GI SPECIAL 4A18:

Harassed By Command?
ArchAngels’
Basic Self-Defense Survival Guide
[This is a
reply from ArchAngel to a letter from a soldiers’ wife about
problems they are having. See excerpts from her letter
reprinted below. Originally in GI Special 4A14: 1.22.06:
copy of that issue available on request. T]
From:
ArchAngel1BL@aol.com
To: GI Special
Sent: January 22, 2006
Subject: Re: Saw your GI
Special and hoped you could get the word out
It sounds
as if they didn't take extra measures as to make copies of
all that paperwork.
All I can
say right now is that to keep GI Rights
[http://www.objector.org/girights/] informed, and to get one
of those little digital recorders and a phone that has
speaker phone on it.
With these
items, start making some phone calls and record them. Also
to record the phone calls between her husband and whom ever
else calls for proof reasons.
She needs
to relay to her husband to start keeping a journal or
something and it wouldn't hurt for her to do the same.
Write down anything of importance to what
was said, who said it, time date and if possible, in his
journal, witnesses to any incident that occurs.
This may take a month if not a little longer, but she needs
to contact her local State Rep. so as to start a
congressional.
The reason why it will take so
long is because they will want his signature on a permission
request form. If they can't mail one to him, then have one
mailed to her and then she mail it to him.
Word of
advice, some commands are know to look through the mail for
certain names. If a letter comes in with the return address
from a congressman or senator, they like to pretend it never
showed up if you know what I mean.
A good
friend of mine had trouble getting letters to and from her
husband, and she found the best way to get things thru was
by care packages.
If she
needs anything else, I will try to help. All she needs to
do is contact me.
I am going to say this again
in hopes that it will help others in the future.
When it
comes to military issues and medical issues, the
Soldier/Troops need to make copies of everything.
Keep one copy for themselves, and give the other
to, if married, their spouse, other family member or a
trusted friend. The reason is because sometimes things get
lost and having a backup helps out.
Anything that is noted on
paper, request a copy of it.
Take
note, sometimes they will tell you that you can't have a
copy of your medical records or that you can't take them
out of the facility. This is not true. All
Soldiers/Troops have a right to obtain a copy of their
medical records don't let them tell you otherwise. This
has been tried before, but I was quick to respond.
Soldiers/Troops know that most of the time they can't say a
word, but when it comes to a spouse etc.., they can say
anything because there is nothing the military can do.
They will
try to tell you, you can't do that or this, when in fact yes
you can.
Recording conversations help a
great deal as well, and even a witness on the side helps.
Last but
not least, a power of attorney, though the government
doesn't accept them when it comes to a Soldier's/Troop's
affairs, it's best to have one just in case.
I hope this helps T, like I
said it's all I can do right now.
But that is what ArchAngel is about to help if we can
despite the fact that we are not doctors or lawyers.
We are former military, and military family members.
[To
contact, use the email address above. T]
*************************************************************
Letter From
Soldiers’ Wife [Excerpts]
From: GI
Special 4A14: 1.22.06
My husband and I met with his
commanding officer and told him our concerns and what effect
it was having on our children and our marriage. The CO
suggested that we file for a hardship discharge. However,
after doing so, the CO denied it.
After it went through the
ranks, it was denied.
When I spoke with JAG the guy
there said that we couldn't appeal it, and that I would just
have to suck it up, deal with the fact that my husband was
going to Iraq no matter what.
My husband
was then advised, by GI rights, that with our beliefs and
what was going on, that my husband should file for a
conscientious objection status. Long story short, they
denied the packet 2 days ago.
They told
him he has 10 days to file an appeal.
However,
the army has all his paperwork in Iraq, and me and our
lawyer are here in the states.
On top of
that, the commanders are continually shutting down the
internet and phones for a week at a time.
Do you
have a friend or relative in the service? Forward this
E-MAIL along, or send us the address if you wish and
we’ll send it regularly.
Whether in Iraq or stuck on a base in the USA, this is
extra important for your service friend, too often cut
off from access to encouraging news of growing
resistance to the war, at home and inside the armed
services.
Send requests to address up top.
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
Marine
Killed In Al Karmah
January 25, 2006 MNF Release
A060125a
CAMP
FALLUJAH, Iraq: A Marine assigned to 2nd Marine Division, II
Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward), was killed in action
by small-arms fire while conducting combat operations
against the enemy in al Karmah, Jan 24.
Family Will
Lay Soldier To Rest In Philippines:
“He Was Not
Happy About Returning To Iraq”

Waipio resident Nick Garcia
held a photograph yesterday of his grandson Chief Warrant
Officer Ruel Garcia, who was killed Monday in Iraq while
piloting an AH-64 Apache helicopter. JAMM AQUINO /
JAQUINO@STARBULLETIN.COM
January 19, 2006 By Gregg K.
Kakesako, Honolulu Star-Bulletin
The family of one of two Army
attack Apache helicopter pilots killed Monday in Iraq plans
to bury the soldier in the Philippines, which he left nearly
two decades ago to pursue his dream to fly.
Chief Warrant Officer Ruel
Garcia lived with grandfather Nick Garcia in Waipahu in 1987
because he wanted to be a military pilot, Nick Garcia said.
Garcia now lives in Waipio.
Family friend Benny Quiseng
said the younger Garcia had graduated from a college in
Manila with a degree in electrical engineering. Once in the
United States, he had to start all over again.
Nick Garcia said during the
five or six years his grandson lived with him, he attended
the adult high school at Waipahu at nights to get a U.S.
high school diploma.
With that in hand, Nick Garcia
said his grandson was able to get into the Air Force in
1992, where he served for four years. After he became a
naturalized citizen, he switched to the Army to attend
helicopter flight school.
On Monday, Ruel Garcia, 34,
was killed when his AH-64 Apache attack helicopter crashed
north of Taji. It was his second combat tour in Iraq.
He and the other crew member,
also a pilot who was killed, belonged to Task Force
Ironhorse, part of the 4th Infantry Division from Fort Hood
in Texas. There have been reports that the copter might
have been shot down.
Although there has not been
official confirmation of Garcia's death by the Pentagon,
Nick Garcia said one of his daughters called from Long
Beach, Calif., telling him his first grandchild from his
other daughter, who lives in the Philippines, had been
killed in Iraq.
"She was crying when she
called," said Nick Garcia, 80, "and I started crying, too,
like a baby."
Garcia said his grandson loved
to play tennis. "When he was living in the Philippines, he
wrote to me asking for a tennis racket, so I made him
several and sent them to him."
Garcia said
his grandson married a girl from the Philippines three
months ago and bought a 1-acre home in Texas.
In October
the younger Garcia called his grandfather, telling him he
was going back to Iraq for the second time.
"I advised
him not to go out alone and be careful because there are so
many roadside bombs," the elder Garcia said. "He told me,
'Yes, Grandpa, I will be very careful.'"
Quiseng
also received a call from Ruel Garcia before he left, and he
was not happy about returning to Iraq.
"He told
me, 'It can't be helped,'" Quiseng said. "'I'm a pilot, and
I am doing this for my country.'"
Garcia is also survived by his
parents, Resendo and Cynthia Garcia, who live near Manila;
wife Apple, of Texas; brother, Ramisis, also of the
Philippines; sister Eden; and step-grandmother Gloria.
Nick Garcia said funeral
services will be held in early February in the Philippines,
where his family and friends live.
Southwest
Ohio Soldier Dies
January 21, 2006 WHIO
FORT CAMPBELL, KY -- The
Pentagon says a southwest Ohio soldier has died in Iraq from
an illness.
The Army says the death of
Private First Class Adam Shepherd of Somerville wasn't
related to combat. He died Tuesday in Baghdad.
The Pentagon didn't disclose
his illness and says an investigation is continuing.
Shepherd was 21 and was
assigned to the Army's Second Battalion, 502nd Infantry
Regiment, Second Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne
Division.
Preble County Shawnee school
officials say Shepherd attended high school there until he
withdrew in 2002. He earned his degree through a
computer-based charter school and joined the Army in January
of 2003.
Somerville is about 35 miles
southwest of Dayton.
Salisbury
Firefighter Posthumously Awarded Silver Star
January 19, 2006 WBAL
BALTIMORE -- The Army has
awarded a Silver Star posthumously to a Salisbury
firefighter who was fatally wounded on Christmas Eve
rescuing a fellow soldier in Iraq.
Sgt. Michael McMullen, who
will be buried with military honors in Arlington Cemetery on
Friday, also received a posthumous promotion to Staff
Sergeant, the Maryland National Guard said Wednesday.
McMullen, 25, was wounded near
Ramadi when a homemade explosive device went off near his
unit, the Baltimore-based 243rd Engineering Company.
He died last week at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center.
McMullen was originally from
Pennsylvania but had lived on Maryland's Eastern Shore for
many years. He had no children and was unmarried.
In addition to the Silver
Star, McMullen received the Purple Heart, the Army
Commendation Medal and the Good Conduct Medal.
TRISTE
REGRESO
A CASA:
“ةste
Expresَ Su Descontento Con La Guerra”

“Me quedé esperلndolo”, dijo
Rosaly mientras sostenيa con tristeza una foto de ella junto
a su esposo Jason del dيa de su boda. (Lino M. Prieto)
1.10.06 Por Cynthia Lopez
Cabلn, Nuevo DIA
Jason Lَpez Reyes planeaba
sorprender a su familia con una visita inesperada el 12 de
enero. Querيa celebrar su cumpleaٌos junto a sus seres
queridos. La fecha del encuentro se mantiene, sَlo que no
serل sorpresa. Tampoco llegarل haciendo bulla como solيa
hacerlo para anunciar su entrada.
Regresa en silencio y sin
vida.
El soldado de 29 aٌos, quien
naciَ y se criَ en el barrio Pajuil de esta Hatillo, muriَ
en la vيspera del Dيa de Reyes. Realizaba su ْltima misiَn
en Bagdad cuando se formَ un motيn y un artefacto casero
“del tamaٌo de una uٌa” estallَ cerca del vehيculo militar
en el que viajaba, arrebatلndole la vida en segundos, indicَ
su hermana menor, Zoraima Lَpez.
Otros cuatro soldados
fallecieron en el incidente.
Asي Lَpez Reyes se convirtiَ
en el primer soldado puertorriqueٌo que muere en Irak en el
recién comenzado aٌo.
Esta semana Lَpez Reyes
cumplيa su aٌo en el convulso paيs. Se preparaba para
reportarse al Fuerte Stewart en Georgia. Después tenيa en
agenda viajar a la Isla donde pretendيa celebrar su
cumpleaٌos el 22 de enero.
Tras una estadيa de 15 dيas,
regresarيa a Georgia a extinguir los ْltimos meses de su
contrato con el Ejército de Estados Unidos, que culminaba en
marzo. Formَ parte de la milicia durante ocho aٌos.
Con su muerte, se elevan a 47
los soldados puertorriqueٌos que han ofrendado su vida en el
Medio Oriente desde que comenzَ la llamada guerra contra el
terrorismo.
“Estaba
loco por salir de Irak porque veيa cosas horribles. Me
decيa que después de las elecciones las cosas se estaban
poniendo peor”, comentَ Zoraima, quien sostenيa en sus manos
una fotografيa de su hermano.
Jason no tenيa apodos, pero
desde pequeٌa Zoraima lo bautizَ “Manguay”. Dijo que era un
joven alegre y vivaracho que disfrutaba de los deportes y
los buenos guisos.
Ademلs era un aficionado del
tradicional Festival de Las Mلscaras, que se celebra en
Hatillo en el mes de diciembre. El aٌo pasado antes de
partir a Irak formَ parte de una comparsa, que luciَ trajes
alusivos a las marcas deportivas.
“Yo era su consentida y él era
mi vida”, indicَ Zoraima, quien conocيa a su hermano como la
palma de su mano.
“Cuando mentيa se le abrيan
los boquetes de la nariz”, narrَ entre sollozos.
Relatَ que la ْltima travesura
que le hizo fue llevarle -durante las navidades pasadas- una
parranda con “cinco gatos” porque su ْnico fin era
despertarla.
Explicَ también que su hermano
ingresَ al Ejército en busca de mejores condiciones de vida
y por todos los “sueٌos” que le venden los reclutadores
militares.
La noticia de la muerte de
Jason causَ tal impresiَn en su madre, doٌa Gladys Reyes,
que tuvo que ser llevada de emergencia al Hospital Regional
de Arecibo, donde recibiَ atenciَn médica para la alta
presiَn y su condiciَn del corazَn.
Su esposa, Rosaly Lَpez,
contuvo el llanto y conversَ.
La mujer, de 25 aٌos, recordَ
que en la ْltima llamada que recibiَ de su esposo éste le
enviَ besos y le asegurَ que se verيan pronto. También le
enviَ cariٌos a su hijo Jayriell de dos aٌos. Lَpez Reyes
tenيa otro hijo de cuatro aٌos -Jahel-, de una uniَn
anterior.
“Me quedé esperلndolo”, apuntَ
Rosaly, quien sostenيa en sus manos una foto del dيa de su
boda.
Indicَ
ademلs que en las mْltiples conversaciones que sostuvo con
su esposo éste expresَ su descontento con la guerra.
“Me decيa:
aquي lo que hay es oro y eso es lo que busca ese presidente
(George W. Bush)”, apuntَ Lَpez.
En la habitaciَn contigua, un
familiar anotaba en una libreta los mensajes que llevarيan
las camisetas que lucirلn los familiares durante las
exequias fْnebres. “Era un hombre de detalles que no perdيa
la ocasiَn para regalarme una flor”, seٌalَ entre sollozo
Otro atributo de Jason era su
temperamento. Siempre estaba de buen humor y bromeando,
segْn su cَnyuge. “Para él una comida sin tostones no era
comida”, agregَ sobre los detalles que lo hacيan especial.
Los restos de Jason
descansarلn en el cementerio municipal de Hatillo.

Resistance
Attacks U.S. Positions In Ramadi
Jan 25 (KUNA)
Using
mortars and light machineguns, unidentified guerrillas
attacked two government buildings where American troops were
present in central Ramadi city earlier today, eyewitnesses
said, American troops fought back. American helicopters and
artillery were called in to assist.
Silliest
Bullshit Of 2006, So Far:
30%
Increase In Resistance Attacks?
“The
Increased Number Of Attacks Was Just A Response To Our
Successes”
January 25, 2006 Al Hilal
Publishing & Marketing Group
Violence in
Iraq rose dramatically last year compared with the year
before, said a report released by the US military.
According to US military statistics, 34,100 insurgent
attacks mostly targeting US and Iraqi troops were recorded
last year, up from about 27,000 in 2004, representing an
increase of almost 30 per cent.
US military spokespeople,
however, insist that the recorded increases do not indicate
a weakening of government control or evidence of an
empowered insurgency.
'These
numbers can't be taken as a reference for anti-occupation
operations, because we're succeeding in our work and Iraqis
are getting more control each day, despite such attacks,' an
IRIN report quoted US military spokesman Tim Keefe as saying
in Baghdad.
'These numbers aren't
significant when compared to all the development inside the
country in 2005,' he said in the IRIN report.
Hussein Al Garawi, a senior
Interior Ministry official, said 'These are just numbers,
but the reality is very different,' Al Garawi said in the
report.
'The
increased number of attacks was just a response to our
successes in targeting the insurgents.'
'The
bombings are just a way for the insurgency to vent its anger
over our efficiency,' he added.
NEED SOME
TRUTH? CHECK OUT TRAVELING SOLDIER
Telling
the truth - about the occupation or the criminals
running the government in Washington - is the first
reason for Traveling Soldier. But we want to do more
than tell the truth; we want to report on the resistance
- whether it's in the streets of Baghdad, New York, or
inside the armed forces. Our goal is for Traveling
Soldier to become the thread that ties working-class
people inside the armed services together. We want this
newsletter to be a weapon to help you organize
resistance within the armed forces. If you like what
you've read, we hope that you'll join with us in
building a network of active duty organizers.
http://www.traveling-soldier.org/
And join
with Iraq War vets in the call to end the occupation and
bring our troops home now! (www.ivaw.net)
IMPOSSIBLE
MISSION
FUTILE
EXERCISE
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW!

U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Brandon
M. Mitchell, from New London, Wisconsin, and other combat
engineers with the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment sweep
for weapon caches in Lake Tharthar village in Iraq January
8, 2006. REUTERS/ Cpl. Adam C. Schnell/Handout
TROOP NEWS
“You See
These Horrible Things In War. You Just Killed People”
"You
see these horrible things in war. You just killed
people," he says. "A lot of my friends that came back
say they would have preferred to die out there."
Jan. 25, 2006 Macarena
Hernandez, Dallas Morning News
Jesus Bocanegra left Iraq more
than a year ago, but the war never left him.
The 24-year-old cavalry scout
spent a year in Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown, beating
down doors, raiding homes, searching for the enemy.
When his tour was up in 2004,
Bocanegra returned home to South Texas. He began to have
head-splitting flashbacks, paralyzing panic attacks and
painfully vivid nightmares.
He enrolled at the local
community college, eager to transition into civilian life.
He dropped out after two months. He spent a couple of months
as a produce inspector but had to quit, irritable and unable
to concentrate.
A door would shut, he'd jump.
A stranger would approach, he'd panic.
"When I was in Iraq, if a
stranger walked up to me, he was either going to blow up
himself or throw a bomb at me," he says. That, he believes,
explains his hyper-alertness and why he prefers to be at
home in his "bunker," his cocoon.
In the combat zone, his mind
and heart raced.
The Department of Veterans
Affairs deemed Bocanegra completely disabled upon diagnosing
his post-traumatic stress disorder.
He fears life will never be
the same.
Today,
Bocanegra feels abandoned. He sees a psychiatrist for about
10 minutes every three months. He takes one pill for
anxiety and another for depression.
The doctor,
he says, "just tells me, 'Take your medication.'"
After
nearly five years in the military, he feels like someone
else's problem now. If he needs an eye exam or a dental
visit, he must drive four hours to San Antonio to the
nearest VA hospital.
Today, Bocanegra can still
hear children's screams and see the fear in the faces of the
women he sighted down the barrel of his weapon.
"You see
these horrible things in war. You just killed people," he
says. "A lot of my friends that came back say they would
have preferred to die out there."
“Spoof The Spooks!”
Northeast
Ohio Anti-War Coalition Organizing “Spy-In” At Federal
Building:
NOAC Spy-In
January 30,
2006; 7:30 a.m.
Federal
Building, 1240 East 9th Street, Downtown Cleveland
You've heard of sit-ins,
sleep-ins, and die-ins. Well, now you are invited to do
your patriotic duty and join us for a "spy-in."
The Feds
(specifically the Department of Defense) in November, 2004
spied on the Northeast Ohio Anti-War Coalition (NOAC).
Now it's
time we spied back!! Dress in spy gear (trench coats, black
suits/fedoras, sunglasses, etc.) Bring toy cameras,
notepads, binoculars, magnifying glasses, telescopes.
Why aren't the Feds
investigating their own: those who lied about going into
Iraq, those who say they don't need to get approval from
anyone to spy on U.S. citizens, those taking illegal
campaign "contributions" from lobbyists??
Why can't we sit in on THEIR
planning meetings, THEIR discussions, take pictures of THEM
going in and out of the Federal Building; after all, they
are paid with our tax dollars and are ultimately accountable
to US?
Is this
action ridiculous?
Sure it is!
But, so is
the Pentagon spying on citizens and groups (not to mention
illegal) who have no history of violence or threats to
anyone. Our intent is to spoof the spooks!
For more information:
216-736-4176
Take
Careful Aim At Foot:
Open Fire
1.25.06 By Lolita C. Baldor,
Associated Press & New York Times on the Web
Hundreds of
officers and health care professionals have been discharged
in the past 10 years under the Pentagon’s policy on gays, a
loss that while relatively small in numbers involves troops
who are expensive for the military to educate and train.
Many were
military school graduates or service members who went to
medical school at the taxpayers’ expense; troops not as
easily replaced by a nation at war that is struggling to
fill its enlistment quotas.
“You don’t just go out on the
street tomorrow and pluck someone from the general
population who has an Air Force education, someone trained
as a physician, someone who bleeds Air Force blue, who is
willing to serve, and that you can put in Iraq tomorrow,”
said Beth Schissel, who graduated from the Air Force Academy
in 1989 and went on to medical school.
Schissel was forced out of the
military after she acknowledged that she was gay.
Late last year Army officials
acknowledged in a congressional hearing that they are seeing
shortfalls in key medical specialties.
“What
advantage is the military getting by firing brain surgeons
at the very time our wounded soldiers aren’t receiving the
medical care they need?” said Aaron Belkin, associate
professor of political science at the University of
California at Santa Barbara.
Overall,
the number of discharges has gone down in recent years.
“When we’re
at war, commanders know that gay personnel are just as
important as any other personnel,” said Nathaniel Frank,
senior research fellow at the Center. He said that in some
instances commanders knew someone in their unit was gay but
ignored it.
The overall discharges peaked
in 2000 and 2001, on the heels of the 1999 murder of Pfc.
Barry Winchell, who was bludgeoned to death by a fellow
soldier at Fort Campbell, Ky., who believed Winchell was
gay. About one-sixth of the discharges in 2001 were at that
base.
Officials did not provide
estimates on the cost of a military education or one for
medical personnel. However, according to the private
American Medical Student Association, average annual tuition
and fees at public and private U.S. medical schools in 2002
were $14,577 and $30,960, respectively.
Early last
year the Government Accountability Office, the investigative
arm of Congress, estimated it cost the Pentagon nearly $200
million to recruit and train replacements for the nearly
9,500 troops that had to leave the military because of the
policy. The losses included hundreds of highly skilled
troops, including translators, between 1994 through 2003.
Opponents of the policy are
backing legislation in the House sponsored by Rep. Marty
Meehan, D-Mass., that would repeal the law. But that bill,
with 107 co-sponsors, is considered a longshot in the
Republican-controlled House.
Boom Times
For War Profiteers
1.25.06 Wall Street Journal
Defense contractors posted
higher earnings for the fourth quarter, including Northrop
Grumman Corp, where earnings went up nearly 22% for the
quarter.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action

A bomber's attack on an Iraqi
police patrol in Tahrir Square, in Baghdad Jan. 25, 2006.
wounded three policemen and one civilian. (AP Photo/Karim
Kadim)
01/25/06 AP & (CNN) & Reuters
In
Baghdad's Sadr City, guerrillas shot dead a police sergeant
as he drove to work, said police Lt. Laith
Abdul-Aal.
In Baquba,
to the northeast, guerrillas killed two police officers and
an employee of the Water Resource Ministry in separate
attacks Tuesday, an official with the
Diyala Joint Coordination Center told CNN.
A
motorcycle rigged with explosives detonated near a police
patrol in central Baghdad Wednesday, wounding at least two
police officers, authorities said. The
blast in busy Tahrir Square damaged a number of storefronts
and several civilian vehicles, according to emergency
police.
ISHAAQI: A
roadside bomb attack on the convoy of army Brigadier Shuja'a
al-Saadi killed five of his bodyguards and wounded two
others in the town of Ishaaqi, 130 km (80
miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
Beware
Hysterical Blathering
January-March 2006 Rick
Jahnkow, Draft Notices [Excerpts]
One thing the Army has done to
temporarily try to keep the recruiting crisis from
snowballing is lower its recruiting quotas for the early
part of fiscal year 2006 (33% less than the same period in
2005). This and the acceptance of larger numbers of less
qualified recruits have allowed it, so far, to claim success
in meeting its quotas; but it is really only a temporary
public relations move, since the reduced numbers will have
to be made up later in the year.
All of this
is important for the peace movement to understand because it
corrects the simplistic assumption often made on the Left
that Bush, Cheney and the neocons are totally in control and
will have their way.
As this
view holds, the occupation of Iraq will last at least a
decade, Iran and Syria will be attacked, we'll probably have
a draft, and, on the extreme side, some even say fascism
will be the inevitable result.
What do you think?
Comments from service men and women, and veterans, are
especially welcome. Send to
thomasfbarton@earthlink.net. Name, I.D., withheld on
request. Replies confidential.
OCCUPATION
REPORT
Killing The Messengers:
Already
More Dead Press Workers Than In 22 Years Of The Vietnam War
January 25, 2006 Ghali Hassan,
Globalresearch.ca [Excerpt]
According
to Reporters without Borders (RSF), a total of 76 (85 as of
May 2005) journalists and media staff have been killed since
the U.S. unprovoked aggression against Iraq March 2003.
That was more than the 63 reporters killed in the 1955-1977
conflict in Vietnam, the group said, citing figures from
U.S.-based press advocacy group Freedom Forum.
Iraq was the world's deadliest
place for media members for the third consecutive year since
the invasion, said RSF.
The BBC
anchor, Nick Gowing said recently: "The trouble is that a
lot of the military particularly the American military do
not want us there. And they make it very uncomfortable for
us to work. And I think that this...is leading to security
forces in some instances feeling it is legitimate to target
us with deadly force and with impunity".
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
DANGER:
POLITICIANS AT WORK
While
Soldiers Died, Bush Buddies In Iraq Looted Millions
[Thanks to Anna Bradley, who
sent this in.]
"It
does not surprise me at all," said a Defense Department
official who worked in Hilla and other parts of the
country, who spoke anonymously because he said he feared
retribution from the Bush administration.
He
predicted that similar problems would turn up in the
major southern city of Basra and elsewhere in the
dangerous desert wasteland of Anbar province. "It's a
disaster," the official said of problems with
contracting in Anbar.
25 January 2006 By James
Glanz, The New York Times & Reuters
A new audit
of American financial practices in Iraq has uncovered
irregularities including millions of reconstruction dollars
stuffed casually into footlockers and filing cabinets, an
American soldier in the Philippines who gambled away cash
belonging to Iraq, and three Iraqis who plunged to their
deaths in a rebuilt hospital elevator that had been
improperly certified as safe.
Tens of millions of dollars
went into and out of the region's cash vault with no
record-keeping whatsoever, it found.
Agents from the inspector
general's office found that the living and working quarters
of American occupation officials were awash in
shrink-wrapped stacks of $100 bills, colloquially known as
bricks.
One official kept $2 million
in a bathroom safe, another more than half a million dollars
in an unlocked footlocker.
One
contractor received more than $100,000 to completely
refurbish an Olympic pool but only polished the pumps; even
so, local American officials certified the work as
completed.
More than 2,000 contracts
ranging in value from a few thousand dollars to more than
half a million, some $88 million in all, were examined by
agents from the inspector general's office. The report says
that in some cases the agents found clear indications of
potential fraud and that investigations into those cases are
continuing.
But much of
the material in the latest audit is new, and the portrait it
paints of abandoned rebuilding projects, nonexistent
paperwork and cash routinely taken from the main vault in
Hilla without even a log to keep track of the transactions
is likely to raise major new questions about how the
provisional authority did its business and accounted for
huge expenditures of Iraqi and American money.
"It
does not surprise me at all," said a Defense Department
official who worked in Hilla and other parts of the
country, who spoke anonymously because he said he feared
retribution from the Bush administration. He predicted
that similar problems would turn up in the major
southern city of Basra and elsewhere in the dangerous
desert wasteland of Anbar province. "It's a disaster,"
the official said of problems with contracting in Anbar.
No records were kept as money
came and went from the main vault at the Hilla compound, and
inside it was often stashed haphazardly in a filing cabinet.
That casual
arrangement led to a dispute when one official for the
provisional authority, while clearing his accounts on his
way out of Iraq, grabbed $100,000 from another official's
stack of cash, according to the report. Whether
unintentional or not, the move might never have been
discovered except that the second official "had to make a
disbursement that day and realized that he was short cash,"
the report says.
Outside the vault, money
seemed to be stuffed into every nook and cranny in the
compound. "One contracting officer kept approximately $2
million in cash in a safe in his office bathroom, while a
paying agent kept approximately $678,000 in cash in an
unlocked footlocker in his office," the report says.
The money,
most from Iraqi oil proceeds and cash seized from Saddam
Hussein's government, also easily found its way out of the
compound and the country.
In one case, an American
soldier assigned as an assistant to the Iraqi Olympic boxing
team was given huge amounts of cash for a trip to the
Philippines, where the soldier gambled away somewhere
between $20,000 and $60,000 of the money. Exactly how much
has not been determined, the report says, because no one
kept track of how much money he received in the first place.
In another
connection to Iraq's Olympic effort, a $108,140 contract to
completely refurbish the Hilla Olympic swimming pool,
including the replacement of pumps and pipes, came to
nothing when the contractor simply polished some of the
hardware to make it appear as if new equipment had been
installed. Local officials for the provisional authority
signed paperwork stating that all the work had been
completed properly and paid the contractor in full, the
report says.
The pool never reopened, and
when agents from the inspector general's office arrived to
try out the equipment, "the water came out a murky brown due
to the accumulated dirt and grime in the old pumps," the
report says.
Sometimes the consequences of
such loose controls were deadly.
A contract
for $662,800 in civil, electrical, and mechanical work to
rehabilitate the Hilla General Hospital was paid in full by
an American official in June 2004 even though the work was
not finished, the report says. But instead of replacing a
central elevator bank, as called for in the scope of work,
the contractor tinkered with an unsuccessful rehabilitation.
The report
continues, narrating the observation of the inspector
general's agents who visited the hospital on Sept. 18, 2004:
"The hospital administrator immediately escorted us to the
site of the elevators. The administrator said that just a
couple days prior to our arrival the elevator crashed and
killed three people."
In the case
of the elevator crash at al-Hillah hospital, the contractor
had been paid in full, even though 20% of the work was not
complete, which meant there was no way to hold the
contractor accountable.
More than 160 vehicles worth
about $3.3 million disbursed by the South Central region
could not be traced because there was no proper
documentation, the report said.
Officials also paid for
ammunition and weapons to be used by personnel working for
the reconstruction effort, but did not keep detailed records
on who received the weapons, it said.
Another
project, a $473,000 contract to install internet service in
Ramadi was cancelled because officials realised that they
could not oversee it, despite payments to the contractor.
In an
internal document, dated April 2005, officials said: "There
is no way to verify this project was ever completed, because
we don't even know where exactly in Ramadi it was supposed
to take place. It appears the contractor was paid."
MORE:
The Biggest
Theft Of All
January 27, 2006 Socialist
Worker, Editorial [Excerpt]
THE STORIES of unscrupulous
contractors stealing Iraq blind seldom make it into the
news.
But what’s
never reported is the theft that’s taking place under the
so-called rule of law.
U.S. rule,
that is. It’s considered a crime when someone picks your
pocket, but if that someone is the U.S. government, and
they’ve invaded your country to steal your oil, that’s
different.
The malfeasance was easy to
see when it was revealed during the early stages of the
occupation that Vice President Dick Cheney had pulled
strings to win his friends at Halliburton and Halliburton
subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root lucrative contracts in
Iraq. The same went for other big campaign contributors,
like construction corporation Bechtel, which were eager to
grab the spoils in post-invasion Iraq.
This is about making the Bush
administration’s friends in Corporate America happy, but
that’s not all it’s about.
The invasion and occupation of
Iraq means that the U.S. controls the country with the
second-largest proven oil reserves in the world, multiplying
its clout around the world.
And like
any swindler, the U.S. used a web of lies to justify its
scam: from Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent “weapons of mass
destruction” to its claims of bringing “democracy” and
“liberation.”
MORE:
Reconstruction in Iraq? Maybe the Americans came to
Iraq to show us how corruption, embezzlement and
thievery are the guiding principles of democracy.
January 25, 2006, Truth About Iraqis blogspot.com
Imperial
Democrats Demand Bigger Army
January 25, 2006 By Rick Maze,
Army Times staff writer
A Democratic advisory group
led by former Defense Secretary William Perry issued a
report Wednesday that concludes the strain of deployments to
Iraq and Afghanistan is endangering the nation.
The Army
needs an active-duty increase of 30,000 people, which would
provide 48 brigade combat teams rather than the 42 currently
envisioned. Congress already approved such an increase, but
only as a temporary measure. The report recommends it be
made permanent.
General Michael Hayden:
Idiot
Traitor Publicly Lies About What The Constitution Says
25 January 2006 By William
Rivers Pitt, Truthout Perspective [Excerpt]
Bush and the boys have taken
to the road this week to defend the indefensible. To wit:
spying on American citizens without a warrant is fine and
dandy, because the President can do whatever he wants,
because laws are meaningless in the main, because Osama may
be under your bed sharpening his cutlass. The road trip
started in Kansas and will wend its way hither and yon,
spreading bad information and flat-out lies at every
whistle-stop.
A defining
moment of glittering idiocy took place on this road trip
during an exchange with reporters on Monday. General Michael
Hayden, Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence
and former director of the National Security Agency, was
tapped to be the responsible face of the intelligence
community for this junket. The façade didn't hold up for
long.
Jonathan Landay, a reporter
with Knight-Ridder, queried General Hayden about the central
issue behind the recent revelations that Bush authorized the
National Security Agency to spy on thousands of American
citizens.
"My
understanding," began Landay, "is that the Fourth Amendment
of the Constitution specifies that you must have probable
cause to be able to do a search that does not violate an
American's right against unlawful searches and seizures."
That's as far as Landay got.
Here is the remainder of the exchange:
Gen. Hayden: No, actually:
the Fourth Amendment actually protects all of us against
unreasonable search and seizure. That’s what it says.
Landay: But
the measure is probable cause, I believe.
Gen.
Hayden: The amendment says unreasonable search and seizure.
Landay:
But does it not say probable ---
Gen. Hayden: No. The amendment says unreasonable search and
seizure.
There you have it.
The fellow
who used to run the NSA, the agency whose very charter
places the Fourth Amendment in greatest peril simply by dint
of its ability to peek through windows, does not think the
Fourth Amendment requires probable cause.
Let’s have
a look at the text in question, just for the sake of
clarity:
“The
right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no
Warrants shall issue,
but upon probable cause,
supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly
describing the place to be searched, and the persons or
things to be seized.”
Bush
Traitors Admitted Their Spying Was Illegal And
Unconstitutional
25 January 2006 By Steven
Aftergood, FAS
The Bush
Administration rejected a Congressional initiative in 2002
that would have lowered the legal threshold for conducting
surveillance of non-US persons under the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act from "probable cause" that the
target is a terrorist or agent of a foreign power to
"reasonable suspicion."
Administration officials said at the time that the
legislative proposal was unnecessary and possibly
unconstitutional.
Yet in a speech this week on the NSA domestic surveillance
program, Deputy Director of National Intelligence Gen.
Michael V. Hayden indicated that the executive branch had
unilaterally adopted a similar "reasonable suspicion"
standard.
Deep Shit
[Thanks to Ken, who sent this
in.]
A little boy goes to his dad
and asks, "What is Politics?"
Dad says, "Well, son, let me
try to explain it this way:
I am the head of the family,
so call me The President.
Your mother is the
administrator of the money, so we call her the Government.
We are here to take care of
your needs, so we will call you the People.
The nanny, we will consider
her the Working Class.
And your baby brother, we will
call him the Future.
Now think about that and see
if it makes sense."
So the little boy goes off to
bed thinking about what Dad has said.
Later that night, he hears his
baby brother crying, so he gets up to check on him. He
finds that the baby has severely soiled his diaper.
So the little boy goes to his
parent's room and finds his mother sound asleep.
Not wanting to wake her, he
goes to the nanny's room. Finding the door locked, he peeks
in the keyhole and sees his father in bed with the nanny.
He gives up and goes back to
bed.
The next morning, the little
boy say's to his father, "Dad, I think I understand the
concept of politics now."
The father says, "Good, son,
tell me in your own words what you think politics is all
about."
The little boy replies,
"The President is screwing the
Working Class while the Government is sound asleep.
“The People are being ignored
and the Future is in deep shit.”
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