GI SPECIAL 4C25:

[Thank to Phil G, who sent this in.]
“Utter
Debacle”
“Their Lies
Are Coming Home To Roost Now, And It's Gonna Fall Apart”
Command
Sgt. Major (Ret’d) Has Some Words For Bush
[Thanks to Phil G, who sent
this in.]
And
(I'm saying this as) a man who has been involved in the
most pointed of our activities. I know it, and all of
my mates know it. You don't do it. It's an act of
cowardice. I hear apologists for torture say, "Well,
they do it to us." Which is a ludicrous argument. ...
The Saddam Husseins of the world are not our teachers.
Christ almighty, we wrote a Constitution saying what's
legal and what we believed in. Now we're going to throw
it away.
3/26/2006 By David Kronke, TV
Critic, Daily News
Eric Haney,
a retired command sergeant major of the U.S. Army, was a
founding member of Delta Force, the military's elite covert
counter-terrorist unit.
He culled his experiences for
"Inside Delta Force" (Delta; $14), a memoir rich with
harrowing stories, though in an interview, Haney declines
with a shrug to estimate the number of times he was almost
killed. (Perhaps the most high-profile incident that almost
claimed his life was the 1980 failed rescue of the hostages
in Iran.)
Today, he's doing nothing
nearly as dangerous: He serves as an executive producer and
technical adviser for "The Unit," CBS' new hit drama based
on his book, developed by playwright David Mamet. Even up
against "American Idol," "The Unit" shows muscle, drawing 18
million viewers in its first two airings.
Since he has devoted his life
to protecting his country in some of the world's most
dangerous hot spots, you might assume Haney is sympathetic
to the Bush administration's current plight in Iraq (the
laudatory cover blurb on his book comes from none other than
Fox's News' Bill O'Reilly).
But he's
also someone with close ties to the Pentagon, so he's privy
to information denied the rest of us.
We recently spoke to Haney, an
amiable, soft-spoken Southern gentleman, on the set of "The
Unit."
****************************************************
Q: What's
your assessment of the war in Iraq?
A: Utter
debacle.
But it had
to be from the very first.
The reasons
were wrong. The reasons of this administration for taking
this nation to war were not what they stated. (Army Gen.)
Tommy Franks was brow-beaten and ... pursued warfare that he
knew strategically was wrong in the long term.
That's why
he retired immediately afterward.
His own
staff could tell him what was going to happen afterward.
We have fomented civil war in
Iraq. We have probably fomented internecine war in the
Muslim world between the Shias and the Sunnis, and I think
Bush may well have started the third world war, all for
their own personal policies.
Q: What is
the cost to our country?
A: For the first thing, our
credibility is utterly zero. So we destroyed whatever
credibility we had. ... And I say "we," because the American
public went along with this. They voted for a second Bush
administration out of fear, so fear is what they're going to
have from now on.
Our
military is completely consumed, so were there a real threat
- thankfully, there is no real threat to the U.S. in the
world, but were there one, we couldn't confront it.
Right now,
that may not be a bad thing, because that keeps Bush from
trying something with Iran or with Venezuela.
The harm
that has been done is irreparable.
There are
more than 2,000 American kids that have been killed.
Tens of
thousands of innocent Iraqis have been killed, which no one
in the U.S. really cares about those people, do they?
I never
hear anybody lament that fact.
It has been
a horror, and this administration has worked overtime to
divert the American public's attention from it.
Their lies
are coming home to roost now, and it's gonna fall apart.
But somebody's gonna have to
clear up the aftermath and the harm that it's done just to
what America stands for. It may be two or three generations
in repairing.
Q: What do
you make of the torture debate? Cheney ...
A: (Interrupting) That's
Cheney's pursuit.
The only
reason anyone tortures is because they like to do it. It's
about vengeance, it's about revenge, or it's about
cover-up. You don't gain intelligence that way. Everyone
in the world knows that. It's worse than small-minded, and
look what it does.
I've argued this on Bill
O'Reilly and other Fox News shows.
I ask, who would you want to
pay to be a torturer? Do you want someone that the American
public pays to torture? He's an employee of yours.
It's worse
than ridiculous. It's criminal; it's utterly criminal.
This
administration has been masters of diverting attention away
from real issues and debating the silly.
Debating
what constitutes torture: Mistreatment of helpless people in
your power is torture, period.
And (I'm
saying this as) a man who has been involved in the most
pointed of our activities. I know it, and all of my mates
know it. You don't do it. It's an act of cowardice. I hear
apologists for torture say, "Well, they do it to us." Which
is a ludicrous argument. ... The Saddam Husseins of the
world are not our teachers. Christ almighty, we wrote a
Constitution saying what's legal and what we believed in.
Now we're going to throw it away.
Q: As
someone who repeatedly put your life on the line, did some
of the most hair-raising things to protect your country, and
to see your country behave this way, that must be ...
A: It's pretty galling.
But
ultimately I believe in the good and the decency of the
American people, and they're starting to see what's
happening and the lies that have been told.
We're
seeing this current house of cards start to flutter away.
The
American people come around. They always do.
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
Bunkie
Soldier Remembered
March 18, 2006 By Jim Leggett,
thetowntalk.com
FORT POLK: A Bunkie soldier
was remembered Friday as an "outstanding NCO" by two
teary-eyed comrades before being sent off with salutes from
a chapel full of soldiers.
Staff Sgt. Bryan A. Lewis, 32,
who was killed in Iraq on Monday, was remembered in memorial
services attended by a standing-room-only crowd in the
post's main chapel. Before each soldier and civilian paraded
up to salute a display showing a beret, boots, rifle,
helmet, and a Bronze Star and Purple Heart, both awarded
posthumously, a rifle salute and taps were rendered.
Before taps was played, a roll
call was taken. Some fellow sergeants barked out their
presence before Lewis' name was called. When he didn't
answer after the third call, the bugler began to play.
Lewis' wife, Fabersha, his
parents, Deloris and Donald, and his sisters, Shellie,
Shalyn and Shawn, were at the service but said they didn't
want to talk to reporters.
LOCAL
SOLDIER IS KILLED

GONZALEZ
March 21, 2006 By CYNTHIA R.
FAGEN, New York Post
March 21, 2006: A 22-year-old
New Yorker who had phoned his parents from Iraq to tell them
he planned to re-enlist was killed five days later in a
mortar attack in Tikrit, authorities said.
Word of the death of Army Spc.
Carlos Gonzalez of Orange County, came on the third
anniversary of the start of the war.
The Middletown native, who was
married and the father of a 22-month-old girl, died March 16
when a rocket blew up his bus as it headed back to a base in
Tikrit.
"When we spoke to him, he said
was going to re-enlist. I think that says a lot when
someone was over there," said his mother, Anna, choking back
tears.
"We were very proud that he
was re-enlisting," she said. "I didn't know that was going
to be the last time I spoke to him.
"But he's home now. We went
to Dover airport and brought his body home."
Gonzalez, a communications
specialist, "spent four years in the ROTC when he was in
high school," his mom said. "He wanted to make the Army his
career. It was his life."
AL ANBAR
SOLDIER DIES DUE TO CARDIAC ARREST
3.27.06 HEADQUARTERS UNITED
STATES CENTRAL COMMAND NEWS
Release Number: 06-03-02C
CAMP FALLUJAH, Iraq: A
Soldier assigned to 2/28 Brigade Combat Team died due to
cardiac arrest in Al Anbar Province Saturday.
Iraqi
Interior Minister Calls U.S. Military Commanders Liars And
Murderers:
Baghdad’s
Governor Breaks Relations With Occupation Command Over
Mosque Massacre

Men view a blood-stained floor
at the Mustafa mosque following a massacre of Iraqis by
Occupation troops in Baghdad March 27, 2006. (Ali
Jasim/Reuters)
3.27.06 CNN & MARIAM FAM,
Associated Press & (Reuters) & Nancy A. Youssef, Knight
Ridder & Aljazeera & Le Figaro with AFP
Iraq's
security minister, a Shi'ite political ally of Prime
Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, accused U.S. and Iraqi troops
on Monday of killing 37 unarmed people in an attack on a
mosque complex a day earlier.
"At evening prayers, American
soldiers accompanied by Iraqi troops raided the Mustafa
mosque and killed 37 people," Abd al-Karim al-Enzi, minister
of state for national security, said.
"They were all unarmed.
Nobody fired a single shot at them (the troops). They went
in, tied up the people and shot them all. They did not
leave any wounded behind," he told Reuters.
Iraqi police and sources in
al-Sadr's office said the U.S. military was battling the
militia.
Police said 20 members of the
Mehdi Army, the militia of radical Shiite Muslim cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr, were killed. Sources from al-Sadr's
Baghdad office -- which is inside the mosque -- also said
militia members died in the raid.
For his
part, the Governor of Baghdad announced his intention of
suspending all cooperation with American forces until an
independent investigation is opened to determine what really
happened.
"We have
decided today to cease all political and logistical
cooperation with American forces," declared Hussein al
Tahan, adding that the United States embassy and the Iraqi
Defense Ministry should be associated with the
investigation, but not the American military.
Iraqi
television showed a room containing bloodied corpses with
identification tags that read Dawa Islamic Party, the Shiite
party of Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
Details of a joint U.S.-Iraqi
Special Operations attack in northeast Baghdad late Sunday
continued to filter out, with Iraqi officials angrily
disputing a U.S. account of what happened.
Iraqi
Interior Minister Bayan Jabr said the Mustafa mosque was
attacked with worshippers killed, while a U.S. statement
said the operation focused on "a compound of several
buildings and that "no mosques were entered or damaged
during this operation."
Mr. Jabr
angrily denounced the operation and rejected the U.S.
account.
"Entering
the Mustafa Shiite mosque and killing worshippers was
unjustified and a horrible violation from my point of view,"
Jabr said on the Al-Arabiya TV news network. "Innocent
people inside the mosque offering prayer at sunset were
killed."

March 27, 2006: Iraqis call
for death to America as they parade the coffins of victims
of a US raid on a Mosque in Baghdad. (AP photo/Mohammed
Hato).
Qassim
Saleh, 36, a merchant, said he was walking in the area when
he saw U.S. forces approaching the mosque. He said he heard
extensive gunfire, and that U.S. forces were "shooting at
the mosque and at anyone on the street."
Sadrists
charged that members of the Iraqi Army accompanied the
Americans, but a ministry of defense official denied that.
Iraqi television showed
pictures of corpses on Sunday night inside what it called
the Mustafa mosque.
Many of the
dead were elderly and said to be members of prominent
political parties.
One mourner
said: "No one is protecting us. If it wasn't for the
al-Mahdi Army, we would be slaughtered in our homes."
Iraq's
ruling Shi'ite Islamist Alliance bloc demanded on Monday
that U.S. forces return control of security to the Iraqi
government after what it called "cold-blooded" killings
by troops of unarmed people in a mosque.
"The Alliance calls for a
rapid restoration of (control of) security matters to the
Iraqi government," Jawad al-Maliki, a senior Alliance
spokesman and ally of Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari,
told a news conference.
"American forces and Iraqi
Special Forces committed an odious crime when they attacked
the Al-Mustapha Mosque in the Ur neighborhood," the Shiite
bloc asserts in a communiqué.
"It's an
organized crime with serious political and security
implications. It aims to incite a civil war," the Shiites
insist.
"To kill
such a great number of the faithful of the family of the
Prophet after handcuffing and torturing them is
indefensible. It's an attack on the dignity of Iraqis that
strips away any credibility from the slogans of freedom,
democracy and pluralism flaunted by the American
administration," the communiqué concludes.
TROOP NEWS
Soldiers
“Really Part Of The Majority Of Americans Now Very Cynical
Toward This War”
Mar 27, 2006 MARGARET WARNER,
NewsHour [Excerpts]
MARGARET
WARNER: I'd like to ask you all, finally, about how you and
many veterans that you all stay in touch with -- whether
active duty, whether involved against the war, how they feel
about the fact that American support, public support for the
war is waning?
And I'll
begin with you, Sergeant Dougherty.
KELLY DOUGHERTY: Well, I just
got back from a march from Mobile, Alabama, to New Orleans
with hurricane survivors and veterans to call attention to
the Iraq war and the effects that it's having on our own
communities here in the United States.
And we had a large number of
Iraq veterans against the war, plus veterans from other
conflicts, the most that we've had together in one place.
And I think
we're all hopeful that, because of the turning viewpoints --
not only among the American public, but among soldiers in
Iraq, 72 percent of which who were polled said that they
think there should be a complete withdrawal within the next
year -- that this will help speed the end of this conflict,
because already we have over 2,300 U.S. soldiers and tens of
thousands of Iraqis who have been killed because of our
involvement in Iraq.
So to me, it's heartening, but
polls don't necessarily turn into tangible conclusions and
actions.
[Army Captain Jeremy Broussard
served with an artillery unit in Iraq.]
JEREMY BROUSSARD:
Historically, support for any conflict is at its highest
point the first day of the war. It only goes down, without
any deviation. We're now in our fourth year of the war. And
by a majority, there is public opposition to the war, you
know, not support.
My concern, in when I talk to
people, their concern is that...
MARGARET
WARNER: You're talking about other veterans?
JEREMY BROUSSARD: Other
veterans.
They say sort of what I said,
is that, you know, we've been told one rationale in '03.
The first people there, the first wave were there for
weapons of mass destruction.
People who
are now in their second and third, you know, possibly this
year in their fourth tour, are being told that they're there
to prevent a civil war and to maintain democracy. So what's
happening is you're getting people who get very cynical,
very jaded.
And I
think, as opposed to really being an exception, they're
really part of the majority of Americans who now see as
being very cynical toward this war.
Veterans-Survivors March
Mobile To
New Orleans:
Beauty
Defined In Epic Action:
“The
Marchers And Locals Alike Came Together In The Realization
That We Must Stand Together Against A Common Enemy, An Enemy
Not Of Color, But Of Class”
3-20-2006 by Ward Reilly,
Veterans For Peace
Dave Cline of VVAW and VFP
called me, and a few others, back in December, and asked
what I/we thought about organizing a march along the
(Katrina-affected) Gulf Coast, to commemorate the third
anniversary of the war in Iraq, in the mold, no pun
intended, of the civil rights marches of the 60`s.
We had been tossing around
different ideas about what action to take for the third
anniversary of the Iraq disaster, ever since we had marched
together in Washington back in September of 2005, and it was
time to make a decision, so we did.

Iraq
Veterans Against The War
Photographed by Shirley H. Young, Veterans For Peace at the
wreckage of a miniature golf course in Mississippi, March
16, 2006
The "Veterans-Survivors
March....Mobile to New Orleans" was born. We were "Walkin'
To New Orleans!"
Stan Goff took the bull by the
horns, and started putting together a team to organize this
huge undertaking, and in January we got down to business.
Goff, a retired Special Forces Master Sergeant, and member
of VVAW, VFP, and MFSO, put together a budget and supply
list, and we got to work organizing this incredible
adventure.
We set up a website, and
started a series of conference calls, formed committees and
a task force. The team involved is too large to list, but
they know who they are, and what we accomplished together.
In the end, EVERY participant was what made it work.
Veterans For Peace of Mobile,
Alabama, led by veteran Paul Robinson, put out the
"official" call to march, and the work began. We knew that
we were already late in organizing an adventure of this
scope, but we were determined that it was a great idea, that
being to try and tie the war in Iraq, and its staggering
cost, to the virtual abandonment of the Gulf Coast and the
city of New Orleans.
If the Bush administration had
trillions of dollars to destroy and "re-build" Iraq, why
wasn't that same administration doing
anything-and-everything possible to help the (destroyed)
cities in our own country?
As we had
put on the event t-shirts, "Every bomb dropped on Iraq,
explodes along the Gulf Coast." This was a play on Dr.
Martin Luther King’s words during the Viet Nam War, when he
said that "every bomb dropped on
Hanoi,
explodes in Harlem".
We kicked around a few
different names for the march, and a few different logos,
and in the end, we decided on the "Veterans-Survivors
March", with the theme of "Walkin’ To New Orleans", a Fats
Dominos song of the same title. "Fats" lost everything to
Hurricane Katrina, and he lived in the infamous "Lower 9th
Ward" of New Orleans.
We decided
to start the 130 mile march on Tuesday, March 14th, and to
end the march in New Orleans on March 19th, the third
anniversary of our nation’s invasion of Iraq, a country that
did absolutely NOTHING to the USA. And we marched...and we
bussed...and we marched some more.
Our message
was simple enough..."Let's stop the war, and rebuild our own
nation, NOW." We chose for a march logo a picture done by
Perry O’Brien of IVAW, that of a combat soldier and a
civilian woman, walking side-by-side into the sunset.
We also
decided that it was imperative for "Iraq Veterans
Against the War" to lead and speak as representatives
for this action, and LEAD AND SPEAK they did!
Press coverage locally was
outstanding, with front-page photos and articles in EVERY
city we marched through, from Mobiles' "Press Register", to
"The Mississippi Press" and finally in the "Times Picayune"
of New Orleans.
We were on local TV, and on
many live radio shows around the country, such as in
Colorado, where KVNF Public Radio did live broadcasts. If
there was one disappointment, it was in our (failed)
national press in covering the march, but the good news was
that we got killer international press, with "Aljazeera"
covering us for the last three days, and BBC, CNN, and a
Japanese press agent were with us, also.
In other
words, the people of Iraq and the rest of the world got to
see U.S. veterans of the Iraq and Afghan Wars, speaking the
TRUTH about those wars, a major coupe for us. There were
also at least 5 documentary film crews with us.
IVAW
took the lead each and every day, proudly carrying
theirs, and the marches’, banners.
They
led with grace, and they led with the TRUTH.
They
also did a fabulous job of sharing their experiences,
with their own brand of intense poetry and music. That
so many of their members came from around the country is
tribute to their commitment, and their beauty on stage,
and in being interviewed, was "icing on the cake." At
least 25 IVAW members made the trip.
The Iraq and Afghanistan War
veterans did a superb job of speaking, and an even better
job of performing. One after another, they went on stage
and shined during the "Veterans Art Collective", which took
place on Saturday night, the 18th, at the Viet Namese
village in New Orleans East, where we camped the last night.
The Art Collective was organized by IVAWs own Michael
Cuzzort, a Louisiana native who lives near New Orleans. It
would be a disservice to say that any act was better than
any other, because they were truly ALL inspired.
It is still hard for me to
understand how they can rap out multi-paragraphed lyrics,
with deep emotion, without even a lyrics sheet, or how they
can articulate so much meaning and their heart-felt words,
straight from memory.
Some of the participants in
the "Veterans Art Collective" were Josh Dawson, who emceed
and performed. Joe Hatcher and Garrett Reppenhagen did
several (Iraq War based) poems, Dave Cline jammed with Ward
Reilly, Josh Dawson, and Ethan Crowell. Billy Mitchell, a
Nam-era vet, and co-founder of "Gold Star Families For
Peace", read a poem about his son, who was KIA the same day
as Casey Sheehan, whose mother Cindy also joined us for a
portion of the march. Charlie Anderson played a fine song.
Fernando
Braga did a poem about Katrina, and Stephen Potts did his
(now infamous) speech, comparing holding-farts-in to not
speaking out. (How’s that for COMPLETE coverage?)
Dave Cline then took the stage
once more for an incredible song about "touching The
Wall"...I must add that there were late-night drum sessions
that went into the wee hours of the morning, each and every
night, and that it was incredibly gratifying to see all
those young vets having fun and realizing that there IS some
semblance left of the nation they were supposed to be
fighting for.
They were
"home" for the first time since they went away to impose
Bush’s war-crime-policies on the Iraqi and Afghani people.
The other
good news about the march is that we made contact, REAL
contact, with the black and Viet Namese communities that
Bush and Cheney's "class warfare" have most affected.
Truthfully,
the issues down here along the gulf-coast are issues of
gentrification and the stealing of the land of the poorest
of our citizens, and NEVER BEFORE have so many white
Americans gone into the homes and communities of the black
citizens in the deep south.
We shared
their music, their churches, and their food, as they fed us,
laughed with us, cried with us, and loaned us their land to
rest our weary heads (and feet).
Day after
day we took care of each other and loved one another, and we
started something that will spread like wildfire.
The locals
had the chance to mingle with people that LOVED and
RESPECTED them as true equals, and the marchers and locals
alike came together in the realization that we must stand
together against a common enemy, an enemy not of color, but
of class.
Yes, we did
it...and the hardest part of the trip was saying goodbye to
all of those that formed this incredible family, our TRIBE
of peace-makers, on this fabulous journey, from Mobile to
New Orleans.
Until we
meet again, March On, and PEACE OUT.

Iraq
Veterans Against The War
Photographed by Shirley H. Young, Veterans For Peace at the
wreckage of a miniature golf course in Mississippi, March
16, 2006
Military
Recruits Are Pulled Largely From The Nation's Working Class
[Thanks to Phil G, who sent
this in.]
03/26/06 CYNTHIA TUCKER,
ajc.com [Excerpt]
Military recruits are pulled
largely from the nation's working class - from those whose
prospects are less than stellar, from high school graduates
who know they have little chance of affording college
tuition, from young parents whose civilian jobs don't come
with health insurance.
Enlisted men and women tend to
come from households earning between $32,000 and $33,500,
according to a 1999 Defense Department study. (The median
American income is $43,300.)
YOUR DEAD
SON IS AWOL
[Thanks to
NB who sent this in. He writes: Please publish this - it
shows how the official mind works in my country.]
26 March 2006 By Lesley
Roberts, The Sunday Mail (UK)
Greig's
life was shattered as pals died around him in Iraq. Now his
parents want to know why the Army has listed him as AWOL
months after his death, and why it refuses to give them his
medals.
PRIVATE Greig McBride's name
does not appear on the list of fallen Iraqi war heroes.
The Black Watch squaddie is
not counted in the running tally of 103 British troops who
have lost their lives since the invasion three years ago.
Greig wasn't shot by a sniper
or blown apart by a bomber - but to his heartbroken parents
Helen and Diarmuid, he is another victim of the conflict.
Tormented
by the death of his best friend in Iraq, the 26-year-old
soldier threw himself off the Forth Road Bridge.
Incredibly,
the Army have listed him as AWOL because his body has not
been found. They refuse to hand over his possessions and
medals to his devastated parents - because, officially,
Greig is still "missing". And they will not release his
records to shed light on his final days.
Greig served with the Black
Watch for seven years. He saw fellow soldiers killed and
mutilated during a month-long stint in Iraq's 'triangle of
death'.
His pal - Private Kevin
McHale, 27 - was the first of five Black Watch squaddies to
die during that period.
Greig never
came to terms with what went on there. Now he's a forgotten
statistic, with no hero's funeral or regimental plaudits.
"He has been let down by the
army," said Diarmuid, 48, a despatch worker.
"I tried to
get him to talk but we never found out what he saw in Iraq.
He didn't sleep and picked fights. He was withdrawn. We
could see he was in trouble so why didn't the Army?"
Greig, from Inverkeithing,
Fife, was part of the 850-strong Black Watch deployment to
Iraq in June 2004.
It was the regiment's second
tour of duty to the Gulf and included an assignment to Camp
Dogwood, the US base near Baghdad, to tackle insurgents in
Falluja.
Soldiers came under constant
attacks from rockets and suicide bombers.
"We were waiting for news all
the time. It was terrible," said Diarmuid.
Five Black Watch men were
killed during the turbulent attachment.
Private Paul Lowe, 19,
Sergeant Stuart Gray, 31, and Private Scott McArdle, 22, all
from Fife, died when a suicide bomber drove a car at them.
Private Pita Tukutukuwaqa, 27,
of Fiji, was killed by a roadside bomb.
But the first to lose his life
was Greig's pal, Private Kevin McHale from Lochgelly, Fife.
He was driving across a bridge when it collapsed.
"They met after they joined
up," said Helen, 48, an electronics worker.
"When they were on leave,
Kevin drove Greig's car more than he did. They were great
mates. When Greig got leave, he went to see Kevin's
parents."
Greig told his father about
another incident. He was travelling through insurgents'
territory when the Warrior vehicle directly in front was
bombed.
His friend from Fife, Private
Russell Gibson, 24, suffered terrible injuries, including a
broken back and pelvis.
"Greig knew guys in the
Warrior were badly injured but they were told not to go out
and help," said Diarmuid.
Greig, who
was a talented boxer, had a history of depression. When the
Black Watch was deployed to Iraq in 2003, he was unable to
go as he was in a military hospital in Germany.
"While he
was here on leave, the doctor signed him off duties for
three months," said Helen. "We assume he was being treated
for depression when he went to Germany but the Army won't
let us see his records."
The tour of duty ended in
December 2004 and his parents were relieved their son was
coming home. But Greig had changed." He was drinking a lot
but things were going through his head," said Diarmuid.
Greig returned to barracks in
Wiltshire but in October 2005, the McBrides had to break
devastating news to him - Helen had cancer.
Greig was home on leave when
his mum went into hospital. The day after her operation -
December 16 - was to be the last anyone saw him.
Without telling anyone, Greig
drove to the hospital in the early hours asking to see his
mum. He told staff he was being followed by someone with a
gun.
His car was later found near
the north end of the Forth Road Bridge.
"He phoned at 10.30am to say
he was at the hospital," said Diarmuid.
"At 11.33am, a camera on the
bridge filmed him falling into the water. We didn't find
out until 4pm.
"I kept saying, 'He's an Army
boy, why can't the Army help us look for him?' They say
it's a civilian matter because Greig was on leave."
Greig jumped exactly a year
after his return from Iraq. His parents feel he was left to
deal with the mental burden that overwhelmed him.
"It might have been easier for
us if he had been killed in Iraq," says Helen. "We would
have had his body and could have had a funeral."
Greig was their youngest son.
His older brothers - despatch worker Garry, 29, and roads
worker, Scott, 28 - don't talk about his death.
"He was my bairn," said
Diarmuid. "Every day I drive across that bridge to get to
work. I hate it.
"Greig went to Iraq and did
his duty. But the Army didn't do their duty by him and
offer him help."
Government figures reveal
1,333 personnel returned from Iraq with mental health
problems.
Charles Plumridge, of the Gulf
Veterans and Families Association, said: "Today's terrorism
is putting our young men and women under a different type of
psychological pressure."
The Black Watch said last
night Greig had served "with distinction".
The
spokesman added: "Greig's absence is deeply felt by all his
colleagues." He was unable to say how long it would take to
return Greig's possessions to his family.
Join Dr. Joseph Lowery and Rep. Cynthia McKinney at the
SOUTHERN
REGIONAL MARCH
for PEACE
IN IRAQ
and JUSTICE
AT HOME
SATURDAY,
APRIL 1, 2006
a date
linking the 3rd anniversary of the war, March 20,
with the 38th anniversary of Dr. King’s death,
April 4
ATLANTA,
GEORGIA
Gather at
the King Center, 450 Auburn Avenue, at noon
March
step-off at 1 pm; Piedmont Park Rally 2 – 4 pm
BRING THE
TROOPS HOME NOW!
A Just Peace in Iraq / Civil and Human Rights for All
People
Before Profits
Drummers, Giant Puppets, Dancing Flowers for Peace!
Join
thousands coming from across Georgia, from
Birmingham,
Huntsville, Nashville, Memphis,
Tallahassee, Orlando, Gainesville,
Fayetteville, and Asheville!
For more information—groups coming from your
area/state, driving directions, etc.
www.georgiapeace.org
404-522-4500 AprilFirstMarch@yahoo.com
Friday,
March 31
Join Amy
Goodman and Dr. Joseph Lowery
for an
Atlanta Tribute Fundraiser for
Damu Smith,
founder, Black Voices for Peace
Hillside
Chapel & Truth Center, Inc.
2450
Cascade Road,
Atlanta GA 30311
6-7:30 pm
Sponsor’s Reception & Book Signing
8-10 pm
THE TRIBUTE
Suggested
minimum Donation $10 Children Free
When
possible, print off and help distribute the
two-sided
leaflet available at
www.georgiapeace.org - good graphics on the front and
endorsers, speakers and the March 31 event
with Amy Goodman on the
back!
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOP HOME:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW, ALIVE

The casket of Lance Cpl.
Evenor C. Herrera during his funeral at Sunset View Cemetery
in Eagle, Colo. Aug. 19, 2005. Beneath the flag at center
are from left to right, his grandmothers Alma Enamorado,
Carmen Herrera, mother Blanca Stibbs and stepfather David
Stibbs. Herrera, assigned to the 1st Battalion, 5th Marine
Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force,
based at Camp Pendleton, Calif., died Aug. 10 from injuries
he suffered when a bomb exploded during combat near Ar
Ramadi in Iraq. (AP Photo/Peter M. Fredin)
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action
Mar 27, 2006 (Reuters)
On Monday
afternoon, a rocket killed seven people and wounded 29
others when it struck a building in southeastern Baghdad, an
emergency police official said. The building houses offices
for the Dawa and Fadhila Shiite [translation: collaborator]
parties, the official said.
Police said they found the
body of a man who works as an Iraqi army supplier in the
town of Yathrib, near Balad.
BAGHDAD: A policeman and
three civilians were wounded when a roadside bomb hit a
police patrol in the city's south.
MOSUL: Five policemen were
wounded when insurgents threw a grenade at their patrol in
the northern city, police said.
Four people who work in the
U.S. military base near Tikrit were wounded when guerrillas
attacked them while they were heading to the base.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
Joint
U.S.-Iraq Base In Mosul Bombed
Many
Casualties

An Iraqi police car is seen
burning after it was hit in a roadside bomb in the northern
city of Mosul. A bomber killed at least 40 people waiting
outside an Iraqi army recruitment center. (AFP/Mujahed
Mohammed)
Mar 27, 2006 (Reuters) & CNN
At least 40
people were killed and 30 wounded in a bomb blast inside a
joint U.S.-Iraq base in Mosul on Monday, police said.
An Interior
Ministry source said the explosion targeted Iraqi army
recruits.
The attacker walked up to a
line of recruits at Kisik Base between Tal Afar and Mosul, a
base employee said.
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
“The
Genuine Items Are Seldom Recognized In History”

Photo
and caption from the I-R-A-Q (I Remember Another
Quagmire) portfolio of Mike Hastie, US Army Medic,
Vietnam 1970-71. (For more of his outstanding work,
contact at: (hastiemike@earthlink.net)
T)
From: Richard Hastie
To: GI Special
Sent: March 26, 2006
Protester being arrested at
the White House on September 26, 2005. More than 300 peace
activists were arrested for civil disobedience.
If Thomas
Jefferson had been there, I'm sure he would also have been
handcuffed.
The genuine
items are seldom recognized in history.
Mike Hastie
Vietnam
Veteran
“Still, We
Came To Oppose Him”
Reflections
On The 3rd Anniversary In North Texas
He
replied, "Well I want the TROOPS HOME NOW! My idea of
'gun control' is to control the big guns of the
military, not the little guns of the citizens!"
From: David Honish, Veterans
For Peace
To: GI Special
Sent: March 27, 2006
Subject: Reflections on the
3rd Anniversary in North TX
It was raining as I wrote this
on Saturday night of the 18th. Raining hard, with
occasional lightning flashes, and thunder rumbling like a
distant artillery range.
It rained on and off from
Friday thru Monday that weekend. When rain was forecast a
week ahead of time, my suggestion that Peace Action Denton
plan for a possible alternate rain date was ignored. The
event went forward as planned, rain or no rain.
Weather limited turnout to
about four dozen or so folks. Four dozen folks that stood
in wind, rain, and rapidly dropping temps to hear local
activists speak against the invasion of Iraq.
Local politicians were there
also, to speak for themselves.
Imagine how
determined the opposition to Bush policy across the nation
must be when one of the most ultra conservative parts of a
red state like Texas has folks willing to stand against Bush
policy for two hours in rain and temps in the forties?
A couple of rain canopies were
brought for shelter. Only partial shelter from the wind
driven rain blowing sideways.
Still, we
came to oppose him.
Myself and several others had
to hold each of the metal support poles down against the
wind to keep the rain canopies from blowing away. I admit
to being nervous while holding a wet steel canopy support
pole while lightning flashed.
Still, we
came to oppose him.
When it was my turn to speak
out, I leaned into the microphone, rather than touch it to
adjust it. The sound equipment was wet with rain. I
noticed when helping to set it up that the power cord had
the third prong for the ground wire cut off it too.
Fortunately, there were no accidental electrocutions that
day.
Still, we
came to oppose him.
The
speakers were more strident than those last year. It is a
reflection of the growing majority opposed to the war in
Iraq.
Words like
"impeachment" and "war criminal" were a common theme in many
of the speeches.
After my speech, a young woman
wearing a woodland camo BDU cap and a Code Pink button asked
if I planned to speak at the Dallas Peace Center's third
anniversary event the next day?
I declined, and told her I was
no fan of the Dallas Peace Center's agenda that includes
'gun control.'
I told her
the Clinton / Reno Justice Department tried, and failed, to
establish the legal precedent stating the Second Amendment
meant only the police and military had a right to bear
arms.
I asked her
to imagine living under the Bush regime if such a precedent
had been established?
We'd
probably be living behind barbed wire in FEMA camps for
dissidents now if it had?
She
lamented that it was too bad that such differences could not
be resolved.
I told her
I would not support any alleged peace group that advocates
repeal of any portion of The Bill Of Rights.
Later that night, too late, I
thought that I could have given her a copy of my speech and
encouraged her to read it in Dallas.
After all, it is about the
message, not the messenger.
I met my precinct democratic
candidate for county commissioner at the demonstration. I
told him I was a Libertarian who regarded democans and
republicrats as flip sides of the same coin.
I asked him just how dumb the
democans could be to not learn from their mistakes?
I told him
that if the democans were dumb enough to nominate yet
another east coast lawyer with a gun control agenda, to
expect another crushing defeat in the next presidential
election.
He replied,
"Well I want the TROOPS HOME NOW! My idea of 'gun control'
is to control the big guns of the military, not the little
guns of the citizens!"
ALL RIGHT! My kind of
democrat. I know who has my vote for county commissioner.
What do you think?
Comments from service men and women, and veterans, are
especially welcome. Send to
thomasfbarton@earthlink.net. Name, I.D., address
withheld unless publication requested. Replies
confidential.
OCCUPATION
REPORT
2003:
Sowing The Wind
2006:
Reaping The Whirlwind

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.
The protest was largely
peaceful, though there were a few scuffles between
demonstrators and American soldiers guarding the entrance to
the compound. (AP Photo/Murad Sezer)
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
Iraqi Army
Troops Waited For American Support:
“It's Too
Dangerous For Us To Go In There Alone”
27 March 2006 By Jeffrey
Gettleman, The New York Times
The most gruesome report of
violence for the day came from officials in Baquba, who said
Sunday evening that 30 men had been beheaded and dumped near
a highway.