvere of EaglesUp mustered over 600 bikers (updated) on Harley's, Ducatis, and every bike in between. Guys and gals drove in from Modesto, Turlock, Arizona, Wyoming, San Mateo, San Jose, Santa Clara, Contra Costa and supporters flew in from San Diego and L.A.

In all, there were close to 800 people there, and it surprised the hell out of the media.(This whole section courtesy of Melanie Morgan site)

As with the February show of support for our troops in Berkely, our Tanker sister Gail was there this time, too! And yes, she took some awesome pictures:

Photobucket

One of my personal faves:
Photobucket

And there was this:
Photobucket

And yes, our intrepid reporter Gail also sent me the following summary:

By the way the pictures of the Marine in the red shirt is Captain Lund. [brat note: check out all Gail's pics here] Yes THE Capt. You remember his eloquent answer to code stink attacking them was published in the newspaper. I was honored that he took time out of his day to come out & thank us for being there. He thanked all the VN vets for being there. Thanked all of the mil families. Then he asked for a moment of silence for the fallen. And yes, even on that busy street, you could've heard a pin drop. You know code stink has never received such an honor. The Berkeley Police dept. was considerably friendlier. I am not sure if complaints put them in a friendly mode or what happened. When I spoke up to a tired no blood for oil sign holder, one of the officers told me he'd like to ask the guy, if he was allowed to, If our country is so bad why not move somewhere else? I told him we have the greatest freedom here, even that freedom to leave if we don't like it here. I forgot to grab batteries for my camera, so I debated, spend money in the dreaded berkeley or have no pictures of the day. I went with buying batteries. I was going to walk a few blocks down to a Long's but saw a little shop. There were a couple of riders in there so I stopped there. The guy thanked us for being there. Said how much code stink is damaging their businesses. He said there were bringing someone else in to stop them. Another man just walking down the street stopped and thanked me for being there. He also said he was a business owner on Shattuck & did NOT want code stink there anymore, did NOT support code stink & the cities stance. Someone mentioned that 3 businesses on Shattuck have gone bankrupt since this has started. I do feel bad for them, obviously we don't want any individuals suffering for the actions of a few ignorant city council members. But they do need to take action too. Start a recall of the council members. Demand that apology. STOP code stink in their tracks. Simply not allowing them to demonstrate day after day would be a start. OK off soap box!

You can get on your soapbox any time around here, Gail! Sounds like a fantastic day was had by all. Freepers also has a great post up on the show of support, along with some great pictures.



These Heroes stood in front of the Office for quite some time. Brave warriors from wars past.
One of the other pictures from Freepers(and you can find more pics and their write-up here!)


I'm thinking that the Marines felt the love, and that the Code Pinks felt the power of the USMC and their HUNDREDS of supporters.

Semper Fi, Marines.

Brat(H/T to Gail of course..)

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Every Day Heroes


Meet Sergeant Benjamin Marshall:
Benjamin Marshall

Separated from his platoon and nearly surrounded by eight al Qaeda fighters, Sergeant Benjamin Marshall had a decision to make: run for cover, stranding his two pinned comrades; or sprint across enemy fire and assume a position to shoot back. Marshall chose the latter, in what he would later call the defining moment of his life.

July 7, 2006, during a mission in Tharthar, Iraq, Marshall, two fellow soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter entered a farmhouse – one of several they had been searching all day after receiving intelligence on a possible al Qaeda training camp in the area. After Marshall and one of his comrades, Staff Sergeant Christopher Schroeder, cleared the first room, an unknown man darted into another room, pointed his rifle out the doorway and blindly sprayed 7.62 rounds at the soldiers from his AK-47. Schroeder was hit twice. The two men on point, the wounded Schroeder and Sergeant Williams Wills, quickly sought cover in an adjacent room as a tremendous wall of automatic weapons fire began coming down on all three soldiers.

The interpreter got out of the house but Marshall knew his soldiers could not get out unless he was able to take up a firing position outside. Looking back, he said “I don’t know how, but they never saw me.” Marshall remembers he had to run right by the terrorists in an effort to get outside, only to find a position in a dilapidated chicken coop. The terrorists attempted to close in on Wills and Schroder’s position, but Marshall’s expertly aimed shots stopped them.

As the battle wore on, it became apparent to Marshall that these were well-trained and determined fighters. As the gunfire continued inside the house, Marshall could hear the fervent chanting of the al Qaeda fighters, but the fate of his men remained a mystery. After hearing a volley of grenades near his soldiers’ last location, Marshall feared the worst. When he heard the thunderous clap of a flash bang grenade exploding near the insurgents’ position, only then did he breathe a sigh of relief.

As the platoon leader’s Humvee approached, Marshall shouted out the status of his injured brothers-in-arms to the vehicle’s gunner. His communication was critical, but it alerted the insurgents and drew fire onto his position. Round after round of machine gun fire ripped apart his thin cover, nearly taking his life. Yet becoming the insurgent’s target was exactly the diversion Marshall had hoped for to take the pressure off his fellow soldiers. This maneuver enabled the injured soldiers to signal to the four U.S. gun trucks. A Humvee, now at Marshall’s position, provided him with cover to then pull up alongside the building to evacuate the other two American soldiers.

Not a day goes by when Marshall does not think of that life-changing experience in Tharthar. In a split second he made the decision to save the lives of his fellow soldiers rather than run for cover. He picked "the hard right over the easy left," and because of that was awarded the Bronze Star with "V" device for exceptionally meritorious heroism in July of 2007.


We have so many every day heroes walking among us, but I found this hero here.

Thank YOU for your service, Seargant Marshall! HOOAAH! (yes, M*A - you can say that here.lol)

Brat

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Random Acts... an Easter story!


I came across this story on the Soldiers' Angels forum, and have to share it with you:

Sgt. John Urbanski/contributed photo

Gun Truck Platoon, A Company, 426 Brigade Support Battalion, 1st Brigade Combat Team, displays a "Thank You" sign for items sent to Camp Speicher, Iraq, to help them celebrate Easter. The platoon is in front of an mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicle.


Easter 'Angels' step up, help
Random acts of kindness warm troops' hearts

Regina Urbanski and her husband, John, wanted to do something nice but simple for Easter for the deployed soldiers in her husband's platoon. The way it turned out, two people performed "a very rare act of kindness" for them.

Regina Urbanski was at a post office in the Hilldale area, somewhere she rarely visits, when a man — whose identity remains unknown — pushed her aside and paid the $49.95 in shipping to get the three boxes to Iraq.


In the boxes were chocolate crosses, camouflage-patterned plastic Easter eggs and Girl Scout cookies for the deployed soldiers in Sgt. John Urbanski's platoon.

John Urbanski is assigned to Gun Truck Platoon, A Company, 426 Brigade Support Battalion, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division.

The anonymous donor, who Regina Urbanski said was a well dressed, middle-aged businessman, saw Urbanski chatting with the postman at the counter and walked up and told her he would cover the cost of the shipping.

Even though $49.95 doesn't seem like a major expense, Regina Urbanski said the effect of his gift sent shockwaves and "changed lives that day."

"He proved why we're there, and why our (soldiers) do the job they do," Regina Urbanski said. "Because there are Americans who love and appreciate and support our soldiers regardless of how they feel about the war."

Later the same day, Regina Urbanski was buying prepaid phone cards for the men when her friend, Vickie Polk, pushed her aside and paid the $50 for the cards.

"It was an amazing day for me," Regina Urbanski said. "I felt like I met an angel that day, two angels."...


The msm would have us all believe that no-one gives a damn about our troops. WRONG!
You can read the rest of this neat story here.

Brat (H/T to Regina...lol)

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Friday, March 21, 2008

Good News Friday (B*N*S*N1)


"Have I done great things? No," she said. "I just feel I've done what I know and love...."

This from a story about a young woman you probably won't read about in the msm:

Young Leader Makes Magazine's Select List

Penny Koger-Thomas of AMCOM G-1 (Human Resources) is included in Ebony Magazine’s 2008 “Thirty Rising Leaders Under 30.” Photo by Samuel Vaughn (AMCOM

Penny Koger-Thomas was surprised when she opened the February issue of Ebony Magazine.

She was traveling from New York to Alabama in January and was in the Charlotte, N.C., airport. She subscribes to the magazine but bought it at the airport because of the famous personalities and articles mentioned on the front cover.

"I had a long layover in Charlotte, too, so I needed something to read," said Koger-Thomas, a human resources specialist in the Aviation and Missile Command's (AMCOM) G-1 (Human Resources).

She happened to turn right to the page where she was listed as one of Ebony Magazine's 2008 "Thirty Rising Leaders Under 30." The list included males and females throughout the United States who have distinguished themselves as young lawyers, doctors, politicians, government employees and media personalities....

Yet another story that surely qualifies as B*N*S*N and you can read it here.

Brat

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N2)


"...I believe that there is no glass ceiling and that women can go as far as they want to...”

So says Col. Valerie Ratliff at an award ceremony this past week:

March 20th, 2008 Posted By Bash.

1

By John J. Kruzel
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, March 20, 2008 - The Defense Department honored Army Col. Valerie Ratliff last night for her efforts to break down barriers for future generations of women.
But Ratliff hopes the recognition, conferred on her and dozens of others here during the department’s 2008 Women’s History Month Outreach and Observance Reception, will soon be made obsolete by virtue of future women’s continued success.

“This is just the beginning of the trailblazer recognition,” she told American Forces Press Service today. “And it will be a good thing when we won’t have to recognize it in the same manner.

“The history books will be written, the ‘firsts’ will be done,” she continued. “The doors have been opened.”

The Defense Department honored Ratliff and 12 other women with “Female Trailblazers” awards. In addition, 14 women received the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Role Model Award for excellence in those fields.

Ratliff, an Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran, is the first African-American woman in Army history — and the second woman in the branch’s history — to command a battalion of the elite 82nd Airborne Division....(here)


You can also read the official military article here. That's B*N*S*N!

Brat

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N3)


To prove that our troops have got the "right stuff" - not that we need that proof.lol, comes this story:

Three Soldiers Qualify for Olympic Shotgun Team

Two-time Olympian Pfc. Walton Glenn Eller III of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit of Fort Benning, Ga., qualified for the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team in Double Trap March 15. Photo by Courtesy

KERRVILLE, Texas (Army News Service, March 17, 2008) - The 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Shooting (Shotgun) concluded March 16 with Pfc. Vincent C. Hancock of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit of Fort Benning, Ga., earning a spot on the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team in Skeet.

Army Marksmanship Unit Soldiers Pfc. Walton Glenn Eller III and Spc. Jeffrey G. Holguin were selected to the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team in Double Trap March 15.

In Men's Skeet, Hancock, the 2007 World Cup Italy Champion and world record holder and 2007 Pan-American Games Gold Medalist, earned a berth to his first U.S. Olympic Team finishing with a total score of 511 targets.

USAMU's Staff Sgt. Mark L. Weeks tied Sean McLelland of Texas with 478 targets going into the final, but McLelland earned the spot on the Olympic Team shooting 24 targets to Weeks' 22 targets in the final. McLelland finished with a total score of 502 targets, while Weeks finished with 500 targets....

Go read the rst of this B*N*S*N here.

Brat

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Wednesday Hero

Spc. Monica Lin Brown
Spc. Monica Lin Brown
19 years old from Lake Jackson, Texas
4th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team

Army Spc. Monica Lin Brown has done something only a very few female soldiers in American history have ever done. She’s been awarded the Silver Star.

Brown saved the lives of fellow soldiers after a roadside bomb tore through a convoy of Humvees in the eastern Paktia province of Afghanistan in April 2007. “I did not really think about anything except for getting the guys to a safer location and getting them taken care of and getting them out of there.”

“We stopped the convoy. I opened up my door and grabbed my aid bag,” Brown said.

She started running toward the burning vehicle as insurgents opened fire. All five wounded soldiers had scrambled out.

“I assessed the patients to see how bad they were. We tried to move them to a safer location because we were still receiving incoming fire,” Brown said. “So we dragged them for 100 or 200 meters, got them away from the Humvee a little bit,” she said. “I was in a kind of a robot-mode, did not think about much but getting the guys taken care of.”

For Brown, who knew all five wounded soldiers, it became a race to get them all to a safer location. Eventually, they moved the wounded some 500 yards away and treated them on site before putting them on a helicopter for evacuation.

“I did not really have time to be scared,” Brown said. “Running back to the vehicle, I was nervous (since) I did not know how badly the guys were injured. That was scary.”

The military said Brown’s “bravery, unselfish actions and medical aid rendered under fire saved the lives of her comrades and represents the finest traditions of heroism in combat.”

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. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

My Two Cents: Of Savagery and Civility


This week saw the anniversary of MyLai. This week also is seeing the disgusting spectacle that is Winter Soldier II. This week ALSO sees Americans standing up and saying "No, this is NOT Vietnam, and we won't stand for our troops, fighting in this Global War on Terror, maligned by present day, ignorant anti-troop dimtwits." Iraq War Today has a great post up:
For the last couple of days, a poem has been stuck in my mind. It has interrupted the strains of Celtic music that are usually there on this day. It starts like this:

In prison cell I sadly sit,
A d__d crest-fallen chappie!
And own to you I feel a bit-
A little bit - unhappy!

It really ain't the place nor time
To reel off rhyming diction -
But yet we'll write a final rhyme
Whilst waiting cru-ci-fixion!
The metered echo in my head was not an unexpected event - yesterday, as I perused the headlines, I saw the predictable:

U.S. veterans, Japanese mark 1968 Vietnam massacre - Video

Survivors reflect 40 years after My Lai

My Lai. Yesterday was the 40th anniversary of the incident that came to encapsulate Vietnam for the antiwar movement, and for a generation of Americans who lost their stomach for fighting Communists, for casualty counts, for war. Like it or not, My Lai was the best thing ever to happen to those who malign our troops and what they do - to the anti-troop crowd, My Lai was an unprecedented gift.

I've always been somewhat skeptical about the 'official' story around My Lai, especially given the context. There was tremendous pressure on the military to find someone guilty, to throw someone under the bus to make the raging crowds happy.

It's generally accepted that our troops crossed the line at My Lai. But my problem with the whole thing is that the judgment of My Lai comes completely out of context, and more often than not, the incident is viewed through eyes that have absolutely no frame of reference. Hindsight may be 20/20 in most cases, but not when you're working in the dark. Even now, so many years later, there are many, many unanswered questions about what happened - and why.

Vietnam, to be sure, was not the war that those who went there expected. When the Vietnam war happened, the generation who would serve there was accustomed to war being almost a rite of passage. Remember, there had been a war in this country virtually with every generation since its birth. If you were male, you grew up, you went to war, you came home. Sometimes you didn't, in which case you became immortalized as a hero....

As I read this, all that kept running through MY head was: Not this time, NOT on my watch.
Go read here.

Brat

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Monday, March 17, 2008

Marine fights "domestic" enemies



Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani is a 19 year veteran of the US Marine Corps, with tours of duty in Panama, the Persian Gulf and three tours of Iraq. He is also a man whose well documented, and heroic, career is on hold right now because of the accusations of one man: John Murtha, American Congressman, who went on national television and accused the Marines of killing innocent civilians in cold blood. Lt. Col. Chessani swore an oath on joining the military to defend America against all "enemies, foreign and domestic". As has been seen repeatedly throughout the current war, it is the domestic enemies that people like the Lt. Col. most have to defend themselves against.

The most serious charge against Lt. Col. Chessani is "dereliction of duty", charges based on Murtha's unfounded assertions that what happened in Haditha on November 19, 2005 was a 'massacre' by our Marines, repeated in various Time magazine articles, and carried on by others in the mainstream media....

Go read the rest here.

Brat

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Sunday, March 16, 2008

Every Day Heroes


In this series, I have been bringing you heroes from the current war. We all know that even if I featured just one hero a week, we would be reading the series until long after they all come home. The heroes in this series all survived harrowing events to be hailed - rightfully - as heroes.

Today, I want to bring your attention to two heroes who served in a war long ago: World War 1. I found a piece on one of them on the BBC, and want to share this man's story with you. He recently died, so I wanted you all to learn a bit about him. The other is an American bona fide hero who recently met President Bush.

Meet Lazare Ponticelli:

France's final WWI veteran dies
Lazare Ponticelli celebrating his 110th birthday on 16 Dec 2007
Lazare Ponticelli celebrated his 110th birthday in December
France's last surviving veteran of World War One, Lazare Ponticelli, has died at the age of 110.

President Nicolas Sarkozy announced the death on Wednesday, paying tribute to the last "poilu", as French WWI veterans were known.

"Today, I express the nation's deep emotion and infinite sadness," he said.

Mr Ponticelli, originally Italian, had lied about his age in order to join the French Foreign Legion in August 1914,

aged 16, Mr Sarkozy said....

Mr Ponticelli was born on 7 December 1897 in Emilia Romagna, northern Italy.

He made his way, at the age of nine, to France to join his two brothers, and worked in Paris as a chimney sweep and paper boy.

Mr Sarkozy said there would be a national day of remembrance for France's war dead in the coming days as he marked Mr Ponticelli's death.

"I salute the Italian boy who came to Paris to earn his living and chose to become French, first in August 1914 when he lied about his age to sign up at 16 for the Foreign Legion to defend his adopted homeland," the French president said in a statement.

"Then a second time in 1921, when he decided to remain here for good."

Mr Ponticelli, who lived with his daughter in a southern suburb of Paris, had initially refused a government offer of a state funeral, the AFP news agency reported.

But he later decided to accept "in the name of all those who died, men and women", during WWI.

"Poilu", a word meaning hairy or tough, is the affectionate name given since Napoleonic times to French foot soldiers. (source BBC here)


American Frank Buckles, may have been in the same war as M. Ponticelli, but at 107 years young, is a mere punk compared to his French contemporary.

Meet Corporal Frank Buckles:



More than 4 million Americans were mobilized for World War One. One of them is Frank Buckles of Jefferson County....Cecelia Mason talks to Buckles about his memories of two wars, his life today, and his gratitude. This story aired May 24, 2007, on the program "Outlook." Cecelia Mason is the producer.

Last surviving U.S. World War I vet honored by president

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Frank Woodruff Buckles was just 15 years old when he joined the U.S. Army. Soon, he was deployed to war and headed overseas on the Carpathia -- the same ship used in the rescue mission of the Titanic.

art.buckles.cnn.jpg

World War I veteran Frank Buckles entered the Army at age 15. "I didn't lie," he said with a laugh this week.

He drove ambulances in Britain and France for soldiers wounded during World War I.

A few decades later, Buckles was in the Philippines as a civilian, on December 7, 1941, the day Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. He was taken as a prisoner of war for 39 months in Manila, eating his meals out of a single tin cup.

More than 60 years later, he still clings to that cup, the one that sustained his life. Weathered with age, the cup has flecks of white paint chipped off. He keeps it as a reminder of his sacrifice for the country he so loves. He also still has his dog tags.

At age 107, there's not much the war veteran, POW and West Virginia farmer hasn't seen. But this week, this quietly accomplished man was humbled.

Buckles, the last known surviving World War I U.S. veteran, met the president of the United States and received a standing ovation at the Pentagon.

"I didn't lie; nobody calls me a liar," he said with a chuckle, referring to how he became a soldier at just 15....


Go here to read the rest of the story about this amazing man being recognised, acknowledged by President Bush.

107-year-old Corporal Frank Woodruff Buckles of West Virginia met with President Bush in the Oval Office yesterday. Buckles had fudged his age to join the Army.
107-year-old Corporal Frank Woodruff Buckles of West Virginia met with President Bush in the Oval Office yesterday. Buckles had fudged his age to join the Army. (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)


Did you know that WW1 veterans still have no national memorial in America? I did not, until I read the following story:

Pentagon honors last American veteran of WWI

Corporal, 107, joined in 1917


WASHINGTON - World War I veterans still have no national memorial. There has been no Hollywood blockbuster in recent years to bring their story to life. But they still have Frank Buckles.

More than 90 years after he fudged his age to join the Army, Corporal Frank Woodruff Buckles, the last surviving American veteran of World War I, came to the Pentagon yesterday to represent the more than two million "doughboys" who braved the trench warfare and gas attacks of the "The Great War."

"It is an honor to be here to represent the veterans of World War I. I thank you," the 107-year-old Buckles, of Charles Town, W.Va., told a packed auditorium. Buckles spoke softly but clearly, and shared stories - including a meeting with General John J. "Black Jack" Pershing.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates unveiled portraits of Buckles and eight other veterans who were photographed over the past 18 months - but seven have since died, and the eighth served with Canadian forces.

At 16, Buckles sailed from Hoboken, N.J., in December 1917 on the HMS Carpathia, the ship that saved Titanic survivors five years earlier. He drove an ambulance in England and France and later guarded German prisoners...

Be sure to go read the rest of this story here. And, please watch part 2 of the above Outlook programme:


What an amazing hero! And yes, you KNOW the President had something to say to Cpl Buckles:

President Bush Meets with World War I Veteran Corporal Frank Woodruff Buckles
Oval Office

THE PRESIDENT: Sitting next to me is Mr. Frank Buckles, 107-years-young, and he is the last living Doughboy from World War I. And it has been my high honor to welcome Mr. Buckles, and his daughter, Susannah, here to the Oval Office.

Mr. Buckles' mind is sharp, his memory is crisp, and he's been sharing with me some interesting anecdotes. I asked him where he lived, and he said, that reminds me of what General Pershing asked me. And he told the General that he was raised on a farm in Missouri. And the General said, well, you know, as the crow flies, it's 40 miles from where I was raised.

And so Mr. Buckles has a vivid recollection of historic times. And one way for me to honor the service of those who wear the uniform in the past and those who wear it today is to herald you, sir, and to thank you very much for your patriotism and your love for America.

So we're glad you're here. Thanks for coming.
President George W. Bush welcomes Cpl. Frank Woodruff Buckles, the last known surviving American-born WWI veteran, to the Oval Office Thursday, March 6, 2008. The President told the 107-year-old, ".One way for me to honor the service of those who wear the uniform in the past and those who wear it today is to herald you, sir, and to thank you very much for your patriotism and your love for America."  White House photo by Eric Draper (source)


America is blessed to have such men as Cpl Frank Buckles in their midst. Thank YOU for your service, Sir!

Brat

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Saturday, March 15, 2008

The Hate Speech in the Cult of Barack Hussein Obama


Is Obama's free ride over? Are we now going to be able to lift the lid off what he is REALLY about without being labelled 'racist' etc etc.. Quite apart from all the quibbles I have with him offering "change" but relying on speech sound bites from bygone eras, (never mind thrilled to be endorsed by "has been" hacks.lol), I have been appallled at how the msm has swallowed his bs hook, line and sinker.

Well, no more! MissBeth's Victory Dance has a post up (which I found cross-posted at Wake Up America,) and it really IS must reading for all:


A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a few posts regarding Barack Hussein Obama's questionable attributes and associations; some, he could address directly, others he has refused to address at all, preferring to run away from a press conference after he answered about eight questions. It all stemmed from the manufactured controversy over using his middle name--since he's mulatto, we're not supposed to criticize him at all, on any issue, lest we be labeled as racist.


Some people are idiotic enough to think only whites are racist. These people are your typical, politically correct nutcases who are intent on bringing this country down from the inside. And, they are wrong.
























If anything, blacks themselves are more racist than 95% of the whites in America today. Their leaders, Jackson, Sharpton and Farrakhan, have been joined in the race baiting, hate mongering war by Jeremiah Wright. No, I won't put "Rev." in front of ANY of their names--whether they "earned" their divinity degrees or simply claim it, none are men of God, unless that god is Satan himself.


Barack Hussein Obama and the Trailer Trash Hillary wannabe Michelle, have been race-baiting throughout this campaign, albeit sublety.

What's worse, people are stupid enough to vote for this man, simply because he's mulatto. No other reason--they buy the empty rhetoric and the color and cast their vote. They don't bother to investigate him, what he stands for, what his meager record shows, what his actions reveal, or the company he keeps.



I have maintained Barack Hussein Obama has questionable ties from the start. I mentioned his Chicago land deals way back when. Nobody listened. Now, it's coming out in the MSM--the Rezko controversy. What I didn't know then but do now is the Iraqi ties of Rezko. Rezko is also one of his campaign contributors.


I've mentioned Barack Hussein Obama's questionable ties with his cousins in Kenya and how they contacted HIM to step into the Kenya bloodshed--a minor, freshman Senator from Illinois. I asked why they would contact HIM for help. I still don't have an answer. He holds no real power, why would he be the contact for help?

I've questioned Barack Hussein Obama's foggy past regarding islam and asked where he stands on the subject of islam and terrorism. Answers have not been forthcoming. I've questioned his appearance in pictures in the dress of a Somali elder:...


If you read nothing else on Obama during this whole process, Miss Beth's is something everyone should read! She lays Obama dirt out, clear as day. There is an old saying that goes something like: we are known by the company we keep. After reading Miss Beth, and seeing the company Obama keeps, I have to ask every American "Is that the company YOU want to see in the White House?" Go, get educated, here.

Brat(h/t Miss Beth)

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Friday, March 14, 2008

Good News Friday (B*N*S*N1)



Canada in Afghanistan

This story IS in the msm, but it is GOOD news. Just as in the US, Canada has been in 'debate' about our mission in Afghanistan. Just as in the US, Canada has had to listen to the whining of the opposition parties "Bring our Troops home now..." blah blah :

House votes in favour of extending Afghan mission

Last Updated: Thursday, March 13, 2008 | 7:40 PM ET

A confidence motion to keep Canadian soldiers in Kandahar until 2011 has passed easily in the House of Commons.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper receives a standing ovation from caucus members as he votes in favour of extending the mission in Afghanistan to 2011. Prime Minister Stephen Harper receives a standing ovation from caucus members as he votes in favour of extending the mission in Afghanistan to 2011.
(Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)

The Conservative motion passed by a vote of 198 to 77. It was the second confidence vote the government survived Thursday, and carried the possibility of triggering an election if it hadn't passed.

Defence Minister Peter MacKay saluted the vote, saying it will bolster the men and women serving in Afghanistan.

"It shows confidence in everything they're doing, as well as aid working shoulder to shoulder with our Forces," MacKay told reporters outside the House following the motion's passing.

Revised following consultations with the Liberal party, the motion calls for the mission to be renewed past 2009, but with a focus on reconstruction and training of Afghan troops....(CBC here)


I have talked to Canadian soldiers and veterans, and to a person, they have told me of their commitment to our mission there. While the politicians have postured, and tried to gain political brownie points on the backs of our soldiers, our troops have been taking care of business:

Canadian MPs back Afghan mission
Canadian troops at site of Kandahar blast - 12 March 2008
Canadian troops have become increasingly involved in combat
Canada's parliament has voted to extend the army's mission in Afghanistan by two years to 2011, but only if Nato sends reinforcements and equipment.

MPs voted 198-77 to keep the 2,500 troops in the southern province of Kandahar if Canada's allies send 1,000 more soldiers, drones and helicopters.

Otherwise, Canada would withdraw next year at the end of its current mandate.

The confidence motion had been expected to pass because the minority governing Conservatives had opposition support. ...(BBC here)


I am not a big fan of Stephen Harper, but I was worried that his government would fail a non-confidence motion and then we would have an election with our Afganistan mission as part of the platform. It seems that Harper has survived another day. And our troops continue on. For now!

HOO-frickin-AAH! That IS B*N*S*N!

Brat

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N2)


CavMom has a post up called "Passing on a Good Post". It is a piece written by Captain Pete Hegseth who is executive director of Vets for Freedom:

A Neighborhood Reborn

by Captain Pete Hegseth

Al Doura, Baghdad — As I step out of the humvee into the street, I have two facts in mind: I’ve been here before; and this time, I don’t have a weapon.

Recalling the tension of my first patrol in this neighborhood as a platoon leader, my five senses are sharp. The dusty road below greets my boots, some of the smells are eerily familiar, and the sound of idling humvees is my only comfort. My head swivels to scan the street. My hands are naked without an M-4, so I find the nearest soldier.

Soon — as a young child approaches — the wary familiarity gives way to fascination. I may be in the same geographic location, but I’m not in the same neighborhood. This is not Al Doura, at least not as I knew it. Where did all these people and shops come from? Where is all the trash, and the open sewage? Where is the fear — the deep-seated fear?...


This should be required reading for all the dimtwits. But errrrrrrrr maybe they should learn to read first! You, however, can read the rest of this B*N*S*N here at CavMom's.

Brat

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Good News Friday (B*N*S*N3)


We all know how the msm quotes the polls to add credibility to their usual defeatist stories slanted to show that we are in an unwinnable war, and that the country (U.S) hates President Bush who led with lies to get us into a quagmire that has no hope of victory. Well, over at Wake Up America, Spree has two posts based on polls which show that maybe - just maybe - Americans ARE waking up:

Public Opinion Gives George Bush Credit for No Terror Attacks on the U.S. Since 2001

I referred the Pew Research poll in the previous piece here at Wake up America, showing how the public perception of Iraq has improved, considerably in the last months, but this portion of the poll deserved a post of its own.

More than six in ten people, 62 percent, of respondents to the Pew Research Center poll, say that George Bush and his administration's policies have had a great deal (28 percent) or a fair amount (34 percent) to do with the fact that there have been no terrorist attacks in the United States since 2001.

(Click to enlarge)


Opinions about the administration's role in preventing terrorism, like other views about Bush and his policies, are deeply divided politically. Nearly half of Republicans (49%) say the administration's policies and actions have had a great deal to do with the fact that there have been no attacks in more than six years; just 14% of Democrats agree.

Nonetheless, nearly half of Democrats (47%) say those policies have had at least a fair amount to do with the absence of attacks since 2001. A solid majority of conservative and moderate Democrats (56%) credits the administration's policies with preventing attacks, compared with just 37% of liberal Democrats....

Ya think? Go read the rest here. And if that's not enough for you, check this post out too. Also at Wake Up America:

53 percent of Americans Believe the U.S Will Succeed in Iraq

Americans have seen the poll figures continue to rise in a "surge" of their own since General Petraeus took command in Iraq and implemented the new counterinsurgency strategies with additional troops added to the mix and the current news has consistently shown a reduction of violence in amazing levels, all across Iraq.

Monthly troop deaths have dropped by about two-thirds since the summer of 2007.

For the first time since the surge began, public opinion shows, via Pew Research, that 53 percent of Americans now believe the U.S. can succeed in achieving its goals, in Iraq. That figure has risen from 42 percent in September of 2007....

CBS News shows that public opinion of the war is better than at any point since August of 2006, according tho their figures, 43 percent of respondents say the war is going "well", while not matching the figures of Pew, that is double the level of last Junes figures for CBS.

(Click Chart to Enlarge)


Military Progress.

Pew Research began tracking the public perception of U.S. Progress in Iraq in December of 2005 and for the first time more respondents say that the United States is making progress in reducing civilian casualties than those that say it is losing ground. 46 percent believe progress is being made and 40 percent think it is losing ground....

File this one under "DUH!".....I haven't seen this news blasted all over the msm, but YOU can read the rest of this B*N*S*N here. ON to victory!

Brat

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Thursday, March 13, 2008

Politics make for .......


.....strange bedfellows? Reading one of my local papers this week, I had to laugh. An op/ed columnist - yes, a woman - used words like: 'disgusted', 'appalled', flabbergasted', 'humiliated', when talking about how she would feel to be in Silda Spitzer's shoes. I also was listening to some women from middle America last night saying how they would respond to Spitzer's public dressing down.

As the media frenzy continues in the Eliot Spitzer's comedy of errors, I have to think that Britney babe and her cohorts in Hollywood are breathing a sigh of relief for just a few brief moments, as the barracudas and sharks feed off the public humiliation of the Spitzer's family.

As far as I know, NY ex-Governor Spitzer has not been charged with any crimes yet. No matter what you think about prostitution, and I happen to think prostitues obviously supply a service, since men have been paying women for sex since time began, in my books the worst crimes that Spitzer is guilty of are arrogance and stupidity. As the "Sheriff of Wall Street" he has made it his life's work to clean up the ne'er-do-wells of his city.

I have often said that the smarter some people are, the stupider they get. Spitzer had to have known - as a public figure, and in an election year for goodness' sake - that political foes would be using microscopes to find the dirt, any dirt. And the salivating continues. ;)

I find it all absurd, this American pre-occupation with the sex lives of public figures. Asking an American friend(yes, male) about this whole focus on Spitzer's sex life, I was told "well, it's all politics isn't it?" Yep - politics as usual.. But ask Ashley Alexandra Dupre if she thought politics is relevant. Ms Dupre, in case you missed it, is the "Kristen" whose liasons with Spitzer are at the 'heart' of this latest public fall from grace. Just as the women in other famous "politican/call girl scandals" have gained 15 minutes of infamy via their clients, so, too for Ms Dupre:

"It was my decision, and I've never looked back," she writes...(and you know there is more about - and from - her, here.)

That from CNN of course, who will stoop to any level for a 'scoop.' My favourite take on all of this comes from a columnist with the BBC:

Washington diary: Spitzer's scandal
By Matt Frei
BBC News, Washington

Eliot Spitzer returns to his Manhattan apartment, 10 March 2008
Eliot Spitzer has not been charged with any offence

There may well be outrage amongst the prostitutes of the District of Columbia this week.

Why did the governor of New York, Eliot Spitzer, allegedly feel the need to bring in a prostitute from the Empire State when there were plenty to choose from in the nation's capital itself?

One can imagine the District's red light district heaving with indignation. "You see! Those snooty New Yorkers. We're not good enough for them."

Mr Spitzer may well reply that he was acting out of state pride when he reportedly bought what court documents describe as a 5ft 5in brunette called "Kristen" a train ticket to Washington.

In his surreal post-scandal press conference he did, after all, refer to the "importance of ideas in politics" and his desire to keep building New York's future.

Unfortunately, outsourcing hookers to a rival state is not just an insult to the local guild. It also happens to be a federal crime, written into law in 1910 to prevent forced prostitution and protect women from being trafficked across state lines....(here)


I have no sympathy for any of the adult 'players' in this sitcom. I refuse to see it as a Greek tragedy as some pundits are calling it. Really, they are all grown ups. I DO feel sorry for the Spitzer teenage daughters. If there are any victims in this 'victimless crime', it is the girls who are having to watch the breathless rush to judgement of their father.

What was Spitzer thinking? Oh wait, it is obvious he wasn't using his head all those times he paid big bucks for 'Kristen's services'. But seriously folks, if I was Spitzer I would be counting my blessings right now. Why, you ask? Within the hour of this story hitting the news wires, all mention of Spitzer was removed from Hillary Clinton's campaign website. Previously touted as one of Clinton's leading supporters, with a picture of him and her raisng clasped hands in a sign of togetherness (lol), I'm thinking Spitzer got off light. Phew! To be removed from Clinton's site has to be a lot easier to swallow than some of the other separation of one-time allies that the Clintons are famous for. Vince Foster, anyone?

And talking Clinton. Am I the only one who sees the hypocrisy oozing (like slime ya know.lol) in Hillary Clinton's disowning of Spitzer? Hillary Clinton of the famous "Stand by your Man" pathetic displays when Bill was caught with his pants down. I guess Spitzer didn't tell Hillary "I did not have sexual relations with that woman." And yes, I can bet that Hillary is also privately grateful to Spitzer. For a few brief minutes, the spotlight of the media circus is shining on someone else's 'shortcoming.' What a guy Spitzer is, taking one for the team.;)

I am not concerned with the morality at play here. I am flummoxed by the hypocrisy of the participants. There is enough hypocrisy to go around here as the underbelly of politics is exposed - yet again - for even the most salacious appetites. And as America waits with bated breath for the next instalment - spoon-fed by the ever-accomodating msm, of course - Spitzer joins the annals of history of public figures who are hoist on their own petard.

NEXT!

Brat

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Eagles UP!




Winter Soldiers II: We Won't Stand for More Lies PDF E-mail
Written by Melanie Morgan
Monday, 10 March 2008

The country is swept up in Obama-mania, the candidate who promises immediate withdrawal from Iraq just as we are winning the war.

The anger in the streets is palpable. And in the middle of election madness, the hate-filled rhetoric of the anti-war crowd has gone under the radar of the Mainstream Media.

ALERT: An ugly thing is set to happen in Washington, D.C. this week.

The same people who are bombing Marine Recruiting Centers and assaulting pro-troop supporters in the streets of Berkeley are organizing to spread MORE lies about the men and women who are currently serving in Iraq.

They plan to make a false comparison to what the Vietnam Veterans were accused of, wrongly, 30 years ago. You have heard it for years--baby-rapers, murderers, insane soldiers let loose to strafe innocent civilians.

As recently as a few days ago, Cindy Sheehan, the woman who dishonors her son with lies about his service wrote this:

..Iraq Vets Against the War is holding a “Winter Soldier” event soon, and they will recount stories of how they participated in war crimes or witnessed war crimes, which is not in dispute because the entire invasion and occupation is a war crime. These young people came home alive and many of them will have to deal with their demons forever as my Vietnam veteran friends still do, but we families of soldiers who were killed will also be haunted by things we know and things we will never know or never know for sure. The stories of military neglect, abuse (sexual, physical, mental, emotional) or lies are almost as many as there are troops: living or dead...

The world according to Cindy says that our troops are participating in war crimes and atrocities, just like the Vietnam Veterans did..and the stories of abuse are continuing today.

Cindy, STOP LYING ABOUT OUR TROOPS.

WE WON'T STAND FOR IT.


Read more of what Melanie Morgan has to say here. She is not going to Washington alone. The agenda can be found on this site:

Eagles Muster! Call to Action by Eagles Up

EAGLES WINTER SOLDIER II TESTIMONY CHALLENGE
MARCH 14, WASHINGTON, D.C.

WHO: PATRIOTIC CITIZENS STANDING UP FOR OUR TROOPS

WHAT: IVAW WINTER SOLDIER II TESTIMONY TRUTH CHALLENGE

WHEN: MARCH 14, 0800 HOURS, ALL DAY Eagles Muster

WHY: *** DEMAND TRUTH IN ANY ATROCITY TESTIMONY – TIMES, DATES, PLACES, WITNESSES, LEADERSHIP, ALL UNDER OATH

WHERE: NATIONAL LABOR COLLEGE
10000 NEW HAMPSHIRE AVENUE
SILVER SPRING, MD 20903

HOW: BOOTS ON THE GROUND RALLY AT NATIONAL LABOR COLLEGE

*** Winter Soldier False Testimony of 1971 betrayed Viet Nam warriors…it cannot happen to our current generation of warriors….SF-180 will be required for witness testimony validation.

EAGLES MUSTER AND MARCH

Gathering of Eagles is underway, and they also have details here. But two people who will not be welcome are Jonathan De Wald and Evan Knappenberger. Up til now both these 'people' were members of Iraq Veterans Against War. Those of you who follow Michelle Malkin's site will know that these two POS(no other words - sorry!) have made it their mission to take dissent to a whole new low - the gutter. Knappenburger has threatened all kinds of physical harm to Michelle, even posting an assassination threat on his own blog. In various posts on Michelle's site, commenters have reported these 2 to the FBI and other government agencies. Today, there is this from IVAW on Michelle's site:

Iraq Veterans Against the War does not condone threats of violence or violence against idealogical opponents, for Winter Soldier or for any other event.

Iraq Veterans Against the War and I personally have invited a number of military and veteran bloggers to attend Winter Soldier, because it is an event for military and veterans. Some of those bloggers support the war in Iraq. Some do not. All of these bloggers will be safe and welcomed at Winter Soldier as fellow servicemembers and veterans. They will be blogging from an enclosed space with controlled access, and security personnel will be there for their safety and to help alleviate any concerns. I will also give my personal word of honor as a non-commissioned officer as a guarantor for the safety of any bloggers under my charge…

…Two members have been identified as making personal threats recently. One has been requested not to attend Winter Soldier, and the other situation is currently being handled internally.

Those of you who have served in the military know that you accept responsibility for all under your command, even actions specifically against your wishes or orders. As such, though the situations are far less exact than I would like, I would like to apologize both personally and professionally to Michelle Malkin, Robin, Nicki, Thus Spake Ortner, and Jonn Lilyea and others for the actions of these members, and assure the public that steps are being taken to ensure this does not occur again.

…Jonathan De Wald’s membership has been terminated, and he is no longer a member of IVAW.

Evan Knappenberger’s membership has been indefinitely suspended...(here)


But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; they shall walk, and not faint.
(Isaiah 40:31)
(found that here, and there is also a synopsis of what happened to our Vietnam Vets there too...Read it.) NOT ON MY WATCH! EAGLES UP!


Brat

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Wednesday Hero

Sgt. Steve Morin Jr.
Sgt. Steve Morin Jr.
34 years old from Arlington, Texas
111th Engineer Battalion, 36th Infantry Division, Texas Army National Guard
September 28, 2005


From the time he finished high school, Sgt. Steve Morin Jr. made serving in the military his career.

"He always stood up for what he thought was right," Gwendolyn Michelle Morin, his wife, said. "He was a fighter. He would never give up." "He had called me to let me know what he was going to do that day," she said. He expected to be able to call her more often because of the missions he was being assigned. Sometimes they would go 11 or 12 days between calls.

Morin enlisted in the Navy after graduating high school in his hometown of Brownfield, Texas at 17. By 34, Morin had devoted 14 years to the Navy, served in the National Guard for two and planned to attend Officers Candidate School. Morin was still in the Navy when he met his wife. At the time, the two were working for a photo company; he was Santa Claus and she was an elf, she said. Both were attending Texas Tech University. "It was funny because we always kept running into each other. He would hang outside my classes and wait for me with a Diet Coke," recalled Gwendolyn. "He knew how to make me really happy."

Sgt. Morin died when an IED went off, overturning the vehicle he was riding in near Umm Qasr, Iraq.

"He's very strong willed, very determined. Humorous, a clown, but he was also very disciplined and very passionate about what he believed in," Gwendolyn Morin said. "He always wanted to serve his country."


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. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Fifteen Months (Part One)

As you all know, I'm back.

First thing's first: I want to send my most sincere thanks to Ros, Tracy, A_C, and everyone else who contributed for their hard work while I was gone. I honestly don't know how Tanker Brothers would have continued in my absence without your hard work and tireless efforts.

Second: I want to thank YOU, the readers, for checking this every day and reading some of the incredible stories and articles that have been shared here. I especially want to thank you for your comments on here, and for your letters and prayers while my brother and I were gone. Every day that went by in Iraq, I was more and more convinced that Tanker Brothers was a family that pulled together while we were gone. I don't know how I could have done it without you.

I've been taking the last couple of weeks reconnecting with family and "decompressing" from my second deployment to Iraq.

Fifteen months is a very long time. My deployment to Iraq was longer than when the first boots to hit the beach at Normandy to the Fall of Berlin.

Iraq has changed significantly in the last year-and-a-half. I know everyone here has read about the surge working, and the incredible "Anbar Awakening". I remember that when we landed in Baghdad November 2006, the consensus in the mainstream media was that all was lost. Allusions were being made to Vietnam and the Fall of Saigon. Reporters threw not-so-thinly-veiled references to helicopters airlifting State Department personnel from the roof of the US Embassy.

Could it happen again?

They licked their lips and salivated at the Pulitzer-worthy material that could be reported, or images captured, of such a catastrophe in Baghdad.

Everywhere you turned for your news, you heard of "Sectarian Violence" and "Civil War". They were calling for an immediate pull-out, then a "phased withdrawal".

Then, something happened: Anbar woke up.

Iraqis started taking responsibility for their families, their neighborhoods, and their futures. They started signing up for service in the Iraqi Army in droves. They started taking the fight to Al-Qaeda in Iraq (yes, Senator Obama, they're there), and drove them out of neighborhoods, and decimated their command and control. For the majority of my tour in Iraq, AQI was steadily on the run.

And it all started with a "gamble". Or a "Hail Mary". That's what the press will tell you.

The truth is, though, that The Surge was no more a "Hail Mary" than I am a "Progressive". The Surge was what I like to call "Common Sense": if your Commanders on the ground tell you they can secure more neighborhoods and kill more Bad Guys if you give them more troops, and you send them those troops and the supplies to sustain them...then you give them what they need to win. There's no "gamble" or "Hail Mary" to it.

If you want to win a War like the one we're in, you offer the citizens a better life and security, while beating your Enemy senseless. Then, you help the citizens beat the Enemy senseless. Then, you beat him again. And again. And again.

You beat him in Fallujah. You kick his butt in Ramadi. You b*tch-slap him in Ameriyah. You pound the fight right out of him. And then you see results.

You see attacks on Soldiers and civilians take a nose dive. You see the numbers of captured and killed terrorists go up. And you see a rag-tag bunch of Iraq misfits turn into a well-disciplined and capable fighting force. Which brings me to the second most important factor of what we've seen in the last year-and-a-half: the Iraqi Security Forces...

(To be continued..)

"...I will never accept defeat; I will never quit."


"Start spreading the news..." I just found a piece on the recruiting station in New York:

...Less than 12 hours after the explosion caused damage to front of the building and entry way, Staff Sgt. Ruben Avila, the station commander, conducted a recruiting appointment in the station....

The article is about a visit by Lt. General Caldwell to the new York recruiting centre that was the scene of an explosion last week. (And how humiliating for the would-be bombers: New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, said the bomb was a "low-order explosive" made with powder placed in a green ammunition box. "It was not a particularly sophisticated device," he said.)

As I recall, part of the military oath is to defend America against "all enemies, foreign and domestic":

CAC Commander visits Times Square recruiting station

Members of the NYPD are greeted by Lt. Gen. William B. Caldwell IV, commanding general, Combined Arms Center and Fort Leavenworth, KS, during his visit to the Times Square Military Recruiting Station in New York City March 10. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jennifer Yancey

NEW YORK (Army News Service, Mar. 10, 2008) - The commanding general of the Combined Arms Center, Lt. Gen. William B. Caldwell IV, visited the Times Square military recruiting station this morning to talk to recruiters and survey the repairs made after an explosion damaged the station last Thursday.

"I just wanted to take some time to thank our recruiters for their service," said Caldwell. "They face tough challenges everyday and with the explosion outside their station made the day even tougher. I also wanted to thank the NYPD, the federal authorities involved, and our Corps of Engineers for the hard work they are all doing."

I just LOVE our troops. And if the terrorists (foreign OR domestic.lol) had any smarts at all, they would 'get' the message that our troops really ARE committed:

In a letter to Army recruiters world-wide, the Army Chief of Staff, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., said, "this is a great testimony to the resilience of our Soldiers and their adherence to the tenets of the Warrior Ethos - I will always place the mission first; I will never accept defeat; I will never quit."

"I'm extremely proud of the job our recruiters are doing," said Caldwell. "I just want them to know that they have the support from Army leadership as they recruit tomorrow's Soldiers." (here)

That's my emphasis, and as always, our troops prove how professional they are in defence of the freedoms that allow bombers their twisted efforts to bring war to our streets.

I sleep easier in MY bed, knowing we have such fine men and women placing their mission first, never accepting defeat, and never, EVER quitting.

THIS warrior thanks every single soldier (and Marine.lol) for their selfless service in the global war against terrorism.

Brat

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Marines need you!



I have a special mission for all Tanker Bros and Sisters. Because of my work with Soldiers' Angels, I have been sent word of a Marine who needs extra support. This is part of the email I got today:

sorry it's taken me so long to get back to you....i'd still love to get ***** some cards, especially since he's having a rough go at things lately. he's spent the last few days with food poisoning....and things have been tense here the last 2 or 3 weeks anyway. we're all working 18 to 20 hour days, and ***** has been working his butt off to make things better for everyone else....

This unit is serving overseas, and I first heard of them a few weeks back, when the Marine who wrote the above got in touch with me. They are not posted at any of our big bases in Iraq or Afghanistan - where they are, life is harsh - and I have tried to get out of him stuff they could use to make their mission easier.

The email above is part of what I got back. ALL he is asking for is cards of support for that specific Marine. Can you please spare a card or a note of support for this hero and his brothers in arms? If so, I have the address. You all know where to find me.

Let's get 'er done. Let's show this Marine and this unit that they are not forgotten. Thank you.

Semper Fi!

Brat

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Monday, March 10, 2008

Project Yusufiyah - Mike's Legacy


SGT Mike Stokely


"Mike cared enough about the children in Yusufiyah to go fight there, to die there. If we can do a little bit to help the children..."

Robert Stokely early this morning, told me that they started Project Yusufiyah with the idea of sending some school supplies to kids in Iraq.

Mike's Forward Operating Base was in Yusufiyah, and he died about two miles away on Aug. 16, 2005 near the village of Muhlafiyah. A goal of the Mike Stokely Foundation Inc., since the early moments, has to been to do something in Mike's memory to help the school children of Yusufiyah and Muhlafiyah. Recently, a special donation was made to the Foundation for that purpose.

I have established a contact with the 101st Airborne in Yusufiyah and they are ready to help with the project. The project consists of packing school supplies in a plastic bag - pens, pencils, crayons, three hole punch writing paper, three whole punch folders, etc. Also, purchasing chalk for the teachers, which is in short supply. Essentially, school supplies like we would normally purchase for our own children...(here)


CJ over at A Soldiers Perspective posted that on 9 February , 2008. I had to call Robert today. Why, you ask? Robert just sent me an email and having found the above post on ASP I had to verify that the dates were correct. (Yea, I know; a reporter checking facts...who'd a thunk it..;))

This IS what Robert sent me:

Mike Stokely Foundation Inc.'s Project Yusufiyah is now in full swing with shipment of nearly 1,000 pounds of supplies sent parcel post to Capt. Starz of 101st AB DV on Thursday 6 March, and I anticipate arrival in 14 - 20 days. Here is what was sent - 35 boxes, weighing from 20 lbs to 58 lbs:

Boxes 1 - 15 of 35 - contains 13 2.5 gallon zip lock bags for school children
each bag containing a three tab folder with unlined paper, with additional loose paper for future insert,
1 dozen pencils, two Bic ink pens, colored pencils (or markers), hand held twist type pencil sharpener, small bag of hard candy
Box 16 of 35 - contains 11 more bags as listed above

Boxes 17 - 26 - these ten boxes are for teachers and contain chalk, dozen pens, four or more dozen pencils, a full ream of three hole punch paper
and a full ream of white paper, two hand held pencil shapeners, some colored markers, quart size bag of hard candy, toilet/facial tissue,
several three tab folders, and topped off by a stack of loose three hole punch plain paper and a stack of plain white paper.

Box 27 of 35 - This is a box for the Tribal / Civilian leaders - it has a dozen pens some pencils and several reams of paper.

Boxes 28 - 35 - these 8 boxes, divided as four boxes three hole punch plain paper and four boxes of plain white paper to re-supply the teachers and students.

Summary: 74,000 sheets of paper, 225 three tab folders, 244 dozen pencils, 100 cozen pens, 225 pencil sharpeners, 251 dozen colored pencils (or markers), 100 boxes of chalk, and facial tissue.

$822.00 to ship the supplies, but that is pretty good considering the weight and distance.

Hopefully, these basic supplies will help the children and teachers of Yusufiyah where Mike served, and nearby Muhlafayed where he died from a roadside bomb. We are planning a follow-up shipment once we get clearer assessment of remaining need.


Mr Stokely told me today that this all started with a $1,000 donation "and just grew...". Uhuh! Within one month, Project Yusufiyah collected and sent that HUGE shipment of school supplies. When I talked to Mr Stokely, he had no great plans for the future of this project: "Just our little bit."

I cannot predict the future, but something tells me that very soon there are going to be some very happy Iraqi children in Yusufiyah. I know that this "little" project will be a lasting legacy of the heart and soul of Sgt Mike Stokely, who gave his life August 16, 2005, for the children. The history of Iraq, shaped - moulded - by the lives of heroes like Mike, and the children, will be written in the Iraqi schools of today, for the students of all the tomorrows.

Thank you, Mike, Thank YOU, Robert. For the children.

Brat

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Sunday, March 09, 2008

How War Changes Lives...


The first thing I noticed when I awoke at 3:20am was that J wasn't beside me. It was the same at 5:30am. Sunday is OUR day. I have become increasingly protective of that day because most weeks it's all I have. I contemplated getting up and heading into work for a few hours to get some things done, but sadness had again sapped my energy and I went back to sleep. When I woke up at midday, try as I might to fight the urge, the first thing I did was check to see if his car was outside. I knew it wasn't, if it had been he would have been there with me. It's now 9pm and I still have no idea where he is. When I read the article that follows it became personal to me. For me it wasn't about how J deals with be a veteran, to this day despite all the toing and froing he has not deployed, it was about how him being a Soldier affects us. It reinforced for me that J is a Soldier first. He has become so accustomed to guarding what he does that it has become who he is. Often he dissappears for a weekend or weeks at a time and then suddenly reappears, shrugs and says he was training. My friends of course, think he is cheating but anyone who says that doesn't know him. It is just who he is. He would rather say nothing at all than risk saying the wrong thing.

I don't think that any 2 military partners have ever experienced what the other feels. I believe we can share the more common emotions of fear, sadness and emptiness. I spoke to a Soldier this morning who returned from Afghanistan 12 months ago and is now preparing for another 15 months away from his family. He told me he worries about how his wife will deal with him being away again. I told him I thought she must be a strong woman. He reminded me that he needs to be too. His family would not be the only ones feeling the loss of deployment. This again got me thinking. For every bit of pain and sadness I feel at not knowing where J is, what does he feel?? I remember the last time he reappeared he messaged me for days, all day until he was back with me. Usually trying to get a message out of J is like trying to win the lottery.

Every experience, every set of memories, every life changed forever is as unique and individual as the person who experiences them.

5 years on, Iraq war has changed lives

By KIMBERLY HEFLING, Associated Press Writer Sat Mar 8, 12:44 PM ET

Laura Youngblood clutched her husband's photo as she drove alone to the hospital. She'd become pregnant nearly nine months earlier, the day he'd left for training for Iraq. Hours later, after the baby was born, she placed the photo in the bassinet next to the infant he'd named Emma in his last letter home. He would never hold her.


Laura Youngblood poses for a photographer with daughter Emma, ...

Laura Youngblood poses for a photographer with daughter Emma, 2, while holding a photo of her husband, at their home in Sebastian, Fla., Thursday, Feb. 28, 2008. Youngblood's husband Petty Officer 3rd Class Travis L. Youngblood, 26, died on July 21, 2005 from wounds received while serving in Iraq.

Petty Officer 3rd Class Travis L. Youngblood, 26, had died two months earlier, killed by an improvised explosive device.

Laura Youngblood is just 29 years old, but she insists she will not remarry. Her life is her children, now ages 2 and 7. One day, she says, she'll be buried in the plot with her husband at Arlington National Cemetery.

"I tell people I'm a happily married woman," she says, crying.

Five years after U.S. troops invaded Iraq, there are many tears — though not everyone is crying. For the great majority of Americans, this is a war seen from afar. They turn off the news and forget about what is happening a world away.

Then there's the other war, the one that's a very vivid and present part of some Americans' lives.

It's the war that more than a million U.S. soldiers have fought, leaving nearly 4,000 dead and more than 29,000 wounded in action. The one in which thousands of contractors rushed in to serve and to make a buck — though some paid the ultimate price, as well.

Around military bases across America, vacations are planned around deployment schedules. Mini baby booms occur nine months after troops come home. Support groups for widows and injured soldiers have come together.

At small town National Guard armories, the focus has shifted from one weekend a month to filling out life insurance forms and packing a rucksack for war.

"'How did I end up in this kind of a situation?' There were a lot of guys that said that," says Jeff Myers, 48, a tech sergeant in the Pennsylvania Air National Guard from Pillow, Pa. His lips still discharge shrapnel shreds, the residue of two roadside bombs he survived in 2004; a neurologist monitors the concussions he sustained.

In his job as a gunner guarding Army convoys, he saw men so paralyzed by fear they wouldn't go outside the wire. He saw others die 15 minutes after he was chatting with them.

It's not a matter of whether you will have to deal with things like irritability and nightmares after you get home, he says: "It's how you deal with it when it does happen."

And how you deal with your fellow Americans who experience Iraq from a distance.

Amanda Jordan, whose Marine husband was killed three days into the war, says she doesn't know what bothers her more — the days that go by when no one speaks of the war, or the punditry. At a local diner she frequents with her 11-year-old son near their home in Enfield, Conn., she's contemplated standing up and leaving so he doesn't hear when people say Iraq was unnecessarily invaded.

"This is like my life. You're saying my spouse, my child's father, is dead for no reason," says Jordan, a 39-year-old former paralegal who is studying to be a therapist specializing in grief. "That's a pretty harsh thing to hear all the time."

___

Some can tell you exactly when their lives changed.

For Hazel Hoffman, from outside Grand Rapids, Mich., it was when the phone rang and she learned her son, Josh, was shot by a sniper. He was left a quadriplegic, unable to speak.

"I cried so hard that I had tears of blood. I remember looking down wondering, where is all this blood coming from? And it took a few seconds for me to realize this was coming out of me," says Hoffman, who has lived more than a year in an apartment with her son's girlfriend near his hospital in Richmond, Va.

Suzanne Stack, 48, was soaking in the bathtub in their house at Fort Campbell, Ky., when the doorbell rang. There were two officers at the door.

Afterward, still numb from the news of her husband's death, she walked her kids to the school bus. She sensed that people were looking at her fearfully, as if they were afraid they would be next. Even before the funeral, one spouse told her there was a waiting list for post housing. When would she be moving out?

"One day you're one thing. The next thing you're not. It's really quite a shock," says Stack, of Fredericksburg, Va., who now volunteers as an advocate for widows on Capitol Hill.

Walter Lajuane Williams, 33, of Fremont, Calif., was stoned when his turning point came. He was couch surfing, unemployed and in an abusive relationship after he left the Army, which took him to Iraq and Afghanistan. Even his service was criticized: "I had a person tell me, `How could you kill another person?'"

He went to the nonprofit Swords to Plowshares, looking for help finding work. A caseworker, wise to his drug use, took him aside. "I'm going to tell you candidly how I feel and what I smell," he said. "I'm going to work with you. Don't make me regret it."

Williams now helps other vets find jobs.

"All we need is a chance," Williams says.

___

Recently, an Iraq veteran came to Daniel Fox's office and asked to take a screening exam for post-traumatic stress disorder a second time. He'd lied the first time, he said.

"When I asked him why he wasn't honest, he said because I had just gotten home and everybody's like saying, 'Welcome home hero,'" Fox says. "And how could he tell him that this hero was not doing well?"

Fox, 47, works for the Department of Veterans Affairs as a case manager, assisting Iraq and Afghanistan veterans. For a year, Fox, an Army Reservist, worked as an intensive care nurse at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany; the injured would be airlifted from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Fox and his fellow nurses called themselves the ICU angels on the ICU angels tour. To lighten the mood, they made T-shirts with the slogan. Their bravado just helped mask their intense emotions.

"You had a mom and dad and the new wife with the babies in their arms standing in the door of this patient's room and he's got a gunshot wound to the head," says Fox, of Wichita, Kan. "How do you explain that to them? You can't console them."

"After a while, you go home and you cry about it," he says.

He used to be more macho and unemotional. Today, "I have more sympathy, more compassion," he says.

Lt. Col. Douglas Etter's job was sympathy and compassion. Etter, a minister, was a chaplain with the Pennsylvania National Guard in Al Anbar Province; his battalion lost 13 soldiers and two Marines.

He laid his hands on some of the men and delivered last rites. One morning, after he memorialized two of the dead, he says his stoicism dissolved; jogging by the Euphrates River, he cried.

In blunt newsletters home, he chronicled what the troops were seeing and experiencing, from delivering shoes and school supplies to happy Iraqi children to the story of a dead soldier wrapped in a flag by his fellow soldiers in the middle of a firefight because nothing else was available.

"As excited as we are to go home, many are equally afraid," he wrote in one of his last letters.

When Etter himself returned on leave to Pennsylvania to officiate at the funeral of a close friend, he turned to his wife and said he wanted to go home.

"I said, `OK, get in the car. Let's go home,'" said Jodi Etter. "And you said, 'No, my home in Iraq. I just want to go home.'"

When his tour was over, and he went with his wife to buy furniture for their new house in Lebanon, Pa., he had to remind himself that it was important to her — even if it seemed trivial to him after the war. He drove fast, and bought a BMW so he could do it. One day, Jodi pointed out that he was drinking more.

With time, his life settled down, and he came to feel that his months in Iraq were a time of growth. Now executive director of the Pennsylvania Bureau of Veterans Affairs, Etter says a deployment is like a magnifying glass.

"Personalities that are strong become stronger," he says. "Personalities which are weaker are made to become weaker."

___

Phil Nesmith came away from Iraq with a certain clarity.

It wasn't the money that lured him to Iraq, he insists. He was like most of the U.S. troops he was living with at the time — idealistic about the mission.

He had been an Army paratrooper, but now he was among the first group of government contractors to arrive in Iraq after the invasion in 2003. His task was to help get telecommunications running.

At night, rockets flew into their compound. Sometimes they missed and hit apartments nearby, killing Iraqis. On the ground near where he was sleeping, a young officer shot and killed himself.

Violence did not account for all the stress. While he was there, Nesmith says, his relationship with his girlfriend of three years ended and she got pregnant by another man. "Pretty much every other soldier around me, husband, wife, boyfriend, girlfriend, whatever, had left them or they suspected them cheating on them."

It was hard. "You've left your life and you're wanting to maintain some kind of connection with that, but everything you left behind is continuing on even though your life is kind of suspended while you're there."

As he left Iraq, he crossed paths with a contractor who bragged about what he was going to buy with the money he was going to make in Iraq.

"I was just like, well, `You know, everybody's got their reasons, but I've got to ask you this: You lose both your legs, is that $160,000 going to be worth it?'" he says.

By that point, Nesmith says he knew what he wanted, what was important. He wanted to backpack through Australia, visit Montana, and go to photography school.

He did all three.

He had taken pictures in Iraq. Now he took some of those shots and manipulated them to look like they were taken in the Civil War era. They were shown at Washington, D.C.'s Irvine Contemporary Gallery in Washington, D.C., and priced at $1,500 each.

One photo depicts a single soldier standing alone in the desert. It reminds him of his own plight. "I knew I was on my journey back and when I got there I was going to be alone," Nesmith says. "No one was going to understand what that year was like."

Another photo, his favorite, is of an Iraqi flag flying outside a government utility office. Some Iraqis had just put it up. It was a time of optimism.

But now, he says, "it just seems like a more naive time, when you thought there was so much more that could possibly happen."

___

Before Travis Youngblood left for Iraq, he and his wife watched a TV interview with a pregnant woman whose husband had died in Iraq. Laura Youngblood cried.

"I felt so sorry for her," Youngblood says.

But then, "When my husband died, my first words were, 'I became her.'"

Today in nearly every room of her Florida house, there's a photo of her husband.

"It is hard. I feel bad for my son because he's 7. He doesn't know how to ride a two-wheel bike. His daddy was going to teach him," she says. "I can't do all the boy things that he wants to do."

She put together videos so her daughter will know the father she never met.

"I'm a survivor of the war. I'm a surviving spouse," Youngblood says. "That's the best way I can say it because every day you're surviving."


This is why we can never forget and never stop thanking our servicemen and women AND their families enough for what they do. War should never be a political tool to gain government, a means to cash in on the unfortunate, a rallying point for those whose time could be better spent caring for their families or working to better their communities. It is an individual journey for millions of unique people who will endure their own personal experiences in their own personal ways. Whether they come together or stand alone, War will unite them. Lifelong friendships will be forged while others are torn apart....Even after the world stops watching.

War will become a shared scar on the collective hearts of all those it touches.

A_C

Every day Heroes


Meet Technical Sergeant Jeremy Sudlow:

Jeremy Sudlow

Logging 434,000 miles, 14 missions, and nearly four months on some of the world’s most dangerous roads earned Air Force Technical Sergeant Jeremy Sudlow the military’s fourth-highest combat award, the Bronze Star. The scourge of the desert - the improvised explosive device was always a possibility, yet Sudlow heroically led his convoys to complete their operations. Coalition forces in Iraq rely on supply convoys for their entire mission, and Sudlow handled this dangerous job for six months while serving the 424th Medium Truck Detachment. Without this precious cargo, the intense tempo of the war effort could never have been maintained.

Sudlow demonstrated his managerial skills by training his assistant convoy commander and lead vehicle commander in advanced convoy techniques to ensure the safest possible travel for all missions under his command. With the IED threat looming over every journey, Sudlow worked to continually upgrade the convoy vehicles, equipping them with “Go-Lights” to improve visibility, and sirens to alert daytime traffic. During one operation, Sudlow’s convoy captured a group of criminals who had stolen military and civilian equipment from their contracted vehicles. Sudlow alerted Forward Operating Base Taji of the incident and successfully concluded the mission.

Once, an unidentified vehicle made an alarming u-turn towards the supply column while on the road in Iraq. Sudlow had to make a split-second judgment. Was it a suicide-bomber behind the wheel, or an innocent Iraqi civilian? Previous lessons he had given to the gun-truck crews helped them remain calm and focused. It turned out that there was no threat, and because of Sudlow’s forward-thinking leadership, a tense situation passed without incident.

The Tech Sergeant’s paramount concern was always the wellbeing of his 15-man squad and the foreign nationals assigned to his convoy. Due in no small part to his efforts, Detachment 424 escorted 4,680 tractor-trailers loaded with valuable cargo from Kuwait to Iraq while guiding and protecting 2,300 foreign national drivers.
(source - and for extra links - here)


Thank you for your service Technical Sergeant Sudlow!

Brat

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Saturday, March 08, 2008

A special relationship - a dog story!


I suspect that by now, everyone in blogland (and msm of course!) has been reading the story of the Marine and the puppy. I refuse to add any more "ink" to that one. Instead, I want to share a story that is the antithesis to such garbage. THIS story shows the true relationship between our troops and their dogs. I think you all know I am a doglover. ;) You probably also know I am a member of the K9 team at Soldiers' Angels, so I am very familiar with the close bond our 2 legged and 4 legged soldiers share. Their lives depend on that relationship. Surprise, surprise, THIS story was also featured in the msm:

A special bond between soldiers in Iraq

Bomb detected
Tina Susman / Los Angeles Times
BOMB DETECTED: Iron, a German shepherd trained to sniff out explosives, weapons, wires and other threats, and handler Sgt. Joshua T. Rose, right, wait as military explosives experts investigate a bomb that Iron found south of Baghdad.
Some dog handlers have asked to be buried with their four-legged partners -- who may outrank them -- if they are killed together.
By Tina Susman, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 25, 2008
Minari Village, Iraq

Staff Sgt. Iron quakes with fear at the sound of explosions. He brawls with other soldiers. He whines when he doesn't get his way and slows others down when he stops to relieve himself during patrols through hostile territory.

On the job
But nobody complains, because when it's time to enter a building that might be rigged to explode, or cross a pasture that could conceal a minefield, Iron is at the front of the line, making sure it's safe for those who follow.

If it's not, Iron will bear the brunt of the blast, along with his best friend, Sgt. Joshua T. Rose, who ranks one level below him. It's an honor Iron enjoys for the dangerous job he does. It also ensures that charges could be filed against Rose in the unlikely event he ever mistreated Iron -- an 80-pound German shepherd.

Rose and Iron are one of about 200 canine teams deployed in Iraq, where the bond between soldiers and their dogs is so deep that some handlers have asked to be buried with their canine partners if they are killed together.

On frigid winter nights in the Iraqi desert, Rose shares his cot and sometimes his sleeping bag with Iron to keep him warm. In the scorching summer heat, he makes sure Iron has enough water before taking his own share. If the heat is too much for Iron, who has a thick coat of glossy black fur, Rose lets him rest, no matter what the platoon leader might want.

Whenever he goes on a mission, Rose tucks a copy of an ode to police and military dogs into his front pocket. It reads in part: "Trust in me, my friend, for I am your comrade. I will protect you with my last breath. When all others have left you and the loneliness of the night closes in, I will be at your side."...

"I will be at your side." And so it is for ALL our K9's. Go read the rest of this story, which has a history of MWD - and includes Kory and Cooper - here.

Brat(H/T Gail)

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Friday, March 07, 2008

Good News Friday(B*N*S*N1)


Absolutely no commentary needed from me on this first story today:

The Thunder Rolls: Taji Rail Lines Open for First Time Since 2003
Thursday, 06 March 2008

Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldiers from A Battery, 2nd Battalion, 11th Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, MND-B pull open the doors of the rail road gate on Camp Taji Mar. 5 as an Iraqi locomotive slowly approaches the gate, marking the first time a train as arrived at the installation since the beginning of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Photo by Sgt. Jerome Bishop, 2nd Stryker Brigade 25th Infantry Division.

CAMP TAJI — The railroad lines of the Taji Qada, north of Baghdad, have laid dormant since the beginning of Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, but as a result of the efforts of Multi-National Division – Baghdad Soldiers, the first train let loose a thunderous blast of its horn March. 5, as it slowly rolled through the gates of Camp Taji.

"This particular train … is part of a proof of principle,” said Cpt. James Kerns, a Harrison County, Ky., native, who serves as the assistant operations officer for the Base Defense Operations Command (BDOC), Multi-National Division – Baghdad. "(This mission was executed) to facilitate the Iraqi railroad infrastructure improvement so they can, in the future, utilize the train and rail system to carry goods."

With a functioning rail system, the Iraqi Security Forces can benefit from the results as well as the people of Iraq.

"It's an enduring mission. The Iraqi railroads are being put back in, and it's going to change the face of Taji," said Maj. Henry McNealy, a Dewey Beach, Del., native, who serves as the operations officer for the BDOC. "It'll become a consistent train; hopefully, over time, the infrastructure of Iraq will be rebuilt."

The train is a big piece of getting Iraq back on line, McNealy added...


I just LOVE great news stories like this one. :) Someone tell the msm - quick - that Iraq IS being rebuilt, reclaimed! While we all wait for the msm to get with the programme, (or not...lol), YOU can read the rest of this B*N*S*N here.

Brat

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


This story is also so elementary, and so gooood news, but you won't see it in the msm.

Micro-Grants Offer New Hope for Baghdad Shop Owners



BAGHDAD — Money is always a concern for those running a business. Start-up capital is one of the most difficult obstacles for entrepreneurs starting a new business in the United States because the businesses often do not have enough capitol to stay above water.

Iraqi shop owners on Spruce Street in northern Saydiyah know and understand this problem as well. They recently lined up to receive micro-grants from Soldiers of 4th Battalion, 64th Armored Regiment, attached to 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad....


Well duh!... Another basic principle of economics. Get businesses up and running, and keep the terrorists at bay. This story certainly IS another B*N*S*N and you can read it here!

Brat

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Good News Friday(B*N*S*N3)


Remember last week in B*N*S*N I told you about Master Sgt Woodrow Keeble? You can read the preliminary here. Today, that Medal of Honour has been given:



“Over 300 million Americans are free today because Master Sgt. Keeble fought bravely with honor and humility to defend this country and his fellow citizens. His personal courage and selfless service lives on in the Soldiers who have succeeded him.”

- Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Richard A. Cody, during Master Sgt. Woodrow Keeble’s posthumous induction into the Hall of Heroes a day after President Bush bestowed the Medal of Honor on the Korean War hero....(here)

Go read the rest of the story about the induction here, and check out more information on this hero here.

Be sure to check your msm newspapers - NOT! But this story really IS B*N*S*N!

Brat

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Thursday, March 06, 2008

GUILTY part 2


From "honourable discharge" from the US Navy, to convicted spy:

Ex-US sailor convicted of spying
US navy ships - file photo
Abujihaad was convicted of providing support to terrorists
A former US navy sailor has been convicted of spying and supplying a pro-al-Qaeda website with information on American warship movements.

Hassan Abujihaad, 32, was found guilty of providing material support to terrorists and disclosing secret national defence information.

He was arrested last year in Phoenix, Arizona.

Abujihaad, a Muslim convert previously known as Paul Hall, faces 25 years in jail when he is sentenced on 23 May.

He showed no emotion as he was convicted of passing classified details of US navy ships to Azzam.com by a jury at the US District Court in New Haven, Connecticut. (here)


Arrested last year, Abujihaad aka Paul Hall, is the first American convicted of spying since WW2. In March 2007, Right Truth did a piece on this. The implications of a US Navy person conspiring to kill Americans are scary, to say the least:

Hassan Abujihaad, hang him high

Hassan Abujihaad, a non-Presbyterian as LGF calls him, a former sailor in the United States Navy, has been 'arrested in Phoenix on charges of supporting terrorism with an intent to kill U.S. citizens and transmitting classified information to unauthorized people.'

You have to wonder how many more 'non-Presbyterians' are allowed access to critical intelligence that could be used against America. We know that the majority of terrorists these days are 'non-Presbyterians', so should we be worried about them in our military? Should extra investigations be conducted on 'non-Presbyterians' when they join the military? Just posing the question, don't get your knickers in a knot.

In 2004 Daniel Pipes listed what he called Pentagon Jihadis. Go read it and be amazed. Jihad Watch has more here and in this post, "Spy Agencies Fear Some Applicants Are Terrorists"

48navy_terrorsffhighlightprod_affiliate5 This image provided by the US Navy shows the guided missile destroyer USS Benfold (DDG 65) maneuvering in the Andaman Sea off the coast of the island of Sumatra, Indonesia in 2005.

Ahmad was arrested in 2004 but the case against Abujihaad apparently received a boost in December following the arrest of Derrick Shareef, 22, of Genoa, Ill., near Chicago, who was accused of planning to use hand grenades to attack holiday shoppers at a mall.

According to the affidavit, Shareef and Abujihaad lived together in 2004 when Ahmad was arrested. After reading news reports of the case, Abujihaad became upset and said, "I think this is about me," Shareef told investigators. (here)

Those who insist that what happens "over there" is nothing to do with us - is not here in our countries - would do well to read all about this convicted spy. In a piece called "The Patient Terrorist", the New Haven Advocate has this to say:

The Patient Terrorist
Was American-born Hassan Abujihaad plotting to attack a San Diego military base? A federal judge is deciding that now.
By Betsy Yagla

Hassan Abujihaad calmly listened to recorded phone conversations in federal court last week, in which he offered assistance in an ill-conceived plot to attack a San Diego military base and then snipe off soldiers trying to escape the attack.

Abujihaad, an American born Paul Hall, was arrested March 7 in Phoenix, and indicted March 21 in Bridgeport on charges of material support of terrorism and disclosing previously classified information. In 2001, while in the Navy, Abujihaad allegedly emailed classified information about ships' locations in the Middle East to Azzam Publications, a pro-jihad website hosted by a Connecticut company. This was months before 9/11. Abujihaad's email said the U.S.S. Benfold, a Navy destroyer, would pass through the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf on the night of April 21, 2001, when the ship would experience a communications blackout. During the blackout, Abujihaad wrote, "they have nothing to stop a small craft with RPG etc." In another email he praised the 2000 attack on the U.S.S. Cole, saying "psychological warfare [was] taking a toll."...

Quirks aside, those conversations are alarming: They paint Abujihaad as a disgruntled Muslim American considering "defensive jihad." He laughs at the thought of killing American soldiers and admires an Iraqi sniper video. There's no real smoking gun in these conversations (although there is a semi-confession), but they reveal a paranoid would-be terrorist with a "consciousness of guilt."...(here)


This spy could be sentenced to 25 years in prison. Quite apart from all the long term ramifications of the exposure of this terrorist, I reckon 25 years is not long enough. Betraying one's country, aiding and abetting the enemy - especially in a time of war - deserves the penalty that Right Truth declares: Hang them high.

NEXT!

Brat

Labels:

Resolve To Win, Veteran's March



Coming to a neighbourhood near you?

Three retired Army officers, recently returned from Iraq and others will be marching from the SC/NC Stateline and ending at the U.S. Capitol (1 Mar to 16 Mar 2008). Dennis McCool, Carl Heerup and Marc Breslow will be walking 400 miles in an event called "Resolve To Win" . The reason is to show support for the Troops and the Mission of the Troops. The purpose is to demonstrate resolve to do a difficult task and to create a dialogue about our National Will to win.

We are looking for participation and support from everyone in getting the word out to the active duty, military civilians, local community and veteran organizations to support this effort. This event will be supported by many American Legion and VFW Posts along the route of the march. We expect this event will be getting National coverage by Fox News and other local and national media.

It is the desire of the men organizing and performing this March to get as many people along the route as possible to show we as Americans support our troops, the military leadership in Iraq and want to win this conflict. Everyone is encouraged to join in this Resolve to Win March. If anyone desires to join the march for a mile, an hour, a day or just standing along the side of the road, you can join in anywhere along the route and march as long as you like. Motorcycle participation is encouraged to assist the marchers through busy intersections and to travel up and down each days march route to draw attention to the event. Many American Legion Post & VFWs will be participating and supporting this effort. For example, Spotsylvania, VA Post 320 will have their Honor Guard participate in the march and other members plan to join the march as well.

This march is strictly to show support for our troops in Iraq.. It's not political, nor is it to support any particular party. This is an endorsement of General Petraeus's leadership and the skill, talent and sacrifice of our Troops to win in Iraq. Our troops need to know we remember them, by showing our Patriotism, that we care and support them and that they are and will not be forgotten now or later.

March Route & Schedule:

Please refer to the Google Map at: www.gmap-pedometer.com/?r=1629888 for march route details. Note these map can be zoomed for finite detail.

Date
Start Daily Destination
SC / NC Stateline at Rt 301
Miles
01-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Hwy 211, northside of Lumberton, NC 25.1
02-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Hwy 87, south of Fayetteville, NC 25.0
03-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Hwy 421 / 55, in Dunn, NC 25.4
04-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Brogdon in Smithfield, NC 26.2
05-Mar-08 Route 301 @ US117, in Wilson, NC 25.7
06-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Rte 1545, northside of Rocky Mt, NC 25.4
07-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Hwy 627, southside of Emporia, VA 25.1
08-Mar-08 Route 301 @ NC 903, in Halifax, NC 26.0
09-Mar-08 Route 301 @ Hampton Inn, Stony Creek, VA 26.8
10-Mar-08 Route 301 / Hwy 1 @ Woods Edge Rd Col Heights, VA 26.6
11-Mar-08 Hwy 1 @ I-295, Biltmore north of Richmond, VA 25.6
12-Mar-08 Hwy 1 @ SR 712 Ladysmith, VA 24.3
13-Mar-08 Hwy 1 @ VFW Post 3103 south of bridge in Fredericksburg, VA 22.3
14-Mar-08 Hwy 1 @ Celestial south of Woodbridge, VA 22.2
15-Mar-08 3939 Oak St, Fairfax VA (at American Legion Post) 24.9
16-Mar-08 Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC 16.2






Brat(h/t Laurie & Veterans News Bureau here)

Labels:

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Wednesday Hero

Chief Warrant Officer Mark O'SteenChief Warrant Officer Thomas GibbonsStaff Sgt. Daniel L. Kisling Jr.SSgt. Gregory M. Frampton
Pictured Left to Right
Chief Warrant Officer Mark O’Steen, 43 years old from Ozark, Alabama
Chief Warrant Officer Thomas Gibbons, 31 years old from Prince Frederick, Maryland
Staff Sgt. Daniel L. Kisling Jr., 31 years old from Neosho, Missouri
SSgt. Gregory M. Frampton, 37 years old from Fresno, California

1st Battalion, 160th Special Operations Aviation Regimen
January 30, 2003

“They succeeded where lesser men failed,” said Chaplain Robert Glazener. “They proved themselves in ways that men out there who never served, never volunteered, never sacrificed, would never understand. They sought neither glory nor special recognition, but they gained both by their actions. They are the true American heroes today and deserve more honor than we can humbly bestow on them.”

The helicopter carrying the men went down seven miles east of the Bagram Air Base while on a training mission.

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. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

Labels:

The ANZAC On The Wall



The Anzac on the Wall

Author Unknown

I wandered thru a country town 'cos I had time to spare,
And went into an antique shop to see what was in there.
Old Bikes and pumps and kero lamps, but hidden by it all,
A photo of a soldier boy - an Anzac on the Wall.

"The Anzac have a name?" I asked. The old man answered "No,.
The ones who could have told me mate, have passed on long ago.
The old man kept on talking and, according to his tale,
The photo was unwanted junk bought from a clearance sale.

"I asked around," the old man said, "but no one knows his face,
He's been on that wall twenty years, deserves a better place.
For some one must have loved him so, it seems a shame somehow."
I nodded in agreement and then said, "I'll take him now."

My nameless digger's photo, well it was a sorry sight
A cracked glass pane and a broken frame - I had to make it right
To prise the photo from its frame I took care just in case,
"Cause only sticky paper held the cardboard back in place.

I peeled away the faded screed and much to my surprise,
Two letters and a telegram appeared before my eyes
The first reveals my Anzac's name, and regiment of course
John Mathew Francis Stuart - of Australia's own Light Horse.

This letter written from the front, my interest now was keen
This note was dated August seventh 1917
"Dear Mum, I'm at Khalasa Springs not far from the Red Sea
They say it's in the Bible - looks like Billabong to me.

"My Kathy wrote I'm in her prayers she's still my bride to be
I just cant wait to see you both you're all the world to me
And Mum you'll soon meet Bluey, last month they shipped him out
I told him to call on you when he's up and about."

"That bluey is a larrikin, and we all thought it funny
He lobbed a Turkish hand grenade into the Co's dunny.
I told you how he dragged me wounded in from no man's land
He stopped the bleeding closed the wound with only his bare hand."

"Then he copped it at the front from some stray shrapnel blast
It was my turn to drag him in and I thought he wouldn't last
He woke up in hospital, and nearly lost his mind
Cause out there on the battlefield he'd left one leg behind."

"He's been in a bad way mum, he knows he'll ride no more
Like me he loves a horse's back he was a champ before.
So Please Mum can you take him in, he's been like my brother
Raised in a Queensland orphanage he' s never known a mother."

But Struth, I miss Australia mum, and in my mind each day
I am a mountain cattleman on high plains far away
I'm mustering white-faced cattle, with no camel's hump in sight
And I waltz my Matilda by a campfire every night

I wonder who rides Billy, I heard the pub burnt down
I'll always love you and please say hooroo to all in town".
The second letter I could see was in a lady's hand
An answer to her soldier son there in a foreign land

Her copperplate was perfect, the pages neat and clean
It bore the date November 3rd 1917.
"T'was hard enough to lose your Dad, without you at the war
I'd hoped you would be home by now - each day I miss you more"

"Your Kathy calls around a lot since you have been away
To share with me her hopes and dreams about your wedding day
And Bluey has arrived - and what a godsend he has been
We talked and laughed for days about the things you've done and seen"

"He really is a comfort, and works hard around the farm,
I read the same hope in his eyes that you wont come to harm.
Mc Connell's kids rode Billy, but suddenly that changed
We had a violent lightning storm, and it was really strange."

>"Last Wednesday just on midnight, not a single cloud in sight
It raged for several minutes, it gave us all a fright
It really spooked your Billy - and he screamed and bucked and reared
And then he rushed the sliprail fence, which by a foot he cleared"

"They brought him back next afternoon, but something's changed I fear
It's like the day you brought him home, for no one can get near
Remember when you caught him with his black and flowing mane?
Now Horse breakers fear the beast that only you can tame,"
"That's why we need you home son" - then the flow of ink went dry-

This letter was unfinished, and I couldn't work out why.
Until I started reading the letter number three
A yellow telegram delivered news of tragedy
Her son killed in action - oh - what pain that must have been
The Same date as her letter - 3rd November 17

This letter which was never sent, became then one of three
She sealed behind the photo's face - the face she longed to see.
And John's home town's old timers -children when he went to war
Would say no greater cattleman had left the town before.

They knew his widowed mother well - and with respect did tell
How when she lost her only boy she lost her mind as well.
She could not face the awful truth, to strangers she would speak
"My Johnny's at the war you know , he's coming home next week."

They all remembered Bluey, he stayed on to the end
A younger man with wooden leg became her closest friend

And he would go and find her when she wandered old and weak
And always softly say "yes dear - John will be home next week."
Then when she died Bluey moved on, to Queensland some did say
I tried to find out where he went, but dont know to this day

And Kathy never wed - a lonely spinster some found odd
She wouldn't set foot in a church - she'd turned her back on God
John's mother left no will I learned on my detective trail
This explains my photo's journey, that clearance sale

So I continued digging cause I wanted to know more
I found John's name with thousands in the records of the war
His last ride proved his courage - a ride you will acclaim
The Light Horse Charge at Beersheba of everlasting fame

That last day in October back in 1917
At 4pm our brave boys fell - that sad fact I did glean
That's when John's life was sacrificed, the record's crystal clear
But 4pm in Beersheba is midnight over here.......

So as John's gallant sprit rose to cross the great divide
Were lightning bolts back home a signal from the other side?
Is that why Billy bolted and went racing as in pain?
Because he'd never feel his master on his back again?

Was it coincidental? same time - same day - same date?
Some proof of numerology, or just a quirk of fate?
I think it's more than that, you know, as I've heard wiser men,
Acknowledge there are many things that go beyond our ken

Where craggy peaks guard secrets neath dark skies torn asunder
Where hoof beats are companions to the rolling waves of thunder
Where lightning cracks like 303's and ricochets again
Where howling moaning gusts of wind sound just like dying men
Some Mountain cattlemen have sworn on lonely alpine track
They've glimpsed a huge black stallion - Light Horseman on his back.

Yes Sceptics say, it's swirling clouds just forming apparitions
Oh no, my friend you cant dismiss all this as superstition
The desert of Beersheba - or windswept Aussie range
John Stuart rides forever there - Now I don't find that strange.

Now some gaze at this photo, and they often question me
And I tell them a small white lie, and say he's family.
"You must be proud of him." they say - I tell them, one and all,
That's why he takes the pride of place - my Anzac on the Wall.

AC

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

GUILTY


In case you missed it: last week, another terrorist was convicted in England.

Mohammed Hamid paintballing
Mohammed Hamid: Paintballing and camping trips
A man said to be one of the most important recruiters for Islamist extremism in the UK has been convicted at the end of a major trial.

Mohammed Hamid, 50, of east London, was found guilty of training men in secret camps in the Lake District and New Forest to prepare them to fight abroad.

Among those to have passed through Hamid's camps were the four failed suicide bombers of 21 July 2005.

All four of the men responsible for the failed bombings were friends of Hamid.

The conviction marks a major success for counter-terrorism policing with Hamid regarded as a key figure in extremist networks...

Hamid, 50, was found guilty of three counts of soliciting to murder and three counts of providing terrorism training....(here)



This is the man who said :

"You know what happened on the tubes, right, how many altogether, four people shaheed [martyred]," said Hamid. "Allah wa Allah I have to say this is as well, but four people got shaheed, right, how many people did they take out?"

"Fifty-two," replied Ahmet.

"Fifty two, that's not even a breakfast for me," said Hamid.


Mohammed Hamid, paintballing, filmed by the BBC
Born 1957, Tanzania, to Indian family
Grew up Batley, Yorkshire
Moved to London aged 12
Various manual jobs
Sent to borstal
Jailed for robbery
Two marriages, five children
Reformed crack addict
Found religion in 1990s

And if you think this was an isolated loner, think again. The BBC has this about his co-accused:

HAMID'S CO-ACCUSED
Atilla Ahmet, Kibley Da Costa, Kader Ahmed and Mohammed Al Figari
Clockwise from top-left:
Atilla Ahmet: Soliciting to murder
Kibley Da Costa: Attending terrorism training, providing training, holding terrorist articles.
Kader Ahmed, 20: Attending two training camps.
Mohammed Al-Figari, 44: Attending camps and holding terrorist articles.

A while back I read a comment to a post on another site, about the state of Britain. Despite evidence to the contrary - stories like this one - the Brit commented that things were 'just fine' there, thank you. Not so much, as convictions like this continue. Things are so not fine in England when training camps for terrorists are dotted all over the land:


Lake DistrictSt AlbansBerkshireHackneyTonbridgeCrowboroughNew Forest

Eight men have been convicted for their involvement in terrorism training camps in the UK - including those attended by the men responsible for the failed suicide bombings of 21 July 2005. The prosecution began after police and MI5 launched a major covert operation, including placing an undercover officer at the heart of the group they were investigating. But what were the camps, and where did they take place?


To read the history of Hamid is to see "loser" written all over him. Being a "loser" is no crime of course, but when losers like this 'find religion' - you know, the "religion of peace" (uhuh) - and decide to kill 'infidels', THEN England, or anywhere else they surface, has a BIG problem. The BBC has extensive reportage on this latest trial. You could start here. As you read the chronology, and the details of what they intend, it should be a stark reminder to all those citizens who are asleep, and in denial, of the extent of the fight we are all in.

As I have said before about these loser terrorists: they can run, but they cannot hide. These latest convictions are more proof that England is methodically pursuing those who would wreak madness and mayhem on the innocents.

NEXT!

Brat

UPDATE:

Mohammed Hamid
Mohammed Hamid: Ran stall in central London
Friday, 7 March 2008, 16:31 GMT

A man convicted as a major recruiter for Islamist extremism has been jailed indefinitely for public protection.

Mohammed Hamid, 50, of east London, organised secret training camps, one of which was attended by the four failed suicide bombers of 21 July 2005.

Hamid was jailed for seven-and-a-half years - but told he would not be released until he had reformed....

The Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) sentence against Hamid was the first use of the powers in a terrorist case. [go here and read what the Judge had to say in full]


Brat

Labels:

I'm not singing yet!




Photobucket

Remember when Code Stinkos made a disgusting display of themselves the day the Berkeley City Council met to 'debate' the apology they owed the Marines for their letter? You know, the letter that said the Marines were "uninvited, unwelcome intruders", etc? Remember how Tanker sister Gail braved the masses and stood with our Marines?

At that time I told you the Code Stinkos had not heard the last of this, and that disgusting episode would not be over until I sang? Well, Move America Forward has unleashed a new national ad campaign. From ThirdWaveDave comes this:

CAMP BERKELEY: A NATIONWIDE SMACKDOWN BEGINS TODAY

Last week, I attended the MOVE AMERICA FORWARD rally in Berkeley to support our Marine Heroes. In terms of turnout, the rally was a huge success. However, the Berkeley City Council didn't really get the message, and I'm sure they think we'll simply tire of all this and go away. Think, again, Berkeley.

Beginning today, Feb. 21, 2008, MAF is unveiling a Nationwide Ad Campaign to put even more pressure on the City of Berkeley. This issue is not going away. At the very least, they owe our military and their families an apology....(go here to read the rest of what he has to say.)

If the Code Stinkos and Berkeley City Council thought this matter was closed, they are WRONG, WRONG, WRONG! They may have thought we would just fade away, but as I said at the time, WE are only just getting warmed up. MAF has a petition to sign, and ways you can donate to keep this campaign going.


You can find all the details of this latest campaign at MAF here. Sign the petition they have up, or donate, or both! Their new ad? Right here:


I'm not singing yet. Let's get 'er done!

Brat

Labels:

Monday, March 03, 2008

My Two Cents: I've Said It Before; I'll Say It Again.


No, this is not MY two cents, but it IS how I feel. This is by Pam over at Iraq War Today. Read on:

IRAQ WAR TODAY
Keep Your Helmet On!

My Two Cents: I've Said It Before; I'll Say It Again.

Life is finally starting to get back to some semblance of normal for me after my husband's injury this past August (no, not in combat - we're civilians. Although my puppy did attack him once he fell, so maybe that counts as some sort of combat...). Or at least, to the new normal.

I haven't been inspired - and haven't had the energy - to really rant in a while. Wouldn't you know it would be the scum of the earth - one step above the terrorists - that prompted me to do so again?

I've been criticized in the past for saying that the anti-war crowd almost invariably turns anti-troop. They'll tell you they're not.

Even when they do this, and this, and this, and this, and this.....and the list goes on.

Still, they'll tell you they're not anti-troop. And as it was forty years ago, and sixty years ago, and in every conflict where they've decided to slither in, it's a lie.

And now, once again, they're at it in D.C.

Go - now! - and read the rest of Pam's rant here. While you are there, be sure and check out the rest of this great blog. Was really good to meet you in Pasadena, Pam. You goooooooo girl!

Brat

Labels:

National Heroes Tour



Mark your calendars!


Many of America’s most decorated war heroes from Iraq and Afghanistan have packed their bags and are hitting the road on a national bus tour to take their non-partisan message of progress and freedom from coast-to-coast.

The Vets for Freedom National Heroes Tour is about supporting our troops, honoring their commitment, and rallying the country to complete the missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

At this critical juncture in our country, we need Americans, lawmakers and the media, to fully recognize—and appreciate—the sacrifice of our brave military and the dramatic success they have achieved, especially in Iraq with the new counterinsurgency strategy. ...


Answer the call. Go to Vets for Freedom's site here, and see when the National Heroes Tour is coming through your neighbourhood. Then, mark your calendar, and get out there and show support for our heroes! Thank you.

Brat

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Sunday, March 02, 2008

Every Day Heroes


Meet Major Lisa Carter:

Lisa Carter

When Lisa L. Carter was an Atlanta postal worker caring for her two-year-old daughter, she had a strong feeling she was capable of more. Little did she know that, almost two decades later, she would be in command of more than 90 soldiers in the sands of Iraq. Nor would she have predicted that a Bronze Star would be pinned on her uniform in 2003 for her extraordinary service in support of the 555th Maintenance Company.

Spurred on by colleagues, she joined the Army Reserves in 1987 and was forever changed when she saw a black female officer and thought, “If she can do it, surely I can do it.” From that day forward, she tirelessly reached for excellence. In 1996, she received her bachelor’s degree in social work from Georgia State University and earned Army lieutenant gold bars through the school’s ROTC program, all the while raising a family as a then-single parent....


There is much more to know about this amazing hero. Go here and read it all, and then follow more links there. This is another of those cases where "Thank you" seems totally inadequate. But, THANK YOU for your service, Major Carter!

Brat

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Saturday, March 01, 2008

Aussieness!!!











Ignorance is no excuse

Check out the hat (Thanks for this one M*A!)


Ignorance as an excuse is not a new idea, but a publication in Australia called New Idea is pleading ignorance about the agreement with the media NOT to disclose that Prince Harry - Lieutenant Wales - was deployed as part of the British forces in Afghanistan.

Prince Harry in Afghanistan
The prince's deployment was subject
to a news blackout

I am on the record as saying I believe that in a time of war ALL media should respect OPSEC., and those who do NOT, should be dealt with harshly. It seems that many media knew that Harry was in Afghanistan, but chose to remain mum about it, in part in exchange for unprecedented access to the Prince. But not New Idea.

Australian magazine broke Prince Harry story


By Nick Squires in Sydney
Last Updated: 7:11am GMT 29/02/2008

Australians angrily condemned the decision of a weekly women's magazine to break the news blackout on Prince Harry's deployment to Afghanistan....

In an article on its website dated January 7, the magazine - nicknamed in Australia 'No Idea' - reported that Harry had seen front line action in Afghanistan despite opposition from the British government and members of the Royal family.

New Idea said it could "exclusively reveal" that the "maverick prince" had already seen front-line action.

The story was then picked up by a German newspaper and, yesterday, the US-based Drudge Report website, triggering world wide interest.

In an online poll on Sky News Australia, 78 per cent said it was wrong for the media to have leaked Prince Harry's deployment.

New Idea's website was flooded with readers expressing their fury and calling for the resignation of its editor.

Readers labelled its journalists "guttersnipes", "money-hungry idiots", "morons" and "selfish parasites", saying they were an embarrassment to Australians living abroad....(read more here)


"..idiots, morons..." Ya think? In their rush to "exclusively" reveal Harry's whereabouts, New Idea put not only him in danger, but all the forces working there. In the link above, they also talk about Drudge Report's part in this whole sorry episode. You can follow the link for yourself, but I do argue with their sub heading of Drudge as the "world's most powerful journalist." Whateverrrrrrrrrrr...

Now that the story is broken, the BBC has wall to wall coverage of Harry in Afghanistan, and is in the the thick of the debate about media coverage. As for Harry?


It's very nice to be a sort of a normal person for once. This is about as normal as I'm ever going to get
Prince Harry


Harry in Afghanistan
The prince has not been given preferential treatment

From the BBC, who can't resist their self-righteous tone! :

The media's self-imposed silence hasn't been a completely selfless act. In return for not rushing into print or onto the airwaves, we have been rewarded with access to Harry at regular intervals.

In December, before he left, Harry was excited and in a reflective mood.

He told me the Iraq debacle had left him frustrated and he had contemplated leaving the Army.

"I did feel very much like, well if I'm going to cause this much chaos to a lot of people then maybe I should just, well, bow out... at the same time I was very keen to make it happen or hope for the opportunity to arise and luckily it has."

Harry in Afghanistan
Prince Harry had wanted to go to Iraq but was thwarted

A month later, when a television camera caught up with him again, Harry was doing the soldiering he's always wanted to do. He hadn't had a shower for four days, or washed his clothes for a week. He wasn't missing anything from home - even booze, he insisted.

Prince Harry describes Afghanistan as "massively important for me. It could be a turning point".

The young man with no destiny to fulfil is realizing his childhood ambition.

That 'page' of the Beeb has some interesting interviews/videos with Prince Harry. You can find them - and lots more - here. In the current flurry of media attention, Lieutenant Wales' superior officers describe Harry's work as 'exemplary', apparently one of the highest accolcades a soldier can receive from a superior. Even so, the military is also voicing their displeasure that Harry's anticipated deployment of 14 weeks has been cut short at 10 weeks. Cut short because of the stoopidity of one media outlet who just 'had' to rush to print with their 'exclusive'. Ignorant, they claim. Ummmmmmmm.. even if they didn't get the "memo", commonsense would surely tell them that sharing such information with the world could get people killed. Forget where I read it, but the Taliban is already on the record as saying they will target the British troops now. Well, there's a surprise - NOT! (And, for a series of CBC pictures of Harry in Afghanistan, go here).

I have often lamented that we don't have a Winston Churchill as a Commander in Chief in this war. I hazard a guess that if we did, that "magazine" would be feeling more than the wrath of their readers at this point.

Throughout this war, we have seen a distinct lack of integrity within the msm. Remember a while back I told you about a CBC report about an upcoming mission of our Canadians? With maps and everything, saying exactly what our troops were going to be doing in a mission about to get underway? What the hell is wrong with these people? "Loose lips sink ships." Loose lips get people killed. In America, in Canada, in England, the media has usually been altogether too cavalier with what they know. Sometimes it's not even what they KNOW, but "stories" based on uninformed speculation. I have always lived by a mantra: Just because I know something, does NOT mean I have to share it with you. I usually don't. So it is with this war we are in. I am priviledged to know quite a few soldiers throughout the coalition forces, but you will never hear me share their information with you. NOT what I am about. No soldier I know is royalty (although you are all princes to me....lol), but when lives are at stake, my lips are sealed. It HAS to be that way, especially in wartime.

It appears that in this latest breach of OPSEC, even Reuters signed on to keep silent about the Prince's whereabouts:

...Reuters, like other major news outlets, agreed to the embargo, seeing it as similar to those frequently agreed on news stories, even if the details were more complex this time. Before the invasion of Iraq in 2003, a similar-style embargo was maintained on the timing of the invasion.

The only British national newspaper that did not put the story on its front page on Friday was the Independent.

"We don't share our rivals' incredible fascination with every aspect of the royal family's lives," deputy editor-in-chief Ian Birrell told Reuters.

"The most interesting aspect about all this is the breaking of the media embargo by Drudge, but we decided that in itself wasn't big enough to warrant the front page."

As far as the embargo goes, Birrell was supportive.

"I don't see a problem at all. I think the media has acted in a very responsible manner on what has been a difficult situation in which lives were at risk," he said....


That excerpt is part of a much larger piece debating the merits of such embargoes, and discussing the role of media. Well worth the read here.

Laughing Wolf over at Blackfive has a few choice comments on this episode too. While he commends Harry for going, LW has this for the media jackals:

Good On Ya, Harry

Posted By Laughing_Wolf

...
A raised finger salute to the people who leaked it to Drudge, and to Matt Drudge for willfully endangering the Prince and those with him. May you and those who leaked it to you soon find yourself in an enclosed space with SAS and others who care to express their opinion in a very, very personal manner. No linky love to you, a*****e. (read the rest here)


Couldn't have said it better myself...lol Yep - I reckon the SAS would love to have an "exclusive" meeting with the folks who went with the story.

Harry is on the record as saying he wants to serve his country. He has proved this by fighting alongside his countrymen in Afghanistan. By doing the job he trained for, he has proved that he is serious about a military career. This despite the obvious disappointment at not being allowed to go to Iraq with the men he trained with. If you recall, that opportunity was denied him for worry about just such an outcome as we see today.

And the immediate fallout from the leak? This:

Harry withdrawn from Afghanistan
Prince Harry
British media agreed not to report the prince's deployment
Prince Harry has been withdrawn from Afghanistan after news of his secret deployment leaked out.

The 23-year-old royal, who has spent the last 10 weeks serving in Helmand Province, is flying back to the UK amid concerns for his safety.

The move follows the collapse of a news blackout deal over his tour of duty, which was broken by foreign media.

There had been fears the prince, who is third in line to the throne, could become a target for the Taleban.

In a statement, the Ministry of Defence described the reporting of Harry's deployment by foreign media as "regrettable" but said that contingency plans for such a leak were in place....

Chief of the Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Sir Jock Stirrup, in consultation with head of the Army, General Sir Richard Dannatt, had taken the final decision to withdraw Harry immediately, the statement said.

"This decision has been taken primarily on the basis that the worldwide media coverage of Prince Harry in Afghanistan could impact on the security of those who are deployed there, as well as the risks to him as an individual soldier," it added....

Prime Minister Gordon Brown paid tribute to the prince and said Britain owed him a "debt of gratitude" for his service in Afghanistan, but he added that it was correct to bring Harry back to the UK.

"Security considerations come first. That has been the deciding factor which was made by our defence staff and I think that everybody will respect that is the right decision."...(read the rest here)


"Security considerations...", "respect...." And as I read that, I find this:

PRINCE William is to serve on the front line aboard a Royal Navy warship, The Sun can reveal.

Detailed plans are being drawn up for the future King to fight for his country at his own request — like his war hero brother Harry, 23, who was flying home from Afghanistan last night.

Army officer Wills, 25, will be commissioned into the Navy and serve on a frigate or destroyer in one of the world’s trouble spots for at least 30 days later this year.

The Sun knows exact details of where and when Navy top brass are considering sending William.

But we have agreed to withhold key information to protect him and his sailor comrades....(here)


Uhuh. Sure! Right. Let's hope they - and the rest of the worldwide media -mean it.

Brat

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Who you gonna call?


Back when the Code Stinkos were being pains in the arses in Berkeley (yes, I know they still are...lol) and protesting the presence of the Marines' recruiting office in their neighbourhood, I suggested that - no matter what - the Marines would respond if called to duty.

Well: "told ya so"!!! I don't say that very often, but this time I say it with great glee. It seems the media darling Medea Benjamin - she who is front and centre demanding Marines leave Berkeley - needed the Marines. Gasp!!! Read on:

Send in the Marines!

When in danger, call for the US Marines. That’s what CodePink’s Medea Benjamin did

By Judi McLeod Thursday, February 28, 2008

Cindy Sheehan, Hugo Chavez, Medea BenjaminCode Pink co-founder Medea Benjamin, who can turn the air blue when shouting chants against American Marines called out for the Marines in front of Marine Recruiting offices in Berkeley yesterday.

Eamon Kelley, the young Marine who is featured in Move America Forward’s TV commercial that ran on Fox News earlier this week, could hardly believe his own ears when Benjamin called on the Marines for help.

Kelley, who is recovering from back surgery, spent his day in Berkeley, where CodePink continues with Berkeley council’s blessing, to keep a virtual blockade at the recruit center, expanding its efforts to harass American troops and to turn back any young Americans looking to enlist.

City Council stubbornly refuses to apologize and continues to subsidize free parking for CodePink to drive soldiers out of town.

“While we were at the protest in Berkeley from 12 to 4 p.m., a white Volvo drove by and a man spat upon CodePink,” Kelley wrote in an email to MAF’s Melanie Morgan. “They chased him down the street and got into a verbal altercation. The police were NOWHERE in sight.

“That’s not the best part, ready for this?...

Canada Free Press here has the rest of the story. Love it. This story is all over the internet (okay, so I AM late with it...being a "little old lady in Pasadena" was exhausting...lol), but one of my favourite commentaries is over at Wake Up America:

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Situational Irony: Berkeley Protestors Call FOR Marines

Berkeley, California, has once again found itself in the headlines. This time, however, they're calling IN the Marines.

In what can only be seen as an ironic twist of fate, Code Pink, and none other than radical leftist Medea Benjamin, found themselves involved in an incident in which they saw the necessity of calling in the Marines for help.

It started at the usual place with the usual suspects involved. Members of Code Pink were barricading the Armed Forces recruiting center in Berkeley, California (where the city still gives them free parking and a free pass to protest uninhibited by normal legal procedures), when a man in a white volvo drove by and "spat upon Code Pink."...

It says a lot, in my opinion, that Benjamin called upon the Marines for help when there was no available law enforcement. It says a lot about the reputation of the Marines in regards to character, honor, and valor. What speaks volumes more, to me, is that the Marines on sight at the protest did what Marines do best and like no others; they responded to the call of duty.

I don't know if this will make any sort of impact on the Code Pink crowd that was involved in the protest. I don't know that some spark of reason may be triggered in the backs of any of their minds that will give them pause to stop for a moment and think, "These Marines are willing to put themselves in harms way for me, what am I doing?" Perhaps not, but the possibility of it exists....(read the rest here

I wouldn't hold your breath there, American Fighting Man. Really, I wouldn't! But, good on the Marines. As always a class act.

Brat

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