GI SPECIAL 4A21:

www.vietnamveteranministers.org
“Attacks
Creep Ever Closer To The Heavily Fortified Green Zone”
Infiltration And Probing Actions Underway “In Preparation
For Large Scale Assault”
“Attacks In
And Around Baghdad Are Becoming More Complex And
Sophisticated”
“The
coordination and sophistication of attacks has
dramatically increased,” said Col. Ed Cardon, a brigade
commander in the 3rd Infantry Division. “They’ve
obviously had training, some military background and
military training in the way they conduct operations.
We hadn’t seen that before,” he said.
January 30, 2006 By Greg
Grant, Special to the Army Times [Excerpts]
As car
bomb attacks and suicide bombers creep ever closer to
the heavily fortified Green Zone in downtown Baghdad,
Iraqi insurgents are testing the security of the
country’s seat of power in preparation for a large-scale
assault, military sources said.
Unable to
blast their way through the zone’s heavily defended
entrances, insurgents have enlisted Iraqi prostitutes and
children to gather intelligence within, these same sources
say.
The sources said the
insurgents have been recruiting an unusual group of
intelligence agents: prostitutes who live and work inside
the Green Zone’s neighborhoods.
The
recruiting of prostitutes has been going on since at least
last spring, the sources said.
They are
also given digital cameras and instructed to photograph
military checkpoints, the U.S. Embassy and the houses of
Iraqi government officials.
The
sources said the women pass the photos and information
to insurgent sympathizers working as Iraqi police, who
are able to move through military checkpoints without
being searched. Once outside the Green Zone, these
policemen pass the materials to insurgent cells.
Children are also used to
gather information. Many families live inside the zone, and
their children are a common sight that attracts little
attention.
But,
military sources say, some of the children are sending
information to insurgents: counting vehicles, taking note of
units in the area, recording patrol schedules and detailing
the security around important targets.
These
infiltrations are combined with attacks that seem designed
to probe U.S. responses and seek vulnerabilities, the
sources said.
Sporadic
indirect fire continues to fall inside the Green Zone, and
the number of insurgent attacks in nearby neighborhoods has
surged in recent months.
While the
incidence of insurgent attacks across Iraq is running steady
at around 50 per day, attacks in and around Baghdad are
becoming more complex and sophisticated.
While
single roadside bombs continue to be the insurgents’ weapons
of choice, such improvised explosive devices are
increasingly used to initiate an attack, drawing U.S. forces
into a “kill zone” emplaced with more IEDs and troops
bearing small arms and rocket-propelled grenades.
Insurgents often have cars waiting for a quick exit.
“The
coordination and sophistication of attacks has dramatically
increased,” said Col. Ed Cardon, a brigade commander in the
3rd Infantry Division.
Cardon, whose brigade is
responsible for protecting the Green Zone, said he has begun
to see better-trained fighters among the insurgent ranks.
“They’ve
obviously had training, some military background and
military training in the way they conduct operations. We
hadn’t seen that before,” he said.
MORE:
Resistance
Deploying SA-7 Missiles And 14.5mm Anti-Aircraft Cannons
Still,
small-arms fire remains the primary threat faced by
low-flying helicopters.
It has forced U.S.
pilots to operate near American soldiers on the ground
who can root out enemy fighters aiming to shoot down the
aircraft.
January 30, 2006 By Greg
Grant, Special to the Army Times [Excerpts]
According to U.S. military
sources, intelligence reports began emerging last year of an
insurgent group operating in the North Babil area, south of
Baghdad, that was armed with more than a dozen SA-7
missiles.
The sources
said insurgents have focused renewed attention on attacking
U.S. helicopters because they believe the aircraft were key
to breaking up large-scale, coordinated insurgent attacks,
including the April attack against the Abu Ghraib prison
compound and the June attack on an Iraqi police commando
compound in southern Baghdad.
Iraqi insurgents view American
attack helicopters as a long-term threat they will continue
to face after the bulk of U.S. ground forces are withdrawn,
and are searching for ways to defeat them.
Abu Ayman, a former Iraqi
Intelligence Services officer, is considered “the most
high-value target of the Baghdad area,” said Army Capt. Ben
Crombe, an intelligence officer with the 3rd Infantry
Division. Abu Ayman’s Sunni insurgent group, made up of
former Republican Guard and Iraqi intelligence officers, has
emerged as one of the most dangerous threats in Iraq.
The
discovery of SA-7s concerns military sources, who thought
shoulder-fired missiles had all but disappeared as a threat
in central Iraq. They thought the threat had dissipated
because surface-to-air missiles such as the SA-7 are
precision instruments whose components degrade without
maintenance or replacement parts.
A U.S. Air Force C-130 was hit
by a shoulder-fired missile in November 2003, and at least
two other fixed-wing aircraft were struck by missiles after
taking off from Baghdad. The downing of a British Royal Air
Force C-130 north of Baghdad in late January 2004 had raised
renewed concerns about the threat posed by surface-to-air
missiles. The British government has withheld details about
the attack, but according to military sources, the lumbering
aircraft was brought down by a wire-guided Russian-made
Sagger anti-tank missile.
The SA-7 is perhaps the
world’s most common shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missile.
Introduced in the late 1960s, it was successfully employed
against American helicopters in Vietnam and against Israeli
aircraft in 1973.
The
intelligence sources said insurgents have also mounted
Russian-made 14.5mm anti-aircraft cannons in the back of
pickup trucks as anti-helicopter guns.
Still,
small-arms fire remains the primary threat faced by
low-flying helicopters. It has forced U.S. pilots to
operate near American soldiers on the ground who can root
out enemy fighters aiming to shoot down the aircraft.
Since May 2003, enemy fire has
brought down 26 of the 46 American helicopters lost in Iraq,
according to the Washington-based Brookings Institution.
The rest were lost to accidents.
MORE:
N.C. Family
Says Son Died Copter Crash:
“He Was
Shot At Every Time He Went Up”
Jan. 15, 2006 Associated Press
LEICESTER, N.C. - Every time a
helicopter went down in Iraq, the parents of Army chopper
pilot Mitch Carver remembered him describing the danger of
the job he carried out through two tours of duty.
"He told us
when he went home that he was shot at every time he went up,
and was hit once," said Judy Carver, the 31-year-old chief
warrant officer's mother.
Judy and Kyle Carver said Army
representatives visited their Leicester home to tell them
late Friday that their son was killed that day when his
OH-58 Kiowa Warrior reconnaissance helicopter crashed near
Mosul.
MORE:
Hanging On
In Ramadi
January 28, 2006 By Louise
Roug and Richard Boudreaux, Los Angeles Times
[I]nsurgent
violence rages unabated in Ramadi, as in much of Iraq.
During a
recent 10-day stretch, insurgents staged 113 attacks on U.S.
troops here. Mortars rain down almost daily on their base.
Marine snipers sit atop the governor's office, dueling with
masked men in black who shoot through broken windows of
abandoned buildings across the street.
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
MND-B
Soldier Killed By Roadside Bomb
January 28, 2006
MULTI-NATIONAL FORCE-IRAQ Release A060128c
BAGHDAD,
Iraq: A Multi-National Division Baghdad Soldier was killed
when his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in central
Baghdad Jan 28.
Roadside
Bomb Kills Another Baghdad U.S. Soldier
January 29, 2006
MULTI-NATIONAL FORCE-IRAQ Release A060129a
BAGHDAD,
Iraq: A Multi-National Division-Baghdad Soldier was killed
Jan. 28 while on a combat patrol at approximately 7:30 p.m.
when his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in Baghdad.
Marine
Killed In Falluja Non-Hostile Vehicle Accident
January 28, 2006
MULTI-NATIONAL FORCE-IRAQ Release A060128b
CAMP
FALLUJAH, Iraq – A Marine assigned to 2nd Marine Division,
II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward), was killed in a
non-hostile vehicle accident in Fallujah, Jan. 27.
‘Non-Hostile’ Death Under Investigation
January 18, 2006 By Ray
Rivera, Washington Post Staff Writer
A Marine from Crownsville
serving his second tour in Iraq died Saturday from an
apparent "non-hostile gunshot wound," the Defense Department
said in a statement yesterday.
Cpl. Justin J. Watts, 20, was
found dead at Forward Operating Base Haditha Dam in Haditha,
the military said.
His family declined interview
requests yesterday but in a statement said Watts was a
loving son and husband and died "serving his country
proudly."
"We are extremely proud of
Justin, and we will miss him dearly," said his father, James
A. Watts, choking up as he read the statement over the
telephone.
Justin Watts grew up playing a
variety of sports, including ice hockey, swimming, lacrosse
and BMX bicycle racing, the family said.
He graduated from Old Mill
Senior High School in Millersville in 2003, the family said.
He joined the Marines that September.
In May 2004, he married his
high school sweetheart, Nicole Seaton, in a backyard
ceremony at his family's Crownsville home.
He was assigned to the 3rd
Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, 1st
Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton, Calif., but
his unit had been attached to the 2nd Marine Expeditionary
Force at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
He completed his first tour in
January 2005, said the family, which did not say when he
returned to Iraq. Haditha is in Anbar province 125 miles
northwest of Baghdad on the Euphrates River.
Family
Remembers Soldier

Dudkiewicz
January 18, 2006 By
Mark-Alexander Pieper, Pacific Daily News
Army Pfc. Kasper Allen Camacho
Dudkiewicz did everything to the fullest.
As a high-school athlete, his
coaches say he was a self-starter and a team player; as a
soldier he was training to become a member of the army's
elite special forces; and as a son he strived to top
everything his father did.
On Sunday, Dudkiewicz became
the first son of Guam this year to lose his life serving his
country in Iraq, and the 12th son of Micronesia to die since
the war began in 2003.
His father, Kasper Dudkiewicz,
said he heard his son died while riding in a military Humvee
that was struck by a civilian vehicle. The Humvee flipped
and 22-year-old Dudkiewicz, who was the gunner, was killed.
The elder Dudkiewicz said the
military has yet to confirm the circumstances of his son's
death. He said he got the information from one of his other
sons, who spoke with Pfc. Dudkiewicz's wife, Katie, who's an
active-duty Army soldier stationed in Fort Lewis, Wash.
The father said the news of
his son's death has been hard for him, but his 22 years in
the military, from which he retired as a Guam Army National
Guard sergeant, have helped him cope with the reality of the
situation.
"Being in the military, you
expect things to happen, especially if you go to war," he
said. "You expect injuries, death. You can't guarantee
anything."
While he has worn a brave face
since the news of his son's death, his wife, Connie
Dudkiewicz, Pfc. Dudkiewicz's stepmother, said the grieving
father has had to keep himself busy to keep the tears from
streaming down, as they did when he first heard the news.
So he's been mowing the huge
lawn of the family's Chalan Pago home, feeding the pigs,
setting up canopies and working with the Department of
Public Works to set up for when his boy's body returns to
Guam later this week. The boy's mother, Maria Camacho, and
some of his 10 siblings are expected to be on island for the
services.
THERE IS
ABSOLUTELY NO COMPREHENSIBLE REASON TO BE IN THIS EXTREMELY
HIGH RISK LOCATION AT THIS TIME, EXCEPT THAT A CROOKED
POLITICIAN WHO LIVES IN THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU THERE, SO
HE WILL LOOK GOOD.
That is not
a good enough reason.

U.S. Marines with the 22nd
Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) on the Euphrates River as
they prepare to search a house near Hit January 24, 2006.
REUTERS/Bob Strong
Silly U.S.
Officer Says Tal Afar Citizens Helping Occupation Keep
Resistance Out:
After The
Press Conference, Resistance Mortar Attack Wounds Mayor
1/29/2006 AFP
The mayor of Tal Afar was
wounded yesterday when rebels attacked his office, security
officials said.
Najim Abdullah, the mayor of
Tal Afar, was wounded when rebels fired mortars at his
office, a police officer from Tal Afar said. “Insurgents
fired four mortars which landed on the office of the mayor
and wounded him,” the officer said.
The attack
came after a US commander declared Friday a “fragile
victory” in the town, four months after a US-led military
operation was carried out to break the hold of terror
network Al-Qaeda and other insurgents in the city.
Colonel
H R McMaster said ethnic strife between Turkmen Shi’ite
and Sunni communities was ending in the city, and
residents were cooperating with authorities to keep
insurgents from slipping back.
In a press
conference last week, US military spokesman Major General
Lynch distributed to reporters a letter from Abdullah
thanking the US military for clearing the town of
insurgents.
TROOP NEWS
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US Army
Forces 50,000 Soldiers Into War After Their Enlistment Term
Has Expired
[Thanks to Phil G and David
Honish, who sent this in.]
"When
you sign up for the military, you're saying, 'I'll give
you, say, six years and then after six years I get my
life back.' And they're saying, 'No, really, we can
extend you indefinitely.'"
29 Jan 2006 By Will Dunham
(Reuters)
The U.S. Army has forced about
50,000 soldiers to continue serving after their voluntary
stints ended under a policy called "stop-loss," but while
some dispute its fairness, court challenges have fallen
flat.
Under the policy, soldiers who
normally would leave when their commitments expire must
remain in the Army, starting 90 days before their unit is
scheduled to depart, through the end of their deployment and
up to another 90 days after returning to their home base.
With
yearlong tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, some soldiers can be
forced to stay in the Army an extra 18 months.
A few soldiers have gone to
court to challenge stop-loss.
One such case fizzled last
week, when U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth in Washington
dismissed a suit filed in 2004 by two Army National Guard
soldiers. The suit claimed the Army fraudulently induced
soldiers to enlist without specifying that their service
might be involuntarily extended.
Jules Lobel, a University of
Pittsburgh law professor who represented the National Guard
soldiers, said a successful challenge to stop-loss was still
possible.
"I think the whole stop-loss
program is a misrepresentation to people of how long they're
going to actually serve. I think it's caused tremendous
morale problems, tremendous psychological damage to people,"
Lobel said.
"When you
sign up for the military, you're saying, 'I'll give you,
say, six years and then after six years I get my life back.'
And they're saying, 'No, really, we can extend you
indefinitely.'"
ENOUGH:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

Jan. 18, 2006: Estelita
Maravillosa, mother of U.S. Army Sgt. Myla Maravillosa,
holds a picture of her daughter besides her coffin in her
hometown Ibanga, in the province of Bohol in central
Philippines. Maravillosa died in an attack on Christmas eve
in Iraq. (AP Photo/Pat Roque)
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!

[Sign up for this action at:
http://www.vetgulfmarch.org/index.php]
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
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action
1/29/2006 AFP & PAUL GARWOOD,
Associated Press Writer & Reuters
A massive
car bombing killed four Iraqi soldiers and wounded six more
in Uja, about 75 miles north of Baghdad, army Capt. Ahmed
al-Azawi said.
A policeman
was killed and another wounded in a roadside bomb attack in
the restive town of Fallujah.
BAQUBA: An
official with the Iraqi military intelligence was killed and
four were wounded when guerrillas opened fire on a
checkpoint in eastern Baquba, police said.
In a
separate attack, two policemen and five civilians were
wounded when gunmen fired mortar rounds then start shooting
at a police patrol in the city centre, police added.
A roadside
bomb in Baghdad's volatile southern Dora neighborhood killed
one policeman and wounded another, police said. A car bomb
blast killed a policeman in Baghdad's western Amariyah
district, while two policemen were killed while leaving work
following the end of their shift in the same area.
Drive-by
guerrillas killed two more policemen as they left the Khadra
police station, also in western Baghdad, after finishing
work, police said.
A police
captain was killed in Beiji, 155 miles north of Baghdad,
while an ambush in Baqouba, north of Baghdad, killed one
policeman and wounded another, police said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
“I Hope The
Filipinos Wipe Such Soldiers From The Face Of The Earth”
January 23, 2006 WILLIAM LOREN
KATZ [Excerpt]
Harry Belafonte did more than
speak truth to a President who lied to justify an invasion
that has taken the lives of more than 2,000 Americans and
tens of thousands of Iraqis. He became part of a proud
African American tradition Frederick Douglass started in
1848.
Frederick Douglass excoriated
President Polk's administration for "grasping ambition,
atrocious aggression, and wholesale murder of an unoffending
people" in "a disgraceful, cruel, and iniquitous war," and
demanded "the instant recall of U.S. forces from Mexico."
President
Polk lied to justify a U.S. invasion that seized land
stretching from Texas to California for new slave states.
"I would
not care if tomorrow, I should hear of the death of every
man who engaged in that bloody war," said Douglass.
(Congressman Abraham Lincoln
also reviled Polk for ordering an invasion of an innocent
neighbor based on a lie.)
During the
Spanish American War of 1898, another conflict based on a
lie, anti-lynching crusader War Ida B. Wells urged her
people to oppose all overseas actions until Black citizens
at home were safe from lynching.
Lewis Douglass, Civil War hero
and the son of Frederick Douglass, said the McKinley
administration's invasion of the Philippines would bring
"race hate and cruelty, barbarous lynchings and gross
injustice to dark people."
A.M.E.
Bishop Henry M. Turner not only denounced the occupation but
was appalled that 6,000 Black soldiers were sent "to
subjugate a people of their own color. I can scarcely keep
from saying that I hope the Filipinos wipe such soldiers
from the face of the earth."
Black U.S. troops were
divided.
One soldier
charged his country was conducting "a gigantic scheme of
robbery and oppression," and another admitted, "These people
are right and we are wrong, terribly wrong."
Twenty U.S.
soldiers, including 12 African Americans, defected to
Filipino General Emilio Aguinaldo and his freedom-fighting
army.
One day
while I was in a bunker in Vietnam, a sniper round went
over my head. The person who fired that weapon was not
a terrorist, a rebel, an extremist, or a so-called
insurgent. The Vietnamese individual who tried to kill
me was a citizen of Vietnam, who did not want me in his
country. This truth escapes millions.
Mike Hastie
U.S.
Army Medic
Vietnam 1970-71
December 13, 2004
OCCUPATION
REPORT
U.S.
OCCUPATION RECRUITING DRIVE IN HIGH GEAR;
RECRUITING
FOR THE ARMED RESISTANCE THAT IS

U.S. Marines with the 22nd
Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) search an Iraqi citizens’
house near Hit January 25, 2006. REUTERS/Bob Strong
[Fair is
fair. Let’s bring 150,000 Iraqis over here to the USA.
They can kill people at checkpoints, bust into their houses
with force and violence, trash their personal possessions,
overthrow the government, put a new one in office they like
better and call it “sovereign” and “detain” anybody who
doesn’t like it in some prison without any changes being
filed against them, or any trial.]
[Those
Iraqis are sure a bunch of backward primitives. They
actually resent this help, have the absurd notion that it’s
bad their country is occupied by a foreign military
dictatorship, and consider it their patriotic duty to fight
and kill the soldiers sent to grab their country. What a
bunch of silly people. How fortunate they are to live under
a military dictatorship run by George Bush. Why, how could
anybody not love that? You’d want that in your own home
town, right?]
The Great Iraqi Collaborator Troop Training Fiasco Rolls On:
“They Go
Into A House And Arrest Somebody And Steal Everything They
Can Get Their Hands On”
Brown
described an incident in which intelligence indicated
foreign fighters were holed up in a house south of
Baghdad. He planned a night mission with an Iraqi
special police unit. But when his soldiers hit the
target, they found the insurgents had fled.
“To do
this combined operation, I had to turn in my plans to
the Ministry of Interior. They gave away the plan,”
Brown said.
January 30, 2006 By Greg
Grant, Special to the Army Times [Excerpts]
Progress has been made in
training, controlling corruption and alleviating other
problems in the new Iraqi army and police, but Americans in
Iraq say they’re still not ready.
“They go
into a house and arrest somebody and steal everything they
can get their hands on,” said Lt. Col. David Funk, a
battalion commander in the 3rd Infantry Division, describing
Iraqi police in action. “The Iraqi people
don’t trust their own security forces. They’ll call us
before they call their own people.”
He and
other officers recounted turning suspected insurgents over
to the Iraqi police, only to see them released for bribes.
“We captured some of these
guys who were killing my soldiers; we put them in Abu
Ghraib. Now I’m told they’re out and back kidnapping and
killing again,” said Lt. Col. Ross Brown, a squadron
commander in the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment.
Brown
described an incident in which intelligence indicated
foreign fighters were holed up in a house south of
Baghdad. He planned a night mission with an Iraqi
special police unit. But when his soldiers hit the
target, they found the insurgents had fled.
“To do
this combined operation, I had to turn in my plans to
the Ministry of Interior. They gave away the plan,”
Brown said.
Lt. Col. Shawn Weed, an
intelligence officer with the 3rd Infantry Division, said
U.S. military officials have found “at every level —
company, battalion, brigade, division — players who are all
dirty, making money on the side.”
“It makes it hard to deal with
them in a realistic way,” Weed said.
“We don’t
know who to trust, or how close we want to work with them on
an operation. We could do a lot better if we were completely
onboard and had a working relationship with the Iraqi
security forces, but there’s obviously some level of tension
between us and them. They don’t want to show us everything
they have and we don’t want to show them everything we
have.”
Many officers are troubled by
the sectarian divisions within the Iraqi government and the
concentration of power in the hands of Iraq’s Shiite Arabs,
who control both security ministries.
Weed said
that soon after the arrival in Baghdad of an Iraqi Ministry
of Interior commando unit, called the Wolf Brigade and
manned by Shiite militia members, the unit’s commander told
Weed he had 350 names of suspected insurgents to arrest.
“I said,
‘You’ve been here for three days, how can you have 350
targets?’ He’d been given a list of names of guys to go
hunt down that were all Sunni.”
Many
insurgents attack the American military because they believe
the U.S. helped put the Sunnis’ centuries-old rivals into
power, Weed said.
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)
DANGER:
POLITICIANS AT WORK
White House
Promises Not To Discriminate In Continued Domestic Spying
Speaking of the war/not war, Bush said he was
particularly pleased with the results of intercepting
U.S. troops' Christmas messages sent home from Iraq.
"Any
grunt who used the words 'no body armor' got assigned
immediately to unescorted convoy duty," he explained.
"We'll deal with these whiney bastards in the way they
deserve."
1.28.06 by Michael Less,
Enduringvision.com [Excerpt]
In a gracious gesture toward
opponents of his domestic spying program, President Bush
promised today to be an equal opportunity snoop toward
everyone.
"We are going to make sure
that rich Democratic supporters are spied upon just as much
as poor, black agitators," Bush announced. "No one will be
getting any free rides here."
"Hell, I've even eavesdropped
on my daughters," he added. "Those little vixens are a
handful."
Bush did issue a partial
apology, however, for intercepting Sammy Alito's
communications with Clarence Thomas about most promising
porn sites to visit on Supreme Court computers.
"Those guys should be allowed
to do that stuff in private," Bush admitted. "I just wish
they wouldn't swap pictures comparing each other's
thingamadoodles."
Bush also warned his
adversaries to lay off the criticism.
"If Ted Kennedy keeps this
stuff up, he'll be awfully surprised to see what shows up in
Bob Novak's column," he snarled. "We're going to keep the
results of our spying absolutely confidential, except in the
case of anti-American agitators like Kennedy, who will wish
they'd never been born."
Skillfully touching on another
hot-button issue, Bush added, "In fact, the very existence
of Ted Kennedy is the only reason I can think of to support
the right to an abortion."
Vice
President Dick Cheney chimed in as to the need to continue
domestic spying.
"We are in
a war," he stated. "Except we are not in a war when it comes
to treating military prisoners in accord with international
law. We are in a war when we say we are in a war, and not in
a war when we say we are not in a war, and we are always
right, because we are in a war we are not in."
Speaking of
the war/not war, Bush said he was particularly pleased with
the results of intercepting U.S. troops' Christmas messages
sent home from Iraq.
"Any grunt
who used the words 'no body armor' got assigned immediately
to unescorted convoy duty," he explained. "We'll deal with
these whiney bastards in the way they deserve."
Got That
Right
1.29.06 by way of Tom Condit &
Air America
This year,
both Groundhog Day and the State of the Union Address fall
on the same day.
It is an
ironic juxtaposition: one involves a meaningless ritual in
which we look to a creature of little intelligence for
prognostication; and the other involves a groundhog.
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.
CLASS WAR
REPORTS
Katrina:
The
Catastrophe Is Not Over
January 28, 2006 By Jennifer
Moses, Washington Post [Excerpt]
BATON ROUGE, La.
While the
rest of the country wakes up in the morning to read about
the latest round of Washington scandals, the misery in
Louisiana continues unabated.
Except for
a few older, historical neighborhoods on "high ground," New
Orleans is uninhabitable, and Cameron Parish, in the
southwest corner of the state, basically no longer exists,
having been wiped out by Hurricane Rita.
Meanwhile, though Congress
passed a $29 billion aid package for the Gulf Coast region,
it's being split between Mississippi and Louisiana, perhaps
because, even though Mississippi has fewer than one-fifth
the number of affected households Louisiana does, its
governor, Haley Barbour, an ex-Republican National Committee
chairman, is a pal of the president.
But with
all the problems Louisiana is facing, including a new round
of budget-slashing, no one seems to be talking about the
looming human crisis: Where will the tens of thousands of
evacuees living in hotels go when the Federal Emergency
Management Agency stops paying the bills in February?
Received:
“Even A
Three-Year-Old, Needs To Be Killed”
From: JM
To: GI Special
Sent: January 28, 2006
Subject: "Even a three year
old needs to be killed"
This is a
terrific piece of writing. My congratulations to the
author. May this message receive wide publicity and help
counteract biased media reporting that supports the brutal,
Israeli, occupation of Palestine. I, for one, will
circulate it to all my contacts.
In solidarity
J
MORE
Received
ON
PALESTINE:
“Israel's
Continuing Occupation And Abuse Of Palestine”
From: Alycia A. Barr
To: GI Special
Sent: January 29, 2006
Just wanted
to drop you a line to tell you how terrific it is to see you
press on and include the horrors of Israel's continuing
occupation and abuse of Palestine in so many GI Specials.
THANK YOU. It's an issue near and dear to my heart and
should be front page headlines in every newspaper across the
country.
In Peace and Humanity,
Alycia A. Barr
Received:
“It's The
Same Old Materialistic Jones If You Ask Me”
From: JF
To: GI Special
Sent: January 28, 2006
Subject: Majority Say War Most
Important Issue
“If you’ve
had enough of elitist snobs whining about how Americans
don’t care about the war, and there have been a lot of them
peddling that lie lately, shove this up their ass.
“You know,
the ones who write those long silly self-referential
articles for pseudo-left consumption about how dumb and
reactionary most Americans are? About how working class
people care about nothing but TV shows and eating at
McDonalds and pay no attention to the war? Those snobs: the
chatterers; the useless pieces of shit who infest the
internet, who bemoan this and lament that as they boast of
how enlightened they themselves are. The same ones who
bowed down to kiss Kerry’s ass at the last election. The
ones who won’t lift a finger to organize anything against
the Empire that requires actual human contact with anti-war
troops. Them. Fuck ‘em.
“If you
prefer class analysis, the great truth about this chattering
class, otherwise known as the petite bourgeoisie, is that
they hate and fear the ruling class above them, and are
terrified of the working class below them, including our
troops, who generally regard them with well deserved
contempt as a great concentration of useless, empty,
pretentious bullshitters. T”
Forgive me
for quoting yourself to yourself at such length, but your
dose of reality has made my day.
I don't prefer class analysis.
But you have hit the nail on the head in my view.
I'd just
substitute a term like "fantasists" for these folks in the
middle, scared by everything the world outside their cocoon
presents them with, dreaming in their heart of hearts of
winning the lottery, of becoming as rich as Croesus or Bill
Gates, of achieving "financial independence" from the rest
of the human race and retiring to... well, it's their fears
they're running from, they're saving the determination of
their actual utopian destination 'til after they've,
miraculously, achieved wealth beyond imagining and have
enjoyed the automatic, concomitant intellectual
enlightenment and moral apotheosis.
It's the same old
materialistic jones if you ask me. It's just like booze or
heroin or rolling the dice until you've lost it all.
You die underneath it any
case.
The problem is that boozers
and junkies and losers take down themselves and their
immediate families while the damage we all do in this mode
continues to make ripples well beyond.
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