GI SPECIAL 4B19:

Elitists In
Action:
UFPJ Kicks
Gays [And Veterans] To The Curb Again
[Note
well. In addition to this writer’s complaint, not one
organization of veterans against the war was considered
worthy of listing. See the list below.
[This is
the same bullshit that happened with the 9.24.05 mass
demonstration in Washington DC, when representatives of
veterans' organizations were excluded from the speakers’
platform. Oh, I’m wrong. One or two Iraq vets did get a
minute towards the end of the day.
[And a UFPJ
leadership type recently had the nerve to claim that David
Cline of Veterans For Peace was a “featured” speaker at the
9.24 rally, after an activist complained about too few Iraq
vets speaking at that one.
“I also know that Dave
Cline of Veterans for Peace, and a board member of IVAW, was
a featured speaker.” Bullshit. Cline got to
speak at an indoors meeting hours after the rally was over.
And he is not a “board member of IVAW,” which illustrates
perfectly how little the writer knows, or cares, about
veterans.
[Reprinted
after the lead article are articles from the Veterans Day
2005 GI Special that remind all concerned of the stupidity
so ably demonstrated at the rally in Washington DC 9.24.05.
[Will it be
repeated in the actions against the war Spring 2006?
[Time will
tell. T]
*******************************************
At
least it will save some transportation costs, by not
including an open national Gay/Lesbian group in the
call! You are unashamedly open about whom you want at
your event, and whom is in control of it! But at least
we are in good company, since you also did not include a
national disabled group, native peoples, or even a
national Latino/Latina group: all seeming unworthy for
you to outreach to!
From: John Obrien (by way of
Tom Condit)
Sent:, February 07, 2006
Subject:
Re: Major Mobilization Set for April 29th; of
those invited and NOT invited!
Thanks for not including a
Gay/Lesbian group among the initial national groups calling
for April 29th protests. Jerry Falwell and Walter Fauntroy
are proud of you! This is very sad in the year 2006 to see
this.
You refuse to understand how
offensive this is, and your refusal to have a Gay/Lesbian
UFPJ task force just adds to this, or is this still another
"oversight"?
At least it
will save some transportation costs, by not including an
open national Gay/Lesbian group in the call! You are
unashamedly open about whom you want at your event, and whom
is in control of it! But at least we are in good company,
since you also did not include a national disabled group,
native peoples, or even a national Latino/Latina group - all
seeming unworthy for you to outreach to!
Maybe GLBT folks, who have
pride an identity, can find another venue to attend, since
they are still not wanted in this setting. At least your
discrimination and insensitivity extends towards others,
such as the groups listed above, so GLBT groups can feel
better and not so isolated, in being not included as a
caller for this action.
Of
course, the Bush Empire folks are also happy that you
keep this limited to the "usual suspects", because if
you tried to get some of the real main line national
groups, such as the Mayors National Conference, Business
Executives for Peace, MoveOn, or other antiwar groups
such as ANSWER, TONC, The World Cant Wait: well this
could present a real problem for the Bush folks, in
having a large united movement, but thanks for keeping
it among the folks you know and care for, and not so
large, as it could have been!
With sadness,
John O'Brien, member of Out
Against the War/ Los Angeles*
*listed for identification
purposes only - this group has yet to take a position on
this, but you can bet they will also not be happy!
ACTION
ALERT * UNITED FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
Dear Friends
We are pleased to announce the
kick-off for the organizing of what promises to be a major
national mobilization on Saturday, April 29th. Today, each
of the initiating groups (see list below) is announcing this
mobilization. Our organizations have agreed to work together
on this project for several reasons:
The April 29th mobilization
will highlight our call for an immediate end to the war on
Iraq. We are also raising several other critical issues that
are directly connected to one another.
It is time for our
constituencies to work more closely: connecting the issues
we work on by bringing diverse communities into a common
project.
It is important for our
movements to help set the agenda for the Congressional
elections later in the year. Our unified action in the
streets is a vital part of that process. Please share the
April 29th call widely, and please use the links at the end
of the call to endorse this timely mobilization and to sign
up for email updates.
April 29th Initiating
Organizations:
United for
Peace and Justice
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition
National
Organization for Women
Friends of
the Earth
U.S. Labor
Against the War
Climate
Crisis Coalition
Peoples'
Hurricane Relief Fund
MORE:
“Quit Going
After Self Serving Photo Ops Or Media Statements, And Put
These Remarkable Young Vets Out Into The Forefront”
As the
mother of a young Iraq Vet, I know the living hell these
troops endure both during and after their deployments.
The
IVAW members are their only voice they have, while still
in service, their best chance of stopping this war,
possibly saving their lives as well as the lives of
their buddies, by making the American public aware of
the truth of what really goes on in their names over
there.
From: Alycia A. Barr
To: GI Special
Sent:
October 11, 2005 7:42 AM
Subject: Re: GI Special 3C79 -
"Veterans Disrespected...
FINALLY...someone who had the courage to come forth and
address an issue that has been a bone of contention with me
since meeting several of the brave young men who ultimately
became founding members of Iraq Veterans Against the War.
This is a
subject I have repeatedly broached within my own
organization, Military Families Speak Out, for well over a
year with no visible results. It angered me to the point of
actually stepping back from my participation as a member of
MFSO and the anti-war movement as a whole.
As the
mother of a young Iraq Vet, I know the living hell these
troops endure both during and after their deployments.
The IVAW
members are their only voice they have, while still in
service, their best chance of stopping this war, possibly
saving their lives as well as the lives of their buddies, by
making the American public aware of the truth of what really
goes on in their names over there.
Thank God
for Mr. Glazer!!!!
Maybe now
others in organizations such as MFSO, GSFP and VFP will sit
up, pay attention, remember that it was the actions of the
soldiers themselves that finally put an end to the Vietnam
war, quit going after self serving photo ops or media
statements, and put these remarkable young Vets out into the
forefront of the news, where they should have been all
along.
Isn't that
what anyone who professes to want to stop this war would do?
Our mission
as peacekeepers shouldn't be selfish agendas, using
bargaining chips, like the McCain amendment to pacify those
concerned about following the Army Regs on Interrogations,
instead of demanding investigations into the actions our
soldiers have had to take, under orders, that produced the
torture of other human beings.
We condemn
our loved ones in uniform to a life of torment that, in some
cases, have already lead to their death by their own hand,
as well as the deaths of others back here at home.
Let's
refocus, regroup, and do it right to BRING THEM HOME NOW!
In Peace
and Humanity,
Alycia A.
Barr
[This is
the article the writer above refers to:]
Veterans Disrespected At The 9/24 D.C. Rally:
“Why Were
There No VETERANS From The Current Iraq War Or The Earlier
Desert Storm As Featured Speakers?”
3 Oct 2005 From: Gene Glazer, Veterans For Peace;
vfp-chaptercontacts
The sponsors of the giant
protest rally and March of Sept. 24 did an outstanding job.
We can imagine the problems and obstacles that had to be
overcome to pull off this event.
However, we
are compelled to submit what we believe is a constructive,
but major suggestion, for future anti war demonstrations.
We welcomed the opportunity to
see and listen to Cindy Sheehan and other mothers/wives
whose loved ones are in Iraq or who were wounded or killed
in pursuit of George Bush’s “noble cause”. They deserved,
more than anyone, the opportunity to address the rally and
the nation.
But following them, what
better informed individuals should be designated as featured
(not 15 second sound bites) speakers, other than VETERANS??
VETERANS are an essential and unique part of the anti
war movement.
Why
then, were there no VETERANS from the current Iraq war
or the earlier Desert Storm designated as featured
speakers? In addition to these groups – Veterans for
Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Korean veterans
and just plain VETERANS were in D.C. that day.
Mike
Hoffman (IVAW), Michael Mc Phearson (Desert Storm), Dave
Cline (VFP) and Stan Goff (VVAW) are all knowledgeable,
articulate speakers.
At the
largest anti war protests in 2 years – the voice of
Veterans should have been heard.
Peace and solidarity
Gene Glazer: WWII;
geneandalice@comcast.net
Joseph Attamante: Vietnam;
joseph_attamante@att.net
Members, Veterans for Peace
(for identification only: The opinions are our own)
COMMENT: T
If you and
I and a lot of other people can understand why it was so
important to have the Iraq vets front and center, so can the
people who claim leadership. And by the way, they have no
problem using the Veterans to lead the march, as long as
they shut up, act like obedient window dressing, and stay
the fuck off the speakers platform.
These
people are shameless opportunists. This is supposed to be
about ending a war, and death, and maiming, and not their
egos and political agendas.
By refusing
to present the best, most honest, most qualified and
powerful critics of the Iraq war, the very troops forced to
fight in it, they prolong the war, and strengthen the
Imperial politicians.
By keeping
the Iraq veterans in the back of the bus, they serve Bush
and the Empire.
Time to
call them out.
The more
people who do so, the sooner this bullshit stops.

www.ivaw.net
MORE:
Iraq War
Veterans Presence in D.C. Unreported:
What
Americans Could Have Heard, But Weren’t Allowed To Hear:
UFPJ &
ANSWER Made Sure The Words Below Were Never Heard From The
Speakers Platform
[“Iraq War
Veterans Presence in D.C. Unreported”? Considering how
they were pushed aside by the organizers, hardly a big
surprise. In fact, the organizers bear the responsibility
for failing to bring the Iraq vets front and center and the
press merely followed their lead. The veterans words,
below, are infinitely more powerful than the raving yowling
blizzard of empty bullshit puked out by the self appointed
“political leaders” of the movement against the war who
controlled the speakers platform for their own purposes.
For what the organizers did
not allow the Iraq vets to say, see the boxed quotes below.]
September 26, 2005 by Eric Herter, Common Dreams
The New
York Times (Sept. 25, 2005) and much of the other news
coverage of Saturday's anti-war demonstration in
Washington, D.C. failed to note the presence of a
particularly knowledgeable group of protestors -
recently-returned veterans of the war in Iraq.
Gathered
behind a wide banner reading "Iraq Veterans Against the
War," approximately fifty men and women in desert camouflage
uniforms or IVAW T-shirts spoke with a handful of reporters
before moving out to take their place in the miles-long
march though the city streets and past the White House.
Short-haired, neat and polite, they answered questions with
a seriousness and conviction born of their first-hand
experiences with the war.
Elizabeth Spradlin, an
attractive Colorado Springs native with straight neck-length
brown hair, spoke with quiet intensity of her year in Iraq.
It began in March, 2003, when she was part of the invasion
force moving from Kuwait to Baghdad.
"Going into that country,
immediately they were welcoming, wanting us there. And over
the course of three months we basically caused so much
trouble in the area we were in. We didn't have
interpreters. We were not helping them re-build their
country. We were just driving around with our vehicles with
guns, not communicating with them in any way, just basically
occupying their space, their country. And they kept on
coming to us asking us to help them re-build and -- based on
my personal experience -- we weren't doing anything to help
them."
Spradlin enlisted in the
Colorado national guard as a medic, but in 2003, that
changed.
"I was
command-directed to go over to Iraq as an MP. So I was
basically unqualified at what I was doing. I was a
gunner, and I sat in a little turret and patrolled
around Iraqi cities - causing problems, basically.
Running children over."
She
paused, blinking.
"It was
terrible."
Chad Soloman, a husky young
man with close-cropped reddish hair and goatee, served in
Iraq as mechanic with the Ohio national guard. He smiled as
he spoke, but his eyes were serious.
"We
tried to survive. That was basically our objective. I
saw nothing that could be said to be beneficial to the
Iraqi people. When I tried to speak with Iraqi people,
they did not at all see that we were there to help
them. Certainly plenty of Iraqis spoke with mortars and
with rifles, so obviously they were not content with our
being there."
Tim Goodrich, a tall clean-cut
Air Force veteran who's spoken at several previous IVAW
demonstrations, was an electronics technician on E-3 AWACS
surveillance aircraft. He spoke of the heavy bombing that,
in effect, started the Iraq war months before the March,
2003, invasion.
"My
involvement in the Iraq war was the bombing of Iraq -
the intensified bombing in the fall of 2002. While Bush
kept saying we were going to try diplomacy, in fact we
were over there bombing the heck out of them. So I saw
the lie, right from the start."
Other members of Iraq Veterans
Against the War expressed their skepticism about the
administration's explanations for the war. One uniformed
young man with a southern accent said he'd been a military
driver trucking supplies from Kuwait to many destinations in
Iraq.
"We went in
there for weapons of mass destruction. There are no weapons
of mass destruction - I think that's perfectly clear. So we
have no reason to be there. Plain and simple."
In addition to the Iraq Veterans Against the War, a
number of active-duty troops attended Saturday's
demonstration in uniform, and told the press of their
opposition to the war in Iraq.
A
tough-looking regular Army sergeant in camouflage fatigues
preferred not to give his name because he was still in the
service, but said he was just back from eight months in
Baghdad.
"I
don't know what we're fighting for over there. It's not
a good cause. They don't appreciate us when we're
there. They look at us as enemies, not as friends. So
it's kind of hard when you're trying to help the
enemies, and not the friends."
He
shook his head with a sad smile.
Chad Soloman, the Ohio
national guardsman in IVAW, probably spoke for many of the
Iraq veterans at the demonstration:
"It's a
war based on greed and selfishness and ignorance and
incompetence, and I just see no reason why we should be
continuing it. So we're here to show that not all
veterans are supportive of the war, that some of us feel
it's wrong, and that we need to take a stand against
it."
MORE:
“Step Away
From The Limelight” And Let The Iraq Vets Take The Lead
The
voices of the Iraq Veterans is far louder, more
powerful, informative and compelling than any number of
military family members. What a shame MFSO, as a whole,
has not realized that fact yet.
It
wasn't the protestors that stopped the Vietnam war, no
matter what they said, or how loud they said it...it was
the soldiers...remember?
Step
away from the limelight, and allow those who have been
there the chance to do what NO other org. can...STOP THE
WAR AND BRING THEM HOME NOW!!!!!
From:
Alycia A. Barr
To: GI
Special
Sent:
October 24, 2005
Just thought you might like to read this message that was
sent out this morning.
It might not have been written if it wasn't made clear in
their message [at the end of this letter] how "powerful" our
voices are, and, once again, forget to even acknowledge
those of our Iraq Veterans.
In Peace and Humanity,
Alycia A. Barr
****************************************************************
From:
Alycia A. Barr
To:
Military Families Speak Out
Sent: Monday, October 24, 2005
2:50 AM
Subject: Re: Commemorating the
Upcoming Horrific Milestone
Dear Nancy and Charley,
The voices
of the Iraq Veterans is far louder, more powerful,
informative and compelling than any number of military
family members. What a shame MFSO, as a whole, has not
realized that fact yet.
This is
one military mom who recognized that a long time ago.
We will have an Iraq Vet as the focal point of our
2000th soldier memorial in Harrisburg, Pa., come hell or
high water.
It's one
thing for Bush to get away with ignoring a dead soldier's
grieving mother, it's a whole other ball game for an Iraq
combat Vet to confront Bush publicly, and ask for the
answers to his or her questions.
How long do
you think Americans would allow Bush to "put off" one our
own troops, who had engaged in the horrors that this war,
Mr. Bush initiated, has resulted in? A subject Bush has NO
expertise in, and the average citizen has very limited
knowledge of.
Who do you think Americans
would listen to?
Who do you think Americans
would support?
Who do you think Americans
would find more believable, based on experience alone?
It
wasn't the protestors that stopped the Vietnam war, no
matter what they said, or how loud they said it...it was
the soldiers...remember?
Step
away from the limelight, and allow those who have been
there the chance to do what NO other org. can...STOP THE
WAR AND BRING THEM HOME NOW!!!!!
Or do
you want to continue to "protest" this war for the next
10 or 20 years, and lose a lot more than 2000 lives?
In Peace and Humanity,
Alycia A. Barr
[This is
the message Alycia Barr is responding to:]
Dear
Military Families,
If you are
still looking to connect with an activity or event in your
area to commemorate the 2,000th troop death, and honor all
of the fallen by calling for an end to the war in Iraq,
check the website http://www.afsc.org/2000/ to see if there
is already an event in your area, or to help initiate one.
The voice of military families opposing this war is more
powerful than ever in helping this country understand the
true human cost of this war, and the urgency by which it
must end.
Thank you
for all you are doing to honor our troops, bring them home
now and take care of them when they get here.
In Peace
and Solidarity,
Nancy
Lessin and Charley Richardson
for
Military Families Speak Out
www.mfso.org
www.bringthemhomenow.org
MORE:
Fast Forward To February 2006:
Sgt. Says
“The Opinion Expressed By The Cartoon Is Shared By Many
Servicemen And Women”
Letters To The Editor
Army Times
Feb. 20, 2006
As an
American soldier, I know that one of the rights that I am
sworn to defend is the freedom of speech.
But now I
see that the Joint Chiefs want to go on record against this,
by protesting an editorial cartoon (“Cartoon rankles Joint
Chiefs,” Frontlines, Feb. 13)
Not only
that, but the opinion expressed by the cartoon is shared by
many servicemen and women.
If the government is going to use propaganda to gain support
for the war, then it needs to go both ways.
We all need to have thick skin
in these trying times, as well as an open mind.
Staff Sgt. Stephen Rogers
Fort Jackson, S.C.

MORE:
What To Do
Now?
Organize
Something Worth Organizing
“One
way or another, the activists and soldiers will work
together to stop this war.” Alycia A. Barr, mother of
Iraq combat veteran, 10.30.05
Comment: T
Reprinted
from:
9.24.05 GI SPECIAL 3C62
Question:
The question is, why did it
take 9 months after the November election to call two
(competing!) anti-war demonstrations in Washington, D.C.?
Why did it take months for UFPJ and ANSWER to quit the
nonsense and decide to have one demonstration 9.24?
And how many more troops will
die before the anti-war movement is rebuilt to the point
where it can achieve its goal: bringing them home now?
Reply: T
Maybe the place to start is to
take a look under the surface.
Americans are turning against
the war, more every day. In the most recent polls, 52% are
for bringing troops home now.
That’s good news.
As was true during Vietnam,
the lower you go on the income ladder, the more widespread
the opposition to the war. The wealthy are least opposed,
of course, since they benefit most from the Empire, and
their kids are safe at home, preparing to manage the family
fortunes.
The pressure has built up so
much that even some of the politicians in DC are making
squeaking noises about the war, as the heat from below
starts singeing their butts.
Mild squeaking noises to be
sure. The Congressional critics aren’t calling for bringing
all the troops home now.
They know who pays their campaign contributions, and its not
Joe and Jane Nine-To-Five. It’s the big corporate donors
who benefit from the Empire.
There’s no personal pressure
either: their kids are safe at home too, preparing to manage
the huge sums of money most Senators and Representatives
pocket from campaign contributions during their very
profitable Washington careers.
So they play it safe, critical
of the war but not too
critical. After all, their careers are at stake,
and what are more dead U.S. troops and more dead Iraqis in
the balance against their Congressional careers?
To sum up:
The Good
News:
There are more and more people
turning against the war, and more and more people wanting
the troops to come home now.
The anti-war movement, meaning
the movement of people moving from support of the war to
opposition to the war, has never been healthier or more
powerful.
Most
importantly, it is spreading in the armed services as well.
Where it really counts.
To talk about “rebuilding the
anti-war movement” is a denial of this powerful reality, as
if the only dimension worth paying attending to is what
happens among the squabbling opportunists on top of the
movement.
The Bad
News:
The politicians edging towards
opposition to the war will are followers at best, mostly
careerists who will betray you in a heartbeat. They are
loyal to their class and their contributors.
The biggest two operations
focused on the war, UFPJ and Answer, are competing for
followers and funding.
And you’re right.
It’s a betrayal of every U.S.
troop and every Iraqi who dies in this miserable,
dishonorable U.S. war for oil and Empire that they waited
for months to do the right thing and have one, united action
against the war 9.24 in Washington.
That’s why neither members of
the armed services, nor working class Americans, can rely on
them for leadership. They’re too opportunistic and
tactically dim to provide leadership that can be trusted.
Lesson
Learned
It isn’t the movement of ever
increasing numbers of people into opposition to the war
that’s the problem. No “rebuilding” needed there, thank you
very much.
It’s the people running the
store that just don’t get it.
What’s the
weakest link in the Empire?
The people
in the armed forces.
As civilian
Americans turn against the war, they also turn against the
war, and often express the fiercest opposition, having their
lives at stake.
Who does
the leadership of the anti-war organizations devote the
least effort to organizing?
The people
in the armed forces.
With a very
few honorable exceptions, the leaderships of the divided,
competing, irresponsible anti-war organizations are, so far,
irrelevant to getting that work done, off in another world.
They mouth
abstract phrases about their concern for the troops, and
turn their backs on them in real life. When was the last
time you heard any of the peace movement big shots offer to
go down to a local Guard or Reserve meeting and try to meet
some anti-war troops?
“Who, us?” “We have more
important things to do.” “Gee, I’d love to do that, but I’m
busy next week a) rebuilding the anti-war movement; b)
giving a speech; c) building a left alternative; d) getting
ready for an interview on IndyMedia or whatever other
pathetic self-referential excuse comes in handy.
There is no gain, however, in
pissing and moaning about their callous indifference.
How
fortunate that members of the armed forces, veterans,
military family members and responsible civilians have the
skills, experience, intelligence, common sense, and
commitment to put something together that works and could
actually stop the war: organizing to give aid and comfort to
members of the armed forces, reserves and Guard who are
turning against the war.
Now there’s
something worth building.
Why wait?

Photo: Ward Reilly, Veterans For Peace
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
U.S.
Armoured Vehicle Towed After A Roadside Bomb Attack

A U.S.
armoured vehicle is towed after a roadside bomb attack in
Baghdad February 18, 2006. A
U.S. soldier was killed on Saturday when his vehicle was
struck by a roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad, the U.S.
military said. REUTERS/Thaier al-Sudani
Fort
Campbell Soldier Dies
2/15/2006 NewsChannel 5
Corporal Andrew Kemple, 23,
was killed Sunday by small arms fire in Tikrit. Kemple was
from Cambridge, Minn.
He was a decorated member of
the 101st Airborne. A memorial service will be held for him
in Iraq. The Department of Defense says Corporal Andrew J.
Kemple of the 101st Airborne Division died in Iraq on Sunday
when his Humvee was attacked by small arms fire.
Kemple enlisted in 2003 and
arrived at Fort Campbell in May 2004.
He was assigned to the 3rd
Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team.
He is survived by his mother,
father and sister.
There have
been 123 soldiers from Fort Campbell killed in Iraq,
including eight since the beginning of February.
Roadside
Bomb Kills Young Marine Recently Arrived In Iraq
February 14, 2006 John
Koopman, San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer
Javier
Chavez Jr. turned 19 on New Year's Eve. He was just married
and a very new, young Marine with less than a year in the
Corps when he lost his life in Iraq.
Pfc. Chavez died Thursday when
he was hit by a roadside bomb.
Little was known Monday about
how Chavez died. The press release from the Marines simply
said he was an infantryman and that he "died from wounds
received as a result of an improvised explosive device while
conducting combat operations near Fallujah, Iraq."
Chavez was born in Visalia
(Tulare County), but moved to the small town of Cutler when
he was 5 years old. His parents divorced and Chavez lived
with his father, stepmother and brothers and sisters until
high school. He lived for three years during high school
with his mother, Maria Leon, according to his stepmother,
Veronica Chavez.
"We called him 'Javi,' "
Veronica Chavez said. "He was a smart and thoughtful little
boy, very respectful, very nice. He had a lot of friends."
Chavez joined the Marines on
April 11, and graduated from boot camp in June. He went to
infantry school and then joined the 3rd Battalion, 5th
Marine Regiment, which is part of the 1st Marine Division
based at Camp Pendleton (San Diego County).
His stepmother said Chavez had
arrived in Iraq only recently, around the first week of
January.
Just before shipping out,
Veronica Chavez said, he married his girlfriend, Janie
Gonzalez, in a civil ceremony. They planned to have a big
church wedding after he got back from Iraq.
"His wife told me he was
scared to tell his mom where he was going," she said. "He
wanted to tell her he was going to Japan instead. He had to
tell his father, though, and he asked him how he felt about
it. Javi said, 'I'm scared but I'm going to come back.' "
Chavez's father said his son
wasn't afraid of dying in Iraq.
"He was more worried about
losing his arms or his legs," Chavez said in Spanish. "I
think that worried him a lot more."
Chavez played soccer and took
karate when he was younger, his father said. He went to
Orosi Union High School in the Cutler area.
Veronica Chavez couldn't say
why Chavez decided to join the Marines, as opposed to any
other branch of the service. It was just something he felt
compelled to do, she said.
He went to basic training a
shy, skinny kid and came back much more mature physically
and emotionally. "You could see it just in the way he
talked to adults," she said. "He had much more confidence."
Veronica Chavez said her
stepson was mature beyond his age, and a little shy,
especially around adults. When his sister, Olga, was having
problems dealing with their parents' separation, Chavez
would comfort her, Veronica Chavez said.
"He would tell her, 'It's OK,
we're gonna go see mom soon,' " she said. "He'd say, "I'm
with you all the time.'
"Olga is taking this very
hard," she said.
IMPOSSIBLE
MISSION
FUTILE
EXERCISE
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW!

Marines with 2nd platoon, Lima
Co., 3/25 preparing to enter in the Iraqi western city of
Karabilah during Operation Spear. (AFP/HO-USMC/Ken Melton)
Rocket
Attack On U.S. Base At Fallujah:
Casualties
Not Announced
Feb. 19 (Xinhuanet)
Insurgents
pounded a U.S. military base in eastern Fallujah late last
night, witnesses told Xinhua.
"Five
rockets landed on the U.S. base at about 11:00 p.m. on
Saturday," witnesses said.
Explosions rocked the area as
sirens wailed inside the base, but it was not known whether
there were any casualties among U.S. soldiers.
Almost
1,000 Vehicles Lost In Combat:
“Nearly All
Of These Losses Were Caused By Improvised Explosive Devices”
Aircraft and vehicle battle losses were heavier in 2005
than 2004; in particular, more Humvees were lost to
IEDs, Army sources said.
February 20, 2006 By Greg
Grant, Special to the Army Times [Excerpts]
Combat and the grinding pace
of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan are fast wearing down
the Army’s aircraft and vehicles.
The Army is asking for $9
billion to “reset” its war-depleted stocks this year, the
vast bulk to replace and repair tanks, helicopters and
vehicles, Army Secretary Francis Harvey said in a Feb. 7
interview.
That money will come from the
regular 2007 budget and from emergency wartime
supplementals.
Since the
Iraq insurgency heated up in fall 2003, the Army’s combat
losses include about 20 M1 Abrams tanks, 50 Bradley fighting
vehicles, 20 Stryker wheeled combat vehicles, 20 M113
armored personnel carriers and 250 Humvees, service sources
said.
The number
of vehicles lost in battle comes to nearly 1,000, when heavy
and medium trucks and trailers, mine clearing vehicles and
Fox wheeled reconnaissance vehicles are added.
Nearly all of these losses were caused by improvised
explosive devices.
Aircraft
losses also have been heavy since fighting began in
Afghanistan in 2001. The Army has lost 85 helicopters there
and in Iraq, including 27 Apaches, 21 Black Hawks, 14 CH-47s
and 23 Kiowas.
Hostile fire downed 17 of
those; the rest, destroyed in accidents in the war zone, are
also defined as combat losses, Army officials said Feb. 1.
(For comparison, 41 helicopters were destroyed in non-combat
mishaps over the same period.)
The Army
counts these 85 aircraft and nearly 1,000 vehicles as “total
losses,” blasted beyond repair.
“They have
to basically burn down to the ground for us to declare them
a total loss,” said Gary Motsek, Army Materiel Command’s
deputy for support operations.
The replacement bill for
total-loss equipment is expected to climb.
Aircraft
and vehicle battle losses were heavier in 2005 than 2004; in
particular, more Humvees were lost to IEDs, Army sources
said.
The losses have forced the
Army to order 19 extra Stryker wheeled vehicles as
replacements, Harvey said.
To replace
tracked vehicles that are no longer in production, such as
the M1 Abrams, Bradleys and M113s, the Army pulls vehicles
out of mothballs and upgrades their equipment to the latest
standards.
Many more vehicles and
aircraft have been damaged enough to knock them temporarily
out of service. These are fixed up at AMC’s repair shops or
by private contractors, then returned to service.
And far more are simply being
worn out by a punishing pace of operations that is about
five times the peacetime load.
In 2005, AMC and its
contractors repaired and overhauled 230 M1 Abrams tanks;
this year, that number will top 700. Bradleys will go from
318 last year to more than 600; M113s from 219 to 614;
Humvees from 5,000 to almost 9,000; and aircraft from 44 to
85.
“Those are the dogs, the ones
that really require major overhaul and repair,” Motsek said.
The Army has ordered 16 new
Apaches and five new Black Hawks as replacements through
emergency supplemental appropriations from Congress.
But the
Army has been unable to replace the 27 Kiowas that have been
destroyed, because the Kiowa production line is no longer
open.
In
addition, there are thousands of small arms, radios and
generators that require major repair and overhaul. The
repair backlog includes almost every major equipment item,
from .50-caliber machine guns to hundreds of thousands of
pads for tank tracks.
TROOP NEWS
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOPS HOME:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

Burial ceremony for Ruel
Garcia, a Filipino-American U.S. army chief warrant officer,
in his hometown in Obando town, Bulacan province, north of
Manila February 7, 2006. Garcia, 34, a pilot, died along
with his co-pilot in a crash after their Apache helicopter
gunship was shot down by a surface-to-air missile on the
morning of January 16 in Taji, Iraq. REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action

Iraqi
policemen help a wounded policeman shortly after their
vehicle were hit by a roadside bomb in Baghdad February 18,
2006. Three policemen were wounded in the attack, witnesses
said. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
19 February 2006 RFE/RL, Inc &
By SAMEER N. YACOUB, AP & Reuters & (Xinhuanet)
A police
general and two of his guards were killed in a roadside
bombing 20 miles southwest of Kirkuk today.
Khalaf was the chief of the
operations center for the police in Kirkuk, headquarters of
Iraq's northern oil-producing center.
In
Al-Fallujah, west of Baghdad, a roadside bomb injured two
police officers.
Guerrillas
ambushed a convoy of trucks carrying construction material
Sunday to U.S. military north of Baghdad, killing four Iraqi
drivers, police said.
The ambush occurred near
Nibaie, about 35 miles north of the capital, police Lt.
Khalid al-Obaidi said. The area has been the scene of
several ambushes and roadside bombings in the last few days.
Four Iraqis
were wounded when a bomber detonated his explosive vest at
the Planning Ministry, police said.
Four Iraqi
policemen were wounded on Sunday when a roadside bomb
detonated near their vehicle on patrol in the northern town
of Toz Khormato, a source from the Iraqi-US liaison office
in Tikrit told Xinhua.
"A roadside bomb went off
Sunday morning in the town of Tozkhormato, some 90 km east
of Tikrit, near a police patrol, wounding four policemen,
including one with serious wounds," the source from the
Joint Coordination Center said on condition of anonymity.
In a
separate incident, unknown armed men killed Saba Hamid
Hussein, who works in a U.S. military base in Yathrib town,
some 90 km north of Baghdad, the source said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
A Short
Walk Through My Thoughts
he has
his war that makes him his gold and who needs anything
more when you own people not just things.
January 27, 2006 Sgt Zachary
Scott-Singley, misoldierthoughts.blogspot.com/
Sometimes I write and try to
make a masterpiece on my first try. Other times it comes to
me in time. Today I will just begin and see where my mind
takes me. I can't say that I have ever made a masterpiece
however, but there is always a first time.
My life has been made up of so
much having to do with the military these last 5 (almost 6)
years. I grow weary thinking about it. For instance there
is the story of the mortar.
While I worked night shift my
friend who served in the navy worked days. He was going out
to watch the night sky one night a few months back when a
mortar hit at what used to be his feet and legs.
Someone who had been a
paramedic before joining the army was able to get there
where he was within minutes and he put 2 tourniquets on him,
one on each leg above the knee. That was what stopped him
from bleeding to death in the crater that the mortar made.
He flew out of Iraq that same day and currently is learning
how to walk with his new legs. He was but a few years older
than me.
I don't know why I chose this
story to write about but my thoughts often turn to my
friends who weren't as fortunate as me. Mayhap I have
forgotten the face of my father but I think not.
Things go
slower here on the peaceful side but don't ever let that
fool you, for like a river through a valley the politicians
are constantly wearing away our rights through the patriot
act and other such things.
Just look
at how they deny death benefits for those soldiers who had
to purchase their own body armor due to shortages.
It amazes me each day that our
friend Dick C. has gotten away with so much and that we
continue to allow him to get away with so much more.
Wars line
his pockets well and take it from me when I say that you can
almost see he has found Midas' touch for here he has his war
that makes him his gold and who needs anything more when you
own people not just things.
I speak not from first hand
knowledge but from what I have seen and what I believe.
Some may
think this is a place where you find no biases but to those
I say you are fools.
What, my
friends, is more biased than my own eyes and opinions?
I can think
of nothing.
So to that
I say take this cup and drink from it but know that which
you drink is but my knowledge and opinion and nothing more.
To those of you who respect it and drink deep I say thank
you and to those who but taste and spit out that which
touches your tongue I also say thanks.
You are
kind to have come at all to see what this soldier has to
say.
“At Some
Point We Have To Take Seriously The Idea Of Putting A Very
Large Wrench Into The Gears Of This War Machine”
From: Ron Jacobs
To: GI Special
Sent: February 16, 2006
On
Wednesday, February 15, 2006, a group of war resisters began
a 34 day liquids only fast in Washington, DC. The fast is
sponsored by the Voices for Creative Nonviolence (VCNV): a
nonviolent action group made up of regular citizens who are
fed up with the direction of the US government, especially
as regards its foreign policy. The name VCNV has given the
campaign that this fast is part of is the Winter of Our
Discontent.
One of the
fast participants is a man named Mike Ferner.
I first
heard of Mike when he traveled to Iraq in the winter of 2003
just before the US/UK invasion in March of that year.