GI SPECIAL 4A9:
HOW MANY
MORE FOR BUSH’S WAR?
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

1.15.05: The coffin of
Philippines-born US Army Sergeant Myla Maravillosa. (AFP)
How Walter
Reed Quacks And Butchers Disguised As Doctors Destroy
Soldiers Lives:
The Scum
Accuse Them Of Faking Traumatic Brain Injury, Tell Them It’s
Hereditary, Delay And Deny Them Treatment
Col.
James F. Babbitt, president of the Physical Evaluation
Board, accused Wilson of being a liar. "I believe that
the preponderance of the evidence available to the Board
supports an alternative diagnosis … one of malingering,"
Babbitt wrote in that memo.
It's
hard for them to believe, after two hard tours of duty,
that this is the kind of treatment he has received. "I
just want to be taken care of," he says. "I just want
healthcare."
Jan. 05, 2006
By Mark Benjamin, Salon.com
[Excerpts]
After fighting in heavy combat
during the initial invasion of Iraq, Spc. James Wilson
reenlisted for a second tour of duty. Now 24 years old, he
loved the life of a soldier.
In the fall of 2004, his 1st
Cavalry Division was mostly fighting in Sadr City, a
volatile sector of Baghdad.
On Sept. 6,
Wilson was manning a .50-caliber machine gun atop a Humvee
when a bomb or bombs went off directly under the vehicle,
rocking his head forward and slamming it into the machine
gun. A fellow soldier told Wilson that his Kevlar helmet
had been split open by the impact. The
heat from one blast felt like "a hair dryer" on his skin,
multiplied "times 20," Wilson later wrote in his diary. To
the best of his recollection, the force of the blast also
knocked the gun from its mount, smashing it into his leg.
Although
battered in the attack, Wilson didn't appear badly hurt, on
the outside, at least. But in the days that followed, the
young soldier from Albany, Ga., says he often felt "really
dizzy, lightheaded and dazed." Two weeks
after the battle, Army medics felt Wilson was suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder and evacuated him out of Iraq
for medical evaluation. Wilson was first flown to Landstuhl
Regional Medical Center in Germany, where wounded troops are
stabilized, and then sent to Walter Reed Army Medical Center
in Washington, D.C., in October 2004.
After
arriving at Walter Reed, Wilson repeatedly told doctors that
he had experienced a hard blow to the head during combat in
Iraq.
He suffered
from symptoms strongly associated with a traumatic brain
injury, which occurs when the brain is rocked violently
inside the skull, tearing nerve fibers: seizures, short-term
memory loss, severe headaches with eye pain, and dizzy
spells that have made him vomit.
During a
visit to the Pentagon around Christmas 2004, Wilson got so
dizzy he vomited "all over" the carpet while meeting Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz in his office.
Despite
Wilson's description of his injury and his symptoms, Walter
Reed officials repeatedly questioned his mental state and
the authenticity of his combat story.
In a June 2005 memorandum from
an Army Physical Evaluation Board, some Walter Reed doctors
stated that Wilson exhibited "conversion disorder with
symptoms of traumatic brain injury." Conversion disorder
holds that symptoms such as seizures arise from a
psychological conflict rather than a physical disorder.
Col. James
F. Babbitt, president of the Physical Evaluation Board,
accused Wilson of being a liar. "I believe that the
preponderance of the evidence available to the Board
supports an alternative diagnosis … one of malingering,"
Babbitt wrote in that memo. [Which would be less
dishonorable than this incompetent piece of shit, who
pretends to have some medical knowledge. A malingerer
doesn’t write filthy slanders of others, or deny them the
treatment that can help them until it’s nearly too late to
do any good, as the story points out below. Let’s get a
ticket to Iraq for Col. James F. Babbitt, one way. He can
spend his time on patrols, without a helmet. Or just tie
his worthless, vicious, ignorant ass on top the nearest
Humvee, so his observation of “malingerers” will be
unimpeded. Col. James F. Babbitt is a classic example of
why troops in Vietnam found fragging such a constructive and
lifesaving exercise of time and energy.]
Wilson and his wife, Heidi,
who has been staying with him at the hospital, vigorously
fought the psychological diagnosis and furiously sought
medical treatment.
The
malingering charge was especially painful. "I want my
dignity, pride and respect back," Wilson says. After
serving his country, being accused of misleading
doctors, he says, "is the worst thing in the world."
[Perhaps the incompetent Col. James F. Babbitt has
written a public letter of apology to the soldier for
smearing him? Why does that seem so unlikely? An
alternative to sending Babbitt to Iraq: When he gets
some cancer or other deadly disease, early enough to
cure, let’s find him a doctor who will decide he’s a
“malingerer” and deny him treatment until the disease is
terminal. That would be real old time justice.]
Today,
Wilson is thin and has a shaved head. He often clenches his
eyes shut, as if to squeeze at the pain in his skull, or
search out an elusive word or memory. Whenever a dim detail
of his combat duty bubbles up in his mind, he types it into
his diary. He holds his hands awkwardly, with his thumbs
folded over his palms. His speech is at times slow and
slurred.
"I have been dealing with this all year because no one would
help me," he says.
[OK, now we
know who and where the enemy is. The enemy isn’t in Iraq
and it isn’t Iraqis. It’s filth in human form located in
Washington DC. “No one would help me.” That says it all.
Betrayal.]
On Dec. 19,
2005, more than a year after he was admitted, Walter Reed
finally sent Wilson to a neurological center to be treated
for traumatic brain injury.
Neuropsychological testing done at Walter Reed on Oct. 11,
2005, led officials to conclude that "there was no
indication of malingering."
According to a neurosurgeon
with extensive experience treating combat head injuries, an
October 2004 MRI of Wilson, combined with a description of
his symptoms, showed that he should have been treated for a
traumatic brain injury right then.
Medical experts say the failure to treat a brain-injury
victim promptly could hinder recovery.
[Get it?
Medical experts say the
failure to treat a brain-injury victim promptly could hinder
recovery.
[One more
time: Medical experts
say the failure to treat a brain-injury victim promptly
could hinder recovery.]
Spc. Wilson
is not alone among Iraq veterans who have been misdiagnosed
or waited for treatment for traumatic brain injury.
Other
soldiers interviewed at Walter Reed with apparent brain
injuries say they too have been deeply frustrated by delays
in getting adequately diagnosed and treated.
[Medical experts say the failure to treat a brain-injury
victim promptly could hinder recovery.]
The
soldiers say doctors have caused them anguish by suggesting
that their problems might stem from other causes, including
mental illness or hereditary disease.
According
to interviews with military doctors and medical records
obtained by Salon, brain injury cases are overloading Walter
Reed. As a result, a significant number of brain-injury
patients are falling through the cracks from a lack of
resources, know-how, and even blatant neglect.
[Medical experts say the failure to treat a brain-injury
victim promptly could hinder recovery.]
Exactly how many brain-injured
patients are being missed, going without care, or left
waiting, as opposed to those who get prompt, top-shelf
treatment, is difficult to say.
Walter Reed officials and
doctors say the Army is getting better at treating
brain-injured patients but admit cases like Wilson's are a
significant problem.
A November
2003 report from the Army News Service states that because
brain injuries aren't always obvious, they "may be
neglected, or even pushed aside as merely psychological."
Patients
with traumatic brain injuries "are suffering as much, but
may not get the same support as someone who has an
observable injury like a bullet wound or a broken leg," says
Dr. Louis French, a neuropsychologist at Walter Reed, in the
article.
[Medical experts say the failure to treat a brain-injury
victim promptly could hinder recovery.]
One thing is certain: Due to
today's military technology and insurgent tactics in the
Iraq war, more U.S. soldiers than ever before are sustaining
and surviving serious head injuries. In fact, traumatic
brain injuries are a major problem among soldiers arriving
at Walter Reed.
According to the hospital's
brain injury center, 31 percent of battle-injured soldiers
admitted between January 2003 and April 2005, 433 patients,
had traumatic brain injuries. Half of those had what the
hospital calls a "moderate, severe or penetrating brain
injury."
Through a
spokesperson, Walter Reed and other Army officials,
including Col. Babbitt, who accused Wilson of malingering,
declined to be interviewed. [So, Col. Babbitt is also a
cringing coward, peeing his pants rather than face a few
questions about his miserable incompetence.]
"We cannot discuss specific
cases with anyone except the Soldier due to the Privacy Act
and HIPAA (the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act), nor could we address the case or
responsibilities of the president of the (Physical
Evaluation Board) without violating some portion of HIPAA,"
wrote Lt. Col. Kevin V. Arata, an Army public affairs
officer, in an e-mail. "Therefore, I cannot arrange an
interview."
[Any
soldier, or civilian, may order the release of any and all
information about his or her medical treatment. Having so
ordered, it is unlawful to withhold that information.
Somebody needs to have a word with this piece of shit too.
Ask your local hospital
about HIPPA: every hospital worker gets endless training in
what the law means. And Rata is giving the reporter fifty
yards of really stupid bullshit.]
There are many success
stories, says John DaVanzo, clinical director at Virginia
Neurocare, a rehabilitation center in Charlottesville, Va.,
where Wilson is receiving treatment. "Yes, there are
soldiers being missed," DaVanzo admits, but many others with
brain injuries, who would've been overlooked in past wars,
are being identified and treated.
Still,
working in partnership with Walter Reed, DaVanzo has seen
the strain on the system during the Iraq war. "There is a
massive influx of injured soldiers," he says. "People are
overworked." [Nothing new about that in medicine. The
problems are scum like Babbitt, who aren’t working, except
to lie and maim.]
Walter Reed hospital is
renowned for state-of-the-art technology and certain kinds
of care. One Walter Reed physician tells Salon that the
care for amputees at the hospital is "amazing," and praises
the work of colleagues, adding that the nurses "work their
butts off."
However,
the physician is worried that a distressing number of
patients at the hospital with brain injuries aren't getting
adequate screening and care, and says many doctors at the
hospital know little about brain injuries and are prone to
making a wrong diagnosis.
"A lot of things are missed
because the doctors are swamped," the physician says. Many
military doctors are away serving in Iraq or Afghanistan,
and some patients are forced to wait too long for surgeries
they need.
"We're overwhelmed in terms of resources," the physician
says. (Salon agreed to withhold the identity of the
physician, who was not authorized to speak to the media,
and feared retribution from the hospital.)
The delay in proper diagnosis and treatment for Wilson and
others with apparent brain injuries is particularly
troubling because patients tend to benefit from a prompt
response.
An April 13, 2005, article about brain trauma from the
Department of Defense's own press service says that "if the
injury is detected and treated early, most victims can
recover full brain function, or at least return to
relatively normal lives."
But Dr.
Gene Bolles, a former chief of neurosurgery at Landstuhl
Regional Medical Center in Germany, says it is plain wrong
to place the burden of proof on wounded soldiers.
Soldiers
coming out of combat who say they've suffered a head blow
and who show symptoms of traumatic brain injury should be
treated for it, says Bolles.
"You do what you can for them," he says flatly. "You
believe them."
Bolles
reviewed a summary of Wilson's October 2004 MRI from
Walter Reed. He says it showed "evidence of loss of
blood supply" to the brain and was "compatible with a
head injury." Alongside Wilson's story and symptoms, he
says, "This sounds like typical head injury syndrome to
me; you can make that diagnosis."
He
notes that the "shearing effect" on nerve tissue that
comes with a serious head blow can be invisible to MRIs
and CAT scans and that "there are no definitive tests
that prove this syndrome." But soldiers even remotely
suspected of having a brain injury, he says, should be
treated aggressively for it, rather than with skepticism.
Bolles, who now practices at
Denver Health Medical Center, treated U.S. soldiers
evacuated from Iraq and Afghanistan for two years at
Landstuhl.
While many
soldiers get good treatment, in other cases "the system is
kind of like you have to prove yourself with an injury
before anyone believes you," he says.
"I wish we
would accept the word of a patient if a patient says, 'This
is what I'm feeling,' rather than trying to prove somebody
is malingering."
It is
better to treat soldiers for what they say is wrong with
them, he says, even if that means a few cheaters get through
the system.
Annette
McLeod says her husband, Spc. Wendell McLeod Jr., was
belatedly diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury.
McLeod
landed at Walter Reed in August after being hit by a
truck in Iraq but was not diagnosed with a brain injury
until December. "If you come in and are missing a limb,
they know how to handle you," says Annette McLeod.
"Anybody with injuries you can't see is shoved to the
side."
McLeod says
that to her knowledge her husband, Wendell, was not
initially screened for brain injury, even though he'd been
hit by a truck.
But his
behavior was so erratic and his memory was so horrible, she
says, that she badgered doctors until they ran some tests
that identified his problem. "I knew there was something
wrong because of the changes in him," she says. "He kept
saying, 'I can't remember. I can't remember.' This is a
man who used to remember everything."
McLeod, 40, arrived at Walter
Reed last August with a fractured vertebra, a chipped
vertebra, four herniated discs in his back, and a shoulder
injury. He also began suffering from bizarre mood swings.
"I can't hardly remember anything," he says.
Annette, who is staying with
him at Walter Reed, took McLeod to the supermarket
recently. "He walked down the aisle three times and could
not remember what I asked him to get," she says. She makes
her husband sit in the back seat of the car because ever
since his accident he wildly grabs at the steering wheel.
McLeod was
tested for traumatic brain injury in September but did not
hear anything about the results until he was diagnosed in
the first week of December.
In the meantime, McLeod was told by officials that he might
have been born with his brain problem. "They tried to say
it was inherited," McLeod says. Annette says they were also
told it could be psychological. The misdiagnosis and delays
have been excruciating, she says angrily, with a lot of
"just waiting around and waiting around and waiting
around."
Sgt. Steve Cobb, age 46, tells
a similar story.
Injured in an armored
personnel carrier accident in Iraq in 2004 while serving
with the West Virginia National Guard, a head blow left him
with short-term memory loss, hearing loss and the loss of
peripheral vision in his left eye. He slurs his words and
is so dizzy that he walks with a cane.
Medics in
Iraq first missed his brain problem completely and gave him
aspirin. He served another eight months after the accident.
Cobb
arrived at Walter Reed last May. In July, he was
diagnosed with traumatic brain injury, but did not start
getting therapy until September. He says that he, too,
was told by hospital officials that he may have been
born with his problem. "They said it was hereditary,"
Cobb says with disgust. [Obviously somebody wrote a
script for these quacks. “Let’s save money: just tell
them it’s hereditary.”]
His memory
is so bad that his wife, Natalie, is afraid he can't take
care of himself. She has left her 13- and 19-year-old kids
at home with family in West Virginia to be with her husband
at Walter Reed. "We heard it was brain disease. We heard it
was hereditary," she says over dinner one evening at a
restaurant near the hospital. "I feel that they are letting
the traumatic brain-injury patients slide through the
cracks."
The
stress of being misdiagnosed can further harm soldiers,
says Bolles, the neurosurgeon, especially if patients
get stuck in a pattern where doctors are denying that
their injuries exist. "That in and of itself becomes a
disability to these people if they get angry and
frustrated," Bolles says. "That alone makes it worth
treating these people early."
Wilson came back from Iraq a
totally different man, according to his wife Heidi. In a
photo of the couple from before his injury, the two are
sitting on the edge of a fountain. Wilson stares squarely at
the camera with a deft, slight smile. Heidi, in a white
dress, sits in his lap, holding a bouquet.
Wilson's injury has left him
so sensitive to light that his room at Malogne House, a
residential facility behind the main hospital at Walter
Reed, looks cavelike, lighted only by two dim bulbs.
Looking at bright light, Wilson says, "is like welding
without your mask on." Sometimes even the dim bulbs are too
much.
"It kills him," Heidi says one
evening in the room. "He puts little blankets over them."
Heidi says her husband's brow turns a deep red during his
worst headaches, which he says feels like his eyes are being
sucked back into his skull. "I just want to take a drill
and drill into my head," he says.
Sometimes Wilson remembers
events from long ago, but not what happened five minutes
ago.
He still writes bits in his
diary, attempting to piece his memory back together. He
used to enjoy cooking Cajun food but now that's gone.
"Everything tastes like
rubber," he says. "I look at stuff I want to taste. I feel
like I remember what it tastes like, but I can't."
When Heidi is away for a few
days, his memory loss and olfactory problems collide, though
he tries to keep a sense of humor about it.
"If she is away, I may not
take a bath for six days, until she gets back," he says.
Heidi nods vigorously. "I'll get his bath ready and say,
'Time to get in the tub,'" she says.
But when
the conversation returns to Wilson's treatment, their smiles
quickly fade.
It's hard
for them to believe, after two hard tours of duty, that this
is the kind of treatment he has received. "I just want to
be taken care of," he says. "I just want healthcare."
[What were
these “doctors” who specialize in making charges of
“malingering” and denying and delaying treatment for hurt
troops doing before Walter Reed? Working for S & M escort
services, wielding whips and chains? Dissecting frogs?
Drowning kittens? Raping kids? Is this their duty station
after torturing prisoners at Abu G? Obviously they have no
skills of any other kind, except telling stupid lies. Well,
let’s feel just a bit sorry for them. They were born too
late. Hitler could have used this kind of sadistic talent
doing experiments on prisoners in his concentration camps.
Those “doctors” were arrested, indicted, tried, and
sentenced to hang when that war was over.
[How many
have these Walter Reed doctors killed? This is reckless or
"depraved heart" murder at the minimum. Let them face a
jury of wounded combat veterans, and their families.
Payback is overdue. And let’s not forget the political scum
infesting Washington, willing to spend billions a month
trying to grab Iraq’s’ oil for themselves and their
corporate accomplices, but who won’t come up with the money
to get wounded troops the best medical care money can buy.
The politicians are premeditated murderers, or, if you
prefer, traitors.]
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
Marine Dies
From Non-Hostile Gunshot Wound At FOB Haditha Dam
01/15/06 MNF Release A060115c
CAMP
FALLUJAH , Iraq – A Marine assigned to Regimental Combat
Team 2, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force
(Forward), was found dead from an apparent non-hostile
gunshot wound aboard Forward Operating Base Haditha Dam,
Jan. 14.
Casualties
Not Reported In Two Attacks On U.S. Patrols
Jan 15, 2006 By DPA
An Iraqi
civilian was killed by the explosion of a roadside bomb
targeting a U.S. military patrol in a suburb of Hillah,
100 kilometre south of the capital, said police.
Information
on casualties among the U.S. soldiers was not available.
The
targeting of another U.S. patrol, near a joint Iraqi-U.S.
checkpoint at the eastern entrance of Fallujah led to the
destruction of a U.S. vehicle, said Iraqi
police.
REALLY BAD
PLACE TO BE:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

US Marines take cover after
coming under fire during a patrol in the northern area of
the Sunni city of Fallujah. (AFP/File/Mauricio Lima)
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
U.S.
Soldier Wounded In Helmand
15 January 2006 By Carlotta
Gall, The New York Times
Kabul, Afghanistan - Two
gunmen on a motorcycle killed a former Taliban leader on
Saturday outside his home in Kandahar, police officials
said.
The victim, Mullah Abdul Samad
Khaksar, was a deputy interior minister under the Taliban
government in Afghanistan. He switched loyalties and
supported Afghanistan's American-backed government after the
Taliban militia was ousted in late 2001.
A Taliban spokesman, Qari
Muhammad Yusuf Ahmadi, said the group had killed Mullah
Khaksar because he was a traitor and said the same fate
awaited other turncoats.
A suicide
car bombing on Saturday targeting an American-Afghan
military convoy in southern Helmand province wounded an
American soldier, said a local police chief, Khan Mohammed.
An American military spokesman said the soldier was
hospitalized and in stable condition.
TROOP NEWS
“A Lot Of
Soldiers Are Debating Whether This War Was Fraudulent To
Begin With”
January 14, 2006 Huffington
Post
On January 5, 2006,
Congressman Murtha held a town hall meeting with Cong. Jim
Moran (D-VA 08).
*************************************************
John
Brumes, Infantry Sgt. US Army:
Everything
that the Bush Administration told us about that mission in
Iraq is absolutely incorrect. Furthermore, I'd like to say
... I came home to no job, no health insurance. Until we
take care of this war, we can't take care of the problems
that matter like health care.
I've witnessed both ends...
Congressman Murtha, I implore you to keep doing what you're
doing.
**********************************************
John
Powers, Capt. 1st Armored Division, served 12 months in
Iraq:
The thing that hits me the
most is the accountability. ...
Where is
the accountability for those men (who took us to war), as
well as where is the accountability for Paul Bremmer, who
misplaced millions of dollars and claims to keep
accountability in the war zone?... I know that if we lost
$500 we would be court marshaled.
So where is the accountability
for this leadership?
******************************************
Garrett
Reppenhagen, served as a sniper in Iraq for a year in the
First Infantry Division:
My question
is also about accountability.
The
soldiers that you see, Congressman Murtha, at the
hospitals... those are my friends.
After
coming back, being a veteran, my question is why?
Why did we
go to this war, why the hell did it happen, why are we in
this condition.
A lot of
soldiers are debating whether this war was fraudulent to
begin with. And there doesn't seem to be a clear answer.
A lot of
Americans now are debating the fact over whether or not the
war was fraudulent in the first place. How come there
hasn't been an investigation on the fraudulent lead up to
the war by this Administration?
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.
“After
Seeing Friends Die And Almost Dying Myself, I Think We Need
To Bring Everybody Home”
15 January, 2006 By MICHAEL
RUBINKAM and KIMBERLY HEFLING, Herald News Daily [Excerpt]
Nearing the
end of a year in Iraq, Army Sgt. Bob Knowles and his closest
friends became disillusioned. And not because they thought
the war was a mistake. It was just the daily grind of
battle.
"Guys were
away from their wives and their kids, away from their
families and home. After 13 months, you‘re tired," says
Knowles, 28, of Pottstown, Pa. "It‘s not a kind of tired
you can sleep off in a couple days. It‘s long-term
exhaustion."
He adds:
"We wanted to keep each other alive, that was the biggest
goal. Everything else was details."
Knowles, a tank gunner, just
barely got out alive.
On May 4, 2004, he was riding
in an M1 Abrams tank that was ambushed. A rocket-propelled
grenade hit the top of the tank, where the hatch was open.
Shrapnel pierced Knowles‘ back and went out his shoulder
As he waited for a medical
helicopter, feeling himself going into shock, he thought
about his German-born wife and their infant daughter.
Doctors later told him that fragments had come within 1
millimeter of his heart and 2 millimeters of his lung. But
he would be OK, except for lingering shoulder pain.
Knowles left the service in
October 2004. He‘s now a train conductor for Norfolk
Southern.
He has come
to oppose the war.
"After
seeing friends die and almost dying myself, I think American
soldiers are, I wouldn‘t say dying for nothing," he says,
"but it‘s needless and I think we need to bring everybody
home."
Yeah, Those
Troops Have It Too Fucking Easy
January 8, 2006 By Thanassis
Cambanis, Boston Globe Staff [Excerpt]
Soldiers in
Somma's platoon inherited a wireless Internet network set up
by an Iraqi contractor.
Commanders ordered it dismantled after Christmas, in part
because it seemed too cushy.
First Sergeant Jason Larson,
who turned 35 on Christmas Day and has spent 15 years in the
Army, said he had always thought the Army would be his last
job. But the inevitability of returning to Iraq, he said,
has persuaded him to leave the military when his contract
runs out in five years.
''I won't
stay a day longer, even if I have to go work as a greeter at
Wal-Mart," Larson said.
“I Am The
Wife Of A National Guard Soldier Who Served A Year In Iraq”
“I Will
Fight Even Harder To Bring The Soldiers Home!”
If the
Pentagon thinks this program of theirs helps families of
Soldiers by teaching them to laugh if off by acting like
a penguin is humiliating and disgusting.
January 13, 2006 VetPax
To the
editor of USA Today:
I am a
member of Military Families Speak Out and the Wife of a
National Guard Soldier who served a year's tour in Iraq. I
would appreciate it if you would publish my reply to the
article below:
Pentagon to families: Go ahead, laugh
1/12/2006
By Gregg
Zoroya, USA TODAY”
When the
stress of the war in Iraq becomes too severe, the Pentagon
has a suggestion for military families: Learn how to laugh.
I am writing in reply to the
January 13th article titled "Pentagon to families: Go ahead,
laugh.”
Go ahead
and laugh? While our loved ones are in harms way, still
without proper armor, proper food, in a war that is an
illegal, immoral and unjust?
Laugh while our loved ones are
dying for nothing?
The families of these soldiers
have a right to be worried, frightened and angry!
What does
the Pentagon imply when they say "this is supposed to
prevent hardening of the attitudes" in the families of
deployed soldiers? Does this imply that we need not worry,
not to feel for our loved ones, just shut up and obey?
That we shouldn't have a voice? Just laugh it off?
This is just another huge slap
in the face of our military personnel and their families.
When our
loved ones go off to war we endure so much pain and worry
for our loved ones and their future, if they ever have one.
The Military doesn't offer us
any emotional support.
If the Pentagon thinks this
program of theirs helps families of Soldiers by teaching
them to laugh if off by acting like a penguin is humiliating
and disgusting.
Offer us real support by bringing our loved ones home.
I am the
Wife of a National Guard Soldier who served a year in Iraq.
I feel for
the Soldiers still in Iraq. I never intend to shift my
attitude on this war and I will fight even harder to bring
the Soldiers home!
Debra Anderson
Staten Island NY 10310
Brig.
General Says Bush In Iraq Like Hitler In Czechoslovakia:
“We Should
Get Out Fast!”
January 9, 2006 by John F.
McManus, Thenewamerican.com [Excerpt]
One of our
nation's most highly decorated combat veterans offers his
thoughts on the current war against Iraq, including why "we
should get out fast!"
Brigadier
General Andrew Gatsis is one of our nation's most highly
decorated veterans.
Awarded
numerous medals for bravery in combat during both the Korean
and Vietnam Wars, he retired from active duty in 1975 after
more than three decades of service in the U.S. Army.
THE NEW AMERICAN sought him
out for his thoughts about the current war against Iraq, and
he minced no words. "We never should have gone in there in
the first place since we weren't immediately threatened," he
thundered.
"There were no weapons of mass
destruction; Saddam Hussein's regime had no connection to
Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, and wasn't responsible for the
attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center; and
there wasn't any evidence to back up the claim that Iraq was
building nuclear weapons capability.
“All the reasons given by the
administration to justify this war have been shown to be
false."
The general
is angry at what the president and his administration have
done.
They
originally claimed the attack on Iraq was needed to fight
terrorism and now insist that the effort is needed "to build
democracy" in Iraq. He wants to know: "Who are we to tell
the Iraqi people what kind of government they should have?"
"We invaded a country that
posed no threat to us," says the general.
"What's
different about what we have done in Iraq and what Hitler
did when he sent his forces into Czechoslovakia in 1939?
“This war in Iraq has already
cost the lives of 2,200 Americans, wounded over 15,000 more,
and left at least 30,000 Iraqis dead, most of whom were
non-combatants caught in crossfires or victimized by
Islamist terrorists. And look at the billions of dollars
being poured into this flawed effort. It saddens me to see
all of this happen to our troops, and all for an unjust
cause."
Asked what he believes the
Bush administration should do, he declared, "We should get
out fast!”
Brass
Condemn Bush Regime Soldier-Killing Rats
Jan. 11 U.S. Newswire
Army
General Wesley Clark:
"The fact
is that the Administration is not providing the resources to
protect our soldiers. The men and women who are serving are
just not getting the support they need.
“The
rhetoric from the Administration doesn't match its actions,
and the result is unnecessary combat fatalities. I think
this is a clear case where Congressional investigation is
warranted."
Lt. Colonel
Andrew Horne, a Marine who served two tours in Iraq:
"Commanders on the ground:
their primary responsibilities are completion of their
mission and the welfare of their troops.
“The fact
that commanders asked for this equipment, asked for the
studies to see what changes could be made, and then, for
literally the cost of a Humvee, they were denied funding for
the full investigation is just deplorable."
“How Does
The Pentagon Expect Us To Laugh Off Our Anger And Our
Fears?”
“This
‘Support Group’ Should Be Ashamed Of Themselves!”
From: Debbie Anderson, Vet Pax
Sent: January 15, 2006
Subject: Another Letter to
editor Re: “Pentagon to families: Go ahead, laugh”
I was
asked to forward this letter out to you in response to the
article in USA today. It is from Francine who is a member of
MFSO and a dear friend of mine.
Debbie
Anderson
In response
to the 1/13/06 article "Pentagon to families: Go ahead,
laugh." I am a wife of a New York Army National Guard
soldier, my husband just returned this past fall from a year
long tour of duty in Iraq.
Though, "laughing" may be
considered "support" by those in the Pentagon, let me tell
you what we really need, and do not get! As National Guard
families, we are in complete shock when our soldiers get
those orders. Our soldiers enlisted to help here at home,
with hurricanes, floods and other National Disasters.
And in a post 9/11/01 world,
they are here to work to keep us safe during times of
terrorism threats. Unlike our active duty counterparts, we
do not live on the same base or the same town or in many
instances the same state! So we go through the deployment
alone. We are lonely, we need to share our feelings, we
need to be able to talk about the latest email or phone call
that we got from our loved one.
And we need to share our
complete and total fear when those phone calls don't come,
because during those times, our lives completely stop.
We imagine the worst, we don't
know if we will ever see our husbands, wives, fathers,
mothers, brothers, and sisters again.
So, yes
military families need support, but it needs to be something
of substance and understanding. How does the Pentagon
expect us to laugh off our anger and our fears?
I am
insulted and mortified by this article.
And this
"support group" should be ashamed of themselves!
Francine
Queens, NY

As V.A. Fails The Wounded:
“They Lose
Their Arms And Legs. And We Just Discard Them. You Know,
Like They Are Ipods Or Old Telephones Or Something”
“(Increased funding) is an obligation that the nation
has, and needs to pick up,” Wiblemo said. “You can’t
send (soldiers) over there and bring them back here and
say, ‘Oh, sorry, you’re on your own!’ … The recognition
needs to be there, and the bill needs to be paid.”
Jan. 13, 2006 By Jessica
Bennett, Newsweek
With record
numbers of soldiers surviving injuries that would have
killed them in earlier wars, veterans' organizations are
questioning whether the federal government is able or is
willing to cope with the demand for health-care benefits,
rehabilitation services and ongoing treatment.
And if Washington can't do it, then who should?
Enter the Intrepid Fallen
Heroes Fund. Since last July, the nonprofit group has
raised more than $25 million in private funds for the
construction of a training and rehabilitation center for
soldiers returning from battle with catastrophic injuries
and amputations.
But should
such an institution really be funded by private sources?
The debate is being fueled by
syndicated radio host Don Imus, who has donated $250,000 and
has made raising money for the fund a regular feature on his
morning show.
On Friday
he told listeners he doesn't know why "the government
wouldn't just simply pay for (the center), considering the
extraordinary amount of money they spend on ... this idiotic
war."
And later
said "We have a tradition in this country, well, going back
to the Civil War, in which we send off young people to fight
these wars. Stuff happens to them. They lose their arms
and legs. And we just discard them. You know, like they
are iPods or old telephones or something."
In
2004, military officials, including then-Secretary of
Defense Paul Wolfowitz, unveiled plans for a
multimillion-dollar amputee-training center to be built
at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.
At the
time, Maj. Gen. Kenneth Farmer, commanding general of
the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command and the
Walter Reed staff praised “the record time” at which the
project had gone “from concept to reality.”
But
that plan was put on hold in August when Walter Reed was
put on a closure list as part of the federal
base-closing process. It is slated to shut down in 2011.
At one VA
hospital, says Cathy Wiblemo, deputy director for healthcare
at the American Legion, there is a seven-year backlog to
receive dental care.
At another,
a surgery ward was closed because there wasn’t sufficient
staff to operate it.
“(Increased
funding) is an obligation that the nation has, and needs to
pick up,” Wiblemo said.
“You can’t
send (soldiers) over there and bring them back here and say,
‘Oh, sorry, you’re on your own!’ … The recognition needs to
be there, and the bill needs to be paid.”
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Al-Mada’ain
Peoples Declare Civil Disobedience Against Collaborator
Troops
January 14, 2006 Association
of Victims of American Occupation Prisons (NGO)
The peoples
of the town Al-Mada’ain declared a civil disobedience as a
protest against the police and the national guards’
exercises when they arrested a big number of the citizens
that reached to 500 arrested and also the assassination of
many of the well-known men of the town by them.
The
aggression was through the breaking into the houses that
they did attack women.
The town people complained
about closing all the roads using the concrete barriers
(blocks) and barbed wire which made it hard for living and
delay the citizens to get to their work and school for many
hours.
The town
people doubt the seriousness of the government in handling
their problems that most of the governmental offices in the
town have been moved outside the town and the employees who
are from the town people have been fired and dismissed.
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
Assorted
Resistance Action:
Collaborator Officers Targeted
Jan 15, 2006 By DPA &
(Xinhuanet) & Reuters & By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press
Writer
BAIJI -
Guerrillas shot dead a
police colonel on Saturday in the oil refinery city of
Baiji, the local authorities said.
ULWIYA:
Guerrillas shot dead a
police brigadier and major after abducting them
on Saturday in the village of Ulwiya near Hawija, 70 km (43
miles) southwest of Kirkuk, police said.
A senior
police intelligence officer was killed Sunday in Baquba,
60 kilometres northeast of Baghdad, said
security sources. Guerrillas killed 1st Lieutenant Qahtan
Mohammed while he was at an auto repair shop, the sources
said.
Meanwhile,
an assassination attempt on a high-ranking Iraqi army
officer from the northern city of Kirkuk caused serious
injury to the official and four of his guards, said police
sources. Their vehicle destroyed in the
attack.
The convoy of Brigadier
General Fraidoun al-Talabani was struck by a roadside bomb
in west of the Toz Khormato town near Tikrit.
Earlier, four policemen were
seriously wounded when a makeshift bomb went off near their
patrol in the town.
Al-Talabani
is assistant commander of the Iraqi fourth brigade which is
deployed in Kirkuk, Tikrit and Baquba.
TAZA: Four
policemen were wounded when a makeshift bomb exploded near
their patrol near Taza, police said.
BALAD - An
Iraqi soldier was killed and another wounded on Saturday
when a roadside bomb went off near their patrol in the city
of Balad.
Guerrillas
in Baghdad killed two police.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
How Bad Is
It?
“Even The
Iraqi Shops On US Bases Have Closed For Fear Of Rebel
Infiltration”
January 12, 2006 Times
Newspapers Ltd.
Much of the damage was done
early on. Battle-hardened troops launched house raids that
horrified Iraqis, who jealously guard their privacy and the
modesty of their women. Doors were kicked in. Money and
valuables were reported stolen.
But little
has changed. “I’m a door kicker-inner,” one young Marine
blurted out in Fallujah last month, to the dismay of his
superiors.
The intensifying violence has
only increased the distance between US troops and ordinary
Iraqis, with ever-higher walls being built around bases, and
US military vehicles warning drivers they will be shot if
they come close.
Even the
Iraqi shops on US bases have closed for fear of rebel
infiltration.
Exactly
01/14/2006 (AP)
Commanders
in both units say insurgents are adept at hiding their work
and improving their bombs. And they are quick to learn.
"All the
stupid ones are dead," said Capt. Jamey Turner of Baton
Rouge, La., a brigade commander in Beiji.
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
Fifteen
Years Of War, And Who's Better Off?
Ask Cindy
Sheehan And Most Any Other Mother Who Has Lost A Child To
War
[NOTE: IN THE PREVIOUS GI SPECIAL, THE LINE CREDITING
THE AUTHOR WAS DROPPED. HERE IS PAGE ONE AGAIN.
APOLOGIES TO RON JACOBS. For the full article see GI
Special 4A8 at: http://www.militaryproject.org/]
To: GI Special
Date: 1.14.06
Subject: 15 Years Of War
By Ron
Jacobs
[Ron Jacobs
writes frequently and well for a variety of publications
opposed to the war in Iraq.]
"I've told
the American people before that this will not be another
Vietnam, and I repeat this here tonight.... I'm hopeful
that this fighting will not go on for long and that
casualties will be held to an absolute minimum.
“This is
an historic moment. We have in this past year made great
progress in ending the long era of conflict and cold war.
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves and
for future generations a new world order..."
--George
Herbert Walker Bush on January 16, 1991 announcing the
attack on Iraq
Fifteen years have passed
since Bush the Elder first attacked the nation of Iraq.
Just remembering that evening
recalls the fear and foreboding those first US bombs brought
with them.
No matter
how you look at it, Washington is no closer to conquering
Iraq than they were on January 16, 1991.
Yet, its
armies march onward into a hell of their own making. And
they are taking the rest of us with them, whether we
acknowledge it or not.
Is Iraq a
better place? Although the answer to this question depends
on where one sits, I will only say that a country being torn
apart by war is rarely better off than when it is at peace.
I hope that there will be
others writing about the progress or the lack thereof in
that shattered country fifteen years on, but that is not my
purpose here. I won't delve into the meaning of the hundreds
of thousands of Iraqi deaths since that January evening.
I
don't live in Iraq. I live
in the United States. So, I'm going to take a look at the US
homeland fifteen years after the first wholesale invasion of
Iraq by Washington's forces. How are the people living in
this country faring?
Are we
better off? Are we a freer people?
As I said
before, the answers to this question depend on where one
sits. Given that, let me say that I sit in the US South and
I work for a living that pays less than $10.00 an hour. My
situation is not uncommon. In fact, it seems to be the
standard. That said, let's take a look at this new world
order and what it means for people in my economic situation.