GI SPECIAL 4B20:
THE
UNIVERSAL CODE OF MILITARY INJUSTICE

[Thanks to Mark Shapiro, who sent this in.]
“My Friends
Are Dying And What The Hell Is Going On?”
Iraq
Veteran Condemns The War At Champaign-Urbana Rally
His
family is very supportive of his activism and his
father, a marine veteran, told him that he is sorry he
voted for George Bush, Adams said.
Adams
described how the VA's treatment was simply by doling
out medications that didn't address the problems, and it
was his work with Iraq Veterans Against the War that
helped him the most.
February 12, 2006 By Steve
Bauer, The News-Gazette, Inc.
CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS:
An Army veteran who served in
Iraq has a challenge for the Bush administration.
Dave Adams,
25, a student at Southern Illinois University and member of
Iraq Veterans Against the War, told a group of more than 50
people at a rally Saturday at Illinois Disciples Foundation
in Champaign that President George Bush challenged troops to
find weapons of mass destruction and members of al-Qaida.
Adams, who
served as a mechanic and chaplain's assistant from 2000 to
2003, said his challenge to the president is to apologize to
the American soldiers and public, to bring the troops home
now and to properly care for veterans, as promised.
Later, in answer to a question
from the audience, Adams added that Bush should also
apologize to the people of Iraq and properly compensate them
for the destruction caused by this war.
Mohammad Al-Heeti, owner of
the World Harvest store in Champaign born and raised in
Iraq, said soldiers and citizens of the U.S. have to
understand that much of the violence directed at the troops
is "just a reflection" of the violence they have suffered.
A pull-out of American troops
"would not be worse than what's happening now," Al-Heeti
said. "It doesn't have to be all at once. It could be in
phases. They need a good faith showing from the American
government."
Adams said a lot of soldiers
he has known feel, as he does, that Iraq will be involved in
some sort of civil war no matter what the U.S. does.
"We need to get the
international community involved and let the Iraqi people
deal with their own situation," Adams said.
Adams said he grew up in a
family with a strong traditions of military and Republican
involvement. When Bush announced the war, he wanted to
serve, he said.
Finally
sent to Iraq in March 2003, Adams saw where people were
living in the rubble and destruction from the first war. He
also encountered a university president, who helped his unit
by providing housing, but he was upset when that man was
arrested because he was a member of Saddam Hussein's Baath
Party.
"It was, in
my eyes, so self-defeating," Adams said. "The one person
that was there to help us was now in a military prison."
Adams said he and his fellow
soldiers were initially greeted warmly, but that good will
has been lost by broken promises to rebuild schools, bridges
and other infrastructure.
The
hostility of Iraqi citizens "is not falling on George Bush,"
he said. "It's falling on the shoulders of soldiers and
marines."
Even though he wanted out of
that environment, Adams said he continued to defend Bush and
the war effort after he first returned home.
But as his friends continued
to die in the war, his own symptoms of post traumatic stress
disorder began to show, he said.
"This is
the point I realized there were concerns," Adams said. "My
friends are dying and what the hell is going on?"
His family
is very supportive of his activism and his father, a marine
veteran, told him that he is sorry he voted for George Bush,
Adams said.
Adams said
he has a yellow ribbon on his door.
"It says,
'Support the Troops. Bring them home now,'" Adams said.
MORE:
February
19, 2006: A summary of an event co-sponsored by
Champaign-Urbana Chapter of Vietnam Veterans Against the War
via
vvawnet@vvaw.org.] [Excerpts]
From: Jen Tayabji
On Saturday, February 11th,
the Progressive Resource/Action Cooperative (PRC) hosted
IVAW member Dave Adams in an anti-war speaking event.
Over 50
people came out to hear Adams describe his experiences
serving in Iraq and his adjustments back to civilian life.
Adams joined the military in
December of 1999 and served from 2000 to 2003. He completed
basic training at Ft. Jackson, South Carolina. Upon
completion of basic training, he was assigned to the 101st
Airborne Division at Ft. Campbell, Kentucky. He served as a
mechanic for the Military Police and was stop-lossed in
early 2003 shortly before the start of the Iraq War.
He
described how he was assigned to various positions and
tasks that he was never trained for. He also discussed
the lack of armor his unit had when they were in convoys
and the extreme danger the convoys brought to both the
troops and the civilians in the towns they traveled
through.
Upon returning home, he was
diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) after
began drinking heavily and acting unlike himself.
He then joined Iraq Veterans
Against the War (www.ivaw.net) and began speaking out.
Adams
described how the VA's treatment was simply by doling out
medications that didn't address the problems, and it was his
work with IVAW that helped him the most.
Currently, Dave is an
undergraduate at Southern Illinois University (SIU) in
Carbondale.
The Progressive
Resource/Action Cooperative is a multi-issue multi-tactical
activist organization located at the University of Illinois
campus in Champaign-Urbana. The PRC has a long history of
anti-war organizing including work around GI and veteran
issues. For more information on the PRC, please visit
http://www.prairienet.org/prc.

www.ivaw.net
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
SOLDIER
KILLED IN IED ATTACK NEAR KARBALA
February 20, 2006 HEADQUARTERS
UNITED STATES CENTRAL COMMAND NEWS RELEASE Number:
06-02-02CM
BAGHDAD,
Iraq: A Coalition Forces Soldier was killed when his
vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb while conducting a
combat patrol southeast of Karbala, Iraq Feb. 20.
Georgia
Soldiers Dies In Ar Rutbah
February 20, 2006 HEADQUARTERS
UNITED STATES CENTRAL COMMAND NEWS RELEASE Number: No.
149-06
Sgt. 1st
Class Amos C. Edwards, Jr., 41, of Savannah, Ga., died in Ar
Rutbah, Iraq, on Feb. 17, from a non-combat related cause.
Edwards was assigned to the Army National
Guard's 1st Battalion, 118th Field Artillery Regiment, 48th
Brigade Combat Team, Savannah, Ga.
Remembering Nick Wilson

2/14/2006 News Channel 34
Nick Wilson was killed by an
improvised bomb in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. NewsChannel
34's Peter Quinn was in Newark Valley today and talked with
some of Nick's former teachers.
Nick Wilson joined the Navy
shortly after graduating from Newark Valley High School in
1998. He was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom by
de-fusing bombs. People from Tioga County who knew Nick say
there was just something special about him.
Williams says, “I remember on
a church youth group trip he was the kid, he was a big
junior or senior, and I still remember the one thing he did
was helping this little 8th or 9th grade girl. A lot of
guys, especially guys, they wouldn't really care. Maybe it
was because he had a younger sister. He went over, helped
her with whatever the project was. It was no big deal to
him.”
Keith Williams taught Nick
social studies and also coached him on the track team in his
senior year.
Williams says, “One of the
nicest things about him. He always had this little grin on
his face. He looked like he was up to something. He was the
kind of kid who would speak to all the kids in the school.
He was not a part of a click. He was like a friend to
everyone, just a real nice kid.”
Warren Harrold is now the high
school's assistant principal.
Warren Harrold says, “The
thing I remember most about Nick is his 12th grade social
studies year, which is Participation in Government. We had a
community service aspect to the course and he was very
involved with that.”
Harrold just retired from the
National Guard after 22 years, and had talked with Nick
about the military.
Harrold says, “The one thing I
remember is his smile. He was one of those kids, happy go
lucky, a little ornery. I know he was into BMXing quite a
bit. He was very interested in service and spoke with me on
several occasions about the service.”
Over the past few years Newark
Valley has had a number of graduates serving in Iraq. So,
when a tragedy like this happens it's felt by all.
Keith Williams, Social Studies
Teacher and coach track says, “Super kid, always nice. I
shared with the classes on Monday about his loss because it
hits close to home. So, I talked with the kids how they are
sitting in the same class, the same seats, that Nick and his
classmates sat in. And, nobody anticipates this happening.”
Nick Wilson is survived by his
wife, Linda who he met while in the Navy, his parents who
still live in Newark Valley, two older brothers and a
younger sister.
A funeral service will be held
for Nick Wilson in San Diego, California where Nick was
stationed. His wife also lives out there.
Captain
Killed On Tikrit Base
Feb 20, 2006 The Associated
Press
(FORT CAMPBELL, Ky.) A Fort
Campbell soldier with the 101st Airborne Division died in
Iraq last week, the Army said Monday.
Capt.
Anthony R. Garcia, 48, of Fort Worth, Texas, died Friday as
a result of a gunshot wound in Tikrit, Iraq, the Army said
in a statement.
The
shooting is under investigation because it happened on a
military base, Fort Campbell spokeswoman Cathy Gramling
said. No further details were available, she said.
Garcia was a physician
assistant assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company,
1st Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment, 101st Aviation
Brigade. He joined the Army in August 1989 and was assigned
to Fort Campbell in June 2001.
Garcia is survived by a wife,
Doris, a daughter, Kelly, and a son, Garrick, of
Clarksville, Tenn.; and his parents, Monico and Josephine
Garcia, of Hudson Oaks, Texas.
U.S.
Soldier Wounded In Al Tobaji
Feb 20 (KUNA)
Three
persons, including a US soldier, were injured Monday by a
blast in Baghdad's northern suburb.
Speaking to Kuwait News Agency
(KUNA), a police source said the three persons were injured
by a roadside bomb that targeted a US army patrol in
Baghdad's Al-Tobaji area.
Two
Mercenaries Wounded In Baghdad
20 Feb 2006 Reuters
Eleven
people were wounded including two foreign contractors when
two roadside bombs exploded in eastern Baghdad, police said.
The
Occupation Besieged: Ramadi
“You Close
Your Eyes And You Could Be Dead”'

U.S.
Marines from the 3rd Battalion, 7th Regiment huddle between
Humvees to avoid sniper fire while searching a vehicle in
central Ramadi Feb. 6, 2006. Downtown
Ramadi, which includes the Anbar provincial government
headquarters, has been the site of numerous battles between
U.S. troops and insurgents. (AP Photo/Antonio Castaneda)
February 19, 2006 RAMADI, Iraq
(AP)
In a
carpeted office filled with oversized gold embroidered
chairs, the governor of troubled Anbar province talked about
his region's sagging infrastructure, over the rattle of
machine-gun fire and the thud of grenade launchers
reverberating from the roof.
Gov.
Maamoun Sami Rashid al-Alwani seemed almost oblivious to the
commotion as U.S. Marines in firing positions lined with
sandbags and bulletproof glass blasted away at an insurgent
trying to plant a roadside bomb nearby.
The
government center is a favorite target in this city at the
center of Iraq's insurgency and dozens of Marines from the
3rd Battalion, 7th Regiment live in one wing to fend off the
frequent attacks.
Marines posted on the roof
have to stay sharp.
When their lieutenant
approaches, they immediately pause and shout out five
things: their name and rank, their gun's lateral limits, the
direction their gun is facing, guidelines to fire, and any
nearby friendly units. The idea is to make sure they are
alert at all times.
''Honestly, sir, it's kind of
a pleasure because it's not something that everybody can say
that they helped build a government,'' Lance Cpl. Brandon
Crusha of Yukon, Okla., told a reporter as he glanced away
from a desolate street.
Marines said the pace of
combat around the building has slowed since the beginning of
their tour last summer, but it can flare up at any moment
and wears on them.
''I'd be happy to go home and
not shoot one more round. You can't go home and talk to
your buddies about shooting people. It's not a subject that
most people talk about,'' said Lance Cpl. Jeff Barrient.
''To see people die, your
friends get hurt over seven months, it can't be explained
unless you've been here,'' Barrient, 21, of Salinas, Calif.,
added, speaking in a cold, tiled room filled with bunkbeds
as the Muslim call to prayer echoed from mosques down the
street. ''The actual price we've paid to help this country
out: it's unexplainable.''
Barrient
spoke just minutes after a Marine radioed that a man had
managed to elude fire and sprint away after dropping off a
black backpack. Later it was found to contain an anti-tank
mine.
An hour
later, another report came in about a man with a
rocket-propelled grenade launcher who had jumped out and
tried to fire at the government center.
''There's a
lot of foot traffic and civilians running around,'' said
Lance Cpl. Ruben Valles, 21, of San Jose, Calif., who
periodically volunteers to work shifts on the roof.
''Sometimes they'll try to be discreet and throw a box down
and move it in place with an attached string.''
The
neighborhood around the government center in central Ramadi
is testament to the combat between U.S. troops and
insurgents.
Virtually
every shop on the adjacent street is closed, alongside
abandoned multistory buildings where insurgent snipers often
lurk. Thousands of bullet holes pepper buildings, and
several nearby structures have the walls of entire floors
blown out, exposing support beams.
The nearby Rashid Hotel, once
a favorite spot for gunmen, was recently destroyed by a U.S.
airstrike.
A health complex to the south,
another common post for insurgents, exhibits heavy damage.
Some
aspects of life for townspeople continue near normal.
Insurgents took note of a school to the west of the
government center and rarely fire there.
A few blocks away, the narrow
streets of the local market are busy with customers.
The adjacent streets have
suffered. A nearby intersection, known as checkpoint 295,
is a common spot where roadside bombs are laid. A police
station abandoned last year by Iraqi officers amid a wave of
insurgent attacks is now manned by Marines.
The U.S.
military has started a program to clean up the neighborhood,
but Iraqi workers who pick up rubble and trash work only in
the gloom of night and still need U.S. guards. Gunmen fired
on them recently but caused no injuries.
''We try to
help the Iraqi people out as much as we can. We wish they'd
help us out a little more,'' Barrient said. [Sorry about
that. They’re helping themselves: they have no interest in
helping George Bush occupy their country and steal their oil
for his buddies. How odd.]
Inside offices once used by
municipal workers, Marines sleep on bunkbeds in dimly lit
rooms. During a reporter's afternoon visit, Marines cleaned
their weapons in a murky hall while listening to Credence
Clearwater Revival songs.
Marines
manning rooftop posts stand shifts that last from four to 12
hours. Some said they have grown to know the Marines they
share roof duty with so well that they can predict their
movements and identify them by their silhouettes.
Other spoke
of night shifts where they fought to stay awake.
“Getting
complacent is the wrong thing to do up there: you close your
eyes and you could be dead,” Barrient said.
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.

A US soldier inspects what's
left of a car bomb that exploded in al-Riad area, west of
the northern city of Kirkuk. (AFP/Marwan Ibrahim
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
Pleasanton
Soldier Is Killed By Road Bomb
02/16/2006 Vincent T. Davis,
Express-News Staff Writer
A 26-year-old soldier from
Atascosa County is one of the latest casualties to die in
the Middle East.
Staff Sgt.
Clint Newman was killed Monday in central Afghanistan when a
bomb exploded next to his Humvee, according to the
Associated Press. Three other troops also were killed in
the attack.
His death
is believed to be the first casualty of the war from
Atascosa County.
The
casualties bring the number of personnel killed in the
Afghanistan region to 214 since the U.S. military began
combat operations in 2001.
According to the Pleasanton
Express, Newman was assigned to the 321st Civil Affairs Unit
based at Fort Sam Houston.
He joined the Army after
graduating from high school and was stationed in Bosnia and
Germany.
Newman
joined the reserves after almost four years of service,
according to the paper. This was his second time being
recalled to duty in the last four years. He was activated
in June 2005 to serve in Afghanistan for the second time.
Newman graduated from
Pleasanton High School in 1997. He was active in school
activities, including the National Honor Society, Eagle
Band, and playing on the varsity football team, the paper
said.
He was due to come home in
May.
Turlock
Loses A Son:
“He Said
Then It Was A Lot Harder Than They Expected”

A photograph of Chad Gonsalves
early in his service career is decorated with a wooden
trinket he made when he was 6 years old. His interest in
the military began at a young age, his mother said.
02/15/06 By ROGER W. HOSKINS,
MODESTO BEE STAFF WRITER
TURLOCK: Friends, family and
old classmates brought everything but hope to the rural home
of Larry and Marsha Gonsalves on Tuesday.
The Gonsalveses' oldest son,
Chad, died in Afghanistan on Monday.
He was among four U.S.
soldiers killed when their armored vehicle was hit by a bomb
in a volatile mountainous region, the deadliest loss for the
military in the country in four months, according an account
released by the Pentagon.
Gonsalves' death was confirmed
by family members.
The bombing raised the death
toll of U.S. personnel in the Afghan conflict to 214 since
the United States invaded the country in late 2001.
Gonsalves, a Green Beret
sergeant first class, was 31 years old. The little rebel,
as his father called him, never finished high school. "But
he passed his (general education) test on the first
attempt," said Larry Gonsalves.
In the wake of unspeakable
grief, Marsha Gonsalves sat in her dining room. Friends
kept a vigil with the family in rooms nearby. Grandmother
Irene Gonsalves, 81, sat next to Marsha Gonsalves.
"He was always military, from
the time he was 7," Marsha Gonsalves recalled. "First it
was G.I. Joe, and then 'Rambo' scooped him up."
While she may have been
nervous about her son's vocation, she never fought it. "How
could I? It was what he wanted."
The Gonsalves family last saw
their son at Christmas. Chad Gonsalves, who lives in North
Carolina near Fort Bragg, brought his twin sons with him to
Turlock; Blake and Dylan will be 2 in May. Gonsalves' wife,
Julie, and oldest son, Cody, almost 4, spent Christmas with
her parents in the East.
"We just had so much fun. He
was such a good dad," Marsha Gonsalves said. "He didn't
want to bring them and he complained about how hard they
would be in an airport, but he brought them to make me
happy."
Shirley Stanley recalled her
nephew's "big heart. He loved and played with those boys.
He would take one in each hand, grabbing their bib overalls,
and lift them like weights."
Gonsalves and his sons left
Turlock on Dec. 28 and he was sent to Afghanistan in early
January.
"He had
been to Bosnia and South America, Colombia, but I don't
think he had a clue how hard this was going to be," Marsha
Gonsalves said. "We talked to him for the last time last
Wednesday. He said then it was a lot harder than they
expected."
Irene Gonsalves let her tears
go, too, for her "Punkin Boy," the name she christened Chad
Gonsalves with when he was an infant.
Gonsalves' father took refuge
in his workshop with three friends. Thinking about what he
did most with his son, he laughed. "Mostly, we argued. But
that got better the last few years. ...
"What
really gets to me is we used to always show each other
what's new," he said, fighting through the tears. "I'd show
him my latest project, a car or the roof or a radio. He'd
show me he could bench 250 pounds or his latest karate
moves.
"I'll never
show him anything new again," he sobbed.
A friend from childhood, Jeff
Jones, said simply, "Chad was a hero."
Anthony Silva, who has been a
teacher at Turlock High School for 34 years, had Gonsalves
in his wildlife management course.
"He wasn't crazy about school,
but he was a really sharp kid," Silva said. "He was beyond
his years for a teenager."
Silva said he also knew
Gonsalves from his rural neighborhood in Turlock. Silva's
family lives about a quarter-mile from the Gonsalves home.
Silva remembers seeing young
Gonsalves on the family ranch. "He was just a shadow to his
grandfather."
Funeral plans are still
pending, but family members said they plan to bury Gonsalves
in the area, and if possible, next to that grandfather, who
fought under Gen. George Patton in World War II.
Even in the depths of her
grief, Marsha Gonsalves harbored no hard feelings for the
military. "Chad made me promise if something happened to
him, not to be one of those bitter moms who blames the Army.
"Chad said, 'Just be proud of
me.'"
But his mom's impossible dream
drew one more harvest of tears.
"I just want to hold him
again," she said. "I want to tell him I love him. But he
knew that. I want him to hold his boys again and raise
them."
And then she wept.
TROOP NEWS
AWOL At
Ballad
February 4, 2006 By Thomas E.
Ricks, Washington Post Staff Writer [Excerpts]
Balad Air Base is a unique
creation, a small American town smack in the middle of the
most hostile part of Iraq. While soldiers drive as fast as
they can beyond its perimeter to avoid roadside bombs and
ambushes, on base they must drive their Humvees at a stately
10 mph, the strictly enforced speed limit.
The 20,000 troops based at
Balad, home to the major Air Force operation in Iraq and
also the biggest Army logistical support center in the
country, live in air-conditioned containers. Plans are being
made to wire the metal boxes to bring the troops Internet,
cable television and overseas telephone access.
The base boasts its own
airline, "Catfish Air," that shuttles soldiers among the
U.S. bases in Iraq. It also has its own customs post, run by
a relaxed but savvy group of Navy reservists.
Searching
for drugs, pornography and souvenir weapons, they have
learned the favorite places that departing Army troops use
to hide contraband: Bibles, picture frames, soap dishes and
the sleeves in body armor vests that hold the bulletproof
plates.
Army
engineers undergo especially close inspections because "they
think they know where to hide everything," sometimes
building false bottoms in toolboxes and containers, said
Petty Officer 1st Class Steven Honer.
Offenders simply suffer
confiscation, but the base does have a genuine criminal
element.
Recently an
Army enlisted man returning from medical leave went AWOL,
living with a cousin in the Air Force part of the base for
two weeks before being apprehended and placed in the base's
small brig.
SSgt. Says:
“They Feel
I Am Outspoken And They Need To Get Me Out Of Here Before
This Conduct Rubs Off On Others”
February 20, 2006 By Matthew
Cardinale, Editor, Atlanta Progressive News
ATLANTA--A
US soldier stationed in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) says
he is being retaliated against for complaining when his
superiors failed to fly the American Flag at half-mast in
remembrance of civil rights leader Mrs. Coretta Scott King,
ignoring a Presidential Executive Order, according to emails
and testimony obtained exclusively by Atlanta Progressive
News.
Staff Sergeant (SSgt.) John M.
Estes, in The United States Air Force Reserves with the
380th Air Expeditionary Wing, claims he has received undue
harsh treatment, including being yelled at, and has been
forced to end his deployment sooner than planned, as a
result of his complaint.
"SMSgt
Hennis and MSgt Owens were using rank intimidation and
thought I would not say anything," Estes wrote in an email
prepared for Atlanta Progressive News.
"I was (originally) told that
I would be sent home on March 7, 2006, not the end of
February 2006. Nothing should happen to me once I return to
the USA.
“Yes, this is a part
retaliation for speaking out about the American flag not
being lowered in Honor Of Mrs. King. They did not like what
I wrote in email to them.
“They feel
I am outspoken and they need to get me out of here before
this conduct rubs off on others. I had the courage to speak
out on something that was right and most Americans would
agree," Estes wrote (grammar edited for clarity in all email
citations).
SSgt. Estes has recently been
stationed in the Middle East, but is originally from the
Atlanta, Georgia, area, and says his family is a good friend
of the King Family. US Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney’s
(D-GA) Office has been following the issue since being
notified right away what was going on regarding their
constituent.
SSgt Estes was troubled when
he first noticed that his command post failed to fly the
flag at half mast at the base of the 380th on the evening of
February 7, 2006.
"The entire
base fail to give honor and respect to Mrs. Coretta Scott
King by placing the American flag at half staff. Two days
later there is no one talking about the wrong that was given
to... Mrs. Coretta Scott King at the 380th... It's hard to
hold back the tears trying not to believe in the year 2006
that things like this still going on... unequal treatment
and disregard," Estes wrote in an email to his unit on
February 9, 2006.
"I was
taught very earlier in my military career to give honor and
respect to others and so was everyone else... How did the
leadership allow this to happen? Mrs. Coretta Scott King
was for the advancement of people and doing what was right
for the entire human race. She deserves better treatment
from the members of the 380th..." Estes wrote.
SSgt. Estes immediately went
to his superior, TSgt Ulyssia A. Guerrier, Expeditionary
Logistics Readiness Squadron Vehicle Operations Night
Supervisor, on the night of the 7th.
Guerrier failed to take
immediate action, instead referring him to file a complaint
with the Equal Opportunity Office, Atlanta Progressive News
has learned.
Estes
wrote Capt. Shoffstall of Equal Opportunity at 3am on
February 8, 2006. "President Bush ordered on Tuesday
February 7, 2006, all American flags every where to be
lowered to half mast for the late Coretta Scott King and
the flag at the 380th was not lowered. This is a big
disappointment for all Americans serving in the 380th."
An email
reply from Shoffstall appeared not to address the issue,
stating that the base would have had to have permission from
the UAE to fly their flag at half-mast. However, Estes
wasn’t talking about the UAE flag.
"SSgt Estes, this is the
response I received from the MEO at Al Udeid regarding your
question. Hope this helps... Permission must be obtained
from a nation before its flag is flown at half-staff.
Therefore, unless permission is granted in each case (for
each flag that flies over your installation), it is
recommended that flags of other nations not be flown when
the flag of the United States is at half-staff. I would
imagine that your installation commander would also have to
get permission not to fly the other countries flag during
the period of our half-staff honors. This sounds like a lot
of red tape and probably could not be approved quick
enough," Shoffstall wrote at 2pm on the 8th.
Yet, Estes persevered. "Sir,
did any in the 380th Air Expeditionary Wing communicate with
the host nation to see if the flag could have been flown at
half staff? Sir how can this situation be prevented in the
future?" Estes replied to Shoffstall at 5am on Thursday the
9th.
In his next reply, Capt.
Shoffstall of Equal Opportunity appears to have made headway
on addressing the problem, after discussing it with a
higher-up, Chief Morris.
"Chief Morris responded to my
e-mail inquiring about this and here is his response: Sir:
Thanks for providing me this info. I must apologize that we
didn't make this happen. But please rest assured the
leadership in the wing was not made aware of this…had we
been, without a doubt we would have complied with the
President's order. I honestly don't believe this
information was delivered to our wing through official
channels. Again, it is my apology," Shoffstall later wrote
to Estes.
Estes says that Chief Morris
is the highest ranked on base.
"MSgt Kevin
E. Owens and SMSgt Tami L. Hennis chewed me out for not
using my chain of command," Estes replied to Shoffstall.
Estes claims, however, that he was following the advice of
his immediate supervisor on the night of the 7th, Mrs.
Guerrier.
"(Equal
Opportunity) is for any one with a complaint.
“It was my
right to contact you about Mrs. Coretta Scott King or do we
live in a society that we can't do this?
“I will like to file a
complaint against MSgt Kevin E. Owens and SMSgt Tami L.
Hennis on their actions and treatment of me. Sir I need to
bring this to your attention while I was being chewed up and
down about emailing you (Captain Troy L. Shoffstall), MSgt
Kevin E. Owens allowed me leave his office so I could get
some supporting documents. I left his office and email him
the documents and went and found my shift supervisor TSgt
Ulyssia A. Guerrier and brought her up to the MSgt Kevin E.
Owens where... Guerrier was told by... Hennis to leave, for
what I don't know. I'm upset that I brought this matter to
your attention for all this back lash," Estes wrote.
Estes also
says that MSgt. Owens tried to deny there was an Executive
Order to lower the flag in the first place, saying he didn’t
see it on the WhiteHouse.gov website. That is, it’s not on
the website and therefore it must not be true? Atlanta
Progressive News has verified the Executive Order exists.
"SMSgt Hennis and MSgt Owens
made me feel shallow and empty because of the way they
expressed their concerns and also by their body language,"
Estes told Atlanta Progressive News.
"SSgt Estes, we definitely
need to meet to discuss this issue. I can tell you that Col
Palmby is looking into how the guidance was not received by
the 380th to lower the flag. He is genuinely concerned and
so is Chief Morris. Let me know when you are available to
meet," Shoffstall replied to Estes.
Estes says he later met with
Shoffstall at 6pm on the 11th. In this meeting, Shoffstall
said he wanted Estes to give his superiors time to correct
the problem. Estes met with his supervisors but was
unsatisfied with his response and later said he wanted still
to file a complaint.
Estes will return home to the
US on February 29, 2006. He says a change in procedures may
result from his complaint and he is glad he spoke up.
However, he feels
uncomfortable in his current environment, is upset by the
mistreatment by his superiors, and worries about an overall
climate of repression.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Governor Of
Karbala Cuts Off
Contact With U.S. Occupation:
“We Are
Going To Escalate Things Against Them”
2.20.06 By ROBERT F. WORTH and
JOHN O'NEIL, New York Times Company
[T]oday,
the governor of the province of Karbala in the Shiite south
announced that he was suspending all dealings with American
troops and barring them from government buildings for
"behaving irresponsibly."
The
governor in Karbala, Dr. Akeel al-Khazali, cut off dealings
with American forces after they had failed to "respect the
security elements in the province," and had brought police
dogs into government buildings, a aide to the governor said
today.
"We are
going to escalate things against them" the aide said.
Assorted
Resistance Action

US soldiers and Iraqi police
inspect destruction of a restaurant filled with occupation
police after a bomb exploded inside it in the city of
Mosul. (AFP/Mujahed Mohammed)
February 20, 2006 (CNN) & By
HAMZA HENDAWI, Associated Press Writer & By ROBERT F. WORTH
and JOHN O'NEIL, New York Times Company & Reuters & RTة
Rebels
killed five people and wounded four when they attacked
trucks loaded with gravel near the Iraqi town of Dujail on
Sunday, police said.
North of
the capital in Taji, gunmen killed five truck drivers after
ambushing a convoy carrying construction materials to an
American military base, Interior Ministry officials said.
A group of
15 cars struck the convoy, which was delivering supplies to
a US military base, at Nabai, about 50km north of Baghdad.
Not far
away in Mahmudiya, a car bomb detonated on a police patrol,
wounding two policemen.
Two bombs
also exploded in the western city of Falluja, wounding three
policemen and two civilians, witnesses and police officials
said.
A car bombing targeted the
mayor of the Jisir Diyala area just north of Baghdad,
killing two of the mayor's security guards, police said.
Eleven other people were wounded in the attack and the mayor
escaped unharmed.
Another homemade bomb attack
Monday in central Baghdad struck an Iraqi police patrol and
wounded two police.
Also in
Baghdad, a car bomb killed two people and wounded five near
a Shiite political office in the Jadiriya district, The
Associated Press reported. One of the dead and three of the
wounded were police officers.
In Kirkuk,
Brig. Gen. Hathem Khalaf, director of operations for the
Kirkuk Police, was killed when a homemade bomb hit his
convoy Sunday. Two bodyguards traveling with him also were
killed.
An Iraqi
army soldier, a police officer and a police commando, none
of whom was in uniform, were killed in separate shootings in
Baghdad on Sunday afternoon, the official said.
Two
civilians were killed and six people were wounded when a car
bomb detonated near an entrance to the heavily fortified
Green Zone.
In Mosul,
225 miles northwest of Baghdad, an attacker blew himself up
in a restaurant packed with policemen eating breakfast,
killing at least five people and wounding 21, including 10
policemen, officials said.
The bombing in the Mosul
restaurant today followed a pattern in which insurgents
often attack locations at which police officers or recruits
gather.
One of the
injured, Muhammad Tharwat, said that more than 25 people had
been crowded into the restaurant before the attack,
including three police recruits at one table. Mr. Thurwar
said he was with two of his cousins when the bomb went off.
"I could not hear anything and
there was heavy smoke in the restaurant but I noticed a
light from the main door and then I got out," he said.
"When I got out I thanked God that I had not got hurt, but I
remembered my cousins."
When he shouted for them, only
one responded. The two of them searched and found the other
cousin just as he was losing consciousness, and drove him to
the hospital, Mr. Tharwat said.
A roadside
bomb wounded a policeman as his patrol passed through the
town of Iskandariya, south of Baghdad,
local police said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
“No To
Empire”
New York
City Labor Against The War Statement
Unanimously Adopted January
17. 2006
1. No to
Empire.
Immediate
withdrawal of the U.S. and its allies from Iraq,
Afghanistan. and the entire Middle East (including an end to
all U.S. aid to Israel) and around the world.
Support for national
self-determination, including the Palestinian right of
return, and opposition to collaboration with occupation and
empire (e.g.,
IFTU in Iraq).
2. Working
Class Resistance.
Rather than tailing the
pro-war Democratic Party, the antiwar movement must link the
war abroad and at home, in order to mobilize the widespread
antiwar sentiment amongst G.I.s, people of color,
rank-and-file trade Unionists, immigrants, and unorganized
workers.
3. Antiwar
Movement.
The antiwar
movement cannot afford sectarianism, turf, peaceocracy,
self- promotion, or worship of politicians and celebrities.
It requires honest, principled, democratic, united,
bottom-up antiwar action.
Comments
On:
Elitists In
Action:
UFPJ Kicks
Gays [And Veterans] To The Curb Again
[GI Special
4B19 2.20.06]
********************************************************************
“It's Going
To Take The Veterans Going To Ordinary Working People”
From: Tom S
To: GI Special
Sent: February 20, 2006
Subject: RE: GI Special 4B19:
Elitists In Action
It's going
to take the veterans going to ordinary working people,
building a new working class based anti-war organization,
independent of the Democrats, to stop this war.
UFPJ is a
middle class, bureaucratic "progressive" organization which
is not going to do this, especially when 2008 rolls around
and they want to shut the radicals up so "we" can get Hilary
Clinton into the White house.
And Answer
plays the same game, albeit more secretively and with more
of a show of Leftist militancy.
MORE:
“Here We Go
Again”
From: Max
Watts
Sent: Monday, February 20,
2006 6:11 AM
Subject:
Fw: GI Special 4B19: Elitists In Action
comment?
i have a
strong feeling of "here we go again"
as we
really had to fight to get rita's [resisters in the armed
forces] heard back when...
[For more
on that history, see: LEFT FACE, Soldier Unions and
Resistance Movements in Modern Armies, By DAVID CORTRIGHT
AND MAX WATTS; Contributions in Military Studies, Number
107; GREENWOOD PRESS, New York • Westport, Connecticut •
London]
MORE:
“The Troops
Must Take Their Rightful Place During This Darkening Storm
Because They Hold A Light To More Important Matters That Lie
Ahead”
From: Alan Stolzer
To: GI Special
Sent: February 20, 2006
Subject: Thoughts
RESPECTABLE
REBELS OF REBELLION
Leadership of the U.S. Left
has long suffered marginalization and imbedded in-fighting
that keeps it far from the masses it claims to embrace.
These
political “chiefs,” or respectable rebels of rebellion,
curiously hold camp away from fires it claims to have
knowledge to stoke.
The acid
test is a class conceit that includes, among other things,
mistrust toward a main political artery, one which carries
the blood of the nation itself and those who spill it at the
behest of U.S. Imperialism: its troops.
Turning a
collective back on troops doesn’t intensify progressive
action; it weakens and denies it.
Looking inward to allies who
share your views shrivels base and critical external work.
This same neatly ribboned package nurtures elements of
dismissal and snobbery that keeps the anti-war movement
divided and weak.
Class-consciousness should not be class arrogance no matter
how enlightened the particular dispenser(s) of wisdom may
be.
Surely one side of a question
reveals the other; seeing every action has a reaction, a
dialectic long established.
Rejecting a
vet back from Iraq, thereby holding her/his experience in
contempt, is no step forward, except into the arms of lip
smacking opposition thriving on self-defeating tactics.
Dialogue, as mass sensitivity,
is long overdue.
Troops
returned in one piece or not, mental or physical, must be
included in national discourse by event sponsoring
agencies or there is no relevant discussion about this war,
pure and simple.
Class positioning is at the
bottom of the dilemma.
Those who artificially place
themselves in the “observation tower” are the bells of
Judas’s Goat, but it’s time to let the flock graze.
The troops
must take their rightful place during this darkening storm
because they hold a light to more important matters that lie
ahead.
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
U.S.
OCCUPATION RECRUITING DRIVE IN HIGH GEAR;
RECRUITING
FOR THE ARMED RESISTANCE THAT IS

An interpreter working with
U.S. Army troops gestures to a group of Iraqi citizens after
U.S. soldiers stopped their vehicle at gunpoint near the
northern Iraq town of Baiji February 20, 2006. The men were
released after the car was searched and nothing suspicious
was found. REUTERS/Bob Strong
[Fair is
fair. Let’s bring 150,000 Iraqis over here to the USA.
They can kill people at checkpoints, bust into their houses
with force and violence, overthrow the government, put a new
one in office they like better and call it “sovereign,” and
“detain” anybody who doesn’t like it in some prison without
any charges being filed against them, or any trial.]
[Those
Iraqis are sure a bunch of backward primitives. They
actually resent this help, have the absurd notion that it’s
bad their country is occupied by a foreign military
dictatorship, and consider it their patriotic duty to fight
and kill the soldiers sent to grab their country. What a
bunch of silly people. How fortunate they are to live under
a military dictatorship run by George Bush. Why, how could
anybody not love that? You’d want that in your home town,
right?]
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
OCCUPATION
PALESTINE
Zionist
Soldiers Opens Fire On Terrorist School Bus,
Shoot
Terrorist Schoolboy In Head
HEBRON, February 14, 2006
(WAFA)
A schoolboy
was wounded on Tuesday when Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF)
opened random fire on a school bus near al-Arroub refugee
camp in Hebron City of the West Bank.
Medical
sources told WAFA that the school boy Ala'a Jawabra 17, was
critically wounded in the head.
Palestinian security sources
stated that IOF opened fire at the bus, driving between
al-Arroub camp and Ummar town of the city, wounding the
schoolboy whom was transferred to hospital for treatment.
Medics affirmed that Jawabra
was shot with a live bullet in the head when a number of
Israeli soldiers stopped the bus and conducted a search
campaign among the schoolboys.
[To check
out what life is like under a murderous military occupation
by a foreign power, go to:
www.rafahtoday.org The foreign army is Israeli; the
occupied nation is Palestine.]
DANGER:
POLITICIANS AT WORK
Dick Cheney
Condemns Invasion Of Iraq At Getting “Bogged Down” In A
“Quagmire”
February 20, 2006 Quotes from
Laurence M. Vance, LewRockwell.com