GI SPECIAL 4C7:

[Thanks to PB, who sent this in: Roxanne.typepad.com]
Fuck What
The Troops Want:
After
Meeting Occupation General,
Collaborator Politician Says He Has Promise:
U.S. Troops
Will Never Leave Iraq
March 4, 2006 ALEXANDRA ZAVIS,
Associated Press Writer
President
Jalal Talabani on Saturday underscored the need for a unity
government in Iraq after a spasm of sectarian killing and
said he had been assured U.S. forces would remain in the
country as long as needed, ‘‘no matter what the period.’’
[And since the Iraqis will never stop fighting for their
liberation from the occupation, that means never.]
Talabani spoke to reporters
after a meeting with Gen. John Abizaid, chief of U.S.
Central Command, who met with Iraqi leaders in Baghdad on
Saturday.
Talabani
said Abizaid assured him Saturday that U.S. forces ‘‘are
ready to stay as long as we ask them, no matter what the
period is.’’
Fuck What
The Troops Want:
U.S.
Command Denies There Is Any Withdrawal Plan
[Thanks to PB, who sent this
in.]
Mar 5 By Ibon Villelabeitia,
Reuters
The U.S.
military in Iraq said on Sunday media reports that America
and Britain planned to pull all troops out of Iraq by spring
2007 were "completely false," reiterating that there was no
timetable for withdrawal.
Two British newspapers
reported on Sunday that the pull-out plan followed an
acceptance by the two governments that the presence of
foreign troops in Iraq was now an obstacle to securing
peace.
"This news report on a
withdrawal of forces within a set timeframe is completely
false," Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson said of the stories
in Britain's Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Mirror, which
quoted unnamed senior defense ministry sources.
Fuck What
The Troops Want:
Pentagon
Says No Decrease In U.S. Forces In Iraq “For The Foreseeable
Future”
MARCH 4, 2006 BY TOM BOWMAN,
SUN REPORTER
The top U.S. commander in Iraq
said yesterday that he hopes to make an assessment this
spring about whether to reduce the number of American troops
in Iraq.
But
Pentagon officials speaking anonymously said a recent surge
in violence there has dampened hopes that force levels can
be cut anytime soon.
The
expectation now is that U.S. force levels will remain the
same for the foreseeable future, according to a senior
military officer, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Another
Pentagon official said that with violence continuing in
Iraq, the current number of American troops would likely be
maintained at least through the end of 2006.
"They're planning for the long
haul this year," the official said. "The numbers will be
sustained or slightly increase to provide for trainers."
Currently, 133,000 U.S. troops
are stationed in Iraq, a number that has remained largely
unchanged for more than a year. A total of 160,000 U.S.
forces were in Iraq in December, a temporary spike intended
to provide security for nationwide elections.
Comment: T
Never
forget. The war in Vietnam didn’t end because the
politicians or the commanders wanted it to end.
The war in
Vietnam ended when the troops there rebelled against it, and
refused to keep fighting it; fragging their officers
wholesale; arranging private truces with people they didn’t
see as “the enemy” anymore; going on “search and evade
missions” or simply flat-out refusing to go on combat
missions; destroying vast quantities of equipment making
missions impossible to execute: the list is endless. And
the rebellion spread to the Air Force: pilots refused to
bomb. And it spread to the Navy: sailors disabled their
ships so they couldn’t engage in combat.
It worked.
The war stopped. Without an armed force willing to fight,
it’s very difficult for Imperial politicians to have a war.
Duh
That’s a
fact of life the Imperial assholes issuing all these press
statements quoted above have forgotten, if they ever knew
it. The troops decide when the war stops. And it will
happen again, in this war, not as soon as we might wish, but
sooner than anyone now expects. And that will be the end of
it.
Everybody
knows now that 72% of troops say “end the war this year,”
and 29% are for immediate
withdrawal.
What’s new
is that because of this poll, now the troops know it too.
The news is spreading everywhere in the armed forces in Iraq
by now. Today, for the first time, they can look in each
others’ eyes and know they are the majority.
And that
has changed everything, forever.
It’s only a
matter of time before that consciousness finds _expression
it ways that are unmistakable, and will shake the world.
The
Imperial politicians, Republican and Democrat, who always
knew what Iraq was really about, thought they would win an
oil empire.
They have
ended by losing their troops.
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
Vt.
Guardsman Who Sought To “Make A Difference” Killed
Mar. 3, 2006 By WILSON RING,
The Associated Press, COLCHESTER, Vt.
A Vermont
National Guard soldier was killed when the observation post
he was in was attacked by a group of insurgents in the Iraqi
city of Ramadi.
Spc. Christopher Merchant, 32,
of Hardwick leaves behind a wife, Monica, and four children,
ages 9 to 14. In civilian life, Merchant was a custodian at
the Peoples Academy in Morrisville.
He was the
second Vermont National Guardsman from Hardwick to die in
Iraq while serving with Task Force Saber. Spc. Scott
McLaughlin was killed Sept. 22.
Merchant was a 1991 graduate
of Peoples Academy. He served in the Army from 1991 to 1995
and the National Guard from 1996 to 1999. He rejoined the
Guard last year so he could serve with Task Force Saber. He
arrived in Iraq in October, three months after the rest of
the group.
Merchant
was the sixth member of Task Force Saber to die since the
unit arrived in Ramadi in July.
Task Force Saber is part of a
brigade combat team led by the Pennsylvania National Guard.
Merchant was a member of C Company of the 1st Battalion of
the 172nd Armor Regiment based in Morrisville.
Missouri
Family Recalls Soldier Killed
02/28/2006 St. Louis Dispatch
Pineville:
A soldier from southwest
Missouri killed last week after less than two months in Iraq
bought a car shortly before being sent overseas and gave it
to his niece, his brother said.
Pfc. Christopher Marion, 20,
was one of four soldiers killed Wednesday, when a roadside
bomb detonated near their Humvee while they were on patrol
in Al Hawijah, 150 miles north of Baghdad. The soldiers
were with the 101st Airborne Division, based at Fort
Campbell, Ky.
Marion's brother, Kevin, said
the soldier had used money he earned in basic training to
buy the car while home on leave.
Kevin Marion said he would
remember his brother as someone who loved scary movies,
parties, road trips, swimming, making people laugh and
practical jokes.
A friend, Jess Allen, who
graduated from McDonald County High School with Marion last
year, said, "He was just all about having a good time."
Kevin Marion said his brother
always planned on joining the military, even though their
mother "didn't think it was that good of an idea." He said
"she figured he'd be making his own decision and get a lot
of experience."
British
Troops Under Attack Near Basra
6 Mar 2006 Scotsman.com
BRITISH troops came under
attack from a roadside bomb outside the Iraqi city of Basra
today.
The device detonated west of a
British Army base south of Basra as a convoy of trucks
carrying soldiers believed to be from the Scots Dragoon
Guards passed.
No-one was hurt in the
incident which took place on a road around seven miles south
of the city.
Bomb disposal teams moved in
and uncovered a second bomb, known in military jargon as an
IED. A third device was found some miles away a short time
later. Army sources reported an increase in the number of
IEDs over the previous three days.
Marines
Pull Out Of Rutbah:
Reduced To
Checkpoints Outside
“In the
long term it cuts down on Marine and civilian
casualties,” Biegel said. As for the town’s suspected
role in financing insurgent operations, Kosid said there
is little the Marines can do until Iraq’s government
establishes a security presence.
March 06, 2006 By Antonio
Castaneda, Associated Press [Excerpts]
RUTBAH,
Iraq: Marines used to patrol the streets of this city near
the volatile Syrian border. Now they’ve penned it in with a
wall of sand, leaving only three ways in or out.
The Marines
ringed Rutbah with a 10.5-mile-long berm, seven feet high
and 20 feet wide, in mid January and reduced their presence
to checkpoints at the three entrances that also are manned
by a few dozen Iraqi soldiers.
The move was forced by a major
U.S. effort to make the former insurgent stronghold of
Fallujah a showplace of American-Iraqi cooperation.
That leaves
fewer Marines to patrol a region with close tribal and
economic ties to neighboring Syria, which Washington has
accused of letting militants slip over the border.
The sand wall is only “an
intermediate solution,” said Marine Lt. Col. Robert Kosid,
whose 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion is
responsible for Rutbah and several thousand square miles of
desert around it.
“I think
the long-term success of Rutbah involves a permanent
presence in the city,” said Kosid, who was also based here
on his previous tour in Iraq. But there aren’t any Iraqi
forces available now.
Rutbah’s corrupt police force
was disbanded last year, and hundreds of Iraqi soldiers that
had been in the area were moved north in November for a
joint U.S.-Iraqi operation around Qaim.
Some Marines say the
checkpoints are effective at weeding out insurgents without
resorting to force.
“It’s a
more methodical way to use (checkpoints) to clear towns
instead of going right in to sweep it,” Sgt. Spencer Biegel
of Albany, Ore., said as he helped inspect cars at a
checkpoint.
More than a dozen wanted
suspects have been caught at Rutbah’s checkpoints, he said.
“In the
long term it cuts down on Marine and civilian casualties,”
Biegel said. [Or, as a soldier said a year ago about a
similar situation “We find if we don’t go there, they don’t
fight.” Given that the citizens of Rutbah are the
“insurgents,” as the story makes clear in the next line,
this simply means the resistance now rules in Rutbah.]
As for the
town’s suspected role in financing insurgent operations,
Kosid said there is little the Marines can do until Iraq’s
government establishes a security presence.
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 marine and a US Army
soldier man their position on the rooftop of a hotel in
Ramadi. (AFP/Patrick Baz)
So Much For
“That Progress In Iraq” Bullshit
3.5.06 Steve Chapman, Chicago
Tribune
For nearly three years,
Americans have been told that we are making progress in
bringing stability and democratic government to Iraq.
But that state of affairs,
like the horizon, keeps receding as we approach.
Lately the
carnage has been waxing, not waning. Last month, for
example, Iraq suffered 39 "multiple fatality bombings." The
previous February, there were 18.
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
Canadian
Takes Command Of Occupation:
“Canadian
Soldiers Are Coming Home In Body Bags”
March 6, 2006 Mobilization
Against War and Occupation
On the morning of Thursday
March 2nd, just 48 hours after command of the NATO
occupation forces in Southern Afghanistan was handed over to
Canadian Brigadier-General David Fraser, Canadian Cpl. Paul
James Davis of Bridgewater Nova Scotia was killed when his
military vehicle "flipped over" during a "routine patrol" in
Kandahar Afghanistan.
Seven others were injured in
the crash.
Attacks on
Canadian soldiers continued in the hours and days that
followed.
In the
suicide bomb, roadside bomb, and axe attacks that occurred
at least every 24 hours on Thursday March 2nd, Friday March
3rd, Saturday March 4th and Sunday March 5th, two Canadian
soldiers were killed, and at least 12 were wounded, some
critically.
MAWO
Co-Chair Shannon Bundock explained these attacks in the
context of the escalation of Canada's military occupation of
Afghanistan: "It is no coincidence that Canadian troops are
under attack in the increasingly violent "combat mission"
that is Canada’s occupation of Afghanistan," Bundock said.
"There are 2,300 troops
stationed in Kandahar. Canadian Brigadier-General David
Fraser is leading the NATO forces in 'tracking down' the
Afghan people that Rick Hillier and the Government of Canada
refer to as 'scumbags and murderers'.
This is a war drive. Already
we are seeing that Canada's 'top soldier' Rick Hillier’s
predictions about this combat mission are coming true:
Canadian soldiers are coming home in body bags."
Notes From A Lost War:
“I’m Sure
I've Shaken Hands With Some People Who Have Plotted Against
Us”
Mar 05, 2006 KANDAHAR,
Afghanistan (CP)
The attack
sounds like the work of a madman, an axe-wielding attempt at
murder rather than an act of war.
Lieut.
Trevor Greene was chatting with dozens of elders near his
forward base in Gumbad when an Afghan villager pulled an axe
with a 60-centimetre handle from inside his clothing.
The
villager, in his 20s, held the axe high over Greene's head
and yelled "Allah Akbar," God is Great.
The man
fulfilled his destiny. He delivered his nearly lethal blow
and then died where he stood, his body riddled with bullets
from Capt. Kevin Schamuhn and two of his fellow soldiers.
Schamuhn, Greene's platoon
commander, was sure Greene was dead.
"It was my initial assessment
that Trevor was dead on impact because of the force with
which the axe hit his head," Schamuhn recounted Saturday.
"Fortunately, that was not the
case."
Greene was in serious but
stable condition Sunday and on his way to a U.S.-military
hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.
He was promoted to captain
before his departure. He was due for a promotion later this
year, but the boost in rank was fast-tracked so he could
receive it in the field.
The notion
the act was of a lone maniac quickly disappeared.
While
villagers scattered in all directions, enemy small-arms fire
broke out from across the river. Canadians and their Afghan
allies returned fire. Then, as things calmed slightly,
another man moved toward coalition forces and tossed a hand
grenade.
The Afghans
and Canadians returned fire again as the grenade exploded
harmlessly. Schamuhn believes the man was hit but the
grenade attacker scurried away in the mayhem.
As things calmed down, a U.S.
Blackhawk helicopter whisked Greene away to a Canadian
hospital at Kandahar Airfield. He remains there in serious
condition, awaiting a plane ride to Germany and home.
The Afghans and Canadians went
into the village to find answers. All they found were seven
old men and some women and children.
"There were
no fighting age males there," said Schamuhn.
"The
leaders we had been speaking to earlier had disappeared and
all the young men that we were talking to had disappeared."
No villager
would say who the dead attacker was.
The platoon from Company A of
the Princess Patricia's Light Infantry brigade in
Afghanistan was making a series of stops in small villages
Saturday from their forward operating base 70 kilometres
north of Kandahar.
Villagers in a meeting hours
earlier welcomed them with blankets and bread and meats.
The meetings with local
leaders are known as shura and are key to getting anything
done in rural areas.
The fateful
meeting was off to a good start when the attacker struck,
Schamuhn said.
The first
hint of trouble could only be seen in the light of
hindsight, he said. "About two or three minutes prior to
the incident, all the children that were present were
escorted away, about 20 to 30 metres away," Schamuhn
recalled. [And
that is not “a good start.”]
"But none of us picked up on
this, there was no weird feeling, no gut feeling that
something was about to go down."
Schamuhn has grown to trust
villagers through dozens of encounters. He and Greene had
removed their helmets and set down their arms in a sign of
respect and trust.
"I'm sure
I've shaken hands with some people who have plotted against
us," he said.
"You can't
tell." [This really belongs in a collection of “famous last
words from Imperials wars of occupation.”]
Schamuhn
said he had started to believe the oft repeated Afghan
contention that foreigners are causing all the trouble. He
doesn't believe it now.
"This guy, he was a local
villager from this village who was coerced or persuaded by
some outside force to do this against us," Schamuhn said. [So,
he’s still an idiot, still can’t believe that Afghans don’t
want an occupation army in their country. Dumbfuck prime.]
"We were completely vulnerable
to them and they took complete advantage of that. There was
a lot of people who knew what was about to happen." [Gee,
maybe it’s not some silly “outside force” involved? Could
that be?]
Schamuhn and his men were back
Saturday night in their small camp near Gumbad. They stay in
a mud-walled farmers compound, with razor wire providing an
outside ring of security.
Schamuhn said his men are
fine, although sleep would not come easy this night. They
are warriors, he said.
"My guys are ready to fight
again. They're ready to go back out and do their job."
"They are ready to go and
protect and continue on this mission. They are not afraid."
[He was almost sounding
credible, and then he had to overdo it with that “they are
not afraid” line. After having just seen a brother get his
head opened up with an axe, if they’re not just a teensy bit
afraid, they’re as blind and stupid as their Captain.]
Playing A
Losing Hand
3.13.06 Time
In places
like Helmand province, where few Afghan or foreign troops
are stationed, the main burden of fending off the insurgents
has fallen to an Afghan police force that is poorly trained
and often overmatched by the Taliban.
PAKISTAN
LEADER TELLS U.S. THEIR AFGHAN STOOGE IS BRAIN DEAD
3.6.06 Los Angeles Times
President
Pervez Musharraf accused his Afghan counterpart of being
"totally oblivious" about the situation on the border of
their two nations, where skirmishes between Pakistani army
units and pro Taliban militants continues.
In an interview on CNN, an
irritated Musharraf responded to contentions by the Afghan
government that it provided Pakistan with intelligence
indicating that former Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar
and key associates were hiding on the Pakistani side of the
border.
TROOP NEWS
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOPS HOME:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

The casket of Corporal Felipe
Carvalho Barbosa goes to the graveside as Corporal Barbosa's
family members look on at Floral Garden Memorial Park
Cemetery in High Point, North Carolina February 6, 2006.
Barbosa, a Brazilian native who recently became a U.S.
citizen, was serving as an infantryman with the 2nd
Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment of the U.S. Marine Corps when
he was killed in Iraq on January 28, 2006 REUTERS/Ellen
Ozier
Dan Quayle,
Bush The Elders’ VP,
Behind Job
Cuts At Walter Reed!
From: JF
To: GI Special
Sent: March 06, 2006
Subject: IAP Worldwide
Services = Cerberus Global Investments = Dan Quayle
Dear GI Special,
After
reading in GI Special about the loss of jobs at Walter Reed
following the new contract to IAP Worldwide Services I
googled the company.
Sure enough
the officers are made of Halliburton and KBR types, and the
company is owned by Cerberus Global Investments, a limited
partnership with 16 billion in capital.
The
chairman of Cerberus Global Investments, since 2000, has
been Dan Quayle.
Crony
capitalism at work.
I wonder
who those limited partners are?
THIS IS THE
STORY HE WRITES ABOUT:
War
Profiteers Target Walter Reed
3.1.06 Washington Times
Lawmakers
and military officials are calling for an investigation into
a $120 million contract at Walter Reed Army Medical Center
that will replace hundreds of federal union workers.
A Government Accountability Office ruling Feb. 21 upheld the
Army's contract award to IAP Worldwide Services, although
the Army initially determined that using federal, in-house
employees would be most feasible.
IAP would provide
administrative, managerial and operational support services
at the hospital.
NEED SOME
TRUTH? CHECK OUT THE NEW TRAVELING SOLDIER
Telling
the truth - about the occupation or the criminals
running the government in Washington - is the first
reason for Traveling Soldier. But we want to do more
than tell the truth; we want to report on the resistance
- whether it's in the streets of Baghdad, New York, or
inside the armed forces. Our goal is for Traveling
Soldier to become the thread that ties working-class
people inside the armed services together. We want this
newsletter to be a weapon to help you organize
resistance within the armed forces. If you like what
you've read, we hope that you'll join with us in
building a network of active duty organizers.
http://www.traveling-soldier.org/
And join
with Iraq War vets in the call to end the occupation and
bring our troops home now! (www.ivaw.net)
“Right Now
I Don't Have Any Bone On My Head It's Just Brain And Skin”
March 3 By Brandie Meng, WNEP
A local soldier caught in the
line of fire while serving in Iraq is now at home and
recovering from a gunshot wound to his head.
Sergeant Michael Scott Bennett
said he's is relieved to be safe at his home near Montgomery
and is now relaxing and enjoying being around family and
friends.
On February 15 the National
Guardsman with the 109th was seriously injured while on
patrol just outside Ramadi, Iraq.
“Right now
I don't have any bone on my head it's just brain and skin,”
SGT Bennett said. “We were out on patrol going through a
high rise apartment building. We made a wrong turn and got
into some mud. It just rained and when it rains in Iraq, it
gets bad when it rains. A lot of things sink, like
Humvees.”
Bennett said as he and his
team were trying to get the vehicles out of the mud, “I just
peered over the Humvee to make sure, I heard shots ring out
and hit me and knocked me over. I didn't realize I was hit
until I got back up.”
He knew he was shot in the
head when he saw blood dripping from his helmet. He said he
didn't feel any pain and was even conscious enough to call
home.
“I was glad to hear his voice
but then I couldn't speak,” said mom, Mary Bennett.
“It was definitely a shock. I
can't remember ever feeling that shock ever before,” said
Bennett's wife, Jolie.
“I just wanted a hug and thank
God he's alive,” the sergeant's mother said.
SGT Bennett still has a few
more surgeries to undergo but he and his family are all
relieved he's safe and will be okay.
Lawrence Of
Arabia Invented IEDs
3.5.06 Long Island Newsday
If anyone can claim credit for
inventing the improvised explosive device, it is Lawrence of
Arabia. When insurgents in Iraq use IEDs to attack armored
vehicles and disrupt U.S. supply lines, they are taking a
page from the less advanced tactics of T.E. Lawrence, the
British liaison officer who pioneered guerrilla warfare
during the 1916-18 Arab revolt against Turkish rule.
His main
lesson for insurgents: If you're facing a bigger and
better-armed adversary, don't engage him directly.
Army
Suspends 14 Recruiters In California For Faking Documents
March 06, 2006 By Jeremiah
Marquez, Associated Press
LOS ANGELES: Fourteen Army
recruiters have been suspended from their duties pending a
military probe into allegations they falsified documents at
recruiting stations in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties,
authorities said Friday.
Army investigators are
focusing on recruiting stations in Oxnard and Santa Maria,
said Michael Shepherd, an assistant chief of staff for the
U.S. Army Recruiting Command, based in Fort Knox, Ky.
The allegations include
“falsifying documents” that accompany recruiting
applications for enlistments, he said.
No further details were
immediately available. Messages left with officials at
Oxnard and Santa Maria recruiting stations were not
immediately returned.
DoD Crooks
At Work:
Air Force
Chief Tied To Contract Fraud;
Centcom
Official Being Investigated
3.5.06 Arizona Republic:
The
highest-ranking officer in the Air Force pushed a $49
million publicity project for the Thunderbirds air show that
is now being investigated by federal regulators.
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen.
T. Michael Moseley and other top officials were involved in
steering the contract toward a Pennsylvania company,
Strategic Message Solutions, whose senior partners included
a recently retired four-star Air Force general, according to
the allegations.
3.5.06 Tampa Tribune:
The
Pentagon inspector general is examining allegations that
Lonnie Smith, a senior manager in the intelligence
directorate of the U.S. Central Command, retaliated against
a subordinate who complained that Smith used his influence
to help his son-in-law get a job at Centcom, a potential
violation of a federal law barring nepotism.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action

The wreckage of a police pick
up truck in Mahmoudiya March 6, 2006. A car bomb targeting
a police patrol injured two policemen. (AP Photo/Haider
Fatehi)
March 6, 2006 AP & CNN & KUNA
& Xinhua
In Baquoba,
a car explosion two policemen and wounded 4 others.
One bomb
exploded as a police patrol was driving along Mughrb Street
in the northern Azamiyah neighbourhood, killing one officer
and a civilian bystander, Interior Ministry official Maj.
Falah al-Mohammedawi said. One patrol member was wounded,
he said.
A car
bomber hit an Interior Ministry convoy near al-Mustansiriyah
University, in eastern Baghdad, killing two members of the
security force and injuring three, police
said.
Another car
bomb targeting a police patrol exploded in downtown,
injuring at least four policemen.
Two bombs
went off in Baghdad's notorious southern Dora neighborhood.
One targeted an Interior Ministry patrol, wounding one
commando, police said.
A second
went off as a U.S. patrol was passing, injuring five
policemen who were guarding a bank, said al-Mohammedawi.
The injured included two staff members of the bank.
In
Mahmoudiya, a car bomb hit a police patrol, injuring two
policemen, said police Cap. Rashid
al-Samarie.
A latest
explosion occurred in Jadriya neighborhood of central
Baghdad, killing three policeman and injuring one other,
police sources told Xinhua.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
Top
Collaborator General Killed By Sniper
[Thanks to
PB, who sent this in. He writes: ONE SHOT, ONE KILL, AS
THEY SAY]
3.6.06 Reuters & BBC
One of the
highest-ranking generals in Iraq's new, U.S. trained army
was shot dead in Baghdad on Monday, the U.S. military and
Iraqi police said.
Major General Mubdar Hatim
al-Dulaimi, commander of all Iraqi army forces in the
capital, was killed by a sniper, police sources said. The
man was killed by a sniper while driving through the
Gazaliya area of the city at about 1700 (1400 GMT).
As the commander of the 6th
Division, among the first and biggest of Iraq's new army
divisions formed by U.S. forces, Dulaimi was among the most
prominent officers in Iraq's security forces.
He is also thought to be the
most senior Iraqi officer to be killed since the fall of
Saddam Hussein in 2003.
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
The Agent
Thanks to Alycia Barr, mother
of a man who served in Iraq, for sending this in. She
writes:
“After
reading the articles by George Liningston and George Webster
concerning DU exposure and the need for testing then
struggling through Garett's piece thought you'd like to read
what follows this message.
“The
chemical makeup of AO and DU are different but they deliver
the same death blow in the end. Curious how both substances
are served up to our soldiers by the same source...our own
government.
“The sad
connection to these WMDs and PTSD is in the following
comment…”
********************************************************
Paul lost his Brother just
this last Saturday after his long illness with AO and PTSD.
Paul Norton wrote: "The Agent"
has collected my brother's receipt, he has died.
John Norton, Grand Blanc Class
of 1959 has died in Illinois. He was RA (Regular Army) U.S.
Army 1963 to 1966.
Two tours in Vietnam.
Honorable discharge, and Agent Orange cancers recognized by
our glorious Veterans Affairs system that was so kind to fry
his insides with radiation in not only the right area, but
also some wrong areas for good measure.
They apologized to him in
their own warm govt. way. He of course is who inspired me
in the middle of the night after he began to suffer, to
write the 'Agent ' poem.
Hell, I ain't no poet. It
just came out. I was gonna toss it out and Shirley said save
it.
It is for all the Cpl. John
Norton's who have suffered, are suffering, and have yet to
suffer, from Agent Orange exposure.
We poor mislead shits that
joined to save America sure got a surprise didn't we?
As an enlistee myself, I can
say that.
Nothing new to report except
that my oldest brother John , a veteran, has died. I know
he is not hurting now and is in a better place.
Younger brother Paul.
MORE:
To:
firebase-news@yahoogroups.com
Sent: March 05, 2006 11:10 PM
Subject: [firebase-news]
Written by a Vietnam Veteran Waiting For The Agent
This hurts
I remember when Paul Norton
wrote this poem...his wife showed it to me without Paul
knowing. (I read it once & a chill went through me! My God!
He was speaking for every Nam Vet I knew!)
He didn't think it was any
good, but his wife, Shirley & I convinced him to let us show
it around...he wanted notoriety back then.
I remember Jennie said "The
Agent" is scary & she didn't like it...we tried to convince
her that if some of those stubborn, bull-headed Vets would
read it perhaps they would think about going to get regular
physicals which is their best defense against "The Agent".
My tears fall freely right now
because like Paul says "The Agent " has collected my
brother's receipt, he has died."
But I still hope that by
reading this email it will convince a few more Veterans to
get regular physicals & by doing so they may have a better
chance at fending off this horrible grim reaper.
The only comfort at this time
for John Norton is like Paul says "I know he is not hurting
now and is in a better place."
May the wonder of angels give
you peace and hope
Hugz, Shelia
The Agent
I am the
reminder.
I am a
herald of sorrow and anguish..
Pain and
misery precede me on my appointed rounds.
I collect
on debts owed. I am the keeper of receipts.
My list of
diagnosis grows. I grow.
I am the
Agent.
Through the
years my disguises are many.
The result
is the same.
I am
irresistible, unstoppable, though once preventable, now
terminal.
Final.
Look here
to the dark angel of a generation misguided and mismanaged.
I am the
way to this inglorious and undeserved end.
I have the
last word.
I am the
Agent.
I am the
instrument of early demise ongoing.
I am a
corrupter of men's ideal and intentions.
I am the
Agent.
Some will
escape me. Not many. All will know of me.
I know whom
I have gotten and who yet remains.
I have the
last word.
I am the
Agent. I am dioxin. I am Agent Orange.
Written by
a Vietnam Veteran Waiting For The Agent

Photo
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)
“The
Politicians And Businessmen Of War Don’t Want That Gravy
Train To Stop”
As long
as we continue to be led by unapologetic war makers,
their wealthy business cronies and the bribery from
large political campaign contributors, there is no
chance we will ever obtain a meaningful peace.
March 6, 2006 Gary Kohls, MD
Lew Rockwell.com [Excerpt]
If we actually knew the
gruesome realities of war (or even understood the immorality
of spending trillions of dollars on war preparation while
hundreds of millions of people are homeless and starving) we
would refuse to cooperate with the things that make for war.
But that wouldn’t be good for
the war profiteers who profit from war.
So those businesses must hide
the gruesome truths and try instead to make it look like
something patriotic, with, for example, sloganeering like
"Be All That You Can Be."
Or they
might try to convince the soon-to-be-childless mothers of
doomed, dead or dying soldiers that their child had died
fighting for God, Country and Honor instead of for
domination of the Middle East’s oil reserves.
Let’s face it. The US
military standing army system has been bankrupting America
at $500+ billion year after year after year, even in times
of so-called "peace."
The warmongering legacy of the
Pentagon is still with us, particularly among those who
wanted to "nuke the gooks" in Vietnam.
Policy-makers of that ilk are still in charge of US
war-making today, and they have been solidifying their power
to do so with the huge profits made off the deaths, screams,
blood, guts and permanent disabilities of our hood-winked
soldiers who were told that they were "saving the world for
democracy" when in fact they were making the world fit for
ruthless and exploitive global capitalism and the obscene
profits of the few.
And the
politicians and businessmen of war don’t want that gravy
train to stop.
As long as
we continue to be led by unapologetic war makers, their
wealthy business cronies and the bribery from large
political campaign contributors, there is no chance we will
ever obtain a meaningful peace.
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
Welcome To
Liberated Iraq:
14,000
Imprisoned Without Trial
[Thanks to many people, who
sent this in.]
March 6, 2006 Mike McDonough,
Guardian Newspapers Limited
US and UK
forces in Iraq have detained thousands of people without
charge or trial for long periods and there is growing
evidence of Iraqi security forces torturing detainees,
Amnesty International said today.
In a new report published
today, the human rights group criticised the US-led
multinational force for interning some 14,000 people.
Around 3,800 people have been
held for over a year, while another 200 have been detained
for more than two years, the report,
Beyond Abu Ghraib:
detention and torture in Iraq, said.
"It is a dangerous precedent
for the world that the US and UK think it completely
defensible to hold thousands of people without charge or
trial," Amnesty spokesman Neil Durkin said.
The vast
majority of the 14,000 people held in Iraq are in US
custody.
Amnesty
said it was concerned the lawyers do not have access to any
substantive evidence against their clients.
One man,
Hillal "Abdul Razzaq" Ali al-Jedda, has been in British
custody since his arrest in October 2004.
The
48-year-old dual Iraqi and UK national has not been charged
with any offence, and a court of appeal judgment on his
detention is awaited following a hearing in January.
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
DANGER:
POLITICIANS AT WORK
Blinding
Flash Of The Obvious
3.13.06 Fareed Zakaria,
Newsweek
The Bush
administration's first, massive misstep in Iraq was to
occupy a country of 25 million people with only 140,000
troops.
D.C.
Republicans And Democrats Think Government Spying On
Americans Just Fine:
They’re
Just Pissed Nobody Asked Their Permission
3.6.06 USA Today
Despite widespread criticism
of President Bush's warrantless surveillance program, even
vociferous detractors in Congress stop short of calling for
an end to the anti-terrorist eavesdropping.
At issue
for many Republicans and Democrats is not the program
itself, but how little the White House told Congress about
it and how much it expands presidential power.
CLASS WAR
REPORTS
Students
Strike After Teacher Suspended For Criticizing Bush

Overland High School students
demonstrate March 2, 2006, in Aurora, Colo., to protest the
school district's decision to put geography teacher Jay
Bennish on administrative leave. (AP Photo/Aurora Daily Sun)
AURORA, Colo., March 3, 2006,
CBS/AP)
About 150
students at a suburban Denver high school walked out of
class to protest a decision to put a teacher on
administrative leave while the school investigates remarks
he allegedly made in class about President Bush, including a
comment that some people compare Mr. Bush to Adolf Hitler.
The protest came Thursday as
administrators began investigating whether Overland High
School teacher Jay Bennish violated a policy requiring
balancing viewpoints in the classroom, Cherry Creek School
District spokeswoman Tustin Amole said.
"It was peaceful. The students
yelled, but there was no fighting," Amole said. "Most of
them did return to class."