GI SPECIAL 4B12:
SOWING THE
WIND: 2003
REAPING THE
WHIRLWIND: 2006

Former
Iraqi Army soldiers shout anti-American slogans during a
protest outside of the Republican Palace in Baghdad June 2,
2003. Hundreds of former Iraqi soldiers protested outside
the office compound of Iraq's U.S. occupiers, demanding pay
for all troops dismissed when the American civil
administrator abolished the country's military.
(AP Photo/Murad Sezer)
“Let Your
Conscience Be Your Guide. You Did Not Sign Up To Be Storm
Troopers”
The Federal
Eviction Management Agency (FEMA) & The Louisiana National
Guard
It
would likely be illegal for me to ask Louisiana National
Guardsman to refuse to be the instruments of domination
to subjugate their own neighbors as if they were
unwanted livestock. It was also once illegal to harbor
fugitive slaves.
So I
will say instead, let your conscience be your guide.
You did not sign up to be storm troopers.
2.11.06 By
Stan Goff, Master Sgt., U.S. Army Special Forces (ret’d),
Huffingtonpost.com
We already
know what class the federal government represents.
In any
choice between profit and people in need, the people will
lose every time.
Our
government is big business writ large, and big business is
Darwinian.
That's why
the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), a federal
bureaucracy allegedly organized to help people like the
survivors of Hurricane Katrina, has terminated its "direct
payment program for hotel rooms through Corporate Lodging
Consultants (CLC)" triggering a mass eviction program of
more than 4,500 hurricane survivors from hotels across the
country.
Now that our attention deficit
compassion fatigue has kicked in, these 'low-class dark
people' hanging around the hotels, it seems, are not good
for business.
The hotel bills were paid with
FEMA money, after CLC, a giant "lodging management service"
corporation, got its cut, of course.
So while thousands of FEMA
housing trailers sit pristine and unused behind chain-link
fences up and down the Gulf Coast, with many being used to
house high-dollar government workers from Republican crony
contractors, those numbered at the disaster trough range
from AshBritt, a Florida-based contractor leviathan with
close ties to neo-segregationist Mississippi Governor Haley
Barbour (who served as Bush's fundraising chief) to morgues
run by Kenyon (subsidiary of the Texas-based,
friend-of-George, scandal-tarred Service Corporation
International, implicated in the discarding of corpses).
Catastrophe is big business,
and a humanitarian response to catastrophe is not
profitable. We are now witnessing, in the most concrete
way, how survivors of a storm can become victims of their
own government, which counts them as disposable.
Just as Kenyon disposed of the
dead, FEMA is now overseeing the disposal of the living. I
once heard a hurricane insurance adjustor living on his
houseboat in Galveston refer to his profession as "storm
trooper." Get it? Storm... Seems an apt appellation for
this case, no?
But there
are actual troopers out there who didn't sign up to put on a
pair of jackboots.
They are
the National Guard of each state.
Together
with the usual perfidious incentives like "money for school"
in exchange for "one weekend a month" (This has become a
grim joke now in Iraq), many people join the National Guard
out of altruism.
They have grown up with the
images of the National Guard rescuing people in distress,
people from their own states and communities, like hurricane
survivors in the Gulf Coast.
I spoke
with one of these Louisiana National Guard troops (who
has requested anonymity until he separates from service)
on the phone two nights ago, and I've been seething ever
since.
The
National Guard is now being employed to assist the
extremely sketchy New Orleans Police with these hotel
evictions; and some of the troops don't like it a bit.
Said
this distressed young man on the telephone, "This is
f***ing unbelievable. We were given an operations order
to herd our fellow New Orleanians onto buses like cattle
or convicts in the middle of the night. They weren't
even allowed to pick up their belongings. We (the
National Guard) were responsible to inventory their
stuff and bag it up."
There
is a really big New Orleans round-up scheduled, he
advised me, on Monday night, February 13th.
Happy Valentine's Day.
The reason, according to this
source, that these operations are being conducted at night
is to evade press coverage and public outrage. The same
people who were wiped out by Katrina are now being
disappeared under the direction of FEMA and its adoptive
parent, the union-busting Department of Fatherland Security.
When I was in New Orleans and
the Gulf Coast two weeks ago to plan for the upcoming
Veterans' and Survivors' March for Peace and Justice, this
once bustling city had huge sections that looked like the
third world. Ominously, many residents describe some areas
as "Baghdad."
The
National Guardsman with whom I spoke is an Iraq returnee,
and he has plenty to say about that experience as well:
nothing positive.
He said
that he had returned from one cruel military occupation
abroad to what seemed like another one at home. Indeed, one
can drive around New Orleans right now and see armed
soldiers stationed on street corners just as I have seen as
a soldier myself in the colonized peripheries of the third
world.
It would
likely be illegal for me to ask Louisiana National Guardsman
to refuse to be the instruments of domination to subjugate
their own neighbors as if they were unwanted livestock. It
was also once illegal to harbor fugitive slaves.
So I will
say instead, let your conscience be your guide.
You did not
sign up to be storm troopers.
This
administration wants to impose a one-party security state,
but they can only do it if they can depend on you to suspend
your critical judgment with the declaration that "I'm just
doing my job."
As the old
line went from Cool Hand Luke, "Callin' it your job don't
make it right, boss."
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
One U.S.
Soldier Wounded In Samarra
February 12, 2006 Associated
Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. troops
from the 101st Airborne Division detained five suspected
insurgents Saturday and were targeted by two roadside bombs
in Samarra, the military said.
The first blast shortly before
1 p.m. caused no U.S. casualties, the division said.
Soldiers who spotted a vehicle fleeing the scene radioed
ahead to another American patrol, which shot at the car and
killed one suspected terrorist, the military said in a
statement.
Several
hours later, a second explosion hit a U.S. patrol, wounding
one American Soldier and two Iraqi passers-by, who were all
taken to a nearby military hospital for treatment.
Rumsfeld
Says Syria Allowing Foreign Fighters To Enter Iraq
February 10, 2006 By ROBERT
BURNS, AP Military Writer
Sicily -- Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld cautioned Iran and Syria against trying
to undermine the newly elected government in Iraq, but he
also said he understood their determination to resist U.S.
efforts to stop them.
But he
alluded to repeated U.S. government allegations that the
Syrians are aiding the insurgency by allowing foreign
fighters to cross their border into western Iraq.
MORE:
U.S.
Officers In Iraq Say Rumsfeld Lying:
His
Bullshit About Syria “A Myth”
February 11, 2006 By Ann Scott
Tyson, Washington Post Staff Writer [Excerpts]
"It's much more than just a
line in the sand right now," said Lt. Col. Gregory Reilly of
Sacramento, Calif., commander of a U.S. cavalry squadron
that oversees about 115 miles of Iraq's northwestern border
with Syria, from the Tigris River to the Euphrates. "It's
not like a vast open border, not at all. It's a very
difficult border to cross."
Syrian
border police are also aggressively patrolling their side,
Reilly said, in contrast with official statements in
Washington accusing Damascus of lax control.
"The Syrians are actually
doing their job. They are more violent than we are. If they
see someone, they will open up shooting," Reilly said as he
walked along a dirt berm in view of Syrian guards several
weeks ago.
"The myth
is that foreign fighters are crossing a porous border," said
Maj. Chris Kennedy, executive officer with the 3rd Armored
Cavalry.
Instead,
many of the incoming fighters can simply fly into Baghdad,
using valid Iraqi passports made from "boxes and boxes" of
blank passports shipped out of Iraq during Saddam Hussein's
rule, Kennedy and other U.S. officers said.
LIAR
TRAITOR
TROOP-KILLER
DOMESTIC
ENEMY
UNFIT FOR
COMMAND

REUTERS/Jason Reed
TROOP NEWS
Army Short
3,500 Officers:
Iraq Vets
Getting Out;
“We All
Joke That We Live In Iraq And Were Deployed To Fort Carson
For Ten Months”
February 12, 2006 By Ann Scott
Tyson, Washington Post Staff Writer [Excerpts]
The Army,
forecasting a shortage of several thousand officers as
wartime demands grow, is boosting the incentives it offers
to try to hold on to experienced commanders.
By 2007, the Army projects it
will be short 3,500 active-duty officers, primarily captains
and majors: positions that are needed for new combat
brigades and other units that are critical to plans for
expanding and reorganizing the nation's ground forces.
The Army projects it will fall
7 percent short of the number of active-duty officers it
needs with ranks from captain to colonel, with shortages
rising to 15 to 50 percent for dozens of specific ranks and
skills.
The shortfall could worsen if
the number of officers leaving the force continues to grow.
The percentage of officers, from lieutenants to colonels,
who leave the Army each year has been rising since 2004.
Many junior
officers, in particular, those who have served two tours in
Iraq, now plan to get out, according to recent interviews
with dozens of Army officers in Iraq and the United States.
"I want to have a normal life
with my wife," said Capt. Adam M. Smith, an intelligence
officer with the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which after
two Iraq rotations since 2003 is having difficulty retaining
experienced junior officers. "I have spent two years in Iraq
with about ten months in between," Smith wrote in a recent
e-mail from Iraq.
Deciding to
leave the Army was hard, Smith said, but he estimated 40
percent of officers in his unit are making the same choice.
One new Army program increases
from 400 to 600 the number of slots for junior officers to
attend fully funded graduate school on the condition they
serve three additional years for each year of study, Harvey
said. Unlike in the past, infantry and other combat arms
officers can participate, offering them a break from war
zone rotations.
Since last
fall, the Army has ordered hundreds of officers from the
Individual Ready Reserve (IRR) to report to U.S. bases to
prepare for Iraq deployments, according to interviews with
more than a dozen officers and Army officials with knowledge
of the call-ups.
"It's a
back-door draft," complained Capt. Melinda Thein, who said
she earned a Bronze Star for her role in the invasion and
early occupation of Iraq.
"Why don't they get us at the
beginning of our IRR commitment? They are getting us at the
very end," she said in a phone interview.
Thein's
required time in the IRR will end in May. But under her new
orders, which she received in a Western Union Mailgram on
Christmas Eve, she will be extended for 18 months to return
to Iraq.
"The sheer
panic of maybe having to leave my family is more stressful
than being in a war," said Thein, who completed active-duty
service with a quartermaster unit in September 2003 and now
has an 11-month-old boy. She has written to her members of
Congress and requested an exemption based on family
hardship.
Another member of the officer
class of 1998 is Matthew King, 30, of Madison, Miss. He had
served on active duty for more than seven years, including
17 months deployed, 11 of them in Iraq, when he left his
unit June 28 last year.
Required to stay in the IRR
until in May, he is being called up for Iraq again.
"Why am I
getting called up so soon after I got out?" asked King,
especially given the Pentagon's desire to reduce troops in
Iraq.
[Army Secretary Francis J.]
Harvey said he would look into any complaints of unfairness
in the mobilizations, and acknowledged problems in
record-keeping.
Simply finding IRR members remains a problem, he said: "We
don't know where the hell half of them are, or 40 percent of
them are."
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. soldiers at the scene of
bomb attack in Baghdad February 3, 2006. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Japanese
Government Getting Troops Out Of Iraq
2.6.06 London Financial Times
Japan will
pull its troops out of Iraq "within several months,"
according to remarks attributed to a senior spokesman for
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. Japan has 550 non-combat
troops in southern Iraq's Samawa region, a relatively
peaceful district. The Tokyo government said in December it
would keep them in Iraq for up to a year, but left its
options open.
Rep. Ginny
Brown-Waite, Stupid Liar
2.7.06 St. Petersburg Times
The Florida Republican,
recalling the hostile public reception of some returning
Vietnam war veterans, writes:
"As far as I can tell, when
liberals say, "We support the troops," they mean this time
around they aren't going to spit on our vets and they won't
protest welcome-home celebrations."
[What this
dumb piece of shit has no clue about is that there was no
spitting on Vietnam troops by any anti-war demonstrators,
ever, and nobody claimed there was any until many years
after the war was over and all the Vietnam troops many years
home.
[Some
Vietnam veterans were indeed spit on during the Vietnam
war. They were members of Vietnam Veterans Against The War,
and they got spit on when demonstrating in New Jersey
against the war during Operation RAW (Rapid American
Withdrawal). They were spit on by “patriotic” dumbshits
just like Rep. Ginny Brown. T]
The
Government Fucking Over The Troops, As Usual:
811,000
Vets Stuck Waiting For V.A. To Act On Their Benefits
2/10/2006 U.S. Newswire
Organizations representing
millions of America's veterans are urging Congress to
increase the fiscal year 2007 Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) budget proposal by more than $2 billion to meet the
crucial health care needs of our nation's veterans and
eliminate an administration plan to create new fees and
double prescription co-payments for some veterans.
The
organizations have also expressed concern about inadequate
staffing levels at the VA's Veterans Benefits
Administration, saying there are too few employees to
properly decide disability compensation claims submitted to
the VA.
The backlog
exceeds 810,000 claims for compensation, pension and
education benefits which are awaiting adjudication or are on
appeal.
“The
Asbestos Companies Poisoned Our Heroes”
The
bottom line is the day the bill passes the asbestos
companies are relieved of all liability and handed a
bailout worth billions. This comes at the expense of
veterans who honorably served their country.
[Thanks to Katherine G, who
sent this in.]
10 Feb 2006
From: Kristin Keckeisen
ActionNetwork@action.action.peopleoverprofits.org
Subject:
Looking for Veterans
First the
asbestos companies poisoned our heroes; now they're pushing
an asbestos bill that provides a billion dollar corporate
bailout but leaves veterans with nothing.
Even worse,
some of the largest asbestos companies, operating through a
lobby group called the Asbestos Study Group (ASG), are
running a fraudulent public relations campaign using
veterans as a front to push an asbestos bill that provides
them a corporate bailout of at least $20 billion.
Our friends
at Protecting America's Families are organizing veterans and
their family members opposed to this outrageous corporate
bailout. Sign the Petition
http://action.peopleoverprofits.org/ctt.asp?u=4061670&l=116724
The bottom
line is the day the bill passes the asbestos companies are
relieved of all liability and handed a bailout worth
billions. This comes at the expense of veterans who
honorably served their country.
If you are
not a veteran or family member of a veteran, please spread
this message to others. The Senate is debating the bill
right now, so time is critical.
http://action.peopleoverprofits.org/ctt.asp?u=4061670&l=116729
For updates
on the Asbestos Bailout Bill go to
www.peopleoverprofits.org.
Sincerely,
Kristin
Keckeisen
Campaign
Manager, People Over Profits
Robert N.
Johnsen’s Story

San Jose,
California. Robert is 74 years old. As a young man he
served on board a ship in the U.S. Navy. While on that ship
he was exposed to asbestos. Later in life he was exposed to
asbestos again when he worked in a building under
construction. He was never adequately told of the dangers
asbestos posed.
Robert was
a successful consultant to the high-tech industry until he,
a lifelong non-smoker, was diagnosed with lung cancer on
February 3, 2005, and with mesothelioma, a terminal cancer
caused only by asbestos, on March 25, 2005.
A formerly active man who
raised four children, Robert now constantly suffers from
extreme fatigue, sleeping nine hours each night and
frequently throughout the day to fight his exhaustion. He
has difficulty breathing. Fluid constantly collects in his
abdomen, causing his weight to increase by about 25 pounds,
until that fluid is drained from his body and the whole
cycle repeats itself.
How would
the asbestos bailout bill hurt Robert’s family?
Robert
filed his case with the Superior Court of the State of
California on July 11, 2005. His case is set for trial in
2006. If the proposed asbestos bill is enacted, Robert’s
case will be eliminated and never heard in court. He would
have to start the claims process under the proposed asbestos
trust fund from the very beginning.
*****************************************
Bernard
Roy’s Story
Edgewater, Florida. Bernard
had always been an active man. He competed in the New
Smyrna Beach Senior Olympic Games, competing in track and
field, basketball, and bicycling. He was an avid
wood-worker. He liked to visit with friends and family and
go on vacation. He never smoked and regularly donated
blood. And he’s the father of six children.
In
September 2005, his life drastically changed. He was
diagnosed with mesothelioma, a terminal cancer caused only
by asbestos.
Bernard had
no idea that his service in the U.S. Navy, and his related
work afterwards, would lead to malignant cancer.
He served
from 1956 to 1962, with four of those years spent on active
duty. Following his service, he worked as a marine
machinist for the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard from 1961 to
1991. At the shipyard, he was exposed to
asbestos-containing products such as pumps, valves,
purifiers, compressors, generators, and engine equipment.
He was in close contact with this equipment on countless
Navy vessels throughout his 30-year machinist career.
Since his
diagnosis, Bernard’s physical health has deteriorated, and
he is unable to work. He endures pain, discomfort, and is
often physically incapacitated. He is currently undergoing
chemotherapy in an effort to prolong his life.
“I worry
about the future care of my wife and children,” said
Bernard. In particular, he worries about his youngest son
who is 16.
Now Bernard
is completely dependent upon his wife, Sylvia. She is
attending college in order to prepare for a future without
Bernard.
How would
the asbestos bailout bill hurt Bernard’s family?
Bernard
filed his case in Rhode Island in October 2005. The case is
pending. If the proposed asbestos bill is enacted,
Bernard’s case would be wiped out and he would have to start
the claims process again from the very beginning.
**********************************************
Fred
Magee’s Story
Bogalusa, Louisiana. Fred was
a once-vibrant man who enjoyed his retirement years visiting
with his grandchildren, taking care of his dogs, and taking
pride in maintaining his home. Fred had no previous health
problems when he was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a terminal
cancer that is caused only by asbestos.
Fred was
first exposed to asbestos in 1939, when he worked in a dry
cleaning shop. His job required him to change
asbestos-containing pads on the press machines. He then
worked at Todd Shipyard, Bethlehem Steel, and the Brooklyn
Navy Yard as a ship-fitter, welder, and iron worker from
1941 to 1966. While working on many U.S. Navy vessels, Fred
was repeatedly exposed to a variety of asbestos containing
products, not only in his own work, but also through the
work of others maintaining ship machinery. He was never
adequately made aware of potential risks to his health due
to exposure to asbestos.
After he was diagnosed with
mesothelioma, Fred’s health deteriorated quickly. Due to
the debilitating nature of his disease, he spent the last
several months of his life in a nursing home.
Fred’s son
and family incurred great expense in caring for him, but
they say that the financial impact could not compare to what
they have endured emotionally, watching him die.
How would
the asbestos bailout bill hurt Fred’s family?
Fred’s son,
Frederick T. Magee, Sr., has filed a case which is pending
in New York Supreme Court. If the proposed asbestos bill is
enacted, his case would be wiped out and he would have to
start the claims process again from the beginning under the
proposed asbestos trust fund.
**************************************************
Democracyinaction.com:
The legal
rights of American veterans are under attack in the United
States Senate.
Many of
those who have honorably served our country are sick from
asbestos exposure. Many thousands who were exposed may not
be aware that because of the long latency period they will
become sick in the future.
The worst asbestos-related
disease is a fatal cancer called mesothelioma, and nearly
30% of all cases involve veterans who were exposed in
military and shipyard construction.
Hundreds of thousands of other
veterans went to work after their military service and were
exposed to deadly asbestos fibers on the job.
Meanwhile,
the Veterans Administration doesn't have any programs to
help asbestos victims.
Veterans who were injured by
this deadly product, like all Americans, now have the right
to go to court so they can hold accountable the companies
that knowingly exposed them. They have the right to seek
compensation to cope with the devastating health and
financial consequences of asbestos-related diseases.
We urge
veterans and their families to join our organization to
oppose S. 852, the proposed asbestos trust fund. It will
delay and deny help for veterans while it takes away their
legal rights to hold the asbestos companies accountable.

[Thanks to Mark Shapiro, who sent this in.]
Adding
Insult To Injury:
Army Smears
Wounded Lt. Who Had To Pay For His Battle-Damaged Body
Armor:
“Lies And
Spin”
February 09, 2006 By Eric
Eyre, The West Virginia Gazette [Excerpts]
The U.S. Army will reimburse
former 1st Lt. William “Eddie” Rebrook IV of Charleston for
the soldier’s bloodied body armor that was damaged by a
roadside bomb in Iraq, an Army spokesman at Fort Hood,
Texas, said Wednesday.
Rebrook said the Army made him
pay for the body armor after he was medically discharged
last week.
The Army
concluded Wednesday that Rebrook failed to follow proper
procedures and fill out necessary paperwork to exempt the
body armor from a list of items Rebrook lost while on active
duty, according to a four-page report.
“The Army
did not make the decision that Lt. Rebrook should pay for
the items that were documented as combat losses. He did,”
the report says.
Rebrook,
25, disputed the Army’s findings Wednesday that he didn’t
follow standard procedures.
He said
senior officers told him that he had waited too long to
report the damaged vest, which was stripped from him and
burned as a biohazard after he was seriously injured in
battle in January 2005. He said a supply officer should
have documented the loss in Iraq.
“They said
I was personally negligent for taking so much time to bring
it to their attention,” Rebrook said. “They told me they
wouldn’t back me up. They told me I would have to pay for
those items if I ever wanted to leave Fort Hood.”
The Army’s report says Rebrook
was anxious to leave Fort Hood and decided to pay for the
body armor to “get it over with.”
Rebrook’s father, Ed Rebrook, denounced the report
Wednesday, saying the Army was spreading “lies and
spin.” Ed Rebrook went to Texas last week to pick up
his son and repeatedly spoke to him about the ordeal
over the body armor.
“Eddie did
follow proper procedures,” said Rebrook, a Charleston
lawyer. “They were running him from pillar to post, from
office to office. He did everything he was supposed to do.
They’re the ones at fault.”
Private:
$24,000 A Year;
War
Profiteer Average:
$11.1
Million A Year
February 8, 2006 DAVID
SWANSON, CounterPunch [Excerpt]
While an
Army private is paid $24,000, a private military contractor
$100,000, and a General with over 20 years experience
$168,000, the average military contractor CEO is bringing in
$11.5 million.
Military
contractors are leading the way in inequality and
unaccountability. Their average CEO to worker pay ratio is
over 400 to 1, and their top earners have made their bucks
by selling the US military defective equipment.
Military
contractors are also leading funders of Congress Members and
Senators.
Twenty percent of Americans
own 84 percent of the wealth in this country. Our country is
far more unequal than any other developed nation. And it
has become far less frequent for anyone born poor in America
to die rich.
Disgusting
Scum At Work
February 08, 2006 By REGINALD
PATRICK, STATEN ISLAND ADVANCE
Three
bronze plaques have been stolen from the Four Chaplains
Memorial at the former Stapleton home port.
The
memorial honors the Army clergymen who gave their life vests
to others when the troop ship Dorchester was torpedoed in
the North Atlantic during World War II.
Last Friday was the 63rd
anniversary of the sinking of that ship, which sailed from
Pier 11 on Staten Island's East Shore.
Eighty-year-old veteran John
Byrnes of Eltingville, who routinely makes the rounds of war
memorials to check up on them, learned that two plaques were
missing on Monday as he showed the monument to several young
people.
Byrnes immediately called
Victor Prevosti, 82, of West Brighton, past American Legion
Commander for Staten Island and Brooklyn. When Prevosti
visited the site yesterday, he found a third likeness had
been removed, leaving only one.
The missing 4-by-4-inch
plaques, which cost $600 each, were unscrewed from the
memorial, which was dedicated on Jan. 2, 1993.
The monument has a special
meaning for Prevosti, because he had a hand in its design.
Staten Island veterans groups paid to have the plaques cast.
The military supplied the concrete and marble, he said.
After a
German submarine torpedoed the Dorchester near Greenland on
Feb. 3, 1943, U.S. Army chaplains Lt. George L. Fox, Lt.
John P. Washington, Lt. Alexander D. Goode and Lt. Clark V.
Poling became legends.
They
distributed life vests, directed men to lifeboats and gave
their own vests to other soldiers. As survivors floated away
from the sinking ship, they could hear and see the
chaplains, arms linked, offering a prayer.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action

Policeman car that was hit in a roadside bomb in the
northern city of Kirkuk. (AFP/Marwan Ibrahim)
Feb. 12, 2006 By ASSOCIATED
PRESS & Reuters & Aljazeera
Insurgents
fired a mortar into Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone,
home to the U.S. Embassy and Iraqi government. The explosion
that rocked Baghdad shortly before midday but caused no
casualties, the U.S. military said.
A group of
armed men in a speeding car killed Education Ministry
official Karim Selman al-Zaidi in Baqouba, 35 miles
northeast of Baghdad, Diyala police's Joint Coordination
Center said.
Four
policemen were wounded when a roadside bomb went off near
their patrol in the northern city of Kirkuk, 250 km (155
miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
Guerrillas
killed four policemen while they were driving in a civilian
car in the main road between Kirkuk and Tikrit, 175 km (110
miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
The corpse
of a Kurdish contractor working with the U.S. army was found
on Saturday in Kirkuk, police said.
Three
police commandos and a civilian were killed and four
commandos wounded when a suicide bomber wearing an explosive
belt blew himself up near a check point in southern Baghdad,
police said.
Guerrillas
captured three truck drivers who were carrying equipment to
a U.S. military base on Saturday in Yathrib, a region near
Balad, 90 km (55 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
Two Iraqi
police officers were killed and another nine wounded when
armed fighters attacked a police convoy near Amiriyat
al-Falluja in the city of Falluja, an Iraqi police source
told Aljazeera.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
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
Gy Sgt
Writes:
“This Whole
Article Is Misleading”
[The letter following refers
to an article: Untrained Marines Sent to Their Deaths: No
Weapons Practice; No Money For
Ammunition; Combat Training Cut In Half, BY DAVID WOOD,
NEWHOUSE NEWS SERVICE, August 24, 2004 carried in GI
Special: 8.25.04 2#B41 T]
From: Porter GySgt Robert G
To: GI Special
Sent: February 07, 2006
Subject: Untrained Marines
Sent To Their Deaths
To Whom it
may concern,
I just read
your article "Untrained Marines Sent To Their Deaths" LINK:
http://www.militaryproject.org/article.asp?id=304
This whole
article is misleading, Marines are shifting from firing
"Live" rounds to ISMT (Individual systems marksmanship
Trainer) produced by the FATS. This system saves the
Military money and ammunition.
The added
benefit is that it is safer than live firing. After an
individual has trained in the ISMT they then will get
trained on the real weapon using "Live" rounds.
LINK for FATS:
http://www.fatsinc.com/Military_Training_System.htm
If you
don't think that is adequate, here is some training my guys
got from the NRA before we deployed to Iraq.
http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/ac95bc775efc34c685256ab50049d458/
f75bd69bb4dde526852570f9003f9a6b?OpenDocument&Highlight=2,nra
Semper
Fidelis
GySgt R.G.
Porter
First
Sergeant
Military
Police Company, 1st FSSG
Camp
Pendleton, CA 92055
DSN: 361-3021
Greek Mythology: We owe this
word to the more heroic age of Homer, in whose Odyssey; he
tells of a trusted counselor, Mentor who was an old friend
of Odysseus's. To him (Mentor) Odysseus entrusted his
household when he joined the coalition that sailed against
Troy and the tens years of War. Mentor became the guide of
Odysseus' son Telemachus, giving him prudent counsel. Since
then, wise and trusted advisers have been called "Mentors".
Classification:
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The information
transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to
which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or
privileged material or information. Any review,
retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of
any action in reliance upon, this information or material by
persons or entities other than the intended recipient is
prohibited. If you received this in error, please contact
the sender and delete the material or information from your
machine. If this e-mail is marked "FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY"
it may be exempt from mandatory disclosure under FOIA. DoD
5400.7R, "DoD Freedom of Information Act Program", DoD
Directive 5230.9, "Clearance of DoD Information for Public
Release", and DoD Instruction 5230.29, "Security and Policy
Review of DoD Information for Public Release" apply.
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
Mercenaries
Slaughter More Civilians:
“These
Foreigners Do Not Care About The Lives Of Iraqis”
February 10, 2006 By Borzou
Daragahi and Richard Boudreaux, LA Times Staff Writers
[Excerpt]
In the
northern city of Kirkuk, tensions rose over the killing
Tuesday of several civilians by contract security guards
stationed at a U.S. army base. American
and Iraqi officials said they were conducting a joint
investigation into the deaths.
The guards,
working for the State Department, opened fire from two GMC
sport utility vehicles, killing two Kurdish men in separate
cars and wounding a third at a traffic circle north of
Kirkuk, said Maj. Gen. Shirko Shakir, the city's police
chief.
The number and nationality of
the guards involved and the name of their company were not
disclosed. Lt. Col. James Johnson, commander of the 2nd
Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, said the guards were
"under our control" while the investigation proceeded. In a
written statement, he called the shooting "regrettable." The
regiment is part of the Army's 101st Airborne Division,
which is responsible for security in Kirkuk.
Angry
relatives buried the two men and demanded that the killers
be punished. Several Iraqi politicians demanded abolition
of a law that grants immunity from prosecution to American
and allied forces and private contractors working for them.
"There was
nothing going on at the time of the shooting that could
justify it," said Imad Hameed Ibrahim, whose uncle, Nizam
Qadir, 25, was killed at the wheel of his taxi. "These
foreigners do not care about the lives of Iraqis."
The Raid:
Terrorists
At Work In The New Iraq
They
took at least a dozen men from my aunts area alone,
their ages between 19 and 40.
The
street behind us doesn’t have a single house with a male
under the age of 50- lawyers, engineers, students,
ordinary laborers: all hauled away by the 'security
forces’ of the New Iraq. The only thing they share in
common is the fact that they come from Sunni families
(with the exception of two who I'm not sure about).
February 11, 2006 Riverbend,
Baghdad Burning, riverbendblog.blogspot.com
We were collected at my aunts
house for my cousins birthday party a few days ago. J. just
turned 16 and my aunt invited us for a late lunch and some
cake. It was a very small gathering, three cousins,
including myself, my parents, and J.’s best friend, who also
happened to be a neighbor.
The lunch was quite good: my
aunt is possibly one of the best cooks in Baghdad. She
makes traditional Iraqi food and for J.’s birthday she had
prepared all our favorites- dolma (rice and meat wrapped in
grape leaves, onions, peppers, etc.), beryani rice, stuffed
chicken, and some salads. The cake was ready-made and it
was in the shape of a friendly-looking fish, J.’s father
having forgotten she was an Aquarius and not a Pisces when
he selected it, "I thought everyone born in February was a
Pisces…" He explained when we pointed out his mistake.
When it was time to blow out
the candles, the electricity was out and we stood around her
in the dark and sang "Happy Birthday" in two different
languages. She squeezed her eyes shut briefly to make a
wish and then, with a single breath, she blew out the
candles. She proceeded to open gifts: bear pajamas, boy
band CDs, a sweater with some sparkly things on it, a red
and beige book bag… Your typical gifts for a teenager.
The gift that made her
happiest, however, was given by her father. After she’d
opened up everything, he handed her a small, rather heavy,
silvery package. She unwrapped it hastily and gasped with
delight, "Baba, it’s lovely!" She smiled as she held it up
to the light of the gas lamp to show it off. It was a Swiss
Army knife, complete with corkscrew, nail clippers, and a
bottle opener.
"You can carry it around in
your bag for protection when you go places!" He explained.
She smiled and gingerly pulled out the blade, "And look:
when the blade is clean, it works as a mirror!" We all
oohed and aahed our admiration and T., another cousin,
commented she’d get one when the Swiss Army began making
them in pink.
I tried to remember what I got
on my 16th birthday and I was sure it wasn’t a knife of any
sort.
By 8 pm, my parents and J.’s
neighbor were gone. They had left me and T., our
24-year-old female cousin, to spend a night. It was 2 am
and we had just gotten J.’s little brother into bed. He had
eaten more than his share of cake and the sugar had made him
wild for a couple of hours.
We were gathered in the living
room and my aunt and her husband, Ammoo S. (Ammoo = uncle)
were asleep. T., J. and I were speaking softly and looking
for songs on the radio, having sworn not to sleep before the
cake was all gone.
T. was
playing idly with her mobile phone, trying to send a message
to a friend. "Hey, there’s no coverage here… is it just my
phone?" She asked. J. and I both took out our phones and
checked, "Mine isn’t working either…" J. answered, shaking
her head. They both turned to me and I told them that I
couldn’t get a signal either. J. suddenly looked alert and
made a sort of "Uh-oh" sound as she remembered something.
"R., will you check the telephone next to you?" I picked up
the ordinary telephone next to me and held my breath,
waiting for a dial tone. Nothing.
"There’s no
dial tone… but there was one earlier today, I was online…"
J. frowned
and turned down the radio. "The last time this happened,"
she said, "the area was raided." The room was suddenly
silent and we strained our ears. Nothing. I could hear a
generator a couple of streets away, and I also heard the
distant barking of a dog, but there was nothing out of the
ordinary.
T. suddenly
sat up straight, "Do you hear that?" She asked, wide-eyed.
At first I couldn’t hear anything and then I caught it; it
was the sound of cars or vehicles, moving slowly. "I can
hear it!" I called back to T., standing up and moving
towards the window. I looked out into the darkness and
couldn’t see anything beyond the dim glow of lamps behind
windows here and there.
"You won’t see anything from
here; it’s probably on the main road!" J. jumped up and
went to shake her father awake, "Baba, baba, get up, I think
the area is being raided." I heard J. call out as she
approached her parents room. Ammoo S. was awake in moments
and we heard him wandering around for his slippers and robe
asking what time it was.
Meanwhile, the sound of cars
had gotten louder and I remembered that one could see some
of the neighborhood from a window on the second floor. T.
and I crept upstairs quietly. We heard Ammoo S. unlocking 5
different locks on the kitchen door. "What’s he doing?" T.
asked, "Shouldn’t he keep the doors locked?"
We were looking out the window
and there was the glow of lights a few streets away. I
couldn’t see exactly where they came from, as several houses
were blocking our view, but we could tell something
extraordinary was going on in the neighborhood. The sound
of vehicles was getting louder, and it was accompanied by
the sound of clanging doors and lights that would flash
every once in a while.
We
clattered downstairs and found J. and the aunt bustling
around in the dark. "What should we do?" T. asked, wringing
her hands nervously. The only time I’d ever experienced a
raid was back in 2003 at an uncle’s house, and it was
Americans. This was the first time I was to witness what we
assumed would be an Iraqi raid.
My aunt was seething quietly,
"This is the third time the bastards raid the area in 2
months… We’ll never get any peace or quiet…"
I stood at their bedroom door
and watched as she made the bed. They lived in a mixed
neighborhood: Sunnis, Shia and Christians. It was a
relatively new neighborhood that began growing in the late
eighties. Most of the neighbors have known each other for
years. "We don’t know what they’re looking for… La Ilaha Ila
Allah…"
I stood awkwardly, watching
them make preparations. J. was already in her room
changing, she called out for us to do the same, "They’ll
come in the house, you don’t want to be wearing pajamas…"
"Why, will they have camera
crews with them?" T. smiled wanly, attempting some humor.
No, J. replied, her voice muffled as she put on a sweater,
"Last time they made us wait outside in the cold."
I listened
for Ammoo S. and heard him outside, taking the big padlock
off of the gate in the driveway. "Why are you unlocking
everything J.?" I called out in the dark.
"The
animals will break down the doors if they aren’t open in
three seconds and then they’ll be all over the garden and
house… last time they pushed the door open on poor Abu H.
three houses down and broke his shoulder…"
J. was fully changed, and over
her jeans and sweater she was wearing her robe. It was cold.
My aunt had dressed too and
she was making her way upstairs to carry down my
three-year-old cousin B. "I don’t want him waking up with
all the noise and finding those bastards around him in the
dark."
Twenty
minutes later, we were all assembled in the living room.
The house was dark except for the warm glow of the kerosene
heater and a small lamp in the corner. We were all dressed
and waiting nervously, wrapped in blankets. T. and I sat on
the ground while my aunt and her husband sat on the couch,
B. wrapped in a blanket between them. J. was sitting in an
armchair across from them. It was nearly 4 am.
Meanwhile,
the noises outside had gotten louder as the raid got
closer. Every once in a while, you could hear voices
calling out for people to open a door or the sharp banging
of a rifle against a door.
Last
time they had raided my aunts area, they took away four
men on their street alone. Two of them were students in
their early twenties; one a law student, and the other
an engineering student, and the third man was a
grandfather in his early sixties.
There
was no accusation, no problem, they were simply ordered
outside, loaded up into a white pickup truck and driven
away with a group of other men from the area. Their
families haven’t heard from them since and they visit
the morgue almost daily in anticipation of finding them
dead.
"There will be no problem," My
aunt said sternly, looking at each of us, thin-lipped. "You
will not say anything improper and they will come in, look
around and go." Her eyes lingered on Ammoo S. He was
silent. He had lit a cigarette and was inhaling deeply. J.
said he’d begun smoking again a couple of months ago after
having quit for ten years. "Are your papers ready?" She
asked him, referring to his identification papers which
would be requested. He didn’t answer, but nodded his head
silently.
We waited. And waited… I
began nodding off and my dreams were interspersed with
troops and cars and hooded men. I woke to the sound of T.
saying, "They’re almost here…" And lifted my head, groggy
with what I thought was at least three hours of sleep. I
squinted down at my watch and noted it was not yet 5 am.
"Haven’t they gotten to us yet?" I asked.
Ammoo S.
was pacing in the kitchen. I could hear him coming and
going in his slippers, pausing every now and then in front
of the window. My aunt was still on the couch; she sat with
B. in her arms, rocking him gently and murmuring prayers.
J. was doing a last-minute check, hiding valuables and
gathering our handbags into the living room, "They took
baba’s mobile phone during the last raid, make sure your
mobile phones are with you."
I could
feel my heart pounding in my ears and I got closer to the
kerosene heater in an attempt to dispel the cold that seemed
to have permanently taken over my fingers and toes. T. was
trembling, wrapped in her blanket. I waved her over to the
heater but she shook her head and answered, "I