GI SPECIAL 4D13:

You May Not
Have Thought That Seeing A Movie Could Change The World, But
In This Case YOU HAVE THAT POWER!
All eyes
are on New York!!!!
You know
you set the trends for the nation, but what New Yorkers may
not realize is that there are some 30 theater bookers
waiting to see how Sir! No Sir! www.sirnosir.com does
during its week run at the IFC Center in New York, April
19-25th.
If the run
does well in your city, it will reach the heartland of
America and people will learn the suppressed history of GI
resistance to the Vietnam War.
You may not
have thought that seeing a movie could change the world, but
in this case YOU HAVE THAT POWER!
I hope
you'll come out to see this amazing and important film! It
is the untold story of the GI movement to end the war in
Vietnam and tells a part of history that has been forgotten,
about the conscientious objectors, underground newspapers
and coffee houses, of those who resisted in many ways. It
is a powerful glimpse of both history and of the present and
future.
In addition
to meeting Jane Fonda and vets featured in the film and
modern day resisters on April 17th at the benefit for Iraq
Vets Against the War, there will also be talks featuring the
film's director David Zeiger, and members of New York peace
groups after selected screenings during the week run at the
IFC starting April 19th!!
We need
your help and support to get the word out in NYC.
If news of
this movement is to reach the heartland of the USA we MUST
sell out the shows in NYC.
Peace,
Celia Alario
celia@riseup.net
310-721-6517
Sir! No
Sir!
OPENS For
One Week On Wednesday April 19th At The
IFC Center
322 Sixth
Avenue, at West Third Street, New York City
***********************************************
Special
Preview Screenings Of The Film
“Sir, No
Sir!”
Benefits
for Iraq Vets Against the War:
Jane Fonda
In Person
David
Zeiger, Director of the Film
Vietnam
Veterans from the Film
Monday
April 17th at 7:45pm and 9:55pm
IFC Center
322 Sixth
Avenue, at West Third Street, New York City
[Take the A,B,C,D,E,F or V train to West 4th/Washington
Square stop or the 1 train to Christopher street/Sheridan
Square]
Celebrate
Soldiers' Resistance from Vietnam to Iraq
Tickets: $20
Advance tickets on sale NOW
through the IFC box office
Recording: 212-924-7771
Live box office: 212-924-5246
Online at
www.ifccenter.com
Presented
in partnership with:
Central
Committee for Conscientious Objectors, CODEPINK, Courage to
Resist, GI Special, League of Pissed Off Voters, The
Military Project, Not in Our Name, Not Your Soldier,
Veterans for Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, War
Resisters League, World Can't Wait-Drive Out the Bush Regime
************************************
"TWO THUMBS UP!"
Ebert and Roeper
"A penetrating eye-opener of a documentary."
The Hollywood Reporter
"Bolstered by proud memories of Vietnam vets who turned
against the war, Sir! No Sir! rings with an exultant, even
elated tone."
-Variety
Winner of
the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the Los Angeles
Film Festival & Best Documentary Award at the Hamptons
International Film Festival
************************************
AND...
Sir! No
Sir! OPENS for one week on Wednesday April 19th at the
IFC Center
322 Sixth
Avenue, at West Third Street, New York City
Check out the trailer at
www.sirnosir.com
Please contact max@riseup.net
or celia@riseup.net for posters, postcards and flyers to
help promote this event!
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
Fort
Wainwright Soldier Killed In Rawah
04/12/2006 Associated Press
The Army
says a Fort Wainwright soldier was killed when a suicide
bomber detonated a bomb.
The
incident happened Tuesday in Rawah, Iraq.
Two other injured soldiers
were taken to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, an Army
hospital in Germany.
Army officials say one was
classified as "very seriously injured," and the other was
"seriously injured." It was not immediately clear whether
these soldiers were from Fort Wainwright, and an Army
spokesman didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.
Missouri
Sgt. Killed

Sgt. 1st Class Randall L.
Lamberson, 36, of Springfield, Missouri, fatally injured
when a roadside bomb exploded April 9, 2006, near the
vehicle they were traveling in during combat operations in
the Al Anbar Province of Iraq. (AP Photo/U.S. Army)
TWO BAGHDAD
SOLDIERS KILLED BY ROADSIDE BOMBS
4/12/2006 HEADQUARTERS UNITED
STATES CENTRAL COMMAND NEWS Release Number 06-04-01C
BAGHDAD,
Iraq: Two Multi-National Division Baghdad Soldiers were
killed when their vehicle struck a roadside bomb south of
Baghdad at approximately 9:20 a.m. April 12.
IED KILLS
BAGHDAD SERVICEMEMBER
4/12/2006 HEADQUARTERS UNITED
STATES CENTRAL COMMAND NEWS Release Number 06-04-01C
BAGHDAD,
Iraq: A Multi National Division Baghdad servicemember died
at approximately 10 a.m. April 12 when he was struck by an
improvised explosive device during a patrol east of Baghdad.
101st
Airborne Soldier Dies Near Tal Afar
4.12.06 Associated Press
A soldier
from the 101st Airborne Division died Monday at the Sykes
U.S. Army base on the outskirts of Tal Afar, which is about
65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Mosul, Iraq's third largest
city. No name was released.
Rockets Hit
British Military Base
3.12.06 Evening Echo
Two rockets hit the British
military base at the Basra airport complex about 3am local
time, but there were no damages or casualties.
“I Was Glad
To Go Out Because There Were More People Dying At Anaconda”
Apr 11, 2006 Melissa Nelson,
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Excerpt]
Milton Caples said that his
time at the Army's Camp Anaconda near Balad, Iraq, was
life-altering.
"They got
mortared 10 or 12 times a day and every time there was a
mortar attack you'd have to get in the ... bunkers.
“It was
safer going out on the missions than it was living there. I
was glad to go out because there were more people dying at
Anaconda," he said
Deaths Of
U.S. Soldiers Climb Again:
Pentagon
Dimwits Didn’t Get It
4.12.06 New York Times
The U.S.
military announced the deaths of five soldiers in Iraq,
bringing the number of troops killed this month to at least
32, surpassing the American military deaths for all of
March.
[The
Pentagon bullshit artists who were bragging about the low
U.S. troops death count last month merely demonstrated their
ignorance of a fundamental rule of guerrilla warfare against
foreign occupation: the most perilous time of all is when
the guerrilla forces are quiet; they’re preparing their next
offensive. And now, here it is. T]
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
Three
British Soldiers Wounded In Helmand
April 12, 2006 By Nimatullah
Karyab, Associated Press
Three
British soldiers were wounded, two seriously, when their
vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb in the southern Helmand
province: the first attack on British forces since they
began a NATO peacekeeping mission in the region.
Secret
Military Data Stolen From U.S. Base, Included Social
Security Numbers Of Four American Generals
Apr 12 By DANIEL COONEY,
Associated Press Writer
A
shopkeeper outside the U.S.-led coalition headquarters in
Afghanistan was selling computer memory drives Wednesday
containing seemingly sensitive military data stolen from
inside the base, including the Social Security numbers of
four American generals.
This shopkeeper was apparently
not the only merchant in local bazaars trying to get some
cash in exchange for hardware and software containing such
files.
The surfacing of the stolen
computer devices has sparked an urgent American military
probe for the source of the embarrassing security breach,
which has led to disks with the personal letters and
biographies of soldiers and lists of troops who completed
nuclear, chemical and biological warfare training going on
sale for $20 to $50.
Five military investigators,
surrounded by heavily armed plainclothes U.S. soldiers,
searched many of the two-dozen rundown shops outside the
sprawling base.
Asked if any disks had been
found, one soldier, who declined to give his name, said: "We
are looking. That's all I can say."
The shopkeeper showed an
Associated Press reporter a bag of about 15 and allowed them
to be reviewed on a laptop computer. Only four contained
data. The rest did not work or were blank.
The shops around Bagram sprung
up when U.S. forces took over the base in 2001 after ousting
the Taliban for harboring al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.
They sell a range of military
equipment, much of which has been stolen from the base,
according to several shopkeepers, all of whom declined to
give their names for fear of repercussions.
One
shopkeeper wanted $20 for a used U.S. soldier's uniform and
said he could get more.
Other items
apparently were stolen from a duty-free store on the base,
including range-finding binoculars and handheld global
positioning systems, items that could be useful to Taliban
rebels, who have stepped up their insurgency in the past
year.
The computer files seen by the
AP ranged from the very personal, such as a soldier's letter
to the wife of a dead comrade, to confidential personnel
information.
Social
Security numbers were listed next to the names of hundreds
of soldiers, including Maj. Gen. Jason Kamiya, who left
Afghanistan in February after serving for a year as the
coalition's operational commander.
One document listed the names
of 20 members of a platoon who had undergone "the required
Nuclear Biological Chemical (NBC) training and chamber
exercise." It did not elaborate.
Another listed the names of 16
soldiers and the types of weapons they had been trained on.
There were biographies of six
soldiers, including a sergeant who had served in Kosovo,
Iraq and Afghanistan.
Two of the drives contained
several photographs, one showing a group of about 40
soldiers posing at a base, while others had troops inside a
helicopter.
A 502-page
manual on how to operate a CH-47 Chinook chopper, a mainstay
of the 18,000 U.S. troops serving in Afghanistan, was also
there, including photos and diagrams.
Many of the other goods on
sale in the stores still had stickers indicating the price
at the military store. The Afghan shops were selling them
for about 25 percent less.
In one store, two Afghans with
long flowing black beards were haggling over the price of
compasses.
Nearby, two young boys were
trying to sell cartons of fresh yogurt. One, who gave his
name as Nazar, said a friend had stolen them from the
military mess hall.
MORE:
“They Were
From Military Intelligence”
“They Won't
Be Able To Do Anything”
April 12, 2006 By Paul Watson,
L.A. Times Staff Writer
BAGRAM,
Afghanistan: Black marketeers can feel the heat a long way
off. So by the time U.S. soldiers came looking Tuesday, the
shopkeeper had his military computer drives tucked away in a
zip-lock bag on a hidden shelf.
The U.S. military said Tuesday
that it was looking into reports that computer drives
containing military data, some marked "secret," were
available for as little as $20 in a bazaar outside its
biggest base, and soldiers were visible making rounds there.
But once they passed, at least two shopkeepers still
offered memory drives for sale.
"They were
from military intelligence," said the one with the hidden
shelf as he pulled out the plastic bag containing four
drives. "They won't be able to do anything," he added, with
a dismissive wave of his hand.
Nearby, another fence
displayed two memory drives that he said an Afghan worker on
the base delivered to him after a shift change Tuesday
morning. He invited a shopper to return today, when he
expected four more drives to arrive
The stored
data include video clips of soldiers pumping iron in the gym
or kissing their kids at Christmas, as well as documents
marked "secret," like briefings on targeted terrorist bases.
Then there is the sadly
personal, such as the resignation letter of a military
police officer, whose revelation that she was a rape victim
turned up on a drive purchased at the bazaar.
One shop owner said he
"washed" the drives, meaning that he erased the contents, in
case U.S. soldiers came looking.
But deleted files were readily
retrievable using German software downloaded from the
Internet.
Under the heading "Season
Ticket Holders," a diagram dated Aug. 6, 2004, shows a
T-shaped table with three brigadier generals facing two
colonels, five majors and a political advisor. At least 10
other officers sat away from the table.
Items on
the agenda included "psyops," military jargon for
psychological operations, that included campaigns in the
Afghan print and radio media to "discredit" people making
improvised explosive devices.
"Prepare
radio news stories for local stations highlighting Afghan
National Police support," read one in a list of recommended
actions to help defeat a growing insurgency.
In the local bazaar, a
disappointed shopkeeper who couldn't interest a reporter in
an assortment of Army binoculars, watches, bowie knives,
combat boots and other U.S. military items suggested he come
back in a few weeks.
A large group of American
soldiers is due to go home, he said, and when soldiers pack
to leave, there are always good pickings for thieves, he
said.
"There are a lot of things
soon to come out of Bagram," he promised.
TROOP NEWS
“Keep The
Hell Out Of The Mil. Esp The NG”
“People Are
Fodder And Guinea Pigs”
[Thanks to D for sending this.
From: JP
Date: Apr 12, 2006
Via: Campus Antiwar Network
Enquiry
I was
stationed at Dugway Proving Grounds, Utah. 2002 - 2003.
IT is the
worst hellhole in the Army.
They test
bioweapons out there as well as Nukes. We had our blood
tested every 3 months.
I was in
the CA National Guard. Went AWOL afterwards and they kicked
me out.
Keep the
hell out of the mil. Esp the NG.
People are
fodder and guinea pigs.
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOPS HOME:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW, ALIVE

Police motorcyles escort the
funeral procession of Cpl., Brian St. Germain of West
Warwick, R.I., at the Rhode Island Veterans Cemetery in
Exeter, R.I., April 12, 2006. The 22-year-old Marine was
killed in Iraq on April 2. (AP Photo/Joe Giblin)
Ohio
Soldier In Coma Has “Beat A Lot Of Odds”
April 12, 2006 THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS
DAYTON, Ohio - Waiting for an
Ohio soldier to come out of a coma are his wife who is
preparing to deliver the couple's first child and his twin
brother who may soon return to combat duty in Iraq.
The wife of Army Spc. Ethan
Biggers visited him in a Washington military hospital but
had to return home to suburban Beavercreek because her
pregnancy is high-risk. His brother had to leave the
family's bedside vigil last week to return to duty with the
Army in Germany.
Biggers, 21, was shot March 5
during his second tour of duty in Iraq.
"It's been a nightmare,"
brother Matthew Biggers said.
His three years in the Army
are up in July, but his company just received orders to
return to Iraq in June.
"I want to go back," he said.
Biggers' wife, Britni Fuller,
had to get medical clearance to travel to the hospital.
She remains optimistic about
her husband's recovery.
"He's hanging in there, so I'm
hanging in there," she said.
At least 17,469 American
military personnel have been wounded in Iraq. Walter Reed
Army Medical Center, where Biggers is being treated, has
handled 4,895 of them. Of those, 1,465 have been battle
casualties.
And roughly 30 percent of
those casualties have suffered traumatic brain injuries like
Biggers, according to the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury
Center, a joint venture of the Defense and Veterans' Affairs
departments.
Biggers is pale and thinner
than he used to be, but now he's breathing on his own.
"He's beat a lot of odds,"
said his father, Rand Biggers, a physicist at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base who has been with his son
since he arrived back in the United States. "It's a miracle
he's got this far. We keep asking for more miracles."
Nobody was surprised when the
twins enlisted in the Army the summer before their senior
year at Beavercreek High School. Their father flew C-130s
for the Air Force during Vietnam, and their grandfather was
in the Navy in World War II.
Seeing his
son so gravely injured has been devastating.
"I don't
know how to deal with it," the father said. "It's so hard
for me to see him, especially when he opens his eyes and
he's not there, at least yet."
Recruiters
Forced Out Of College Job Fair By Pissed Off Students
[Thanks to Clancy Sigal who
sent this in.]
April 12, 2006 Associated
Press, SANTA CRUZ, Calif. & Diana Walsh, Chronicle Staff
Writer
Four
military recruiters hastily fled a job fair Tuesday morning
at UC Santa Cruz after a raucous crowd of student protesters
blocked an entrance to the building where the Army and
National Guard had set up information tables.
“The recruiters thought the
crowd was getting out of control,” campus vice chancellor
David Kliger said.
Members of
Students Against War, who organized the counter-recruiting
protest, loudly chanted "Don't come back. Don't come back"
as the recruiters left the hilltop campus, escorted by
several university police officers.
The student organization has
become a bit of a cause celebre of the national anti-war
movement ever since it was discovered that the group's
protest of the same job fair last April landed it in a
Pentagon surveillance file, which listed the protest as a
"credible threat" to military facilities or personnel.
Kliger said officials had
tried to engage the anti-war student group in discussions in
the weeks leading up to the fair. But when talks broke
down, officials began privately hoping for rain and brought
in extra police.
The rain probably accounted
for a decidedly smaller turnout, about 100 students compared
with about 300 a year earlier.
Students Against War members
said they were pleased that their counter-recruiting effort
forced the military personnel off campus, at least for the
time being.
"We're saying it's not OK to
recruit on high school campuses, it's not OK to recruit on
university campuses,'' Marla Zubel, a UC Santa Cruz senior
and member of Students Against War, said.
"In order to stop the war, you
have to make it more difficult to wage war."
“This is about creating a
community where we make the change we want to see in the
world,” student Sam Aranke said.
One student
protester was arrested as the recruiters were departing in a
van. While a campus police officer was videotaping a person
throwing rocks at the van, a student blocked the camera and
was cited for interfering with police duties, campus
spokesman Jim Burns.
The student was released
pending a decision by the district attorney’s office on
whether charges would be filed.
How
Traitors In Marine Corps. Command Butchered Their Own:
They Sat On
Reports Of Poison The Troops Were Drinking:
“The Few,
The Proud, The Forgotten”
And Their
Families Die
"They
wiped out two members of my family," Townsend, 75,
added. “I am proud that I served in the Marines, but
there are some days I want to forget that I did.”
The
Marine Corps was alerted to the TCE contamination in
1980, but did not disclose the pollution or make any
changes to its water system until 1985. It was a
five-year period in which thousands of Marines were
exposed.
March 30, 2006 Ralph
Vartabedian, L.A. Times
SAN ANTONIO - On nearly every
block surrounding the former Kelly Air Force Base, small
purple crosses sprout from front lawns, marking the homes
where cancer has struck.
The residents call their
neighborhood the "toxic triangle," alleging that the Air
Force poisoned it with an industrial solvent,
trichloroethylene, or TCE. It was casually dumped at the
base for decades and spread for miles through a shallow
aquifer under 22,000 nearby houses.
Texas health authorities have
found elevated rates of liver cancer among residents, as
well as higher-than-normal rates of birth defects. Though
state health officials say it is impossible to prove that
TCE causes the sickness here, this blue-collar community has
little doubt about the connection.
"We are dying day by day,"
said Robert Alvarado Sr., who has lived in a small clapboard
home for 36 years that sits about 14 feet over the TCE
plume. "I have kidney failure, my wife has thyroid cancer,
my neighbor just died of breast cancer."
What's happening in this
neighborhood of modest low-slung homes, crisscrossed by
railroad tracks and dominated by aircraft hangars on the
horizon, has been playing out for years at other cities that
are home to military bases, industrial plants, nuclear
weapons laboratories and NASA centers.
Hundreds of communities with
major TCE contamination have waited more than a decade for
scientists to explain the cancer risks created by exposure
to TCE. The clear solvent used to take grease off metal
parts is officially branded as a probable carcinogen by half
a dozen state, federal and international agencies. It is
most often linked to liver and kidney cancer, as well as
birth defects and childhood leukemia.
But scientists representing
major polluters, particularly the Department of Defense,
have successfully delayed action on scientific assessments
that TCE is a far graver threat to public health than
recognized by federal standards. When the Environmental
Protection Agency drafted a TCE assessment in 2001, finding
that it was far more toxic than originally believed, the
issue was wrested from the EPA's control.
Anne Elizabeth Townsend died a
month ago in Moscow, Idaho, the result of liver disease and
TCE exposure, according to her death certificate and a liver
biopsy.
She was married to Tom
Townsend, a former major in the Marine Corps who was based
at highly polluted Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, after
returning seriously injured from combat duty in Vietnam in
1965.
The Townsends lived at the
Paradise Point housing complex, which was served by a base
water-supply system that carried 1,400 parts per billion of
TCE, a later investigation by the federal Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry would disclose.
The current EPA limit on TCE
in drinking water is 5 ppb. The standard might have dropped
to 1 ppb had the risk assessment conducted by the EPA in
2001 been adopted, experts say.
In 1967, the Townsends had a
son born with cardiovascular birth defects. He lived only
three months.
"We had an
autopsy done and there wasn't a system in his body that
wasn't screwed up," said Townsend, a retired college
administrator and a former city councilman. "That autopsy
report had 10 pages of findings. It was a mercy that he
didn't last.
"They wiped
out two members of my family," Townsend, 75, added. "I am
proud that I served in the Marines, but there are some days
I want to forget that I did."
The Marine
Corps was alerted to the TCE contamination in 1980, but did
not disclose the pollution or make any changes to its water
system until 1985. It was a five-year period in which
thousands of Marines were exposed.
At the request of Sen.
Elizabeth Dole (R-N.C.), the Government Accountability
Office is investigating whether the Marine Corps covered up
the TCE problems at the base.
"Nearly 20
years have elapsed since the last contaminated well was
closed at Camp Lejeune, and we are still unable to address
the related concerns of former residents," Dole wrote in
2004.
"We have an obligation to
provide them with definitive answers to their questions
regarding the circumstances and extent of the contamination
as well as the likely adverse health effects."
Among Dole's concerns is the
slow pace of a study by the Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry, part of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. A still-incomplete study of 12,598 children
born at the base from 1968 to 1985 found 103 cases of cancer
and birth defects, including 22 cases of leukemia, double
the national average. No studies have been conducted of the
adult men or women who drank the base water.
Jerry
Ensminger, a former Marine drill sergeant, lived at the base
in the 1970s and his wife gave birth to a daughter in 1976.
Their daughter, Janey, died of leukemia at age 9.
He has
been fighting to force the Marine Corps to notify tens
of thousands of Marines, their families and civilian
employees exposed to TCE. He formed a group, "The Few,
The Proud, The Forgotten," along with a website
(www.tftptf.com), to reach out to Marine families.
"The
Marine Corps has done everything in its power to not
notify the people who were exposed," Ensminger, 53,
said. "There is something wrong with our government."
In San Antonio, the former
Kelly Air Force Base ranks among the nation's largest TCE
sites, with contamination that migrated several miles past
the base boundary.
So far, the Air Force has
spent more than $300 million on the cleanup and expects to
spend another $155 million over the next 15 years.
Residents want the cleanup completed much sooner, though Air
Force officials say the plume is shrinking.
The community that lives over
the contaminated water has about double the expected rate of
liver cancers, said Melanie Williams, senior cancer
epidemiologist at the Texas Department of State Health
Services.
A twofold
rate of excess cancer is "not a huge margin," Williams said,
but she noted that the excessive cancers have continued for
10 years.
"The
consistency is a concern," she said.
In addition
to cancer, the department has found excessive rates for
three types of birth defects involving the heart, stomach
and lungs, according to Peter Langlois, a birth defects
epidemiologist at the department. The birth defect rates
range from two to three times higher than expected.
Kelly was a major repair depot
for the Air Force and used TCE to clean oil and grease from
metal parts. Giant tanks of TCE were drained directly into
the ground, former workers have said.
The TCE contaminated a shallow
aquifer about 14 feet below the surface. The aquifer is not
used by the city and little proof has surfaced that the
TCE-tainted water ever penetrated down to the
1,000-foot-deep water drawn for the municipal drinking
supply, said Dr. Fernando A. Guerra, director of the San
Antonio Metropolitan Health District.
But
residents say Guerra and Weegar have consistently
underestimated their exposure. Dozens of unauthorized
shallow wells were sunk into the TCE-contaminated water and
used for drinking, bathing and gardening, according to
residents and federal officials. The Air Force has capped 75
such wells in the last decade.
"We know
that people used the wells in the shallow aquifer for
drinking water," said George Rice, a hydrologist who has
studied the neighborhood's problems. "You have to assume
that people used those wells to water their lawns, wash
their cars and the children used those hoses the way kids
use hoses."
The Air Force also dumped TCE
and other chemicals into open pits on the base for years,
which periodically flooded during heavy Texas rainstorms and
sent the overflow through surrounding neighborhoods that
lacked storm drains, said Yolonda Johnson, a community
activist who lives a few blocks from the base boundary.
Johnson's
daughter and two of her granddaughters have kidney disease.
No air
monitoring tests inside homes have been conducted for TCE,
even though the contamination is in a shallow aquifer.
Outside
health experts say the shallow contamination alone should
have prompted air monitoring tests long ago.
Adam G. Antwine, the civilian
who manages the local cleanup for the Air Force, suggested
that some "pathways" might have potentially exposed the
community to TCE.
"I don't know that we want to
totally dismiss any potential pathways," he said.
"This is a low-income minority
population and that raises concerns of environmental
justice."
The base shut down in 2001
after 80 years of operation. Because the latency period for
many cancers is 10 years or more, higher TCE levels long ago
might only now be causing illness.
Former
Kelly workers describe conditions inside the base during its
heyday as an abysmal toxic nightmare.
Mary Lou Ornelias, a frail
59-year-old woman, worked in the Kelly plating shop for 18
years.
With her
bare hands, she would dip cotton cloths into buckets of TCE
and then wipe grease from aircraft parts. The air in the
plating shop was a steamy, solvent-rich brew that turned the
walls yellow and had a stench that made visitors wince, she
said. The exposure made her dizzy and caused outbreaks of
scaly rashes.
"I would
scratch and scratch the sores," recalled Ornelias, who has
no claims or suits against the government.
The sores
would not be her last or biggest problem. Ornelias tires
easily, looks gaunt and sometimes falls down -- all part of
her life with liver cancer.
"In 2002, I
started throwing up blood," she said.
Outside the plant, community
activists have pushed for a faster cleanup, but say progress
has been slow and the problems have festered.
"Living in this contamination
area is a miserable burden," said Armondo Quintanilla, a
former employee at Kelly who has spent most of his life in
the neighborhood.
"It is shameful. People
deserve better."

Stupid
Shits Won’t Let Returning Iraq Vet Board Plane:
On
“Terrorist” List
[Thanks to John Gingerich, who
sent this in.]
April 12, 2006 Associated
Press, MINNEAPOLIS
A Marine
reservist returning home after eight months in Iraq was told
he couldn't board a plane to Minneapolis because his name
appeared on a watch list as a possible terrorist.
Staff Sgt. Daniel Brown, who
was in uniform and returning from the war Tuesday with 26
other Marine military police reservists, was delayed briefly
in Los Angeles until the issue was cleared up.
The other reservists arrived
at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport as scheduled,
but instead of immediately meeting their families, they
waited on a bus for Brown.
"We don't leave anybody
behind," 1st Sgt. Drew Benson said. "We start together, and
we finish together."
Brown, 32, arrived more than
an hour later. He had also had airport trouble when he was
trying to go to Iraq, and he missed his plane then as well.
"A guy goes over and serves his country fighting for eight
or nine months, and then we come home and put up with this?"
he asked.
Nico Melendez, a spokesman for
the Transportation Security Administration, said Wednesday
he could not confirm or deny whether someone was on a watch
list.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action

A police vehicle destroyed by
a car bomb which targeted a police patrol, killing a
policeman and two civilans April 12, 2006 in Baghdad. (AP
Photo/Hadi Mizban)
April 12, 2006 Xinhua &
Evening Echo & Reuters& The Daily Star & (AFP) & By SAMEER
N. YACOUB
One policeman and three
civilians were killed, and four police wounded, when a
roadside bomb exploded near a police patrol in Waziriya
district in central Baghdad on Wednesday morning.
Several civilian cars and a
police vehicle were also damaged in the powerful blast, the
source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
Six policemen were wounded
when roadside bombs struck two police patrols in the Al Dura
neighbourhood.
Guerrillas opened fire and
killed a police officer when he was leaving his house in the
Amil district in southwestern Baghdad, the source said.
An internal affairs officer at
the Interior Ministry was killed by men in two cars while
leaving his house in Amil in western Baghdad, and a Housing
Ministry employee was killed as he drove to work in the same
neighbourhood, police said.
In northern Baghdad,
guerrillas shot an Oil Ministry worker at a bus stop.
Guerrillas in the eastern
neighbourhood of Baladiyat captured a policeman as he was
leaving his house.
A roadside bomb killed two
policemen in the town of Sulayman Beg, about 90 north of
Baghdad.
Northeast
of Baghdad, a roadside bomb in the city of Baqouba targeted
a convoy carrying the deputy of the governor of Diyala
province, wounding two of his guards.
In Muqdadiyah, about 60 miles
north of Baghdad, mortar rounds struck a police station,
wounding three policemen.
Two policemen were killed and
four others wounded on Tuesday by a roadside bomb in Tuz
Khurmatu, 70 km (45 miles) south of Kirkuk, the Joint
Co-ordination Centre said.
The bodies of four beheaded
Iraqi soldiers were found in Jurf al-Sahkar, 80 kilometers
south of Baghdad, police said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
NEED SOME
TRUTH? CHECK OUT 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)
“Whose
Streets?”
“Our
Streets!”

A
resistance fighter carries a rocket-propelled grenade
launcher on the street April 10, 2006, in Ramadi. An
insurgent umbrella organization called the Mujahedeen Shura
Council claimed responsibility for a Saturday attack against
the Anbar provincial government headquarters in Ramadi which
U.S. officers said was the biggest attack in six weeks.
(AP Photo)
“The Crowd
Chanted Back, ‘America Out! America Out!’”
“He Said
Nothing In Response. What Could He Say?”
April 12, 2006 By Cal Perry,
CNN
Abdul Aziz Hakim, leader of
the prominent Shiite party, the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq, sits in his compound in Baghdad
plotting his next move.
"For three years, we've been
bearing the slaughtering, killing, explosions attacking our
scholars, our mosques, our facilities, our pilgrims, our
barbers, our bakers ... our innocents," he said.
Earlier
that week he raised his arms in front of millions. The power
he wields is palpable and unmatched. He called out to the
masses for cooperation between Sunnis and Shiites.
The crowd
chanted back, "America out! America out!"
He said
nothing in response. What could he say?
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.
Stars and
Stripes Contractor Killed While Delivering Paper in Balad
4.11.06 Mideast Stars and
Stripes
An Iraqi contractor working
for the Stars and Stripes was killed by guerrillas who
ambushed a delivery vehicle after it dropped off newspapers
at a U.S. military base near Balad. Another was critically
injured
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS

Veterans Hospital in Spokane, Washington 2003.
2,350 American Soldiers killed in Iraq.
18,000 American soldiers wounded in Iraq.
Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi citizens killed.
"Bring 'Em On"
George Bush
July 2, 2003
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)
A Reasonable Proposal:
“Arrest The
Son-Of-A-Bitch, Lead Him From The White House In Chains”
Apr 12, 2006 By DOUG THOMPSON,
Capitol Hill Blue [Excerpt]
No doubt about it. George W.
Bush's lying, rotten, putrid, soulless destruction of a
once-great nation called America is now open for all to see.
Bush is not just a liar. He's
a serial liar who avoids truth at all costs because facts
don't support his perverted, twisted view of the world.
Truth exposes his corrupt administration and lays bare his
many crimes against the American people and the Constitution
of the United States.
Impeachment? Nah. Too good
for this lowlife.
Arrest the
son-of-a-bitch, lead him from the White House in chains,
parade him down Pennsylvania Avenue and then lock him in
stocks on the Washington Mall so everyone can see what
happens when anyone thinks they are above the law of the
land.
OCCUPATION
REPORT
U.S.
OCCUPATION RECRUITING DRIVE IN HIGH GEAR;
RECRUITING
FOR THE ARMED RESISTANCE THAT IS

U.S. soldiers break into and
search a home belonging to Iraqi citizens in the Shula
section of Baghdad April 6, 2006. (AP Photo/Jacob
Silberberg)
There’s
nothing quite like invading somebody else’s country and
busting into their houses by force to arouse an intense
desire to kill you in the patriotic, self-respecting
civilians who live there.
But your
commanders know that, don’t they? Don’t they?
“In the
States, if police burst into your house, kicking down
doors and swearing at you, you would call your lawyer
and file a lawsuit,” said Wood, 42, from Iowa, who did
not accompany Halladay’s Charlie Company, from his
battalion, on Thursday’s raid. “Here, there are no
lawyers. Their resources are limited, so they plant
IEDs (improvised explosive devices) instead.”
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!