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The Mudville Gazette is written and produced by Greyhawk, the call sign of a real military guy currently serving somewhere in Iraq. Unless otherwise credited, the opinions expressed are those of the author, and nothing here is to be taken as representing the official position of or endorsement by the United States Department of Defense or any of its subordinate components. Furthermore, I will occasionally use satire or parody herein. The bottom line: it's my house.

I like having visitors to my house. I hope you are entertained. I fight for your right to free speech, and am thrilled when you exercise said rights here. Comments and e-mails are welcome, but all such communication is to be assumed to be 1)the original work of any who initiate said communication and 2)the property of the Mudville Gazette, with free use granted thereto for publication in electronic or written form. If you do NOT wish to have your message posted, write "CONFIDENTIAL" in the subject line of your email.

Original content copyright © 2003 - 2009 by Greyhawk. Fair, not-for-profit use of said material by others is encouraged, as long as acknowledgement and credit is given, to include the url of the original source post. Other arrangements can be made as needed.

Contact: greyhawk at mudvillegazette dot com

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« November 2003 | Main | January 2004 »

December 31, 2003

2004 is Here

[Greyhawk]

Happy New Year!

It's 2004 in Mudville now. So far though it reminds me a lot of 2003.

The neighbors didn't disappoint. The sky lit up with light and sound. If you have one guy in your neighborhood who's famous for home fireworks, imagine that guy is everyone on the street. That's what we have here.

As a service to those of you still living in 2003, if you have any questions about the future I'll be glad to answer them. Use the comment section.


Posted at 2322Z

New Year in the Blogosphere

[Greyhawk]

Many years ago I had a buddy who was a regular barfly; any night of the week when he wasn't working he'd be at the corner dive knocking back a few cold ones. Any night of the year that was his routine, except one.

New Years Eve. He called it "amateur night" and he stayed home safe and sound and let the drunks have the roads to themselves.

I'll be home blogging in the New Years here in Mudville. The neighbors put on a heck of a fireworks display last year and I expect more of the same.

(Side note: we didn't expect the display last year, being our first in Germany, so we were "shocked and awed" by the local firepower.)

Anyhow, we'll be blogging in the New Year here in Mudville, compiling lists and visiting other bloggers too. Hope to see you here or there. (75 minutes to go, but note this blog is on Zulu or UTC/GMT.)

A toast to all.


Posted at 2145Z

A Smashing Good Year

[Greyhawk]

Back in WWII America had guys like Ernie Pyle reporting from the front. In today's paper you could read news of last week's battles. History at your fingertips.

During Vietnam guys like Joe Galloway were on the scene.

And in Operation Iraqi Freedom there were imbedded reporters to carry on the tradition of an American Free Press in time of war.

But in our nations latest conflict history was made by a handful of military bloggers, reporting the war from a decidedly different point of view then ever before. Sure, after WWII a number of authors wrote fictionalized-based-on-fact stories of their experiences, and others wrote facts. But those stories were told through a lense made by the passage of time. The blogs from Iraq and points nearby were immediate and real, and brought Americans closer to the front in real time then they'd ever been before.

Although several bloggers were active, I imagine Smash was the first to come to mind as you read the previous paragraph. And now Smash has posted his year in review. And what a year he had, making history and blogging it, and therefore making history by blogging it.

Go visit America's #1 war correspondent of 2003.


Posted at 2100Z

Referrers

[Greyhawk]

More in the spirit of the season, my top referrers for 2003. Thanks to all; without these good folks amplifying it my voice would be very small in the blogosphere.

In no specific order, many thanks to:

Smash
Andrew Sullivan
Charles Johnson (Little Green Footballs
Scott Ott (Scrapple Face)
Thor (A Soldier's Paradise)
Misha (The Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler)
Kim Du Toit
Glenn Reynolds
Chief Wiggles
Mike (Cold Fury)
Dean Esmay
Blackfive

And yes, these are big blogs that make anyone's list with very few links.
Some 6000 other blogs can't, so I have more lists on the way.


Posted at 1924Z

Look out Osama, here comes The Right Hook

[Greyhawk]

Go ping Hook's traffic counter. Make it spin. To make it worth your while he has a lot of great stuff posted for your reading pleasure. He's readying to go to Afghanistan, don't you know? And don't be shy while you're visiting his blog, I have it on good authority that Hook has a comment section and would love to have you leave greetings.

And if you're a blogger don't be the last to blogroll him. All others will want him in your favorites/bookmarks.

Hey, Hook, maybe your guys will get to find the cave-wall DNA smear that is Osama. Or do you think the gutless coward has sex-changed himself into obscurity?

Either way, I'm proud of you, soldier. And praying for strength for your family and a safe journey for you.


Posted at 1257Z

December 30, 2003

The Top Ten News Stories of 2003

[Greyhawk]

Part III. Part I here. Part II here.

My choices from among CNN's options for the top 10 stories of 2003:

1. Ongoing strife in Mideast - This includes "war in Iraq" and "war on terror". They're all interwoven. If you really wanted to stare into the hard face of reality you could add in Chechnya, Kashmir, and much of Africa. And Bosnia/Kosovo, the Philippines... of course, you'd need a new umbrella title. Dar al-harb, perhaps?

2. Economic ups and downs - know why this isn't on CNN's list, or the "public" list? Because it's all ups.

3. Controversy over 10 commandments list - CNN probably considers this too provincial to merit inclusion. And I'd guess people avoid controversial issues when choosing top stories; don't want to appear to be supporting that "other side." Or maybe some of that non-confrontational Christmas spirit lingers on. Whatever side you're on in regards to this issue, it's a great indicator of the nature of the mood and mindset in the American public square today. (In more ways than one.)

4. Democrats vie for Presidential nomination: The absence of this from both CNN and readers lists is remarkable. Are people missing out on all the great fun? This gives quite an open invitation to the Democratic candydates (not a spelling error) to go at it without much scrutiny. So have at it boys and girls, we wait your next pronouncements with bated breath.

5. Loss of space shuttle Columbia: This strikes close to home. I've worked with shuttle missions and know some folks who fly them. And in addition to the human cost the setback to the space program is enormous. Having grown up in the "space age" I know what it's like to be a citizen of a nation that seeks the real stars (vice Kobe, Brittney, Madonna, and Michael). If the president wants to re-energize NASA and the space program with missions to the moon, mars, or beyond, I'm all for it.

6. Standoff with North Korea: Simmering on the back burner, always close to boiling over. The number one totalitarian dictatorship I'd like to see fall (peacefully) this next year. Close to home again; when the Berlin Wall fell I was in Korea. I remember the euphoria I felt all that distance away, mixed with a tinge of sadness that the same thing would likely not happen on the Korean peninsula. But there's always hope.

7. Crisis in Liberia: Easily the "forgotten story of the year". Remember: African nation in crisis, Bush accused of not having enough compassion, floats 2,000 Marines in a boat just off shore, accused of not doing enough, situation resolved peacefully, story drops off front pages faster then shark attacks and Chandra Levy on 911. A great and forgotten example of the US's much-improved ability to resolve things peacefully (albeit by showing determination and a hint of force) in a post-Iraq war world. (Think: Libyan nuclear program.)

8. California gubernatorial recall: Hard not to vote for a story with the word "guber" in it. Okay, seriously, it's interesting that the California wildfires made the peoples' choice list and this didn't. California wildfires are as perennial as some California Wildflowers. This story is overrated at #3 on CNN's list. The "Republican revolution" may not be the best term for it, but to spin the California story any other way is a denial of reality. (An argument could be made that it's more of a Democratic failure then a Republican success.) Although this issue is somewhat uniquely Californian, more so then the 10 commandments issue is uniquely Alabamian, both have obvious reflection on, repercussions to, and reverberation in the American spirit.

9. Gay civil rights issues: This also somewhat interchangeable with the 10 commandments issue - insofar as it is a morality issue in the minds of many, and in some cases the opposing sides on both issues feature the same players. (The interesting folks are those who are the exception to that statement. Freethinkers in action!) But the banning of religion from the public square, the twisting of "Freedom of Religion" to "Freedom from Religion" is infinitely more important. The gay rights issue is one of importance, but also over-inflated by the media, a media that has probably energized both sides of the debate. Expect this to be in the top 10 for next year too, but not many after that.

10. Ahhh... that final pick's a toughie... here it is: "Heat wave blamed for thousands of deaths in Europe." (Am I the only one who finds the wording curious? It reads like they don't want to declare the heat wave guilty until after a proper trial in the World Court.) Like the recent earthquake in Bam (Hey, where's that on the list? Damn those December news stories!) this horrendous human tragedy points out the difference between the US and under-developed (or over-extended, or unconcerned) nations in dealing with environmental tragedy. (Note: another thing wrong with wording, excessive death toll was in France. Yes, that's part of Europe, but an obvious attempt to be inoffensive just makes CNN look pathetic.) Compare to the SARS outbreak, which "scores" bigger as a news story only for its scare value. The Euro-heat deaths won't spread to Peoria, you know. The most rabid spread and greatest repercussion of SARS was within news rooms. Like Anthrax, West Nile Virus, Monkey Pox, Ebola, and any other hot new disease that could get you to loosen that grip on your wallet. Listen closely during a CNN TV report and you'll hear the cheering from the boardroom. Plague is a "bread and butter" story. Like war, famine, and death in general.

I predict there will be more of each in 2004. And we'll most likely all be here to discuss it at the end.

Happy New Year.


Posted at 1406Z

TOP TEN NEWS STORIES OF 2003

[Greyhawk]

Part II. Part I here.

CNN has a readers poll, where you can vote for your top stories of the year, posted along with their top 10. (But "capturing Saddam" is not an available option.)

Current standings:

1. War in Iraq
2. Loss of space shuttle Columbia
3. Ongoing strife in Mideast
4. Spread and consequences of SARS
5. Elizabeth Smart found alive
6. Iranian conjoined twins die in surgery
7. Economic ups and downs
8. Standoff with North Korea
9. D.C.-area sniper trials
10. California wildfires

Although listed as "candidates", these stories are notably MIA from the readers' poll:

Controversy over "Ten Commandments" monument
Democrats vie for presidential nomination
Gay civil rights issues
Heat wave blamed for thousands of deaths in Europe
Britney Spears and Madonna kiss
Ben and Jen cancel wedding plan

I guess these stories win the 'Kucinich/Braun/Kerry Award' for news in '03.

But I do think the readers did an overall better job then CNN. I note the lack of celebrity sex on their poll, the awareness of other conflict in the mideast, and the presence of North Korea.

Did Ben and Jen really cancel their wedding plans though? They were such a lovely couple. I wonder if religious differences played a part.

More here


Posted at 1154Z

How Soon After Thanksgiving Did They Phone This One In?

[Greyhawk]

CNN's top 10 news stories for 03:

1. War in Iraq
2. Loss of space shuttle Columbia
3. California gubernatorial recall
4. Terror war
5. Massive August 14 blackout
6. Spread and consequences of SARS
7. Gay civil rights issues
8. Celebrities and sex charges
9. Recovery of Elizabeth Smart
10. Deaths of Qusay and Uday Hussein

Since I don't much care what CNN thinks I might have over looked the missing "capture of Saddam" as merely a part of the "war in Iraq" except for the inclusion of Qusay and Uday.

My suspicious side says it's because the brothers went down fighting while poopdeck pappy threw his hands up and offered to negotiate (Sorry, Einstein, that offer has expired), and CNN doesn't want to offend Arab sensibilities.

Could they, having already including one recovery of a missing person, not wanted two on the same theme?

I know what you're thinking, but really they could have included Saddam without leaving out their white hot celebrity sex stories. All that was required was to combine terror war with war in Iraq, as it should be.

But then where would they put the "Khadaffy gives up nukes" story?


Posted at 1000Z

December 29, 2003

'Tis the Season

[Greyhawk]

How much drek did Andrew Sullivan Andrew Sullivan (whose site this week features a guest blogger) have to wade through to compile these awards? (Here and here.) I can't read the excerpts from the mindless testimonials that earned them without wincing in pain, or grinding my teeth.

Was that the intent of the authors? Ha! Then I lied! I laughed at their ignorance-masquerading-as-enlightened-modern-thought!

No teeth gnashing. I'll be damned if their need for a Psychiatrist will result in my need for a Dentist.

This of course, is just a warm up, my way of transitioning themes.

"T'is the season, don't you know." Which one? "You know, the season. The bestof season. The awards season. The top 10 season." Oh. Riiiight. THAT one.

More to come...


Posted at 0107Z

December 28, 2003

Thanks Lisa

[Greyhawk]

Lisa S bestows an unexpected honor on your humble servant.

We go "way back" in blog time, Lisa and I. And I can't say enough good things about her.

Thanks Lisa. Keep fighting the good fight.


Posted at 2313Z

Eric in '03!!!

[Greyhawk]

I wasn't going to vote this week.

Then I found Eric at Self Composed. An active duty military guy. And he's entered the New Weblog Showcase.

That's a great name for a blog Eric.

As a two-time-showcase-loser and now ecosystem-large-mammal-with- powerful-friends-and-thousands-of-readers-that-recently-broke-into-the-top-50-blogs-by-traffic-rankings-although-not-a-blog-alliance-member-and-also-I-don't cheat-the-system-but -I-owe-it-all-to-those-powerful-friends I may have a post on the topic later this week. Unasked for "advice for contestants".

Or I might not.

My advice to you is to vote for Eric if you can. Even if you've already voted once.


Posted at 2310Z

But how many reporters are on the scene?

[Greyhawk]

This AP story ran in both the Atlanta Journal Constitution and the London Guardian

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - The Bush administration is sending 150,000 pounds of medical supplies to quake-ravaged Iran in a military airlift, government officials said Saturday.

I note the credit to the Bush admin vs. "the US". Guess the AP's first-line editors were off for Christmas.

Oops. The Holidays, I mean.

The first round of airlift aid is launching from Kuwait. It's a good thing we were near by and ready, eh Osama? Must have been the Will of Allah.

But seriously... this is one of those events where you're truly proud to serve. Though arguably not the mission of the military it’s hard not to swell a bit with pride when you're in the service of a nation that can do this sort of thing on short order, and does it.

Now can someone explain this obsessively bizarre coverage from CNN?

The flights are the first U.S. military flights into Iran since an elite force tried to rescue U.S. hostages there in April 1980. That mission ended in a fiery crash in a remote part of the country known afterward as Desert One.

Two U.S. military C-130 planes landed at Kerman Airport Sunday morning, about 120 miles from Bam, airport officials said. A third plane was expected to follow shortly, with at least two other flights arriving later.

Operation Desert One was a failed, top-secret mission designed to rescue 66 hostages held in the capital, Tehran.

Mechanical problems in Iran's Great Salt Desert caused the mission to be aborted. As one of six helicopters departed, it crashed into a C-130 cargo plane, causing an explosion that killed eight servicemen.

The U.S. did not try a second rescue attempt, and the hostages were eventually released.

What the...?

Interweaving this story with Desert One? Other then reminding Americans of a miserable failure, what purpose does that serve, exactly? Do we alternate paragraphs in current events stories on North Korea with details about the battle of Chosin Reservoir?

SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea overspent its military budget this year to boost "offensive and defensive" strike capabilities in the face of mounting tensions with the United States over its nuclear weapons programs, a top North Korean official said yesterday.

During the Korean war, US troops landed at Inchon on 15 September 1950, liberated Seoul, marched northward and captured Pyongyang on 19 October.

Hmmmm... maybe that wouldn't be such a bad idea...

Now back to Iran.

Dear CNN,
Thank you for not mentioning the Bush administration in your report on aid to Iran. That right-wing dominated AP fawned over the President as though he was the second coming of Christ. Iraq+Bush=Dean 04! Iran+America=Dean 04!

Here's another story you can use for free. I wrote it all by myself:

IRAN (MVG News) The United States government is currently working with Iranian authorities, the United Nations, and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent to rapidly deploy humanitarian assistance to the people of Iran following yesterday's devastating earthquake in Bam.

The last hungry Islamic nation in turmoil the US attempted to help was Somalia during President Clinton's administration.

The first American aid shipment to Iran arrived early Sunday aboard two U.S. military transport planes that landed in the city of Kerman, about 200 kilometers from Bam.

During a firefight in Mogadishu, 18 American soldiers died while attempting to round up a group of lieutenants of Somalian warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid. Estimates on the Somali death toll range from 500-1500.

The United States will deploy civilian teams composed of more than 200 experts in urban search and rescue, emergency surgery, and disaster response coordination -- including medical response teams from Boston, Massachusetts, and local disaster response teams from Los Angeles, California, and Fairfax County, Virginia. Disaster response experts will also be drawn from USAID, FEMA, and the Department of State, and the US military will deliver more than 150,000 pounds of medical supplies from bases in Kuwait to the people of Iran.

Shortly after the "Blackhawk Down" episode President Clinton ordered the Americans to flee Somalia. Many right wing loonies, perhaps fueled by claims from Al-Qaeda confirming the allegation, believe this show of presidential cowardice contributed to the events of 911.

The United States will continue to work with Iranian authorities and international relief organizations to help the people of Iran during this challenging time.

And oh by the way, this cute little feller might or (might not) cause problems.

(Pray for the people of Bam.)


Posted at 1904Z

Airbiscuit

[Greyhawk]

Movie about a racing bird?

Airmen? So not-PC. MArines, sailors, soldiers, no problem.


Posted at 1121Z

Sand Castles

[Greyhawk]
bam1.jpgbam3.jpgbam2.jpg

Across America today, in churches and in homes, prayers will go out to the people of Arg-e-Bam.

Photo galleries from Blog Iran can be found here and here.

Steve, in an interesting post with a great discussion, has links to organizations that can help.


Posted at 1044Z

December 27, 2003

And so this was Christmas...

[Greyhawk]

The lights still glow, the tree still stands, but the gifts are put away.

Do they show the messages to the front (or home from the front) on your local TV?

We get them here in Germany on Armed Forces Television; deployed folks on camera, shouting hello and season's greetings to their loved ones here in the Bundesrepublik. "Hi I'm Sgt Soandso, and I wanna say hi to my wife and kids in Germany! Happy holidays honey, I love you!!"

Great stuff, and I'm sure it means much to the recipient of the message.

But "Happy holidays"?

Lileks noted this in a near-empty Mall.

At the Mall on Tuesday it was almost the Holiday That Dare Not Speak Its Name; there were references to the season, and things festive. The very word "t'is" has become a code word for Christmas, a wink and a nod. "T'is the season." Which one? "You know, the season. The festive season." Oh. Riiiight. THAT one.

Bad enough there, but in greetings within families? Maybe I'm insensitive here, but the generic greeting, required in the public square, is now the phrase of choice used between husbands, wives, and children?

Really, whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukah, Kwanzaa, or Festivus, has it come to that? Are we afraid to offend our loved ones with specific greetings?

Or were the folks told what to say by the camera crews? (I know what I'd say to the camera crews if they told me what to say.)

I don't think that's the case. I'm afraid the reason is even more depressing. "Happy holidays (short for 'Happy generic holiday occurring somewhere around the winter solstice') is becoming the American greeting for December. Folks say it without thinking about it. It likely sounds right to them.

Though not to me.

Merry Christmas America. Happy Hanukah. Say it loud, and unapologetically.

And speaking of Lileks, do not say farewell to Christmas '03 (or all of '03 for that matter) without reading all of Lileks' Christmas posts. Start with Monday and go from there. Finish the week. It will take you all of 15 minutes. (And then you'll probably want to read them again.) If you've never read Lileks before I'll humbly accept your thanks for pointing you in that direction.

But then come back here and follow this link to Scott Ott's incredible Christmas entry. Not your typical ScrappleFace fare (and thanks Scott, for the link to the Bob Hope entry. A rare honor.)

Definitely the way to close out Christmas. (Though I'm ever reluctant to do so, my Christmas spirit flares brightest on the days just after!)

And prepare for New Years!

(Wait, can we say 'New Years' without offending the Chinese, Koreans, Muslims, Jews, and any one on the lunar calendar?)


Posted at 2110Z

Army of One

[Greyhawk]

Poor Jim. He had pefected the art of blogging in obscurity, then made the mistake of joining the Friends of MilBlogs.

Poor Jim just does everything wrong.


Posted at 1951Z

Update

[Greyhawk]

It's never too late!
Just because Christmas is over doesn't mean these folks don't deserve some holiday cheer! Please help fill the "stockings"! It's free, and you'll feel better for doing it.

Thanks!


Posted at 1846Z

December 26, 2003

Economic Recovery News

[Greyhawk]

More good economic recovery news from Long Island Newsday. You can't credit Clinton or Christmas for this one:

Baghdad, Iraq - Although their electricity runs sporadically and gasoline lines stretch for miles, Iraqis are enjoying unprecedented availability of commercial goods, from cars to satellite dishes to portable exercise machines.

The fall of Saddam Hussein also ended a United Nations trade embargo, import tariffs and, in the absence of a government, sales taxes, which cut prices on appliances, electronic goods and other imports to as low as half their pre-war level. At the same time, some Iraqis are making unprecedented wages as the U.S.-led coalition has dramatically increased public-sector salaries and pensions and contracting fees.

"The Americans, they pay good money," said Haider Riad, an engineer whose salary doubled - from $110 to $220 a month - under a U.S. Army contract. He was shopping for a new refrigerator, washing machine and satellite dish one recent evening.

Catch the reference to absence of taxes? No wonder so many Democrat presidential candidates want us out of there quickly. Our troops could pick up bad foreign ideas and customs.

Two weeks after the fall of Hussein, Ali Mohammed converted his women's shoe store in Baghdad into an outlet for satellite dishes. He has sold 2,000 in eight months for about $200 each. "Every Iraqi wants a satellite," Mohammed said.

And satellite TV arrives in a nation where previously it was illegal to own one. You know sales will be hot. What does everyone want most? That which they can't have. So along with satellite, of course, comes information...

Satellite dishes were illegal under Hussein - possession was punishable by 6 months in prison - and their sudden ubiquity has brought perhaps the most profound cultural change to Iraq, which previously had only state-run television. Iraqis are now watching American movies and British news, where they are learning the extent of Hussein's atrocities.

"Now we know there were thousands of massacres," said Mohammed. "We were shocked."

As I am shocked to learn that British news is broadcasting anti-Saddam information. Quite a contrast from some networks I could name...

American news, of course, is fair and balanced. As proof I offer the concluding paragraphs to the above story...

But the new consumer culture is being undermined by a new lawlessness that prompts retailers who might have stayed open until midnight to close at 8 p.m. And the chronic power outages frustrate new satellite owners such as Usama Hashim, who bought a six-foot dish in July but has electricity for only one or two hours a day. "A TV without electricity; what's it worth?" he asked. "It's like putting a rock on the table."

Six foot dish? No wonder he's angry. Yep, room for improvement.

Although the new availability of goods results directly from the U.S.-led overthrow of Hussein, it has not brought a groundswell of goodwill.

"No, no, no," said Waseem Hassan, an electronics store owner, when asked if being able to sell satellite dishes made him feel better about the United States. "There is no electricity, there is no water, there is no safety." And then, as if on cue, the lights in his store went out.

Obviously we've failed miserably. I hope the Brits don't report it on their news!


Posted at 1857Z

December 25, 2003

Ghost of Christmas Present

[Greyhawk]

Part V

(Part I here Part II here Part III here Part IV here)

Speaking of time...

time.jpg

...here's a gift I got for Christmas this year. I get one of these about every two years now. The bands and the batteries last about that long. I run and bike a lot, so maybe I wear them out faster then some folks.

Grown up stuff. Sort of. I got my first ever watch back when that catalog I linked to in the first post in this series was new. I wanted GI Joe and got the watch. It was cool though. I had a watch. I was growing up!

Tick... tick... tick - watches don't even do that any more...

Time accelerates, you know. It doesn't move at a steady pace. Or does our perspective change? I'm not really sure.

For the first time in almost 20 years Santa did not stop by our house this year. The youngest is 13 next month. I say Santa should have visited in spite of the lack of faith.

So it goes.

As I write this a glance at my new watch tells me Christmas has a very few hours left here. Even if I stop the watch it won't matter.

Don't get me wrong, Christmas is good and the passage of time doesn't bother me that much.


Posted at 2035Z

Ghosts of Christmas Past

[Greyhawk]

Part IV (Part I here Part II here Part III here)

rock.jpg

And then one day you find, ten years have got behind you...

And you're too old for games, baby. And you're a rock and roller and the world is yours and Santa knows you want a Fender Srat and a Marshall Stack. Eternal youth!

It's short lived, isn't it?

Continue reading "Ghosts of Christmas"...


Posted at 1942Z

Ghosts of Christmas Past

[Greyhawk]

Part III (Part I here Part II here)

Speaking of models...

ul.jpg

ur.jpg

Think there is anything new under the sun? Or are all things old just made new again?

Posted at 1703Z

December 24, 2003

Ghosts of Christmas Past

[Greyhawk]

Part II (Part I here)

The space age! Funny that sounds old fashioned to me; have we advanced or withdrawn?

bb.jpg

rob.jpg



A great thing about growing up back in the space age was the toys. Like Billy Blastoff and Robbie Robot. Their backpacks held batteries that spun little gears that drove all their vehicles all over the surface of the moon. Or Mars Base. Or wherever.


Posted at 2309Z

Christmas Carnival!

[Greyhawk]

Need more Christmas spirit? Winds of Change hosts this week's Carnival of the Vanities, with a Christmas theme (of course).


Posted at 2011Z

Operation BOB HOPE

[Greyhawk]

UPDATE: Just because Christmas is over doesn't mean these folks don't deserve some holiday greetings! I'll continue to update, please help fill the "stockings"! Thanks!

Okay, he's no longer with us, so this holiday season you can be Bob Hope. Visit these GI's (and veterans and spouses) around the world and drop a bit of cheer into the stockings that are their comment sections. That includes you folks who read but have never commented on a blog before - I know you're out there. Wish good tidings to these folks, many of whom are far from home enabling your safe season.

I'll update this list routinely, with new entries at the top. Check back when you can for more. (And feel free to e-mail me with links to additional military bloggers).

Without further ado...

update 8: I almost forgot a fellow MilBlogger stationed in Germany. This young lady is an Air Force Airman, working for a living for God and country far from home and family. On Christmas. And she requests comments for her friend Greg, who isn't feeling the spirit. Careful though, she's a homicidal maniac.

update 7: Its always contrast.
Jason is Just Another Soldier readying to deploy, and you can take that jouney with him. (Sort of, insofar as he writes well enough that you will think you are with him.) He's miserable, by the way. Or at least was when he last posted. But I'll bet he's over it. Christmas and all, you know.

And Jasminepetal waits, but uses her Christmas time to post great stuff. Do not miss the First Christmas entry.

But Baghdaddy has a great re-cap of the past year in Iraq, food for thought on if it was all worthwhile. Don't miss it.

But don't forget to leave season's greetings!

update 6: I'm not linking a specific post on Andi's blog because then you'd miss seeing what a great front page she has. She's another spouse with a deployed husband, but he's coming home soon. Just too late for Christmas. Can you spare a bit of cheer?

Thor, on the other hand, made it home on time to start a new household and be with his wife and son on his first Christmas. Cool.

And Doc Russia got home from the Marines a long while back, but has a Christmas story you don't want to miss.

update 5: Surely everyone's wished a merry Christmas and happy new year to Chief Wiggles by now? Actually, surprisingly few folks have, considering all the things that the Chief has done these past few months. Got time for a quick salutation to the Chief?

And Citizen Smash has links to some deployed bloggers too. Christmas in the Sand box is here. (But Smash's Christmas post is here.)

update 4: The last of my fellow "German" bloggers (60-odd years later we're still in das quagmire): Sarah at trying to Grok. Always great and thoughtful things to be found at Sarah's blog, visitors please report here and leave Christmas tidings.

update 3: Christmas presents, or "everytime a bell rings, a jumper gets his wings!"

Bejuspundit earned his wings. Then made it home for Christmas.

Update 3a: Working for a living...

Ed is deployed somewhere in Africa supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. And he's working Christmas so his troops won't have to.

That makes two of us.

He also linked to a poem at Blackfive's. The warrior-poet spirit is alive and well in the blogosphere.

Update 2: You do eventually get home. (At least, 99% do.)

DarthVOB is home, but he spent Christmas 1990 helping liberate Kuwait. Read his tale and you'll know why it couldn't have been done without him. Don't forget to tell him merry Christmas and thanks for the memories!

And speaking of getting home, the Fusilier Pundit has a multi-part story for you, of trying to get home for Christmas from OEF in '01. (That's Operation Enduring Freedom, friends. Remember Afghanistan?) Thank him for the story he lived, please, before you leave.

So there you go. A lesson for the deployed; you'll get there, and when you do home will be all the sweeter. So my fine Athiest Soldier, have faith! (And fine readers, please offer this young man some encouraging words!)

Update 1: These folks require a bit of extra effort on your parts. They have no comments sections and must be emailed (addresses on their sites). I think having their inboxes filled on Christmas morning would be great, 'cause they've all been nice not naughty.

Jason is in Iraq Now and got to jam a bit for a USO audience. A troop entertaining the troops! (Not unusual at all, believe me.) He's also been posting great ground truth for some time; a terrific counter to some other "sources" you're likely familiar with.

And here's an example of contrast:

Capt Patti is just-got-home-from-Baghdad with Tim (I suppose they think of Germany as home, for now at least). Chromedome is not home with his wonderful Mrs., but she's trying to smile. You'll see what I mean. Strong people. Please wish them all well. (Chromedomezone does have a guestbook here)

The first links:

Major Pain's letters from Balad have been the blogosphere's version of M*A*S*H for several months. Her holiday related entries are here and here.

John Galt is a veteran, now serving with the CPA in Iraq, and blogging at Deeds. Christmas related posts here. (and scroll on for more.)

And here's An Army Wife, living in Germany while her husband is deployed to Iraq. She's talking about missing Christmas with her folks here, but I'm sure she's missing lots more. Spread cheer!

Hook is spending Christmas in Hawaii with his family, but is readying to deploy. His Christmas post is here.

That's all for now, more to come!


Posted at 1633Z

December 23, 2003

THE COLD SOLSTICE

[Greyhawk]

The seasons change, and winter comes to the hilltop where I live. There's a dusting of snow on the ground, and flurries falling. There's a fire in the fireplace.

The trees are without leaves, and the forest is smaller though the view is larger; you can see out the other side. It's just a hundred-acre wood, after all.

Last week we walked the dogs, the Mrs., the kids and I. Before the snow had covered the ground. An early morning with frost; rime edged every individual leaf, froze them into solid chips of burnt gold. Infinite detail; amazing artistry. So good to have a family together this time of year, so far from home, where so many do not.

Later that day we saw The Return of the King. (Note: there are no spoilers in the discussion ahead.) Our local theater had it in English on at least two screens and Deutsch on others. We braved the opening day crowd and experienced no disappointment in the movie, of course. Except, perhaps, it was too short. Why make us all wait for the extended version? The others were understandable. No one would have released the first movie in its uncut glory; too risky. Whether to renew interest and fill gaps just before the release of the subsequent episode or just to maximize profit, the first two extended versions were in my opinion the best use yet of the DVD medium. I suppose fiscal concerns of theater owners must trump fan desires in this case, so we wait another many months for the real final installment in the series. So be it; everyone involved certainly deserves the profits they'll take.

I went to the movie with pure enjoyment as my goal, but I couldn't deny a desire to see if a theme from the first two movies would carry through to the third. An amazing connection to events of the day, a line of dialogue to resonate within my mind as amazingly applicable to current events. Fellowship when Gandalf discusses fate with Frodo: We don't choose the times in which we are born. So soon after 911. Towers, Wormtongue's words to Théoden: Do not listen to these warmongers! As the very situation played out in the real world.

Then in Return: Aragorn at the gates of Mordor calls out the dark leader of the dark lands. Where is he? Send him out! I cringe at the all too obvious analogy.

Tolkien himself is said to have hated analogy and denied any existed in his work. I suppose there's the truth at the core of the success of this epic; good vs. evil, persevere against odds to ultimate (though not inevitable) triumph; a story that transcends specific examples and thus encompasses so many.

On that topic of persevere against odds I note the passing of two anniversaries. Nearly sixty years ago a very few miles from here Americans withstood the final German counter attack of WWII. If you haven't seen Band of Brothers yet, if you haven't seen the postscript, where a legless man stands on crutches at the edge of the woods and surveys the land he made free, then you should. There was a commemoration of that battle held this past weekend. I'd have liked to have been there. Survivors from both sides, along with citizens of all nations, walk the battle lines and remember, or imagine. I'd have liked to have done that; to have felt a hint of that cold they felt. To have wondered at how they could have endured that cold with mortar rounds and shrapnel raining down among them.

And a couple weeks and 53 years ago, the First Marine Division and the Army's 7th Infantry Division battled out from Chosin, fought free from 120,000 Chinese soldiers and lived to fight another day. (At least those with all their fingers and toes intact. Frostbite is an unforgiving foe.) If you're not familiar with America's war with China you can start learning here. Then here and here. If there's a commemorative event at Chosin then no Americans will be taking part. There will be no joining of old enemies in peaceful times.

This year.

And speaking of this year, I see out the window the snow is about an inch deep now. And it's cold. And I'm inside with a fire. And the wife and the kids and the dogs.

And my daughter has a friend over. And that friend's dad will spend Christmas in Iraq. And her mom, here in Germany, has not decorated their house this year. Not even a tree.

I missed the Bastogne event because I was working this past weekend. And I'll miss about 10 hours of Christmas with my family for the same reason. We're 24/7/365 at my shop. And I'm not complaining.

Who knows what next year will bring?


Posted at 2316Z

Ghosts of Christmas Past

[Greyhawk]

72.jpg
Greyhawk wasn't always grey...

And in young Greyhawk's world nothing made Christmas a more tangible reality than the annual arrival of the Sears Christmas catalog.

Once you could flip those pages you could really start to plan your Christmas in earnest. You knew just what toys you wanted, just by looking at those flat, two- dimensional images. In your minds eye, of course, you were already playing with them.

I was never a greedy kid; I rarely wanted more then 2 or 3 toys from each page of the catalog. I'd dilligently circle them, and to this day I vividly recall the 95% I never got as among the major disappointments of the first decade-and-a half of my life.




Posted at 0100Z

December 22, 2003

Next: Her Christmas Cookie Recipe

[Greyhawk]

Katie Couric about 2 seconds ago (Today, 22 Dec 2003): "Tell me why there's no woman on the cover?"

Jim Kelly from Time: " That is a Woman."

Katie: "Oh."

Me: "Idiot".

More: Here


Posted at 1250Z

The Hunt for $addam

[Greyhawk]

Stories on the details of the hunt for Saddam should be plentiful for a while. This one from Newsweek contains what will likely be among the first of many embellishments of the "official" version:

The Special Forces commando had already pulled the pin. He was primed to toss the grenade into the "spider hole," a Vietnam-era nickname for lethal hiding places. But the man cowering inside did not use the pistol resting in his lap. He raised both hands in submission and, speaking in English, announced, "I am Saddam Hussein, I am the president of Iraq and I'm willing to negotiate."

As the story was later told, one of the Special Forces operators looked down at the disheveled, bearded, seemingly dazed man and replied, "President Bush sends his regards." And coming out of the hole, Saddam accidentally bumped his head. But a knowledgeable U.S. official told NEWSWEEK that it didn't quite happen that way. In fact, as Saddam was being handcuffed, he began to struggle with his captors. He spat at the soldiers. One of the commandos decked him, either with a punch or a rifle butt. (The military later tidied up the story of his capture for popular consumption.)



Posted at 1238Z

December 21, 2003

Dear Time Warner,

[Greyhawk]

ti.jpgt2.jpgt3.jpgt4.jpgt5.jpg

Yours,
Greyhawk


Posted at 2009Z

Hungry? Here's Food for Thought

[Greyhawk]

A series of quotes that caught my attention from here and there around the blogosphere. Things that made me say "hmmmmm..." (Then: "wish I'd thought of that!") They are much more brilliant, of course, in the context of the full stories from which I culled them.

Lisa S. at Right Voices gets a nice shot off at the new Madeleine Albright battalion of the tin-foil-hat brigade:

"Also, I think President Bush also has the entire Middle East Peace Crisis solved and a Peace plan in place that all parties can agree on - - but he's waiting until right before the election to unroll it to the general public."

Bejus pundit, typing through the pain of jump school, notes:

The fact that no foreign terrorists were captured in this first major raid underscores how fragmented Al Queda has become...if they aren't taking advantage of the opportunity to wreak havoc in post-war Iraq, it's because they can't take advantage of it.

And I hope he's right.

Darren Kaplan injects grim common sense into the discussion of court veto of wartime presidential powers and responsibilities:

As regards Mr. Padilla, if the Constitution permits the President to order the killing of those who threaten the United States under the inherent powers of Commander in Chief, why should we be shocked to find that the Constitution also permits the President to hold such persons for the duration of the hostilities?

Darren (a lawyer) has a couple insightful posts on the recent appeals court decisions.

And Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit scores twice on media coverage in Iraq:

But, really, I'd be happy if the news business were in the news business, instead of letting itself be embarrassingly scooped by Iraqi dentists with digicams and blogs.

Hey, here's another reason why this war isn't Vietnam -- this time around, it's the news media who don't want the real story to get out. . . .

What can I say? Indeed.
Heh.


Posted at 0524Z

December 20, 2003

The Christmas Spin?

[Greyhawk]

Is it because of Christmas? Every one in a while I find a story that doesn't directly (or indirectly) attack the policies of the U.S. Of course, balanced or pro-American reporting invariably comes from a very few sources, and AJC seems to be one.

From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, December 18, 2003

Note: this from print edition, not available on line.

Wounded Find A New Mission

By George Edmonson, Staff

Washington -- Marine Capt. Jason Frei followed a path taken by many of those hurt on the battlefield in Iraq.

An artillery officer from North Dakota who graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, Frei was in a Humvee advancing toward Baghdad in the early days of the invasion when a rocket-propelled grenade hit the vehicle.

He was helicoptered to facilities in Kuwait, flown to a military hospital in Germany and then transported to the United States.

One of more than 280 Marines injured in combat since the beginning of the fight to topple Saddam Hussein's government, Frei lost much of his right arm, which has been replaced by a prosthesis.

After being treated at Bethesda National Naval Medical Center just outside Washington, he took 30 days of convalescent leave in San Diego and then headed back to his base at Camp Pendleton, Calif.

Among his first actions was applying to remain in the Marines. Another was going out to meet other returning troops injured overseas in the hopes of passing along encouraging words.

"You have to maintain a positive attitude," said Frei, 31. "You have to. You can decide to let this slow you down, just like any other adversity you would run into in your life. I can't do that."

Today, others wounded in Iraq probably will hear words of encouragement from President Bush, who will be visiting patients at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here.

The scene will be familiar to Pfc. Adam McLain.

"I met the president" at Walter Reed, said McLain, 22, a military police officer in the National Guard who is now home in Havre, Mont.

McLain, who is recuperating from injuries suffered in Iraq, has a photograph of himself with Bush, but the college student admitted he doesn't recall a great deal about the meeting because he was "heavily morphinated."

Bush's visit is one of several he's made to see injured troops at the complex named after a noted 19th century Army physician who did pioneering work on yellow fever. But some critics argue that soldiers wounded in Iraq are not receiving the attention they deserve.

About 2,100 patients from the war have been treated at Walter Reed, including 368 battle casualties, according to the hospital. The overall Army figures show about 1,900 soldiers have been wounded in action in Iraq and about 7,800 others have suffered non-combat related injuries, including diseases.

This is far more than in the Persian Gulf War and Bosnia, but it pales in comparison to other wars.

"In Korea and Vietnam, they were coming back 500 a week," said Cy Kammeier, national public relations director for the Military Order of the Purple Heart, which has about 40,000 members. "This is almost nothing in comparison -- which is good."

In addition to complaints that not enough attention is being paid the wounded, some critics of the Bush administration contend news coverage of funerals at Arlington National Cemetery has been restricted. They also say a blackout on coverage of bodies returning to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware is designed to hide the toll on U.S. troops.

But administration officials argue they are merely trying to ensure the privacy of families and conduct the operations with dignity.

Last month at Fort Carson, Colo., Bush met with the families of 26 soldiers killed in the war. It was one of several such meetings, according to White House spokeswoman Clair Buchan. The president's Thanksgiving Day trip to visit U.S. troops in Baghdad also served to tamp down criticism.

Private groups, such as the Disabled American Veterans, also are reaching out to the wounded and their families.

With U.S. troops facing more grenade and explosives attacks in the Iraq war, the types of injuries are changing: more blast injuries, fewer gunshot wounds.

The largest component of injuries involve arms and legs, said Lt. Col. Van Coots, a physician who serves as senior medical staff officer for health policy and services with the Surgeon General's Office. Improved body armor and protective Kevlar helmets are two advances that afford more protection to the trunk and head, he said.

In addition to the armor, he cited increased training for medics, new life-saving products employed on the battlefield and surgical units working closer to the front. "So we really are taking care of these guys within that 'golden hour,' that first hour after wounding when saving the life is so critical," he said.


Posted at 1630Z

December 19, 2003

Too Cool for School - a Brighter Chrstmas for a wounded GI

[Greyhawk]

Haven't found this on their website yet, but I'll link when I can.

School's Gift: Wounded GI's Kids Will Make A Holiday Visit

By Eileen Kelley, Special to The Denver Post

COLORADO SPRINGS - Schoolteacher Liz Follon didn't have to borrow an overtold story to teach her third-grade class a lesson on remembering the less fortunate during the holiday season.

Instead, Follon's classroom, along with the rest of Grant Elementary School, created a real-life holiday story.

In a matter of a week, kids at the 500-student school in north-central Colorado Springs dug deep into their piggy banks, unearthed crumpled dollar bills from secret hiding spots and did extra chores around the house to raise money for airline tickets and hotel accommodations for two fellow students. In the end, they gathered about $3,000.

That means Anthony Mitchell, 8, and Megan Mitchell, 7, can visit their injured soldier father at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., for Christmas. They wouldn't be able to go without their classmates' help.

Staff Sgt. Roy Mitchell of Indiana was severely burned and lost part of his left leg in a land-mine explosion in Afghanistan on Nov. 23. The 32-year-old from Fort Drum in New York was one of 21 wounded soldiers recovering as of Wednesday at Walter Reed.

The military hospital has a special dinner and other events planned for Christmas. But Mitchell has no idea his children are coming next week to surprise him. The last time Megan and Anthony saw their father was in June, as he was preparing to deploy.

"It's just so awesome," said Jeanne Fears, the school's head secretary. "One little boy said last night that if that was his dad, he'd want to be there at Christmas, too, so that's why he pitched in."

For Anthony and Megan, seeing their father alive will help allay fears they have about his health and safety, said Jennifer Mitchell, the children's mother.

Jennifer Mitchell, who is divorced from Roy Mitchell, said she never expected the students to rally around Anthony and Megan the way they did. All she did, she said, was inform the school that if Anthony and Megan were acting out and having trouble, officials should know their father was badly injured. But word of the injured soldier spread quickly.

"It's a Christmas blessing, and it will be a Christmas they will remember forever," she said. "We are trying to keep that element of surprise. That is the greatest gift they have for their dad this year."

The children's anticipation and pride are growing.

Each day Anthony asks Follon, his teacher, for the number of days left until he can see his father again.

"They are so very excited," Jennifer Mitchell said. "Anthony answers the phone, 'Hello, my name is Anthony, and my daddy is a hero. Who are you?"'

Earlier this week Follon sent the boy home with a bundle of letters and hand-drawn pictures from his classmates, gifts for his father. The letters are filled with words of love, prayer and concern, not only for Roy Mitchell, but also for Anthony, Follon said.

"It was unbelievable. They were so involved and so motivated and excited to write (the letters), which is not normal when we have to write a story," said Follon. "This is the true meaning of the holidays. They are giving to somebody who they don't know. They have never even seen (Anthony's) father."


Posted at 0459Z

December 18, 2003

FLIGHT

[Greyhawk]

silentflight.jpg

100 years ago today, the Wright Brothers invented flight.

Visit the Air Force Museum

or the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum

Probably the best thing about flying is when GIs get to fly home. Have you visited Operation Hero Miles yet?

Glenn did. (Thanks Glenn.)

(Note - above picture by my daughter when she was in middle school; she won a contest with that one. She said I could use it but she made me promise not to tell it was hers.)


Posted at 0158Z

Yeaah.. That's the Ticket!

[Greyhawk]

Fox says:

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright insisted Wednesday that she was just kidding when she wondered aloud whether the Bush administration is holding Usama bin Laden captive, waiting to break him out at the best political moment.

It was a "tongue-in-cheek comment and was not intended in any other way," Albright told Fox News.

But witnesses to Albright's comment said the ambassador did not appear to be joking Tuesday when she suggested President Bush may reveal bin Laden's capture as an "October surprise" (search) before next November's presidential election.

Albright was in the Fox News studio's green room waiting to appear on an evening program when she made the remark.

"She said, 'Do you suppose that the Bush administration has Usama bin Laden hidden away somewhere and will bring him out before the election?'" said Fox News analyst and Roll Call executive editor Mort Kondracke. "She was not smiling."

Two makeup artists who prep the guests before their appearances also reported that Albright did not ask her question in a joking manner.

Interesting, coming from someone who recently (dated 8 Dec) made this somewhat rambling statement on the failure to capture or kill Osama Bin laden and Saddam Hussein:

"Saddam Hussein's continued life is more of a problem than Osama bin Laden's. Because if we look at what has been happening with the insurgency [in Iraq] and stories in the last few days [about] funds that Saddam Hussein somehow has access to ... in many ways he has a lot of levers he was used to pulling. The question is whether the strings are attached... His continued life is creating huge problems. And while the [Bush] administration is basically saying none of this matters any more, I think it does matter. Whether they capture him there is no way of telling. Osama bin Laden ...I think it would be better if Osama bin Laden were captured. That is what they promised us and it hasn't happened."

And this on Afghanistan from a story dated 13 Dec "Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar are still at large and warlords continue to rule."

And this classic from just a couple months ago:

The United States would now be safer and more popular overseas had Al Gore instead of George W. Bush won the 2000 presidential election, former secretary of state Madeleine Albright said in remarks published yesterday.

In an opinion piece published in the September/October 2003 issue of the scholarly journal Foreign Affairs, Albright also accused the Bush administration of blundering by invading Iraq before Afghanistan was truly stabilised, Osama bin Laden had been caught and his al-Qaeda network smashed.

"I remain convinced that had Al Gore been elected president, and had the attacks of September 11 still happened, the United States and NATO would have gone to war in Afghanistan together, then deployed forces all around that country and stayed to rebuild it," she wrote.

So if it's true, why the sudden reversal on the claim?

My theory: Angling for a veep slot on the Dean ticket.

Dean Dec 1: I don't know. There are many theories about it. The most interesting theory that I've heard so far, which is nothing more than a theory, I can't—think it can't be proved, is that he was warned ahead of time by the Saudis. Now, who knows what the real situation is, but the trouble is that by suppressing that kind of information, you lead to those kinds of theories, whether they have any truth to them or not, and then eventually they get repeated as fact. So I think the president is taking a great risk by suppressing the clear, the key information that needs to go to the Kean commission.

Dec 9:
Scott Spradling, WMUR-TV: Governor Dean, you had once stated that you thought it was possible that the president of the United States had been forewarned about the 9/11 terrorist attacks. You later said that you didn't really know.

A statement like that, don't you see the possibility of some Democrats being nervous about statements like that leading them to the conclusion that you are not right for being the next commander in chief?

Howard Dean: Well, in all due respect, I did not exactly state that.



maddy.jpg deaner.jpg

Update: I'm kidding!!!

Update: No I'm not!

Update: Yes I was!


Posted at 0125Z

December 17, 2003

Bush Proposes Tough New Sanctions on Saddam

[Greyhawk]

As President Bush suggests the imposition of a tough new "sanction" on Saddam Hussein (if so approved by an Iraqi court) some Europeons and a Vatican spokescardinal cautiously urged caution in dealing with the deposed rapist, murderer, and dictator of Iraq.

"Let's just see what penalty he gets, but I think he ought to receive the ultimate penalty ... for what he has done to his people," Bush said in a TV interview broadcast Tuesday. "I mean, he is a torturer, a murderer, they had rape rooms. This is a disgusting tyrant who deserves justice, the ultimate justice."

The Vatican's Cardinal Renato Martino felt "compassion" for Saddam, despite his crimes, after seeing images of "this destroyed man" being "treated like a cow, having his teeth checked" by an American military medic.

Actually, he was probably looking for a suicide capsule, Padre. To prevent Saddy from committing a sin, if you will. And as far as "cow" treatment, I just had my annual dental checkup. I'll admit it wasn't very fun, but I can't say it occurred to me to feel "cow-like" at the time. You see, dental visits are just a part of life... in America.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the world body opposes the death penalty. The European Union shares his view.

"We believe there are no circumstances that can justify the death penalty," said Diego Ojeda, the EU's spokesman on external relations.

Searching tirelessly for additional supporting quotes, the intrepid AP reporter who filed this copy stumbled happily upon...

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who supported the U.S.-led war that ousted Saddam, also emphasized his country's opposition to the death penalty.

The international community and the Iraqi leadership "must show the Iraqis that an alternative to the past decades' terror regimes exists," Denmark's Berlingske Tidende newspaper said.

How many "world figures" would perhaps approve of "one last warning" for Saddam prior to setting him free as an example of the "right way to do business" for the Iraqi people?

Update on the Cardinal from Instapundit.


Posted at 1549Z

Interview With Soldiers Involved In Saddam's Capture

[Greyhawk]

GOOD MORNING AMERICA ABC TV DECEMBER 15, 2003

Interview With Soldiers Involved In Saddam's Capture

DIANE SAWYER, ABC NEWS: We have got our satellite up and once again, we go to Specialist John Iverson and Specialist Ryan Brescher. And there they are joining us from Iraq. And, as I said, we know this is a good morning for the two of you.

Specialist Iverson, I'm going to start with you. As you are heading in, you've got your night vision goggles on, you are heading into this compound. Did you know you were going for Saddam Hussein?

SPECIALIST JOHN IVERSON, DRIVER, 4TH DIVISION, 1ST BRIGADE: We had been informed that that was a possible target that we were going after. We always keep our minds open because we never actually know if what we are going after is there.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) And Specialist Brescher, were your, were your hearts pounding?

SPECIALIST RYAN BRESCHER, GUNNER, 4TH DIVISION, 1ST BRIGADE: Yeah, we were a little excited about the events that could take place. It's a big event. He's a man we've been looking for for a long time. So, yeah, we were, we were pumped up about it.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) Now, Specialist Brescher, was that luck that somebody saw the spider hole or did you all have a tip to go specifically to that place?

BRESCHER: Actually, that was information that we weren't, we weren't given, we were really told of the area, not really the -specifics on the information.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) And Specialist Brescher, I know that through your night vision goggles, you did see Saddam Hussein being pulled out of that hole. We've heard he was disoriented, that he had bumped his head even. Could you tell, was he wobbling around, did he seem off-balance?

BRESCHER: Actually, yes, he did. The terrain was also, the field's a little torn up. But, yes, as they, as they were escorting him out, he was very disoriented. Couldn't tell what was going on.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) And Specialist Iverson, how long did you have, what kind of notice did you have before mounting this operation and how prepared were you for a real fight to the finish?

IVERSON: Well, when we originally started, we had been on standby for, I don't know, I'd have to say maybe about two or three hours. And we rolled out for link up with special operation forces. At that point in time, it just happened one right after another, it seemed like it was going in an instant. I couldn't really put a timetable on it, though.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) And Specialist Iverson, we heard that some of you did light cigars afterwards. Was there a moment of celebration?

IVERSON: I'd have to say that there was a momentary celebration after it was done, once we had officially been told what happened. I couldn't honestly say about the whole cigars, but we did celebrate a little bit.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) Well, Specialist Brescher, I just wonder, have had you a chance to talk to your mom and your wife about your role in this?

BRESCHER: I actually haven't yet. I was able to send a small e-mail to them, but I haven't, haven't been able to talk to them in person or on the phone yet and let them know what actually went on.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) Well, we have a little, we have a little surprise for you right now. And I want to say we tried to get both of your families up, but we managed to get through to Carol Brescher, your mom. And to Brianne, your wife. And they are joining us by phone this morning. Mrs. Brescher, Carol Brescher, can you hear me?

CAROL BRESCHER: Yes, I can.

SAWYER: Do you want to say something to your son this morning?

CAROL BRESCHER: Ryan, I'm so proud of you. I'm proud and I'm, I'm glad you're safe. And, I'm, I'm glad the Iraqi people can be free now.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) And Brianne, do you have something to add?

BRIANNE BRESCHER: I love you. I love you and I'm, and I'm so happy that you are safe, too, honey.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) And Specialist Brescher, it is your turn to talk back.

BRESCHER: I love you, baby. I did it for you guys. I'm over here, I fight the fight everyday. And it's paid off. We, we did what we came here to do. And we continue to do it everyday. And, baby, it's for you. It's, it's for the family. I love you guys. I'm proud to do what I do. And I'm glad I was here. I'm glad I was, was able to take part in this event. And I love you guys so much. I am so proud that I could do this for the country.

SAWYER: (Off Camera) Well, we're going to leave both of you on the phone, all three of you the phone and sign off. And I want you to know, Specialist Iverson, we're still dialing, and if we can get through, you bet you are going to get a chance to talk to your family this morning, too. And we just want to say, thank you from all of us back home.

CAROL BRESCHER: Thank you, Diane.


Posted at 1510Z

December 15, 2003

ScrappleFace: Support the Troops

[Greyhawk]

My buddy Scott Ott has re-posted his "Support the Troops" post from earlier this year, just in time for Christmas and a Saddam bust. If you haven't done so please consider joining the 1300+ commenters (most in the blogosphere?) on this amazing post.

My GI buds: Go read what the real America thinks of you.

Warning to all: rampant feelings of patriotism may result.


Posted at 2357Z

Saddam Says

[Greyhawk]

7 May 2003:
This time we are standing against America, a tryant power that rules the world. You Iraqi people will shame the Americans as the Palestinians shame the Zionists. The Zionists are baffled how to fight the Palestiniain people and you the Iraqi people, men and women, stand together against the invasion and show your stance as much as you can by writing on walls, or making positive demonstrations or not selling them anything or buying anything from them, or by shooting them with your rifles and trying to destroy their cannons and tanks.

4 Jul 2003
Brothers and sons, brave women and men, I bring you the good news that cells and brigades of jihad, sacrifice, and their organisations have indeed been formed on a large scale, comprising men and women mujahideen.

They have started their honourable actions in fighting the enemy and the aggression. You must be hearing about them, although what you are hearing about them, especially the losses they are inflicting among the (?infidel) invaders is just a small part of the actual losses.

1 Sep 2003
This time will be their end through the will, heroic resistance, and great jihad of the Iraqis and their faithful brothers from the sons of our nation.

Glorious heroes: Strengthen your faithful and brave blows against the foreign aggressors, from wherever they come and whatever their nationalities.

16 Nov 2003
In the name of God, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.

Say: "Nothing will happen to us except what God has decreed for us: He is our protector", and in God let the believers put their trust.

Say: "Can you expect for us (any fate) other than one of two glorious things - Martyrdom or victory? But we can expect for you either that God will send His punishment from Himself, or by our hands. So wait, expectant, we too will wait with you. [Koranic verses]

O great people, God willing; O magnanimous mujahideen, lovers of martyrdom, and God's loved ones; O magnanimous men of our Armed Forces wherever you hold on tightly to the weapons of the valiant resistance; O magnanimous men and glorious women in the field of resistance and raising the roaring voice of right against the criminals and weakness. I am addressing you all regardless of all your job titles and ranks, and wherever the slogan in the name of God, Iraq, and the nation under the banner of God is great and come to join the jihad is shouted.

May God's peace, mercy, and blessings be upon you. May you enjoy many happy returns of the day. May God bless your Ramadan and the Id that follows it. May your fasting be accepted, God willing.

Our martyrs are in paradise while the dead of the louts and our other enemies are in hell. O God, make this month of Ramadan the prelude to and foundation of victory as it was during the great Badr [battle], [which marked] the era of the vanguards of Arabs and Muslims who were honoured by faith in you.

Dec 14 2003:
"My name is Saddam Hussein. I am the president of Iraq and I want to negotiate."

And

...there they found Saddam... He was armed with a pistol, but he didn't use it.

<...>

Whether Saddam ever contemplated defending himself was not known, but two of his aides, carrying Kalashnikov rifles, tried to run away. They were captured, too.

ANd here's a headline for those who can't grasp the obvious: "Arrest marks end of disastrous year for Saddam"


Posted at 2321Z

"Regards From President Bush"

[Greyhawk]
saddy.jpg
?My name is Saddam Hussein,? the fallen Iraqi leader told U.S. troops in English as they pulled him out of a dank hole Saturday night where he hid in the village of Adwar, north of Baghdad. ?I am the president of Iraq and I want to negotiate.?

A U.S. Special Forces soldier replied: ?Regards from President Bush.?


Posted at 1956Z

December 14, 2003

December 7, 2003 (Part IV)

[Greyhawk]

Part I
Part II
Part III

Does Senator Clinton "get it" with respect to the troops? Let's see if Tim Russert got the answer he was looking for:

MEET THE PRESS, NBC TV, DECEMBER 7, 2003

Interview with Senator Clinton

TIM RUSSERT: This is the way one Republican, Scott Reed (sp), responded. He said the comments you made were "un-American. Any member of the U.S. Senate should be supporting our troops 100 percent. It sounds like Senator Clinton has been stung by the fact that President Bush overshadowed her trip to Iraq and left her as an afterstory -- (laughter) -- so to break into the debate she had to take the low road."

SEN. CLINTON: Oh, that's so sad. You know, I think that that's reflective of the efforts by this administration to deny and divert attention from what everybody knows. I mean, it is like the old children's story -- the emperor has no clothes. I mean, you know, if you say there are serious questions on the ground raised by our troops, raised by Afghans, raised by Iraqis, raised by our friends around the world, somehow that is not appropriate.

You know, I find that sad because to me we have a lot at stake -- not only the lives of American men and women, not only the lives of Afghans and Iraqis, but about the future leadership of this country. And I think that given the globalization of information and communication, we have to be very forthright in saying, you know, failure is not an option. We are going to stay the course. But we have got to figure out what the course is. And I feel very strongly that in the last several months this administration has had a lot of happy talk and a lot of rosy scenarios instead of dealing in a forthright way about the challenges that we face. I don't think that does anyone any good, particularly the men and women who are serving with such bravery abroad.

MR. RUSSERT: But if someone suggests you're undercutting morale by criticizing the commander in chief to these soldiers in Iraq, it doesn't trouble you?

SEN. CLINTON: Well, I don't think that's what I did.

So what is "Centrist warhawk" Clinton's plan for Iraq?

FACE THE NATION MR. ROBERTS: You've talked about the need to internationalize the operation there. What do you mean when you say internationalize? How can it be more internationalized than it is already? You already have troops from a number of different countries there. You have a number of different countries participating in the rebuilding.

SEN. CLINTON: Well what I have in mind is something more in the order of both what we did in Bosnia and Kosovo in the Clinton Administration.

MEET THE PRESS
Now, we did a couple of things right in Bosnia and Kosovo. We had the friends of Bosnia and Kosovo, we had regional powers. We had many more troops in Bosnia and Kosovo than we have in Afghanistan, and we had more multilateral commitments than we have in Iraq. So why don't we set up some kind of international bridge. The U.N. can be playing a role, NATO can be playing a role. We can create some new entity, the Iraq reconstruction stability authority. We can do something that then gives, frankly, cover to other countries to come in and support us.

THIS WEEK ON ABC
But I still believe that we would be doing ourselves a great favor in the long run by trying to internationalize this and getting more troops on the ground from other countries who could be involved in this effort with us.

Andrew Sullivan writes in the Sunday Times of London (or, if you prefer, The Sunday London Times):

British anti-war liberals, lefties, and conservatives have just won a new enemy. This gung-ho member of the neocon cabal, this imperialistic threat to world peace, this destroyer of multilateral alliances actually believes that president Bush is too soft for the Iraq war. The president is too swift to turn over sovereignty to Iraqis, according to this critique. He needs to pour in more troops, display more resolve, demand more from allies, and take more time to get the job done right. Who is this foe of the anti-war left? Drum roll, please. It's Hillary Clinton.

Which I must presume is an apt view, as I am no expert on British politics, but an incorrect one insofar as I don't think for a minute that Sen. Clinton wants a "get tougher" policy on Iraq. Her stance is rhetoric; she may as well shout that the president should stand on his head in the capitol rotunda and sing The Star Spangled Banner as call for a greater "international presence" (code: France Germany Russia) in Iraq. It ain't gonna happen. And the Senator knows it.

And Mr. Sullivan is savvy enough to know politicking when he sees it, as he so aptly proves:

It was a nifty rhetorical strategy - far shrewder than anything most of the Democratic candidates have been saying. And as the blogger Mickey Kaus observed, she can't really lose. If Bush's strategy succeeds, she can say that she favored the war and its objective of a stable democracy in Iraq. If Bush's plan fails, she can claim that she supported different tactics. Certainly she cannot be accused of selling out American troops, being weak on national security or wishy-washy in the war on terror. Maybe she's sincere. Maybe she's not. Either way, she wins.

...But it strikes me as far too cynical to believe that the Bush administration is attempting to pull a quick exit strategy for purely political reasons. Between next June and November, there is a long period in which the consequences of premature Iraqi sovereignty will be fully visible. Bush will be judged electorally whatever his policy. And if he really wanted to use Iraq purely for electoral purposes, why announce a deadline now - rather than unveil a surprise later, when it would have more impact on the electoral cycle? Besides, with a booming economy, and major legislative gains on hand, Bush's re-election prospects have never looked better. He doesn't need the boost his critics are accusing him of engineering.

But all of that plays into Hillary's hands as well. Almost certainly, she has no plans to run for president next year. But the more the Democratic candidates degenerate into anti-war shrillness and the further they drift away from a decent chance at beating Bush, the better situated she is to take control of the party machinery after a Bush re-election; and the easier it will be for her to run from the center in 2008. Hillary's enormous gift is that the left of the party adores her, almost regardless of what she says or does. She is so hated by the far right that the left adopts her as an ally almost reflexively. So she alone of most Democrats has the ability to campaign from the center, to pose with troops in photo-ops, to out-flank Bush on the right in the war on terror, without endangering her base.

If I may be so bold, I suggest a slightly different spin: Sen. Clinton chooses to avoid a line in American politics that many of her Party cohorts have pranced far across (though some perhaps long before they joined the Party); that point where loyal opposition approaches treason. The Democratic party's Far Left, in what many view as descent into lunacy, have in many cases abandoned all but the thinnest veneer of patriotism. The current crop of contenders for the highest office in our land all define themselves by degree of opposition to the president, which is what 'opposition' candidates must by definition do.
Sadly, perhaps fueled by early success of Howard Dean, they define that opposition by their stances on the war in Iraq. They fall over one another in the struggle to establish supremacy of their level of anti-war rhetoric. And their personal comfort zone with regards to how far they will veer from center on this issue seems to change with the moment, as they leapfrog each other into political oblivion. (Note that those candidates - Lieberman, Gephardt - who choose not to play are already considered "not electable")

So yes, an outstanding opportunity indeed for Ms Clinton. She can stand bemused on the sidelines and watch them race themselves to the edge of the proverbial cliff. But will the antics of this small and tragic group of cliff divers define the landscape of American politics? Ms Clinton is hardly "centrist", unless one accepts that Dennis Kucinich defines the Left and George Bush the Right. And that is how so many would shape the current political stage, but they'd be wrong. For Bush, in response to that far left exodus in the Democratic Party, has also taken steps to the center.

Andrew Sullivan again:

It's the reverse of Bush, who has such emotional support from the right that he can do nothing to stop abortion, spend money like Lyndon Johnson, enact the biggest new welfare state entitlement in a generation, and still be enormously popular with the party base.

The unspoken implication is that there is a "vast right wing" somewhere beyond the president, and indeed there is. The mistake is to marginalize that wing. Folks "right of Bush" are likely a more potent political force then "folks left of Kucinich". Ignore them at your peril, those of you who are convinced you have the shape of the American political landscape figured out.

THIS WEEK ON ABC (emphasis added): MR. STEPHANOPOULOS: Let's talk about President Bush. You're in Houston this week and I want to show our viewers something that the "Houston Chronicle" reported you said: "President Bush has not only been radical and extreme in terms of Democratic presidents, but in terms of Republican presidents, including his own father, his administration is making America less free, fair, strong, smart, than it deserves to be in a dangerous world." Radical, extreme, less free, fair, strong and smart. Those are very tough words. Is that really what you said?

SEN. CLINTON: It certainly is what I said. And it is what I mean. I think we are dealing with an administration that has thrown over the consensus-building and the bipartisan agreement that basically built the 20th-century America that I'm very proud of and that I'm a product of. And yes, you know, there may have been people more to the right or more to the left, but if you look at the efforts that were made starting in the 1930s to save capitalism from itself to put us on the right track, to have the kind of middle class that would grow and provide ladders of opportunity for anybody willing to work hard, if you look at how we built up alliances, the painstaking, frustrating work of working with other nations around the world, I don't think that this president had a mandate to do that coming out of the 2000 election.

Because Hillary Clinton is not the center, and never has been. The center is still firmly occupied by a large group of fine Americans, who will tire of being branded "right wing extremists" in short order. Who will tire of Hillary and others of her sort claiming to belong to their group while actually occupying ground far to their left, and who recognize a significant portion of the Democratic party moving far beyond the pale.


Posted at 1943Z

New Weblog Showcase

[Greyhawk]

New Weblog Showcase vote from me this week:
Hippercritical with Israel's Sammy Davis Jr?


Posted at 1935Z

New Blogs

[Greyhawk]

Okay, there I was tweaking my blogrolls when suddenly the good guys capture Saddam and change the world and my plans for the day...

For what it's worth, in my ongoing efforts to hype newer (new to me, that is) blogs (share a bit of my recent "success" if you will, I've split my "Other fine Patriots" blogroll into a "Boot Camp" section for new additions and the "Veterans" section for my old friends.

So if you're looking for something new, try a "Boot Camp" Blog.


Posted at 1417Z

Ooglay Hussein's Diary

[Greyhawk]

Hello good sirs and madams.

I am Ooglay Hussein and am the sole surviving son of Saddam Hussein, until recently the rightful and benevolent ruler of Iraq. I am writing to you because you are, I am told, a trustworthy person who can help with this most urgent matter discretely and quickly to our mutual satisfaction.

I am recently coming in to possession of 25 million American dollars...


Posted at 0900Z

Saddam Captured

[Greyhawk]

We got the bastard.

The current #1 hero of the American Left is in custody. (Awaiting DNA results.)

Suppose if he says he had no WMD the Lefties will believe it?

And get ready, for the next time a US Soldier dies over there a media storm of "we've lost the war" coverage will exceed all previous attempts. It will "prove" that all Iraqis hate us, not just Saddam.

The celebration in Mudville begins soon.

1156 UTC Update: Intrepid CNN reporter Jane Araf just said that since the average Iraqi doesn't have electricity or water the capture of Saddam won't mean that much to them.

1229 UTC Update from Reuters via MSNBC: (This posted during the press conference officially announcing the capture):

LONDON - The capture of ousted Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in his hometown of Tikrit is a major coup for the U.S., but will not necessarily bring an end to the unrest in Iraq, analysts say.

1305 UTC update: I'll be first to admit when I'm in the wrong. Oliver Willis is the first left-leaning blogger to chime in, and can hardly contain his enthusiasm:

"400 soldiers for one man. Nice exchange, pal. And yes, please do find Osama."

Posted by Oliver at December 14, 2003 07:14 AM

And DU is practically exploding with cheer today: "an illegal war...an illegal occupation. Bush should be tried before Saddam."

1530 UTC:
Atrios: "Saddam was a bad guy, but it isn't clear he's any worse of a guy than some of the folks who are a part of our "Coalition of the Willing," so this pretense of moral clarity, etc... is ridiculous... Saddam wasn't a threat to us."

NY Times in the sixth sentence in the story on the capture: "Some senior Bush administration officials have suspected that Mr. Hussein was still alive and inspiring, if not leading, the guerrilla-style insurgency that has left more than 190 American soldiers dead since President Bush declared an end to major combat operations on May. 1."

18:10 UTC:
Glenn reports a palpable sense of disappointment from the media. He includes this e-mail from a Major Sean Bannion in Baghdad:

Being no friend of the media I can confirm what some of your readers have already told you when they say "you can hear the dejection in their voices" from the media.

In the case of the CPA press conference you could see the disappointment on their faces and in their mien even if they asked a reasonable question. They were at least polite enough not to openly pooh-pooh Ambassador Bremer, LTG Sanchez and Dr. Pachachi.

But you can REALLY get a sense of the media's tone when you read Reuters' cutline from the photo of a captured Saddam:

"A photo of Saddam Hussein after his capture is shown during a press conference in Baghdad, December 14, 2003. U.S. troops captured Saddam Hussein near his home town of Tikrit announced U.S. administrator in Iraq Paul Bremer on Sunday, in a major coup for Washington's beleaguered occupation force in Iraq. Photo by Reuters"

I'm actually HERE and I don't consider ANY of us "beleaguered.

There's lots more on Instapundit (of course).

And here's the text of the press conference from Baghdad, including interpretation of the Iraqi portions.

The CinC in audio and text:

The success of yesterday's mission is a tribute to our men and women now serving in Iraq. The operation was based on the superb work of intelligence analysts who found the dictator's footprints in a vast country. The operation was carried out with skill and precision by a brave fighting force. Our servicemen and women and our coalition allies have faced many dangers in the hunt for members of the fallen regime, and in their effort to bring hope and freedom to the Iraqi people. Their work continues, and so do the risks. Today, on behalf of the nation, I thank the members of our Armed Forces and I congratulate them.

I also have a message for all Americans: The capture of Saddam Hussein does not mean the end of violence in Iraq. We still face terrorists who would rather go on killing the innocent than accept the rise of liberty in the heart of the Middle East. Such men are a direct threat to the American people, and they will be defeated.

We've come to this moment through patience and resolve and focused action. And that is our strategy moving forward. The war on terror is a different kind of war, waged capture by capture, cell by cell, and victory by victory. Our security is assured by our perseverance and by our sure belief in the success of liberty. And the United States of America will not relent until this war is won.

May God bless the people of Iraq, and may God bless America. Thank you.


Posted at 0646Z

RANDOM BRILLIANCE

[Greyhawk]

Another Blog you might not have visited: Random Jottings. John Weidner's Blog is one of the best looking sites I've seen. As if that weren't enough he's also filled it with well-written posts, including an amazing series on World War I (yes, one). Visit once just to see the Blog; read a few posts and you'll want to bookmark or blogroll him too.


Posted at 0625Z

December 13, 2003

Choose your story

[Greyhawk]

Gotta love the NY Times:

Washington -- A former Iraqi intelligence officer who was said to have met with the suspected leader of the Sept. 11 attacks has told U.S. interrogators the meeting never happened, according to U.S. officials familiar with classified intelligence reports on the matter.

Ahmad Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani, the former intelligence officer, was taken into custody by U.S. forces in July. Under questioning, he has said that he did not meet with Mohamed Atta in Prague, Czech Republic, according to the officials, who have reviewed classified debriefing reports based on the interrogations.

U.S. officials caution that Ani may have been lying to his interrogators, but the only other person reported to have attended the meeting was Atta, who died in the crash of his hijacked plane into the World Trade Center.

Anyone else notice the interesting description of how Atta met his maker? One would think the folks at a New York paper would use slightly stronger wording.

And I sure hope the following story doesn't ruin their euphoria, because although there may or may not have been a meeting in Prague the Telegraph has obtained new evidence of a meeting in Baghdad:

Iraq's coalition government claims that it has uncovered documentary proof that Mohammed Atta, the al-Qaeda mastermind of the September 11 attacks against the US, was trained in Baghdad by Abu Nidal, the notorious Palestinian terrorist.

Details of Atta's visit to the Iraqi capital in the summer of 2001, just weeks before he launched the most devastating terrorist attack in US history, are contained in a top secret memo written to Saddam Hussein, the then Iraqi president, by Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti, the former head of the Iraqi Intelligence Service.

The handwritten memo, a copy of which has been obtained exclusively by the Telegraph, is dated July 1, 2001 and provides a short resume of a three-day "work programme" Atta had undertaken at Abu Nidal's base in Baghdad.

In the memo, Habbush reports that Atta "displayed extraordinary effort" and demonstrated his ability to lead the team that would be "responsible for attacking the targets that we have agreed to destroy".

Of course, we may never know, seeing as how Mo died in that tragic plane crash.

And if you think that's too good to be true then you won't care about this either:

The second part of the memo, which is headed "Niger Shipment", contains a report about an unspecified shipment - believed to be uranium - that it says has been transported to Iraq via Libya and Syria.

Posted at 2125Z

Firepower

[Greyhawk]

From the Kentucky Post:

The man being hailed as a hero for stopping a suicide bomber in Iraq before dawn Tuesday called home to Northern Kentucky Wednesday to assure his mother he was OK -- again. James Lawrence Ross III, better known as "JR," told his mother, Sandy Gregg of Taylor Mill, that he was just doing his job when he fired more than 100 rounds from a guard tower, detonating a car filled with explosives that was headed toward the 101st Airborne Division's base in Talafar, about 235 miles northwest of Baghdad.

Army officials are saying his actions saved hundreds of lives.

<...>

When he called his mother Wednesday, he was more worried about fellow soldiers and his mother than he was for himself, Gregg said.

<...>

Ross had just started his guard duty in the watch tower near the base entrance Tuesday morning.

"The fellow before him said everything was quiet. He said, 'Make sure you dress warm; it's a really cold night.'" Ross told his mother.

"He said he was on duty about a half-hour when a car came down the road," Gregg said. "That's not really unusual because people make wrong turns and don't realize they can't get through. Most cars will make a U-turn and turn around.

"But this car kept coming down the road. He said he shot 100 rounds in less than 30 seconds."

News reports said Ross kept shooting until the car blew up, leaving a large crater near the base entrance and blowing out windows for blocks.

Nyuck Nyuck - Here's an observation from Scott Ott. (And a link to Lt Col West's defense fund can be found in the comments)


Posted at 2102Z

Thanks, Andy!

[Greyhawk]

Andrew Sullivan encounters hatred on a military related on-line bulletin board.

I'm inclined to agree with this missive from a former Special Forces major:

"...what you saw on socnet is by no means a representation of the Special Operations community. It is, nevertheless, an embarrassment.

By and large, the individuals who post to boards like that are the most juvenile examples of our breed, if they are even in the community. Most real special operators are far too busy at the moment to waste time posting hateful nonsense on a bulletin board for all to see.

<...>

The overwhelming majority of my comrades in Special Operations were, and are, far more tolerant than most people you are likely to meet in middle America. And they are not so uncertain about their sexuality that they need to attack others for theirs. Not exactly the sort of clown who posts homophobic messages to a site like that."

Amen.

And you can replace "Special Operations" with "military" and it's still a valid point. For those few folks out there who still believe all military folks are mindless automatons who all think alike about all issues, run one lap around the MilBlogs ring and report back here.

The community in and around any US military installation is the best example of a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, multi-generational, multi-belief community you will ever see anywhere. An example: I usually can't tell with any degree of certainty the race/ ethnicity of any of my kids' friends, should I ever even ponder such an issue, as very few have both parents from the same continent! I've worked for (and currently have working for me) representatives of many races and have never noted any disparity of performance or ability (which is my sole basis of prejudice against anyone) among them.

Given that environment one would be correct to anticipate a wide variety of political, religious, and social views. That exists! I've seen lively debate on such issues in offices and off duty among peers (between different ranks would be wrong) - usually respectfully and followed by lunch or drinks after work. The US military, more then any other example anywhere in the world, is the definitive example of folks from different backgrounds working together successfully to common goals. (In that regards I suppose "Star Trek" actually depicts an existing aspect of military lifestyle; perhaps explaining the shows popularity with many of the troops.)

MilBlogs was created with that in mind, to show the diversity and humanity of the folks who make up the greatest military in the history of the world.

And I, for one, am proud to have Andrew Sullivan on our side.


Posted at 0535Z

Sick 'em!

[Greyhawk]

An on-line petition demanding that the Democrat Party formally apologize for Dennis Kucinich has been created. Okay, actually it's the ad exploiting fallen heroes that the petition is aimed at. But the site also includes e-mail information for Kucinich and the vile creator of the spot. Sent yours yet? (Hat tip: Darren Kaplan)

Update: Team Kucinich is apparently still making campaign videos, probably with taxpayer money. Sick bastard (who loves ya, brother five?) Blackfive has the latest.


Posted at 0446Z

From the Department of "Wish I'd Thought of That One"

[Greyhawk]

"Next up on the BBC, Saudi Arabia's Bin Laden Construction Group complains about being excluded from contracts to rebuild the Pentagon and the World Trade Center."

From Darren Kaplan.

Another fine Blog on my list!

More examples of Darren's wit and insight here and here.

(And oh-by-the-way I first found a link to the petition demanding that the Democrat Party formally apologize for the Kucinich ad on Darren's page too.)


Posted at 0312Z

December 12, 2003

Homefront Voices

[Greyhawk]

Smash (Via Medienkritik) links to a story about German "Peace groups" raising money this holiday season:

In the spirit of peace, a number of groups have started a fund-raising campaign entitled “10 Euros for the Iraqi Resistance”. The money will be provided to the Iraqi Patriotic Alliance (IPA) a group dedicated to carrying out attacks against US soldiers in Iraq in collaboration with Saddam loyalists. The common goal is to "liberate” the Iraqi people from the evil imperialist American occupiers. On their website these groups gush with enthusiasm about turning Iraq into another Vietnam for the USA.

I live in Germany - and the above story makes this story (via LGF), from which I might otherwise feel a slight twinge of pain, a little more satisfying.

But if you think the Germans are bad, how about Denny Kucinich? You think Little Denny Kucinich has gone off the deep end, as he celebrates the deaths of Americans in Iraq via cartoon?

LGF and RWN both link to this bit of literary psychosis, "penned" by an "American":

While Iraqis have every right to shoot and kill occupation soldiers, that isn't necessary the most effective way to influence George Bush. Quite a few of the people who fund Bush's election campaign are involved in the latest corporate gold rush ("reconstruction") in Iraq. Attacking their interests might be a quicker way to get the president into listening mode. The lives of American soldiers are dear, but four more years in the White House are priceless.

Okay readers, you are now visiting the weblog of an American GI stationed in Germany. Much as you rely on Blogs for ground truth in overseas locations I rely on Blogs for ground truth about America. Give me your thoughts on this. Where does America stand?

Talk to me.


Posted at 1615Z

Frank

[Greyhawk]

Frank is out ahead of everyone else yet again. While most folks are covering Kerry and Kucinich, Frank is all over the real future of the Democratic party.


Posted at 1337Z

Heart of a Soldier

[Greyhawk]

Shopping this weekend?

heart.jpg

Find this book, buy this book.

Buy some for your friends.

A great story.

If you don't know of Rick, meet him here.

rick.jpg
More to come...


Posted at 1253Z

December 11, 2003

The Little Red

[Greyhawk]

A story my mama read me as a young child:

One day as the Little Red Hen was scratching in a field, she found a grain of wheat.

"This wheat should be planted," she said. "Who will plant this grain of wheat?"

"Not I," said the Duck.
"Not I," said the Cat.
"Not I," said the Dog.

"Then I will," said the Little Red Hen. And she did.

Soon the wheat grew to be tall and yellow.

"The wheat is ripe," said the Little Red Hen. "Who will cut the wheat?"

"Not I," said the Duck.
"Not I," said the Cat.
"Not I," said the Dog.

"Then I will," said the Little Red Hen. And she did.

When the wheat was cut, the Little Red Hen said, "Who will thresh the wheat?"

"Not I," said the Duck.
"Not I," said the Cat.
"Not I," said the Dog.

"Then I will," said the Little Red Hen. And she did.

When the wheat was threshed, the Little Red Hen said, "Who will take this wheat to the mill?"

"Not I," said the Duck.
"Not I," said the Cat.
"Not I," said the Dog.

"Then I will," said the Little Red Hen. And she did.

She took the wheat to the mill and had it ground into flour. Then she said, "Who will make this flour into bread?"

"Not I," said the Duck.
"Not I," said the Cat.
"Not I," said the Dog.

"Then I will," said the Little Red Hen. And she did.

She made and baked the bread. Then she said, "Who will eat this bread?"

"Oh! I will," said the Duck.
"And I will," said the Cat.
"And I will," said the Dog.

"No, No!" said the Little Red Hen. "I will do that." And she did.

Simple, huh? And a good lesson to learn. Aren't the great and fundamental lessons in life always simple?

But here's a newer version.

To save you time and trouble, heres the end of the new version:

"Ding ding" the timer on the table sounded. The Little Red Hen knew it was time to take out the bread. And oh good friends, can't you just smell it? "I wonder," she said aloud, "who will help me eat this fine bread?" Not one second went by before Squek, Bark, and Meow all said together, "I will!" The Little Red Hen began to laugh out loud. "I thought so!"

She opened the drawer with the cutting knives and selected teh right one. Then she sliced offa single slice of bread. By now everyone's mouth was watering thinking "this will be sooooo good!" But then the Little Red Hen cut the singlr slice of bread into three smaller pieces. She put each piece on a napkin and handed one to Squeek, one to Bark, and one to Meow. They were each very troubled and she could see that on their faces.

"I am happy to share a bite of bread with you as your friend!" She said firmly but nicely. "Maybe the next time I need help you will volunteer!" Quick as a wink, Meow, Bark, and Squeek all sat straight up and said "I will!"


Which version do you think Barbara Bush read to her boys?

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Bush on Thursday defended his decision to exclude countries that did not support the U.S.-led effort to topple Iraqi President Saddam Hussein from bidding on some $18.6 billion in reconstruction contracts.

<...>

"Our people risked their lives. Coalition, friendly coalition folks risked their lives and therefore, the contracting is going to reflect that, and that's what the U.S. taxpayers expect."

The policy excludes France, Germany, Russia and Canada from bidding on construction projects.

So if you wonder why the president has to "defend" his position, you can perhaps start by blaming fables that have been re-written to the point of pointlessness.

But that re-write is nothing compared to this version.

And it came time to bake the bread. "Who will help me bake the bread?" asked the little red hen.

"That would be overtime for me," mood the cow.

"I'd lose my welfare benefits," whistled the goose.

"Dropping out I never learned how," quacked the duck.

"If I'm to be the only helper, that's discrimination," grunted the pig.

"Then I will,"said the little red hen, and she did. She baked five bread loaves and held them up for her neighbors to see.

Her neighbors saw their beauty, and smelled their freshness and they all wanted some. In fact, they demanded their rightful share. But the little red hen said, "No, I and my chicks can eat the five loaves ourselves."

"Excess profits!," squealed the pig.

"Profiteering leech!," honked the goose.

"Equal rights!," demanded the cow.

And the duck quacked in too!

And the animals painted "unfair" picket signs and marched round and round the little red hen, shouting their slogans, and their obcenities.

When the government agent came (a new legislative lgal appointee), he said to the little red hen, "You must not be greedy."

"But I earned the bread," said the little red hen.

"Exactly," said the agent. "That is the wonderful free enterprise system. Anyone in the barnyard can earn as much as he wants, but under our liberal government regulations, the productive workers must contribute their product to the idle."

Well, the barnyard calmed down, and the animals lived happily ever after, including the little red hen, who smiled and clucked, "I am grateful, I am grateful."

But her neighbors wondered why she never again baked any more bread.


Posted at 2032Z

December 7, 2003 (Part III)

[Greyhawk]

Part I
Part II

Hillary wants desperately to recreate those glory days when she could rant about a Vast Right Wing Conspiracy and people would care. This past Sunday she ran the rare network trifecta (with emphasis added):

FACE THE NATION CBS TV, DECEMBER 7, 2003

JOHN ROBERTS: So just back to my original question. You have suggested that there's a political imperative here to try to get the troops out. One of the places you made that claim was while you were on the ground in Iraq and people accused you of playing politics - taking that moment to criticize the president.

SEN. CLINTON: Well actually that

MR. ROBERTS: In hindsight would you have criticized the president while you were on the ground in Iraq?

SEN. CLINTON: Well let me correct the record that it didn't happen. I know that's the latest flaming charge by the right wing but that's not what happened. What happened is that when I was in Afghanistan and Iraq speaking with a lot of our soldiers who I think are doing an extraordinary job under dangerous and difficult circumstances. They asked me on one particular occasion well you know what will people think of us and we're doing back home? Now I'm not going to lie to an American soldier particularly a soldier from the 10th Mountain Division from Fort Drum, New York. And what I said is I think you have universal support among the American people. They cannot be prouder of you and there are questions being raised about the administration's policies. Now they know that. They get the Internet. They get the media. They're well aware of that.

MEET THE PRESS NBC TV, DECEMBER 7, 2003
TIM RUSSERT: There has been some reaction to comments you made on the ground in Iraq, and let me go through that. This is the dispatch from the Buffalo News: "'The morale of the troops," Senator Hillary Clinton said, "is very high,'" but she said the military personnel with whom she spoke in meetings and wanted to know, quote, 'how the people at home feel about what we are doing.' 'Americans are wholeheartedly proud of what you are doing,' Clinton said she replied, 'but there are many questions at home about the Bush administration's policies.'" Was it appropriate for you to criticize the president while in Iraq?

SEN. CLINTON: You know, I find this so interesting that this has now become an issue, and largely fueled by a lot of the talk shows and the other sort of right-wing apparatus. You know, when a soldier asks me a very direct question, you know, "How do people feel about us and what we're doing here, senator?" -- especially a soldier from the 10th Mountain Division, which as you know is based in Fort Drum, New York, I wasn't going to lie to that young man. And what I said is what I believe. We are wholeheartedly supporting our troops, and that is exactly as it should be. The American people I think understand that they are performing superbly under difficult and dangerous circumstances. But you know these young men and women serving in Afghanistan and Iraq, they are on the Internet, they get the media. They know very well that there is a debate about our policies. That's part of being an American. And from my perspective it is fully appropriate in talking with our soldiers to have that kind of conversation with them.

Far from negative publicity, the vast right-wing majority virtually ignored Ms Clinton. Which is even worse for her, and why she's running herself ragged hitting all three networks to defend herself against the few pundits who bothered to briefly note the obvious un-patriotic, un-American, but un-surprising aspects of her overseas histrionics. There is an issue here; and although Ms Clinton may be truly unable to comprehend it, Mickey Kaus nails it down:
The problem is she smarmily "wanted to have it both ways," pretending her trip was in part a morale-building visit to the troops ("I wanted to come to Iraq to let the troops know about the great job they're doing") while she "griped about" the mission the troops were on. Here's a home state paper account:

The morale of the troops, she said, "is very high," but she said the military personnel with whom she spoke in meetings and during "two turkey dinners" wanted to know "how the people at home feel about what we are doing."

" "Americans are wholeheartedly proud of what you are doing,' " Clinton said she replied, " "but there are many questions at home about the (Bush) administration's policies.' "

Bet that fired them right up!?... [Links via Lucianne and Instapundit]

Update: Howard Owens and Bill Herbert take issue with the above post, largely on the grounds that a) what Hillary said was accurate--there are "many questions" at home and b)?"military people aren't too fragile to be given straight talk" or to hear Hillary's criticisms of current U.S. policies. All true, but that's not the point. Even if military people are quite strong enough to hear antiwar criticism, surely at some point that criticism, however frankly expressed, can't be portrayed as morale building. If you went to Iraq and told the troops, say, that they were doing the "bidding of Halliburton" and "imposing alien Western values" in a way calculated to increase terrorism directed at Americans, that might be admirable "straight talk" but would be hard to honestly portray as letting "the troops know about the great job they're doing."

That's not the anti-Bush criticism Hillary made, of course. But what she did say struck me as neither as supportive nor as honest as it should have been. It would be one thing to tell the troops, "We're all proud of you, though there are many questions at home about whether we are withdrawing too fast or too slow, or becoming bogged down." It's another to say there are "many questions about the administration's policies." The first is the perspective of a citizen. The second is the perspective of a Democratic partisan. The first says that we're all in this together and we're all worried and we can disagree on how to do it and this is how I would improve things. The second says "this isn't America's policy, it's Bush's policy." It implies that whenever a policy comes in for criticism from voters, Hillary--who voted for the war, after all--will disavow any connection to it.

What I've told troops confronted with "protest" is a bit more simple: "America is with you. As far as the protestors, don't sweat it. You're making history; they're making noise."


Posted at 1841Z

December 10, 2003

New to the Blogroll

[Greyhawk]

If you haven't found The Mulatto Advocate yet you're in for a treat. I found this great blog via trackback, blogrolled him and visit daily. Thoughtful, insightful, and provocative. (A well designed blog, too.) Enjoy!


Posted at 0103Z

December 9, 2003

Dec 7, 2003 Part II: More on Hillary

[Greyhawk]

More on Ms. Clinton's Sunday TV blitz (part one here):

FACE THE NATION CBS TV, DECEMBER 7, 2003

Interview with Sen. Clinton

MR. ROBERTS: And with us now is New York Senator Hillary Clinton. Good to see you this morning. Thanks for coming in.

SEN. CLINTON: Thank you. Good to be here John.

MR. ROBERTS: So Andy Card paints a pretty rosy scenario of what's going on in Iraq. Do you agree with him?

SEN. CLINTON: I think rosy scenario is alive and well in the White House these days based on what Mr. Card had to say. There are some things that are going right. My trip to Afghanistan and Iraq illustrated clearly to me that our troops are doing a great job under very difficult circumstances and that we are making some progress on the ground. But we have such a long way to go. And I think that one of the missing elements in our strategy thus far has been the president and the administration leveling with the American people about what it is we're up against, how long it's going to take, how much it's going to cost.

MR. ROBERTS: This is a rare moment where you seem at least be partially in agreement with Newt Gingrich.

(Laughter.)

SEN. CLINTON: Yes, I find myself amazed by that. I'm sure he's even more so. He has apparently written quite a critical piece of the administration's policy in Iraq. And in –

MR. ROBERTS: Accusing them of going over a cliff in the post-war period.

Well, that's certainly a lot of emphasis on Mr Gingrich's statements. And what did Mr. Gingrich say? Did he call for "internationalizing" Iraq? Did he endorse the Kosovo model? What a surprise to find him on Meet the Press:

MEET THE PRESS, NBC TV, DECEMBER 7, 2003

Interview with Newt Gingrich

TIM RUSSERT: And we are back. Speaker Gingrich, welcome back.

MR. GINGRICH: Good to be here.

MR. RUSSERT: You gave an interview to Newsweek magazine, which will be on the newsstands tomorrow, and you said, "The administration has gone off a cliff" in terms of Iraq. Explain that.

MR. GINGRICH: No, what I said was that after the brilliant military campaign of 23 days, that we went off a cliff after that in the sense that the small military worked and was right if you were going to rapidly convert Iraqis into policing their own country and if you were going to be the reinforcer of an Iraqi system, not the enforcer of an American system. And the mistake we made -- if you look at Afghanistan, it took us three weeks from the fall of Kandahar to recognize Karzai, and five weeks after that he was at the State of the Union sitting next to Mrs. Bush. And from that point on, it was clear that the Americans were helping the Afghans; they weren't trying to police Afghanistan, which is an impossible challenge. I think the cliff we have gone off that we need to get back on is to put the Iraqis at the center of this equation, not foreign governments, not the U.N., not more American troops. Put the Iraqis at the center of this equation and recognize that most Iraqis do not want to go back to a brutal, murdering, raping dictatorship. Most Iraqis want to have an organized way of governing themselves, but they want to be in charge of their own country.

MR. RUSSERT: But there are those who say if you try to do that today or in the next few months, you would have chaos, anarchy and a civil war, because the Iraqis are not capable of securing their own country at this point.

MR. GINGRICH: Look, I don't believe we should be arguing about American commitment in Iraq. The only exit strategy in Iraq is victory.

Sounds more in line with Mr. Cards comments then Ms Clintons. Not sure why his statements aren't labeled as "rosy".

The only amazing aspect of this situation is that somehow the Democrats and the media have somehow latched on to Newt Gingrich as the voice of reason in the Republican party. Stop and think about that one a while. In the "contract with America" days they couldn't discredit the man enough, and now he's their font of reason, wisdom, and knowledge.

So if Newt's on Hillary's team, then who's in charge of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy? Because Ms. Clinton thinks it's alive and well (and out to get her)...

Part III here

All done!

Posted at 1816Z

Quick Reaction Farce

[Greyhawk]

The Mudville Gazette proudly presents, The London Daily Telegraph and Monty Python's Flying Circus staring in "New Quick Reaction Farce Force"

France unveiled its latest plans to dominate European defence yesterday in the muddy, war-worn fields of Picardy.

Crowded into dozens of camouflaged huts were soldiers from 10 countries, including Britain, training for a new, French-led rapid reaction force which will be offered for use by both Nato and the European Union.

France hopes the force will one day rival the British-run Allied Rapid Reaction Corps, which already conducts Nato operations on the ground.

A MAN appears on the battlements. ARTHUR addresses him.

ARTHUR: Hello.

MAN: 'Allo. Whoo is eet?

ARTHUR: I am King Arthur and these are the Knights of the Round Table. Whose castle is this?

MAN: This is the castle of of my master, Guy de Loimbard.

ARTHUR: Please go and tell your master that we have been charged by God with a sacred quest, and if he will give us food and shelter for this night he can join us in our quest for the Holy Grail.

MAN: Well, I'll ask him, but I don't think he'll be very keen. He's already got one, you see?

ARTHUR: What?

GALAHAD: He says they've already got one!

Its creation is a measure of President Jacques Chirac's desire to put France at the head of European defence and was described by France's defence minister yesterday as a "means commensurate to our ambitions".

ARTHUR: Are you sure he's got one?

MAN: Oh yes. It's very nice

CUT TO BATTLEMENTS. THE TAUNTER (MAN) turns to some others.

MAN: I told him we already got one.

They all giggle.


Posted at 1712Z

More on Gore

[Greyhawk]

The kiss of death?

Al Gore has issued his presidential endorsement. "I've seen a candidate who has what it takes to reach out to the independent, mainstream Americans who will make the difference . . . particularly in the South," Gore said. "He's going to send George Bush packing and bring the Democratic Party home."

If you think the candidate Gore endorsed is unlikely to win a single Southern state, you're right. Gore made the above statement, unearthed by MSNBC.com, on June 16, 1988, when he endorsed Michael Dukakis.

--Shamelessly stolen from Best of the Web Today.


Posted at 1654Z

Heeeeeeerrre's Matt!

[Greyhawk]

Time for a bit of Weblog recognition. I'll be trying to highlight a few folks this week; some "old" friends I'm overdue to say hello to and some newer. (mostly folks I've found recently via Trackback, since I've very little time for cruising otherwise.)

But to be honest I'm not sure how I found Matthew Stinson. I know I linked him a while back when he reported on a wounded MilBlogger, (update here and several more) and I find myself visiting him pretty frequently these days.

Matt's working towards a Master's in Political Science at Florida State; I've had a soft spot in my heart for the Seminoles ever since I lived in the area and did some collaborative work with some of the faculty (non-poli-sci).

Matt's already making a bit of a blogosphere splash. His blog is up for Best New Blog in the Wizbang awards, and that's well deserved recognition for this thoughtful young man.

Stop by, tell him hello.


Posted at 0535Z

December 7th, 2003...

[Greyhawk]

John Roberts is apparently stunned that not all Republicans think exactly alike; that some are willing to express their own opinions on things. I'm not sure why freedom of thought is so hard for the media to grasp.

From Face The Nation, CBS TV, DECEMBER 7, 2003, Interview with Andrew Card

JOHN ROBERTS: And welcome to the broadcast. Bob Schieffer is off this morning. Joining us now from the White House is White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card. Mr. Card, good morning.

MR. CARD: Good morning. Good to see you John.

MR. ROBERTS: Good to see you as well. So Newsweek magazine today carries an interview with Newt Gingrich who is now a member of the Defense Policy Board, who says that in the post-war period the administration has gone off a cliff in Iraq, that coalition provisional authorities CPA stands for Can't Produce Anything. Those are pretty harsh words coming from a member of your own party, a supporter of Don Rumsfeld.

MR. CARD: Well first of all I think things are going very well in a very tough situation in Iraq. The president has as his goal first of all to remove the regime of Saddam Hussein. And we've done that. He is no longer the threat to his own people or to the world that he was when he was in office. The second thing is he is working to bring democracy and hope to the Iraqi people and all around Iraq there are dramatic signs of improvement in life. Schools are open. Small businesses are working. Yes we have to do more work on the security front, but it's really limited to kind of the Tikrit, Mosul, Baghdad area and we're working hard to address that problem. But we're making significant progress. The life for the average Iraqi is much better today than it was under Saddam Hussein.

MR. ROBERTS: So how was it though that some members of your own party see it quite differently than that?

MR. CARD: Well, Newt Gingrich is not all knowing. And I'm sure he has opinions and he's always expressed them. But I can tell you from the perspective of the generals who are on the ground and Ambassador Bremer who is running the provisional authority over there things are going better than they could have been expected to go at this time and we're making great progress. More has to be done and we are committed to staying there until it's done right. We would like to see the Iraqi people have more opportunities for self-government, but we're going to stay there until the job is done.

In his hard-hitting crusading journalist style, Roberts then attacks the security measures in place in Iraq, comparing it to the oppression his Palestinian comrades' experience under the boot heel of the evil Jews:


Posted at 0520Z

December 8, 2003

Clueless in Cleveland: the Story of Dennis the Red

[Greyhawk]

Holiday season, the economy is robust, the Medicare Bill has passed. A surprise Thanksgiving visit with the troops at the front reveals how they feel about their Commander-in-Chief. All in all, a great time for anyone wanting to replace the current president to lay low, shut up, enjoy some quality family time, and wait for a new year and perhaps some new issues to really come out swinging.

John F. Kerry had other ideas.

So does Dennis F. Kucinich.

I know a little about little Dennis; the 5'7" (but I'll call him "little" in honor of his mind) former mayor of Cleveland left his town a fiscal quagmire, in default and floundering after a few years of his guidance. In his own defense, he claims to have refused to sell out to special interests that could have saved the city. The voters promptly sent him packing.

You can Google up something to support anything you'd like on that issue.

One thing that could be said for Kucinich is that he's stayed true to his principles through the years. Except for the abortion issue. He flip-flopped on that and is now "pro-choice". So except for the things he's flip-flopped on he's stayed his ground.

And he seems to want to be the "farthest left" of any of the Democratic candidates.

I was going go say something here about little Dennis using the military dead in his campaign; I was going to ask for clarification on his point about there being no media cameras allowed on base to sensationalize the return of America's fallen heroes.

I was going to speak to the needless hassle of babysitting media folks on secure military installations just so they can film returning war dead who are already known to be dead.

I was going to ask if little Dennis thinks his commercial would be in some way improved, or just more dramatic, by some of that footage he's been denied.

I was going to point out the invasion of privacy that media-circus coverage of families in mourning would be; but those families can invite that circus to the funerals if they choose.

I was going to speculate that this sick gang of pretenders to power, led by this clueless moonbat from Cleveland, would drop a night-vision web cam into a casket to record the decomposition of a corpse if they thought it might get them a vote.

Then I realized that more people will read this blog in 2004 then will vote for little Dennis Kucinich for President of the United States.

Later, dude.

More from Emperor Misha, his Blogfather John Cole , and Steve at Little Tiny Lies.


Posted at 1851Z

Choosing Sides (Part III)

[Greyhawk]

On the subject of choosing sides and massive demonstrations, be sure to see Mr Free Market's photos of recent mayhem in London's streets. Great comparison points.

His stats:

Population of UK 60,094,648

No. of people that protested against the Bill
To ban Foxhunting 407,791

No. of people that protested against the
Bush visit 30,000

No. of people that went to Heathrow Airport at
4a.m. to welcome the England team home 8,000

As the parade will pass under my office window, pictorial evidence will be posted. I am sure that the numbers will be interesting to compare with the above.

And indeed they are. Click here.


Posted at 1504Z

DOBA

[Greyhawk]

Misha: DOBA. (Dead-on-balls accurate) as usual.


Posted at 0645Z

Choosing Sides - Part II

[Greyhawk]

Surely you've all seen the coverage of the big protest marches?

From the Washington Times

BAGHDAD — Up to 1,000 Iraqis, including children orphaned by the war that ousted Saddam Hussein, marched through Baghdad yesterday to denounce guerrilla attacks and show support for U.S.-led occupation forces.

Posted at 0643Z

December 7, 2003

NEW WEBLOG SHOWCASE

[Greyhawk]

Dangerous Liberty, for Al Franken on Book TV


Posted at 2324Z

A Surprisingly Short List

[Greyhawk]

Tiger has a collection of links to Pearl Harbor posts from all over.

Thanks Tiger.


Posted at 1116Z

Mission Accomplished? Not yet, but we're getting there!

[Greyhawk]

Via Tim, husband of Capt Patti. Tim, like me, is tired of the fact that some stories in Iraq seem to be relative to "Since President Bush declared an end to major combat" while others are not. So lets put it all in that perspective.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...nearly all of Iraq’s 400 courts are functioning.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...on Monday, October 6 power generation hit 4,518 megawatts—exceeding the pre-war average.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...all 22 universities and 43 technical institutes and colleges are open, as are nearly all primary and secondary schools.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1, by October 1, Coalition forces had rehabbed over 1,500 schools--500 more than their target.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...all 240 hospitals and more than 1200 clinics are open.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...the Coalition has helped administer over 22 million vaccination doses to Iraq’s children.

Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...a Coalition program has cleared over 14,000 kilometers of Iraq's 27,000 kilometers of weed-choked canals. They now irrigate tens of thousands of farms. This project has created jobs for more than 100,000 Iraqi men and women.

Lots more here.

Update: along similar lines, Bill Whittle notes that 13,000 people have not died since the president declared an end to major hostilities...


Posted at 1109Z

And now you know... the rest of the Story

[Greyhawk]

"Attention shoppers, we have an attempted clean up, aisle seven..."

ORANGE CITY, Fla. -- A woman reported "trampled" last Friday by Wal-Mart shoppers desperate for $29.87 DVD players has a long history of claiming injuries from Wal-Marts and other businesses where she worked or shopped.

Patricia Vanlester, 41, was knocked unconscious and, her sister said, "trampled by a herd of elephants" by a stampede of shoppers reaching for DVD players that went on sale at 6 a.m. the day after Thanksgiving, according to Orange City police and the sister, Linda Ellzey.

The story was picked up by the Associated Press and carried in newspapers and other media as far away as Australia and China, an example -- some commentators have opined -- of American excess during the holiday shopping season.


Posted at 1005Z

Advil, the Gateway Drug

[Greyhawk]

From The Shreveport Times:

A student expelled from Parkway High for a year for having Advil, an over-the-counter pain reliever, will not be allowed to return to the school.

Kelly Herpin and daughter Amanda Stiles, a sophomore, appealed the one-year expulsion to a Bossier Parish School Board committee Thursday night, spending about 10 minutes with the board's administrative committee behind closed doors.

The committee and the full board voted unanimously to uphold an administrative decision that Stiles be expelled to the alternative school.

School boards hold such hearings in a closed session, but parents have the right under state law to request that such sessions be open. Herpin didn't make that request but did speak to reporters after the hearing. She left before the board voted on her request but learned of its decision by phone.

Gutless. The school board, I mean.

And sad. Why am I covering it?

Because Parkway is just outside the gates of Barksdale Air Force Base, and a good percentage of the kids in that school are military kids. I know because my kids attended that school for a couple of years.

Parkway is a fine school, with comparatively few and very minimal discipline problems; kids there refer to their elders as "sir" and "ma'am" and mean it. The pledge of allegiance is taken seriously in that area, and prayer is actually heard in school on occasion. I think there may be a "rest of the story" - which may be nobody's business - but does that matter? This is Idiotarianism at its worst.

The folks on the Bossier Parrish School board, with whom I had dealings on several more positive occasions, were never too impressive to me. They are likely just showing total support for a teacher and an administration. (At the cost of a lot of credibility.)

I really hope the good parents I know in that school district will stand up for what's right on this one.

More at Right Wing News, On the Third Hand, and The Daily Ablution (with email to the superintendent).

Maybe Rush Limbaugh will cover this story too.


Posted at 0946Z

Pearls of Wisdom?

[Greyhawk]

This may be today's Idiotarian mantra:

WASHINGTON — U.S. President George Bush did not name Japan in his Pearl Harbor remembrance day statement Saturday, likely in consideration of Japan's help in U.S.-led efforts to rebuild Iraq.

In the statement released on the eve of National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, Bush said, "America was attacked without warning and without provocation" on the morning of Dec 7, 1941, but he did not say who the attackers were.

Expect jokes about not knowing who the attackers were. On second thought, expect some to convince themselves to believe he doesn't know. They want to believe that.

Full text of the statement here.

I note that Idiotarians, had they been around for Roosevelt's speech, would have been apoplectic at his mention of God. But I'd also be inclined to believe the president would have risen from his wheelchair and caned a few of them. (I want to believe that.)

This sort of approach to news is also likely:

Berner says he pays close attention to reports from Iraq and when he hears news of yet another American soldier being killed in action, he can't help but reflect on his own past, and his attitude as a veteran that "war really doesn't change and it doesn't solve anything either.

"I knew people who died. Friends of mine. And you have to think: There but for the grace of God go I. I wound up having a family and grandchildren. But the guy who was in my unit that got his face blown off, he never had that chance. I hope they all get out of (Iraq) soon and in good shape."

Mintz was in the Air Corps at Pearl Harbor. He was later transferred to fight in the European Theatre during WWII and would eventually stay in the military long enough to fly in Vietnam.

"It's the same from one war to another," he said. "You've got young men doing the same job over and over. I feel bad for the guys over (in Iraq) now. My feeling is that we shouldn't be over there. But I'm 81 and I've seen the price we pay."

I don't know what question he was responding to, (reporters prefer to leave you with the idea that their subject was just saying what was on their mind) but "My feeling is that we shouldn't be over there" is a long way from being rabidly anti-war, which is, I'm afraid, the type of quote the reporter was angling for. And what a lot of folks will choose to hear.


Posted at 0707Z

INFAMY

[Greyhawk]

...Always will we remember the character of the onslaught against us.
No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory.

I believe I interpret the will of the Congress and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend ourselves to the uttermost, but will make very certain that this form of treachery shall never endanger us again.

Hostilities exist. There is no blinking at the fact that that our people, our territory and our interests are in grave danger.

With confidence in our armed forces - with the unbounding determination of our people - we will gain the inevitable triumph - so help us God.

Click (Real Player required):

dec 7.jpg

Approximately 6,500 of the 77,000 surviving Pearl Harbor veterans are still with us to tell their stories.

Retired Lt. Gen. Louis W. Truman was an aide to Gen. Walter Short, Army commander on Hawaii, when Pearl Harbor was attacked.

Two months later, when the Roberts Commission issued its report holding Gen. Short and Adm. Kimmel responsible for Pearl Harbor not being prepared for the attack, Truman hand-delivered a copy to President Roosevelt.

The next morning he went by the office of Sen. Truman, who, he remembers, "wanted to know what the hell everybody was doing over there [at Pearl Harbor the morning of the attack], all asleep and drunk?"

The senator said he thought Short and Kimmel were guilty of dereliction of duty and they ought to be court-martialed.

Louis Truman responded as only he could to an indignant senator who was attacking the credibility of his commanding officer.

"I don't think so, Cousin Harry," he said.

Historically speaking, peacetime commanders in the US military have rarely lasted beyond the opening salvos.

The Shreveport Times reports on a small group of survivors:

But the handful of survivors who gathered at Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5951 just outside the north gate of Barksdale Air Force Base focused almost as much on current events as they did their brush with history. And they hoped that lessons they paid for with sweat and blood will not have to be relearned by the current generation or its children.

In fact, that was why Bob Matheny almost missed the ceremony, staged by Fleet Reserve Association Chapter 98 to honor Pearl Harbor survivor Phil Serio for his 30th year in the organization. Matheny honored a prior obligation to talk with youngsters at Sci-Port Discovery Center in Shreveport, and he walked away from that hopeful.

"It was real good. They asked a lot of questions, and the right questions. You can tell when kids are interested in what you're saying - they stand real still."

But no mention is given as to what exactly was said about current events. If the good folks in Shreveport are typical (and I have reason to believe they are) of most vets of that era, then the Houston Chronicle's coverage of the reunion of survivors in Hawaii offers insight:

Saturday's memorial featured a flyover by World War II airplanes, music, speeches and a wreath presentation.

Mainly it honored those who gave so much so long ago.

Luke Trahin, of Beaumont, who was at Kaneohe Air Station on that day, spoke for the veterans and for those who died.

"If we are willing to always stand up for the U.S., they will not have died in vain," he said.

And, at least in some places, that message is being passed on.

More information on Pearl Harbor here.

The full text of president Roosevelt's speech is in the extended portion of this post

pearlharb.jpg

Posted at 0634Z

December 6, 2003

Kerry: BUCK FUSH!

[Greyhawk]

The NY Post reports:

Struggling 2004 Democratic wannabe John Kerry fires an X-rated attack at President Bush over Iraq and uses the f-word - highly unusual language for a presidential contender - in a stunning new interview with Rolling Stone magazine.

Sen. Kerry (Mass.) used the undeleted expletive to express his frustration and anger over how the Iraq issue has hurt him because he voted for the war resolution while Democratic front-runner Howard Dean has soared by opposing it.

"I voted for what I thought was best for the country. Did I expect Howard Dean to go off to the left and say, 'I'm against everything'? Sure. Did I expect George Bush to f - - - it up as badly as he did? I don't think anybody did," Kerry told the youth-oriented magazine.

I wonder if he rode his motorcycle?

I also note the story refers to him as a "Democratic wannabe". I will assume they meant Democratic presidential wannabe, because the Democratic party is willing to register anything or anyone these days.

The article also points out that Kerry is a Vietnam veteran:

Kerry yesterday angrily cited his war record in Vietnam when asked by a New Hampshire student about charges that it's unpatriotic to attack the commander-in-chief, fuming: "I left some blood on a battlefield that President Bush never left anywhere."

What more could you ask of a president? Yeeeehaw! You go, wild man!

1_21_300_kerry_motorcycle.jpg

...I like smoke and lightning
Heavy metal thunder
Racin' with the wind
And the feelin' that I'm under
Yeah Darlin' go make it happen
Take the world in a love embrace
Fire all of your guns at once
And explode into space...

(Hat tip: Glenn)

Update: The Interview


Posted at 2308Z

Or maybe they all went to Ramadan in Iraq?

[Greyhawk]

The sheer editorial genius of The NY Times:

TEL AVIV, Dec. 4 — Israeli officials have concluded that the Islamic movement Hamas has suspended its suicide bombing campaign in recent months, a senior Israeli military officer said Thursday, citing that as one reason Israel has not suffered any deadly bombings in the past two months.

So, based on the lack of bombings, we conclude the bombings have been suspended.

I conclude that The NY Times just has no idea how to report good news.

Israel's security forces have foiled 20 attempted suicide bombings by other Palestinian factions over the past two months, including an attack that was already in motion when two suspects were arrested Wednesday in the West Bank, said the Israeli official, who briefed journalists.

Now why wasn't that paragraph first, followed by the current first paragraph?

Just wondering...


Posted at 2241Z

Friends Of MilBlogs

[Greyhawk]

These are starting to turn up in a lot of places.

dcrad.jpg

You too can link our 40+ worldwide locations with one simple banner.



Posted at 2210Z

6 Dec 1985

[Greyhawk]

1985: Ronnie was president and all was right with the world. The newlywed Mrs and I had everything figured out: a few years of military service, then a career if we liked it or something else if not. A few years after that, once established in whatever, we'd start having kids.

With that plan in mind I departed for basic training.

Nine months later, almost to the day, our first was born.

Happy birthday, son!

(More here, here, and especially here).


Posted at 1213Z

Know your enemy

[Greyhawk]

Big media has never lived up to it's potential to "fight for the little guy". Sadly, political motivations colors everything they do. But every once in a while (usually when it fulfils some other agenda) you get a story like the following.

I must add, (and hopefully I don't sound too unappreciative) that I'd feel better about this if most stories on the news these days didn't seemed aimed (via support of our enemies or attacks on our side) at getting guys like Major Valentini killed.

I present this then as an example of the battles some folks are willing to fight in order to fight for their country.


Posted at 1051Z

Buy a clue

[Greyhawk]

Un-be-lieve-a-bull. And I do mean bull.

If stuff like this doesn't drive the last few intelligent people out of the control of the Leftocracy and straight into the Bush camp (or at least closer to it) I don't know what will.

And speaking of which, memo to somebody in 2005: will the last person to leave the Democratic Party please turn out the lights?

Update: It's Rummy's turn! (Obviously an administration ploy to distract from planegate!)


Posted at 0749Z

Choosing Sides

[Greyhawk]

Meet Abu Mujhid:

"Wait fifteen minutes," Abu Mujhid says after looking at his watch. Sipping a 7-UP soda after having broken his Ramadan fast just after nightfall in mid-November, Abu Mujhid -- not his real name -- has just been challenged by a reporter to prove he commands a resistance cell that performs violent attacks on American troops occupying his home town of Baghdad.

Yup, according to UPI, the individual calmly sipping the un-cola with ace reporter P. Mitchell Prothero is a "top member of an anti-U.S. Iraqi guerrilla group"

Sixteen minutes after Abu Mujhid told UPI to wait, four mortar rounds fired from a southwestern Baghdad neighborhood about 3 miles away flew overhead, landing in the compound of the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority.

"God willing we hit something this time," he says, wryly smiling. "Our mortars are very inaccurate. We cannot wait to aim them, so we use timers.

Bet the farm: He said "Allah" but the UPI "translated". Also note the mortar timing was off by a minute. Let's read more from our intrepid freedom fighter:

"Saddam, I liked him. He was a strong leader," he says.

For a minute I'll pretend a this former Baathist has repented from his sins and now wants a free Iraq, and ask why he's turned against the Americans, who want the same thing:

"They promised to liberate us from occupation, they promised us rights and liberty and my colleagues and I waited to make our decision on whether to fight until we saw how they would act."

But for Abu Mujhid and his men these things never materialized.

Ahhhh, he got tired of waiting. After all those years of Saddam's rule I guess he's used to things being done quickly. Now nearly 40 weeks after the invasion he's not satisfied with the rate of change.

"They should have come and just given us food and some security," he said. "Even today I feel like I cannot drive my car at night because of Ali Baba (the Baghdad slang for criminals)."

"It was then I realized that they had come as occupiers and not as liberators," he says. "And my colleagues and I then voted to fight. So we began to meet and plan. We met with others and have tried to buy weapons. None of us are afraid to die, but it is hard. We are just men, workers, not soldiers."

So, given the opportunity to fight back, instead of confronting that criminal element he attacks the US for supposedly allowing the criminal element to thrive.

Sorry, no ring of truth there. Abu is a man with an agenda. And he is certainly not concerned with security in Baghdad, of that we can be sure.

And what about Saddam? Isn't he concerned about working for Saddam?

"We are told that Saddam might be at the top of the organization," he says. "I don't know if I believe that but my colleague has seen Saddam," he said. "He comes to tell my colleagues to continue to fight. But we look at him as a strong leader. But we don't want him back."

But when asked if he thinks Saddam leads the resistance, he laughs.

"I think Saddam is too busy hiding," he says. "I think that the leaders above me are former generals who want to replace Saddam when the Americans leave."

"We actually took a vote at a meeting last week," he says, laughing. "If the Americans leave and Saddam comes back, we will fight him too. Maybe if he were elected we'd allow it. But no one in Iraq wants Saddam back. He turned into a thief and a murderer who made too many mistakes. We don't want Saddam, but American cannot occupy us any longer."

Well, maybe if Saddam comes back he'll be even angrier and you'll be first into the shredder, Abu-al-Einstein. But you've really been for him all along, haven't you? Something tells me you'd be first in line to kiss the soles of his shoes if he sat once more upon his golden throne.

Speaking of golden thrones, who's financing your group, Abu?

"We have to find ways to get our own money to buy weapons," he says. "The Baath Party members at the top were rich, but I don't think many of them help us fight. They don't send us money or weapons."

"I have friends and colleagues who fight with the Army of Mohammed (a cell based in the Western Iraqi city of Fallujah) and they have more money for anti-aircraft weapons and explosives. Sometimes they help us, but mostly we are left to our own," he says.

But one source of support has been foreigners from other Arab countries.

In earlier interviews, Abu Mujahid acknowledged that both Syrian intelligence and al-Qaida members were operating in Iraq against the U.S.-led coalition forces but denied he received direct assistance from them. But in later interviews, he said he received support from some people he suspects have ties with terrorist organizations.

"In my neighborhood, we have many students from Yemen, Syria and Jordan," he says. "Several of them give us money to buy weapons and conduct operations."

When asked if he thought these students were members or supporters of al-Qaida, he smiles and shrugs.

"How does a student living in Iraq get money to give to me to buy RPG-7s (an anti-tank rocket common in the region)?" he asks. "They have to get their money somewhere. The Syrian ones I think they get money from their government, but we get some money from Yemenis and Saudis. I think they must belong to al-Qaida to have such money. But I don't ask such things. I don't like Osama bin Laden and don't want to fight jihad against America. The Iraqi people just want the Americans to leave our country."

He has, however, used the money to send men to Saudi Arabia to buy equipment.

Not sure what equipment he's buying, but as far as that whole "killing GI's thing" goes, Abu wants his allies in America to know it's nothing personal:

"But my colleagues and I don't hate the American people or even most of the soldiers," he says. "We just want them out of our land. If they promised to leave in one month and hold elections we would put down our arms. I don't want to kill anyone else. I don't want American to hate Iraq. I would wait to see if they left."

"There have been some that say 'hello' or 'peace be unto you' in Arabic to me," he says. "They give our children sweets and do their jobs with respect. One of these men I even see as my friend. So we were conducting an operation, about to shoot at a Humvee one night when I realized it was the nice soldier. I told my man not to shoot him.

Do you really think "Peace be unto you" in Arabic will save our soldiers from these guys? I think our best defense is a good offense, like Operation IRON HAMMER.

"We have lost more men to these strikes and in arrests," he says. "One of our men was waiting to ambush a U.S. Humvee, when he was arrested. He was carrying a heavy machine gun, which is forbidden."

But not to worry, poor Abu has to cash for things other then "equipment":

But the man -- a guerrilla -- has a permit from the coalition to carry an AK-47 but was caught with a heavy machine gun. Abu Mujahid says his men paid an Iraqi translator $600 to replace the heavy gun with an AK-47 so their colleague can go free. Abu Mujahid expected the man to be released the next day.

Six hundred is big bucks in Iraq. By way of comparison,
(Reg req, use greyhawk and mudville)

FALLUJAH, Iraq – Like many Iraqi government employees, police 1st Lt. Ahmed Qassem faces a tough choice as he starts every workday: Stay at home and dramatically increase his chances of staying alive, or go to work and collect a $65 monthly paycheck.

With great reluctance, he chooses the paycheck.

Nice that the reporter has insight into the man's state of mind. But could it be possible that not everyone in Iraq choses to hop down Abu Mujhid's bunny trail?

"This is our job, our duty. If I could make money doing something else, I would quit today," he said.

Frightening, since the "opposition" has money.

Lt. Qassem is among the thousands of Iraqis trained and employed by the Coalition Provisional Authority, or CPA, the U.S.-led government that has kept Iraq running since the fall of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in April.

Read this next bit carefully:

"In my opinion, the one who resists the occupiers is good. It is the thieves and looters who are bad. Our job is only to fight the thieves and looters," said Fallujah police Sgt. Fuad Naameh.

Both he and Lt. Qassem stand guard each day outside the dilapidated building housing Fallujah's governing council, a U.S.-appointed body whose leader resigned last month after receiving repeated death threats. Fallujah, 35 miles west of Baghdad, is a hotbed of support for Mr. Hussein.

"We're not cooperating with the Americans," Lt. Qassem said. "Whenever they come here, we leave because we know they are going to be attacked. I'm not saying they are the enemy, but they are the occupiers."

At 65 bucks a month, these officers are willing to stop thieves and looters but not the Abu Mujhids. And "cooperating with the Americans" is becomming increasingly dangerous.

Sheik Ihsan Mudallat, a leading Sunni Muslim cleric in Fallujah and a vocal supporter of the insurgency, suggested that anyone who works with occupation forces understands the risks.

"We don't want this government in Fallujah. We want our own government, one that rules all of Iraq," he said. Asked whether he regarded Iraqis working for the coalition as legitimate targets, he responded with a shrug and a smile. "Ask them," he said.

The answer from one senior official:

Gen. Ahmad Qadhim, the senior deputy interior minister, said he resented the notion that cooperating with occupation authorities somehow branded him as a traitor. He proudly displays photos on his office wall of himself next to senior U.S. officials, including Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defense secretary who visited Iraq in October and narrowly escaped injury during a rocket attack on his hotel. "We work with the coalition forces, but we do not work for them," Gen. Qadhim said. "I work for my country." Nevertheless, he said he has been the subject of death threats from Mr. Hussein.

He quoted the latest taped message purportedly from Mr. Hussein, received on Nov. 27, as saying, "We must go to Gen. Ahmad, destroy all of his buildings and kill him directly."

"I have 12 bodyguards. Saddam has 12,000. ... Here is my message to Saddam: Go ahead. I'm not afraid," Gen. Qadhim said. "OK, kill me. I do this for my country."

Men of Qadhim's caliber deserve our support. Were we to follow the advice of so many of Abu Mujhid's employers' allies in America, we'd be gone, and Qadhim would be fed feet first into the shredder by Mujhid, while Saddam looked on drooling.

U.S. Army Col. Ralph Baker, of the 40th Engineer Battalion based in Baumholder, Germany, suggested that the U.S. presence gives many Iraqi civilians cause for concern as they carry out their work alongside their foreign counterparts.

During a meeting two weeks ago of a district advisory council in central Baghdad, Col. Baker announced that the U.S. government had agreed to abolish the CPA in June, handing over full governing authority to Iraqis.

The council chairman, Abdul Amir Suaidy, said he welcomed the help Col. Baker and his staff had provided in organizing the council and insisted he was not afraid to die working alongside the Americans. Unless Iraqis cooperate and get to work on the thousands of needed reconstruction projects, he said, Iraq will be easy prey for its enemies. "They are afraid of democracy in Iraq," he said of the insurgents. "So they try as much as possible to prevent this democratic experiment from succeeding. ... We are not afraid. We know we are right."

The sides are chosen, the lines are drawn...

All done!

Posted at 0700Z

December 5, 2003

Another new addition

[Greyhawk]

Welcome Iraq Now to the MilBlogs ring. If you haven't read Jason's reports from Iraq you're missing out on some insightful stuff. As fair and balanced a series of reports as I've seen anywhere.

Proud to have you aboard!


Posted at 1233Z

December 4, 2003

The Last of the Leftover Turkey

[Greyhawk]

In what I hope is my final turkey post, I note my friend (and Friend of MilBlogs member) Scott Ott, (winner of the "Funniest Blog" award at the RWN Warblogger Awards) has something to say.

(And speaking of Warblogger Awards, congrats to Baldilocks, Sarah, and Smash - I note with some pride that 3 MilBlogs ring members are in the top 4 "up and coming". Smash is fairly high on the best over-all blogs list too. Well deserved, all. All gravy, No turkeys!)


Posted at 2002Z

Thanksgiving + War Fever = ???

[Greyhawk]

Thanksgiving posts and War Fever? How could I not add this:

And I went up there, I said, "Shrink, I want to kill. I mean, I wanna, I wanna kill. Kill. I wanna, I wanna see, I wanna see blood and gore and guts and veins in my teeth. Eat dead burnt bodies. I mean kill, Kill, KILL, KILL." And I started jumpin up and down yelling, "KILL, KILL," and he started jumpin up and down with me and we was both jumping up and down yelling, "KILL, KILL." And the sargent came over, pinned a medal on me, sent me down the hall, said, "You're our boy."
Continue reading "Thanksgiving + War Fever = ??? "

Posted at 1803Z

Have a Nice Day!

[Greyhawk]

I've got a theory, well more "painful truism" that I consider one of my secrets to happiness. Since you've gone to the trouble to stop by I'll let you in on it:

If it weren't for bad days you'd never know when you were having a good one.

You either get that or you don't. There are many variations, and lots of things you can substitute for days and still have a fundamental truth. You must have a point of comparison to determine whether something is "good".

Now class, for a more detailed example, DarthVOB will explain to you why GI's generally know a good day when they see one.


Posted at 1755Z

I might not resist war fever!

[Greyhawk]

Thankfully we've got plenty of docs in the MilBlogs ring, 'cause I think War Fever is a real threat to us all.

Your score shows you might not resist war fever. Your score for this survey was 33 out of a possible 52 points. Lower scores indicate less willingness to support acts of war.

The folks who put this together aren't kidding. Doc Russia has a post explaining the diagnosis process and you too should take the test to see if you're susceptable. (If his links aren't working you can get there by typing www.peacetest.org into your address bar).

I'm not a doc, but I think Idiotarianism is rampant here.

Maybe we can Blogathon for a cure.


Posted at 1730Z

Me too.

[Greyhawk]

To John of Argghhh:

Me too.

Cheers,
Greyhawk


Posted at 1655Z

From the Front

[Greyhawk]

Blackfive has an e-mail from a Captain who recently had a dinner with the CinC.

Troops bounded to their feet with shocked smiles and just began cheering with all their hearts. The building actually shook.

Wouldn't be the first building Bush had shaken in Baghdad. An overused cliche, but you do really want to read all of this one.

Because ground truth from one who was there makes a great contrast to this bit of ridiculousness.

While you're there check out more news from the front in Smash's great Sandbox Roundup too.


Posted at 1613Z

Homecoming

[Greyhawk]

Thor is home. Go welcome a soldier back from a job well done.


Posted at 1119Z

December 3, 2003

BIAS

[Greyhawk]

Refreshing news from the UK, for those of you who've noted a little too much rampant patriotism in the American media. From The Telegraph (registration required):

Dyke Accuses US News Of 'Banging Drum On Iraq'

Greg Dyke, the BBC director general, attacked American reporting of the war in Iraq and derided news organisations that were prepared to "bang the drum for one side or the other".

The BBC has been accused of allowing its perceived hostility to the conflict to colour coverage of the war and its aftermath, including the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction dossier story that led to the death of David Kelly, the weapons expert.

Mr Dyke, who was speaking after collecting an honorary award at the International Emmys in New York on Monday night, said the Iraq coverage illustrated the difference between the BBC and US networks.

"For any news organisation to act as a cheerleader for government is to undermine your credibility," he said.

"They should be balancing their coverage, not banging the drum for one side or the other." He cited research showing that of 840 experts interviewed on US news outlets during the war only four opposed the conflict.

"If that were true in Britain, the BBC would have failed in its duty," he said.

I always thought the duty of a news organization was to report the facts, free from opinion. But who am I to say?

Here then, is a look at some of that overwhelming pro-US, pro-Bush bias in the American media. The following quotes are from this past Thanksgiving weekend's network and cable news programs.

Continue reading "BIAS "

Posted at 1613Z

Eat more Soup!

[Greyhawk]

Via Blackfive, a great and easy (free) way to make a charitable contribution:

Campbell's is donating a can of soup (up to 5 million cans!) to the needy for every person that goes to their site and votes for their favorite NFL team. Go to this site and it is right there, and it's very easy to do.

Current top 5:

1. Green Bay Packers 314,075
2. Kansas City Chiefs 271,761
3. Minnesota Vikings 192,878
4. Dallas Cowboys 79,430
5. New England Patriots 77,677

With 2.1 Million cans so far, there's still plenty to give away.

Whatchoo waiting for? Click click click!


Posted at 1026Z

December 2, 2003

Improvise, Adapt, Overcome

[Greyhawk]

MilBlogger John of Argghhh! Has a great 'lessons learned' post on Iraq. This is the along the lines of the "how we can do better" thinking that the Sec Def was encouraging folks to engage in in a leaked memo a few weeks back. (This being a bit lower level, vs the "big picture" view the secretary had in mind.) It's the type of thinking the Lefties absolutely can't comprehend, or see as an admission of failure.

It's the kind of thinking that wins wars.


Posted at 2041Z

Samara

[Greyhawk]

Details you may or may not have heard regarding the Samara firefight, as reported on CNN TV, Sunday, November 30, 2003

MARTIN SAVIDGE: We begin in Iraq, where Iraqi rebels dressed in Fedayin uniforms tried to ambush U.S. convoys in Samara today. But in an extremely deadly firefight, U.S. forces got the upper hand. Our Walt Rodgers is in Baghdad with the details.

Walter?

WALTER RODGERS: Hello Martin. This time it was the Americans' turn to draw blood and they drew it big time. Two convoys – logistical supply convoys were going from the 4th Infantry Division through Samara, a town on the Tigris river, about 75 miles northwest of Baghdad. Suddenly, both convoys were ambushed simultaneously in separate parts of Samara. The Iraqi insurgents poured down rocket-propelled grenades, they fired mortars, there was machine gun fire poured down on the U.S. convoys – 4th Infantry Division convoys. But it was all bravado, because what happened was even while the Iraqis were taking cover in buildings, the Americans had tanks in their M1-A1 Abrams 120 mm cannon. When they turned those cannons on the buildings – the three buildings in which the Iraqi insurgents had taken cover – and let fly with those cannon, the buildings simply crumbled and disintegrated. Additionally, there were Bradley fighting vehicles with 25 mm rapid fire canon. Those, too, disintegrate the walls. Any Iraqis who were in that particular area became instant casualties.

Lieutenant Colonel William MacDonald is with the 4th Infantry Division.

LT. COL. WILLIAM MACDONALD: It sounds like the attack had some coordination to it, but the soldiers responded, used their firepower, used tank and Bradley fire and other weapons available to them to stop this attack, and take the fight to the enemy.

RODGERS: When the Iraqis threw up a barricade, the American armored just simply crushed it and rolled through it. It was a running firefight along two separate routes through Samara. At the end of the day, there were at least 46 Iraqis dead, many of them believed to be Fedayin, that is, they were wearing the black uniforms of those loyal to Saddam Hussein, 18 Iraqis wounded, eight others captured. The American casualties? Minimal. Five soldiers injured, none of them life threatening.

Martin?

SAVIDGE: Thank you. Walt Rodgers, reporting live from Baghdad, we'll be hearing more from you later.

And lest you think CNN has suddenly become some sort of pro-US network, here's Walt's final words from that "more from you later":

RODGERS: Once again, it shows that while the United States claims it controls the battlefield, it's actually the guerrillas who generally tend to dictate where the battles will be fought and that battlefield is constantly shifting.

Martin?

And now of course, CNN is reporting "debate" on the number of casualties.


Posted at 1853Z

Myth, Media, and WMDs

[Greyhawk]

A bit late in the game, perhaps, and certainly with interesting timing, a senior intelligence official has countered media misconceptions, misperceptions, or misrepresentations of the intelligence community's pre-war assessment of the Iraqi WMD issue.

Stuart A. Cohen, Vice Chairman of the National Intelligence Council, has authored a document titled "Iraq's WMD Programs: Culling Hard Facts from Soft Myths" available as a press release on the CIA homepage. (An edited version was published in the November 28th Washington Post.)

Cohen was named Vice Chairman, National Intelligence Council in February 2003 after serving as Acting Chairman and Acting Vice Chairman since May 2002. He was appointed Director, Senior Review, Production and Analysis Staff and National Intelligence Officer At-Large in September 1998. In previous assignments, he served as Special Assistant to DCI William J. Casey; Deputy Executive Secretary, CIA; Director, DCI Nonproliferation Center; Chief, Inspections and Monitoring Support Staff; Chief, Counterintelligence Analysis Group; Chief of CIA's Directorate of Operations' Soviet and East European Intelligence Services Group; Deputy Chief, Arms Control Intelligence Staff; and Deputy National Intelligence Officer for Strategic Programs.

The National Intelligence Council (NIC) reports to the Director of Central Intelligence, providing coordinated analyses of foreign policy issues for the President and other senior policy makers.

The NIC includes a Chairman, Vice Chairman, and Officers drawn from government, academia, and the private sector. Their work ranges from brief analyses of current issues to “over the horizon” estimates of broader trends at work in the world.

In the document Cohen identifies and dispels 10 myths regarding the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction.

Some highlights:

Continue reading "Myth, Media, and WMDs "

Posted at 1637Z

War Profiteering

[Greyhawk]

unfunny.gif
Apparently Gerry Trudeau thinks GI's in Iraq are either too stupid or too afraid to speak for themselves, so from the comfort of his studio he bravely speaks out for them, for pay.

Ain't Free Speech wonderful? Don't you wish everyone had it?


Posted at 1504Z

December 1, 2003

Read More Frank

[Greyhawk]

Frank's an idea man, always full of great ideas. His latest greatest idea is to have more readers. I wish I'd had that idea, but since Frank had it first it's his.

Go read Franks blog. Laugh. Later you will read something in the blogoshere to make you angry or perhaps sad or both. Laugh now, while you can.

Read more Frank.


Posted at 1259Z

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