Category "Support Our Troops"

Bush Pays Lipservice To Vets, Then Cuts Health Care

December 26th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

Bush Pays Lipservice To Vets, Then Slashes Their Health Care The Daily MisLead
December 19th, 2003

Late last week President Bush visited combat veterans at Walter Reed Medical Center. During his visit, he said “We have made a commitment to the troops, and we have made a commitment to their loved ones, and that commitment is that we will provide excellent health care - excellent care - to anybody who is injured on the battlefield.”
His comments stand in stark contrast to the policies he has pushed - and the record he has amassed - as President. Just this year alone, the President “announced his formal opposition to a proposal to give National Guard and Reserve members access to the Pentagon’s health-insurance system”- a slap in the face to thousands of troops, especially considering “a recent General Accounting Office report estimated that one of every five Guard members has no health insurance”. The President also this year proposed to cut $1.5 billion (14%) out of funding for military family housing/medical facilities. This followed his 2002 budget which, according to major veterans groups, “fell $1.5 billion short” of adequately funding veterans care.

This is not the first time the President has staged a photo-op to thank veterans at Walter Reed and then proposed policies that hurt veterans. A little less than a year ago, the President visited the medical hospital , and then on the same day announced his proposal to cut off 164,000 veterans from the VA’s prescription drug discount program.

The result of the President’s harsh treatment of veterans is that “more than 235,000 veterans are currently waiting 6 months or more for initial medical appointments” with “many veterans waiting 2 years just to be seen by a doctor.” At Ft. Stewart, Georgia, UPI reported “hundreds of sick and wounded U.S. soldiers including many who served in the Iraq war are languishing in hot cement barracks here while they wait - sometimes for months - to see doctors.” And CBS News reports that the administration appears, in some cases, to be denying benefits to soldiers wounded in Iraq. Specifically, many soldiers say they are seeing their pay and health benefits severely reduced after they are badly wounded.

Sources:
President Bush Meets with Wounded Soldiers at Walter Reed, 12/18/2003
Gannett News Service, 10/23/2003
Independent Budget, 01/07/2002
President Bush Meets with Wounded Soldiers at Medical Center, 12/17/2003
“VA Cuts Some Veterans’ Access to Health Care”, Washington Post, 01/17/2003
Independent Budget, Paralyzed Veterans of America
“Sick, wounded U.S. troops held in squalor”, UPI, 10/17/2003
“Wounded Troops Denied Benefits?”, CBS News, 12/18/2003

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

US Soldiers To America: ‘’Bring Us Home Now!'’

December 13th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

US Soldiers to America: ‘’Bring us home now; we’re dying for oil and corporate greed!'’

Coalition For Free Thought In Media
Interviews by Jay Shaft

12th October 2003

I had the unique opportunity to interview five US military servicemen who just got back from Iraq, or in the case of two men, corresponded with their wives so that I could ask questions of these soldiers by mail. When the two I corresponded with came back just last week, I was able to complete the interviews I started several months ago with some new details on how the war is actually going.
I was shocked and angered when I found out how many of the service men hate being in Iraq and want nothing to do with rebuilding and policing the devastated nation. From the conversations I had, many soldiers never wanted to go over to Iraq and fight, and the ones who had were now convinced of the awful crime that had been committed against Iraq and our own troops. I was told very few soldiers now believe in staying in Iraq, or want to stay in the country and serve any more days.

The following interview was with an enlisted man, but someone very high up in the enlisted ranks, with over 20 years of military service. I have promised not to reveal his identity for reasons that he has a family and has been told not to speak to journalists. He told me the Army had put a gag order on him while he was home, and told him they would give him twenty years in prison if he spoke out in any manner against the US or the government.

I took several weeks to finish this interview because of not being able to safely be seen with this individual out of his fears of being caught speaking out.

He asked me to call him USA in all the transcripts of these interviews. I have followed his wishes and tried to write what he said in the manner it was said so as not to lose any impact. At times the interview was very rough and the grammar is not perfect, but I tried to write this in his voice so that he can tell the world how bad it is in Iraq. I truly want you to feel what he has experienced in some way if possible.

CFTM– How are you today? Resting I hope?

USA– Can’t sleep for sh..t and I have horrible nightmares when I do sleep. I might be lucky to catch an hour at a time before the nightmares wake me up. I slept easier in the combat then now that I’m away from there. Most awful place I’ve ever been or served duty and I didn’t want to leave my guys. That was the hardest part was leaving the guys I had been leading around and trying to keep out of trouble and alive.

CFTM– Did you see a lot of your buddies get killed? How did it affect you?

USA– How the hell do you think it affected me? I saw over 30 of the men I had to keep safe die, and over 100 get wounded and not come back. I still don’t know if some of the wounded men made it or not. I was never told before I came back home.

CFTM– So it really was awful and as bad as some returning troops have claimed?

USA– It was like a long trip to hell that you knew you might return from. Of course it is as bad as the soldiers say it is. Hell it’s even worse if the truth has to come out. It’s a constant fu..ing nightmare trying to figure out where the guerillas are going to hit, how to keep the civilians calm, and also getting enough water and food to eat. That is one thing the media never really told the Americans about, how bad it was when our convoys weren’t getting through. We had to go to some Iraqi people and trade socks and underwear for some food and a little water.

CFTM– You really did get that desperate because I saw it in the foreign media that the Iraqi civilians had stepped in and fed a whole bunch of troops that had been days without food.

USA– Yeah, that ain’t no joke about getting help from the civilians right after the invasion. We had a pretty good laugh about that and how the army owed them some money for reimbursement. We would not have starved probably, but when we got the food from the people it made sure we could still operate as a functioning unit. It was a near thing that several guys almost died of dehydration because we ran out of clean water for a few days.

CFTM– Just keep going, I want to hear more about the hardships the military and Bush made you go through. I want the American people to know what a nightmare this war has become and what it’s doing to our service men over there.

USA– Okay, well I can bitch about the problems like food being short and water going bad, but I want to tell people about how bad the attacks on US and coalition forces have gotten in the last month. In the last two weeks I was there we were attacked at least 20 times a day if you count all the shots we heard from random sniper or opportunity attacks. We were losing at least five men a day to injuries and there was at least one of our unit killed every twenty four hours.

CFTM– So you were getting one a day killed and at least five injured? Did you know many of the guys killed?

USA– That’s a real dumb fu..ing question to ask me. You know what my rank is, of course I knew them, I was the head NCO for years in our unit. I knew most of the guys who died and I held a lot of hands as they were dying. You tell me that’s not gonna to give you nightmares!

I had one guy tell me all he wanted was to see his little daughter; she was born three days after the war started. He died in the sand holding my hand and crying because his daughter would never know him. Tell me that’s fu..ing right. Where was George Bush when this kid was gasping for air and spitting his blood on foreign soil?

CFTM– I talked to you about this the other day. Do you think George Bush is the wrong man to order troops into battle when he ducked it himself?

USA– That asshole went AWOL and never showed up for duty and then he has the nerve to take us into two different wars that will be going on for years. I do not believe he should be president of this country, he’s a complete idiot and he’s controlled by madmen with a drive for only profits and getting oil.

CFTM– I just have to get this straight for the public, you are well educated are you not? I mean you have had years of leadership training and schools right? You sound very well informed and aware of the current lies and manipulations, which I have not found in some other soldiers.

USA– I have a four year degree in the economics field and I am not a soldier all the time. I am Reservist who just keeps getting caught on long duty assignments. Believe it or not I read authors like Noam Chomsky, Gore Vidal, and Jim Hightower, and went through three copies of “Stupid White Men” by Michael Moore while I was over there. I let people read parts of Mike’s book and they were irate that Bush had screwed us so hard. I had parts of “Best Democracy Money Can Buy” mailed to me because I knew if I had the whole book it would get stolen in a heartbeat.

CFTM– So you might be quite a bit more aware and well informed about the real reasons for the war that others did not know. I don’t know of many line soldiers reading Greg Palast or Noam Chomsky.

USA– I guess you’re right and that might be why I am trying to speak out and let the Americans know that they are sending us to be slaughtered. If you don’t mind I am going to cut through all the niceties and get down to why I am going against every oath I took and giving you this interview. I am doing it for the guys still over there and for the ones who are going. If I’m not careful I’ll end up back there for another six months.

CFTM– Alright tell me what it was really like and don’t skip the gory details. I want people to be shocked and offended enough to realize why you spoke out and what it is doing to our military by sending them over there with blind flag waving and cheers of false victory.

USA– Well the first thing I would like to thank Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Congress for is that nice huge cut they made to Veterans Benefits as soon as the war started. I am in the Reserves after years of active duty and now I cannot get PTSD counseling or many medical benefits I used to take for granted. I knew I would have the benefits because I was laying my life down for my country. Now my benefits are cut by around 2/3 and I have to go to either group therapy or pay for a private counselor out of my own pocket. What happens when someone like me has been through enormous battle stress and combat fatigue and then comes home to no counseling?

I’ll tell you what is going to happen, he will either kill himself or take a bunch of people with him. Some of the guys coming back are going to have gone through the worst time of their lives with their buddies dying and getting hurt, and then they’ll find out they got screwed out of any counseling. It is the greatest disservice America is committing against soldiers who fought for this country and may come back wounded or horribly scarred. Medical services, school aid to dependents, school aid for the vets, all slashed to the bare bones; mental health and drug and alcohol counseling are being eliminated or the waiting lists will be years long for whatever services manage to survive.

That is one thing the American people still have not really caught on to is the fact that while they were screaming out “Support Our Troops” the current regime makers were fu..ing the military and veterans out of almost every social program and non essential service that would make life easier.

Bush really fu..ked us while we were gone. We found out about after being in the middle of heavy fighting for several weeks. It was one of the first things I read in Stars and Stripes, and I thought it was a joke because it was just to hard to believe Congress and our leaders would screw us that bad while we were fighting and dying.

CFTM– Glad you brought that up about counseling because I wasn’t even aware of it. Are you alright to talk about some of the civilian casualties you witnessed and some of the horrifying images you told me about when we first started talking?

USA– I want to talk about some of the children I saw killed for no reason, maybe it will wake someone up who doesn’t believe it was happening, or that it was very bad. I can tell you I will never forget the screams of the wounded or orphaned kids, or the wailing of the parents who lost their kids. The Iraqis and most Muslims have a very vocal way of mourning the dead by lamenting and wailing for the dead. There is no mistaking a mother or father crying out in pain for the loss of a child. They don’t cry like that unless there has been a death. Sometimes after a bombing raid or an artillery attack you could here hundreds of people wiling and weeping.

I have several grown children with grand kids about the age of most of the dead children I saw in Iraq. I also have several kids who are about half grown and I saw a lot of Iraqi children that age wandering around in charge of three or four little ones because their parents were dead.

Let me tell you about the cluster bomb raid we saw wipe out a whole bunch of little kids. It looked like they had already lost their parents and were trying to salvage food from a destroyed Iraqi convoy by the side of the road we were on. The kids were way off to the side about half a mile away by then when we got the word that the Iraqi column was going to be hit with cluster bombs and we had to clear the area. We got on the radio and tried to get the air strike stopped but we were told it was too late to get it stopped.

We could see the body parts flying up into the air after the bombs hit. It was terrible and we could not do a damn thing but watch it happen and scream into the radio at the dumb sh.t pilot that was dropping the bombs. After the strike was over we went to see if there were any survivors and all we found was bits and pieces of little kids and here and there an arm or leg you could still identify.

CFTM– Pretty rough stuff to have to see. Did that kind of thing happen a lot?

USA– More than you can imagine until you’ve seen it over and over again. Man I don’t want to talk about this sh.t anymore. It doesn’t help to talk about it because it just makes me think about it again. I can’t even get any counseling without having to pay for it.

Let all those people who support our troops in on that nice surprise that Bush gave us. That’s how much we really mean to Bush, the Department of Defense and all those other stupid assholes who keep saying how good we’re doing over there. Let those patriotic morons go and fight and die for our country. Let them leave their families behind for months and maybe come back home in a box. I’ll be the first one to salute them or honor them when they die.

It’s just like Nam was in the beginning. I was twelve when my dad got back and I’ll never forget the pain and agony he lived with the rest of his life. Its kind of what I feel now, I suppose. I never thought I would ever serve in some stuff that’s so much like Nam it isn’t funny. Now I really see what my pop went through, and if I could I would go back in the past a few months, I would go AWOL or turn conscientious objector on them, but it’s too late for that now.

I damn sure will not go back over there even if they throw me in Leavenworth. I never could understand how a guy could be a conscientious objector until what I just went through. I wish more guys would stand up and tell Bush and the Pentagon they will not fight their war for oil. We should not have to die for these rich bastards profits and enrichment.

CFTM– Thank you for taking the risk and talking to me. I know there will be other soldiers who can’t speak out who will thank you for having the courage.

USA– It isn’t about courage it’s a matter of what’s right. This war is killing the poor or middle class American men and women who went in the armed forces to have college or some kind of better future. You don’t see the rich kids joining up or any Senator’s kid dying in Iraq. It’s us little guys who are dying over there or getting disabled for life. Where are the leaders that are supposed to be looking out for the little man? They are elected to look after out interests not the interests of Cheney and Halliburton, or any of the rest of the fat cats piling up the profits while the blood of our soldiers flows over their hands.

CFTM– Anything else you want to say to America? Any final thoughts or words?

USA– Yeah! Wake up America! Your sons and daughters are dying for nothing! This war is not about freedom or stopping terrorism. Bring us home now! We are dying for oil and corporate greed!

- Jay Shaft: Editor, Coalition For Free Thought In Media
EMAIL: freethoughtinmedia2@yahoo.com
WEB: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/coalitionforfreethoughtinmedia/

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

Bush’s Commitment To Veterans Not In Budget

December 13th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

President Bush’s Stated Commitment to Veterans Not Reflected in Budget
The Daily Mislead

November 10, 2003

President Bush often emphasizes his commitment to veterans, saying in 2001, “My administration understands America’s obligations not only go to those who wear the uniform today, but to those who wore the uniform in the past: to our veterans.”

But the 200,000 veterans waiting six months or more for their first appointment at a VA facility would be denied access to VA health care under Bush’s plan. Others would be charged $250 annual enrollment fees, doubled prescription costs and increased co-payments.
The same day the President met with wounded soldiers and said that America “should and must provide the best care for anybody who is willing to put their life in harm’s way,” the Veterans’ Administration explained that it could solve the backlog problem by limiting enrollment. “VA would avoid very significant additional medical benefits costs and begin to bring demand in line with capacity, which will reduce the number of veterans on wait lists.”

The administration would also reduce costs by denying access to “better-off” veterans - those who do not have service-related disabilities and with incomes as low as $21,050. Estimates suggest this would likely more than triple the number of veterans denied health care by FY 2005 to more than half a million, and the VA anticipates that 55% of veterans who already participate in the VA health care plan, numbering 1.25 million, may be unable to continue participation due to the enrollment fee.

Congress has called for $1.8 billion beyond what the administration requested for FY 2004 funding beyond the White House request.

While funding for VA 2004 remains unresolved, Congress sought to include $1.3 billion in veterans’ health care and extending reservists benefits who have been called up in the $87 billion emergency funding bill. The administration “strongly opposed” the provisions, articulated in a letter from White House Budget Director Joshua Bolten, which were later stripped.

Sources:
Presidential Speech to the VFW, 8/20/01; Presidential Speech to the American Legion, 8/29/01
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2004/va.html
President Bush Meets with Wounded Soldiers at Medical Center, 1/17/03
Department of Veterans Affairs, 38 CFR Part 17 Enrollment-Provision of Hospital and Outpatient Care to Veterans Subpriorities of Priority Categories 7 and 8 and Annual Enrollment Level Decision; Final Rule, 1/17/03
VA Seeks Record Budget, Shuts Health Care to Priority 8 Vets, American Forces Press Service, 1/24/03
http://www.house.gov/strickland/vetsreport.htm
http://www.house.gov/larson/pr_030523.htm
Etheridge: Budget Cuts Veterans, Rocky Mount Telegram, 4/1/03
Action Alert, American Legion
“House vote backs loans as Iraq bill confronts new woes,” GovExec.com, 10/22/03

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

‘’No Amount of Money'’ - And He Means It

November 13th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

No Amount of Money — And He Means It
Salon: Joe Conason’s Journal
November 11, 2003

White House decides to forgo money for tortured American POWs

The billions included by Congress in the president’s supplemental budget fall well below estimates of what will be needed to rebuild Iraq. So the Bush administration is looking everywhere for money (while averting its gaze from the tax revenues squandered on wealthy contributors). Among the funds they’ve found is a court judgment won against the Iraqi government by a group of former American prisoners of war who were brutally tortured during the 1991 war. The White House position — which seems likely to prevail — is that any frozen Iraqi funds should be turned over for reconstructing Iraq rather than used to pay damages to those tortured U.S. soldiers and officers.
The decision provides yet more evidence of the tender White House concern for enlisted Americans — as anyone could tell from Scott McClellan’s remarkable response to questions on this topic last Thursday. It’s worth reproducing in full, if only to marvel at McClellan’s increasing resemblance to Ari Fleischer:

Q: Scott, there are 17 former POWs from the first Gulf War who were tortured and filed suit against the regime of Saddam Hussein. And a judge has ordered that they are entitled to substantial financial damages. What is the administration’s position on that? Is it the view of this White House that that money would be better spent rebuilding Iraq rather than going to these former POWs?

MR. McCLELLAN: I don’t know that I view it in those terms, David. I think that the United States — first of all, the United States condemns in the strongest terms the brutal torture to which these Americans were subjected. They bravely and heroically served our nation and made sacrifices during the Gulf War in 1991, and there is simply no amount of money that can truly compensate these brave men and women for the suffering that they went through at the hands of Saddam Hussein’s brutal regime. That’s what our view is.

Q: But, so — but isn’t it true that this White House —

Q: They think there is an —

Q: Excuse me, Helen — that this White House is standing in the way of them getting those awards, those financial awards, because it views it that money better spent on rebuilding Iraq?

MR. McCLELLAN: Again, there’s simply no amount of money that can truly compensate these brave men and women for the suffering —

Q: Why won’t you spell out what your position is?

MR. McCLELLAN: I’m coming to your question. Believe me, I am. Let me finish. Let me start over again, though. No amount of money can truly compensate these brave men and women for the suffering that they went through at the hands of a very brutal regime, at the hands of Saddam Hussein. It was determined earlier this year by Congress and the administration that those assets were no longer assets of Iraq, but they were resources required for the urgent national security needs of rebuilding Iraq. But again, there is simply no amount of compensation that could ever truly compensate these brave men and women.

Q: Just one more. Why would you stand in the way of at least letting them get some of that money?

MR. McCLELLAN: I disagree with the way you characterize it.

Q: But if the law that Congress passed entitles them to access frozen assets of the former regime, then why isn’t that money, per a judge’s order, available to these victims?

MR. McCLELLAN: That’s why I pointed out that that was an issue that was addressed earlier this year. But make no mistake about it, we condemn in the strongest possible terms the torture that these brave individuals went through —

Q: You don’t think they should get money?

MR. McCLELLAN: — at the hands of Saddam Hussein. There is simply no amount of money that can truly compensate those men and women who heroically served —

Q: That’s not the issue —

MR. McCLELLAN: — who heroically served our nation.

Q: Are you opposed to them getting some of the money?

MR. McCLELLAN: And, again, I just said that that had been addressed earlier this year.

Q: No, but it hasn’t been addressed. They’re entitled to the money under the law. The question is, is this administration blocking their effort to access some of that money, and why?

MR. McCLELLAN: I don’t view it that way at all. I view it the way that I stated it, that this issue was —

Q: But you are opposed to them getting the money.

MR. McCLELLAN: This issue was addressed earlier this year, and we believe that there’s simply no amount of money that could truly compensate these brave men and women for what they went through and for the suffering that they went through at the hands of Saddam Hussein.

Q: So no money.

MR. McCLELLAN: — and that’s my answer.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

Army Times - No Friends In High Places

November 13th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

No Friends In High Places
Army Times | Editorial

Monday 10 November 2003

“You not only have a former Guardsman in the White House, you have a friend,” President Bush declared during a 2001 visit to an Air National Guard base.

But for 120,000 Guard and reserve members employed by the federal government, friendship seems to have its limits.
The Bush administration last week persuaded Republican lawmakers to vote down a provision in the $87 billion supplemental funding bill for Iraq and Afghanistan operations that would have given financial relief to federally employed reservists called to active duty.

The provision, sponsored by Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., would have reimbursed those federal employees for any pay cut they suffer when mobilized. It was defeated on a party-line vote Oct. 28 during a House-Senate conference.

About 14,000 reservists are now mobilized to assist with operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Durbin estimates that 23,000 federal employees in all would benefit from this sensible measure, at a relatively inexpensive cost of $80 million.

The federal government, the largest single employer of reservists, has encouraged private employers to make up differences when mobilized reservists take pay cuts compared to their civilian wages.

Indeed, about 200 companies and 50 state and local governments do just that, earning them high praise from, among others, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who wrote a September 2002 open letter of appreciation to employers that support their reservist workers.

“During this period of mobilization, many of you did more than was required by law by voluntarily offering continued benefits, pay differentials, and additional, creative forms of family support which made the period of separation so much easier to bear,” Rumsfeld said.

Yet again, Bush administration officials and Republican leaders in Congress have shown how cheap talk can be.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

Bush Administration Has Failed The Military

October 18th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

Bush Administration Has Failed The Military
DefenseWatch Special
By Paul Connors

October 14th, 2003

During the 2000 campaign, then-Gov. George W. Bush of Texas told potential military voters, “Help is on the way.” Military members, exhausted and drained by pointless deployments in support of half-baked peacekeeping schemes hatched by the Clinton administration, rallied to Bush believing they had found their Messiah. How wrong they were.
Unfortunately for the soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen who protect this nation and its people, President Bush inflicted on them a man who is without a doubt, the worst Secretary of Defense this country has had since the Department of Defense was created in 1947.

Like so many of President Bush’s picks for key posts in his administration, Donald H. Rumsfeld is a retread from previous Republican administrations. But unlike some of the others, Rumsfeld, a vain, conceited and arrogant dilettante, has done little to improve the overall condition of the armed forces and the Defense Department. Instead, he has unleashed one pyrotechnic after another as he has purposely wreaked havoc on the senior leadership of the Army, permitted the continued draw-down in the number of combatant ships in the Navy, and has repeatedly denied what is obvious to every American, both in and out of uniform.

Immediately after the first Gulf War, the assaults on the defense budgets began. Starting with the first President Bush, the U.S. Army, the service most closely associated with ground combat and peacekeeping, was reduced from 18 divisions to just 10. The Bush I defense review called for a reduction in the active duty military from 2.1 million people in 1991 to 1.44 million by the middle of the 1990s. By the time the successor Clinton administration had taken power in Washington, the liberal academicians Clinton was so fond of employing decided the collapse of the Soviet Union would make a “peace dividend” possible by ordering even deeper cuts in the military. Clinton’s analysts proposed an active force of 1.25 million and some went so far as to suggest that our active duty forces be trimmed to just one million members.

Throughout the 1990s, the personnel cutbacks, as well as the denial of critical funding for equipment maintenance, upgrades and acquisitions, left the DoD budget stagnating and then falling behind inflation. Despite these losses in buying power the Clinton administration continued to press the smaller U.S. military by putting it to work in every god-forsaken corner of their world. It was if the administration really believed that soldiers should serve as a worldwide “meals on wheels” program for every failed nation-state on the planet. In the meantime, the military lost its warfighting abilities, social engineering became commonplace and officers, more concerned with their careers than national security, bowed to the altar of political correctness and thinly veiled Marxist social rhetoric.

By the late 1990s, many people in the U.S. military had had enough and began looking for their own form of salvation. They desperately hoped that a Bush administration would return them to something resembling what they had known under President Ronald Reagan twenty years earlier.

Those hopes and dreams were in vain. They were quashed the minute that Bush announced Rumsfeld as his candidate for Secretary of Defense. Even before assuming office, Rumsfeld announced that what the military needed was “transformation.” He was so sure in his assertions that it was if he had said, “and by God, I’m just the man to force them to do it my way.”

From his first days at the Pentagon, Rumsfeld let it be known that things were going to change. The Army was the first service to feel the heat. As the largest service (and the most conservative), Rumsfeld believed that Army generals were too devoted to their tanks, armored personnel carriers and attack helicopters. Like JFK before him, he became enamored of the capabilities of airpower and the U.S. Army’s Special Forces, insisting that all future wars could be fought by elite troops with high-tech weapons and new high-tech toys (read newer, faster, more expensive jets).

It should be remembered that Rumsfeld’s own military service was limited to just three years. He served in the U.S. Navy when that service was still flying straight-wing jet fighters. A Princeton graduate, Rumsfeld couldn’t wait to leave active duty so that he could get on with the more important business of making money.

As he embarked on his political career, Rumsfeld first held a seat in Congress and after a stint in the Nixon administration, served as the nation’s youngest White House chief of staff and then SecDef under caretaker President Gerald Ford. With his tenure at the Pentagon cut short by Ford’s electoral defeat by that other foreign policy disaster, Jimmy Carter, Rumsfeld moved back into the private sector.

He excelled in his business career because he was that particularly hard-nosed form of executive who manages by intimidation and demands complete compliance from his subordinates. He reportedly never encouraged discussions or debate from his subordinates and dealt with disagreements harshly. That is the management style Rumsfeld brought with him for his second stint as Secretary of Defense.

At an age when most men would be content to sit back and survey the successes brought forth by a lifetime of achievement, Rumsfeld’s unquenchable thirst for power flared again when President Bush asked him to serve in his administration. After arriving in the Pentagon, Rumsfeld quickly announced that upgrades to legacy programs like the M1A1 Abrams tanks and the M2 Bradley fighting vehicles would be curtailed. The army, he said, was far too heavy and took far too long to get where it needed to be. Army generals were too conservative, too cautious, too conservative. Moreover, they resisted change and still fought and re-fought great tank battles at the Fulda Gap.

Wherever possible, Rumsfeld, like that other defense department failure, Robert S. McNamara, ordered studies of what weapons systems could be cut loose to save money. He ordered manpower studies to consider additional personnel cuts of 90,000 from the active-duty force to pay for more untested whiz-bang technology. Like McNamara, Rumsfeld never met a statistic he didn’t like and seemed to believe that spending more on technology and less on people would automatically win all of the wars the United States might have to fight in the 21st century. His hubris knew no limits and he continued to insist, even after the fall of Baghdad, that American forces were adequately staffed to meet any and all possible contingencies around the world.

After three years, some military observers wonder if there is really a has been difference between the Clinton and Bush administrations in terms of how their policies impacted on the armed forces. While Clinton stretched the military as far as possible without letting the band break, at least he didn’t launch a full-scale war. He kept his conflicts smaller, more local and regional in nature. And while I’ve never been a fan of Clinton or his foreign policy, at least he kept our allies on our side in most major discussions.

With the Bush/Rumsfeld team, we have an administration that launched a war that the military quickly won. But like all too many folks who act on impulse, they didn’t have a back-up plan for what to do when American forces came out of the other end of the tunnel victorious.

And that’s where we sit today. We have a Secretary of Defense who apparently is lying to himself and the American people when he categorically states that American troops are adequate for the tasks at hand. In a complete turnaround from their recent historical opposition to increased military budgets, even the liberal Democrats have belatedly concluded that America’s armed forces are stretched perilously thin and have agreed that we now need more people to carry out the missions that we have given them. Rumsfeld continues to shake his head and say no.

Rumsfeld still fails to see that the average GI Joe and Jane are stretched to the end of their endurance. Military families are sick to death of the lies and the deceit that emanates downward from the OSD through the chain of command to the family readiness coordinators at all of our domestic and overseas locations.

Rumsfeld, recognizing that the National Guard and reserve components have been tasked too much in the last ten years, has decided that the nation no longer needs a capable “force in reserve.” Rather than have forces available when needed, he has ordered that key capabilities currently found mainly in the reserve component be returned to the active-duty force. An ongoing Pentagon review reportedly plans to reorganize the reserve component so that the nation will not have to rely on them for the first 15 days of a major contingency. In other words, by Rumsfeld’s divining, America will in the future fight wars lasting only 15 days or less. In that vein, we won’t need to call up reserves ever again.

The problem is that we already are fighting a protracted conflict in “postwar” Iraq that refutes that theory.

We won the major combat phase of the second Gulf War with less than 200,000 combat troops. But we still went in too light and our occupation of the conquered country has turned into a daily charnel house.

Yet Rumsfeld remains steadfast in his idiotic belief that American forces are numerically adequate for the tasks before them.

Whether we like it or not, the United States has assumed the mantle of an imperial power. With that power comes responsibility, particularly the charge not to waste or squander our finest resource, the young men and women who perform these dangerous tasks for the rest of us.

Rumsfeld and the man he reports to have betrayed the very people who depend on them the most. They have betrayed the men and women in uniform by not providing them with every available means to defeat our enemies, to destroy their ability to fight and then, to have a coherent plan for their re-deployment home.

This administration has betrayed the American public by entering into large-scale military operations without a clear exit strategy and by creating a potential quagmire that will engage our combat forces for years to come. While far too large a percentage of our true combat power is tied down against a guerilla foe, the American homeland has been left woefully unprotected against other threats.

With the smallest Army we’ve had since Dec. 7, 1941, the fewest number of naval vessels since 1931, and a smaller Air Force now than the day it was created in 1947, the Bush administration is blindly following in the footsteps of that other great wartime President, Bill Clinton.

Paul Connors is a Senior Editor of DefenseWatch. He can be reached at paulconnors@hotmail.com. © 2003 Paul Connors.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

Paths Of Glory Lead To A Soldier’s Doubt

October 18th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

Paths of Glory Lead to a Soldier’s Doubt
By Tim Predmore
Los Angeles Times | OP ED

Wednesday 17 September 2003

- An American carrying out his duty in Iraq wonders aloud why he’s there -

For the last six months I have participated in what I believe to be the great modern lie: Operation Iraqi Freedom.
After the horrific events of Sept. 11, 2001, and throughout the battle in Afghanistan, the groundwork was being laid for the invasion of Iraq. “Shock and awe” was the term used to describe the display of power the world was to view upon the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom. It was to be a dramatic show of strength and advanced technology from within the arsenals of the American and British militaries.

But as a soldier preparing to take part in the invasion of Iraq, the words “shock and awe” rang deep within my psyche. Even as we prepared to depart, it seemed that these two great superpowers were about to break the very rules they demanded that others obey. Without the consent of the United Nations, and ignoring the pleas of their own citizens, the U.S. and Britain invaded Iraq. “Shock and awe”? Yes, the words correctly described the emotional impact I felt as we embarked on an act not of justice but of hypocrisy.

From the moment the first shot was fired in this so-called war of liberation and freedom, hypocrisy reigned. After the broadcasting of recorded images of captured and dead U.S. soldiers over Arab television, American and British leaders vowed revenge while verbally assaulting the networks for displaying such vivid images. Yet within hours of the deaths of Saddam Hussein’s two sons, the U.S. released horrific photographs of the two dead brothers for the world to view. Again, a “do as we say and not as we do” scenario.

As soldiers serving in Iraq, we have been told that our purpose here is to help the people of Iraq by providing them the necessary assistance militarily as well as in humanitarian efforts. Then tell me where the humanity was in the recent Stars and Stripes account of two children taken to a U.S. military camp by their mother, in search of medical care. The children had been unknowingly playing with explosive ordnance they had found and as a result were severely burned. The account tells how they, after an hourlong wait, were denied care by two U.S. military doctors. A soldier described the incident as one of many “atrocities” he had witnessed on the part of the U.S. military.

Thankfully I have not been a personal witness to any atrocities, unless of course you consider, as I do, this war to be the ultimate atrocity.

So then, what is our purpose here?

Was this invasion because of weapons of mass destruction, as we so often have heard? If so, where are they? Did we invade to dispose of a leader and his regime because they were closely associated with Osama bin Laden? If so, where is the proof? Or is it that our incursion is a result of our own economic advantage? Iraq’s oil can be refined at the lowest cost of any in the world. Coincidence?

This looks like a modern-day crusade not to free an oppressed people or to rid the world of a demonic dictator relentless in his pursuit of conquest and domination but a crusade to control another nation’s natural resource. At least to me, oil seems to be the reason for our presence.

There is only one truth, and it is that Americans are dying. There are 10 to 14 attacks on our servicemen and -women daily in Iraq, and it would appear that there is no end in sight.

I once believed that I served for a cause: “to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States.” Now I no longer believe that; I have lost my conviction, as well as my determination. I can no longer justify my service for what I believe to be half-truths and bold lies.

With age comes wisdom, and at 36 years old I am no longer so blindly led as to believe without question. From my arrival at Ft. Campbell, Ky., last November, talk of deployment was heard, and as that talk turned to actual preparation my heart sank and my doubts grew. My doubts have never faded; instead my resolve and commitment have.

My time is almost done, as well as that of many others with whom I serve. We have all faced death in Iraq without reason or justification. How many more must die? How many more tears must be shed before Americans awake and demand the return of the men and women whose job it is to protect them rather than their leader’s interest?

(Tim Predmore is on active duty with the 101st Airborne Division near Mosul, Iraq. A version of this essay appeared in the Peoria (Ill.) Star Journal)

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

Rank And Bile

October 14th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

Rank And Bile
By Eric Boehlert
Salon.com

Thursday 2 October 2003

G.I.’s speaking out, angry vets signing petitions, generals attacking him. George Bush’s once-rosy relationship with the military is turning sour.

Rarely in recent memory has a president seemed to enjoy such a close personal — and political — relationship with the U.S. armed forces as President Bush does. A few hundred of Florida’s overseas military ballots narrowly helped him become president in 2000, after all. And since Sept. 11, the Bush White House has unleashed the armed forces to wage two wars in two years.
For the first time in a decade, Army generals have become household names, U.S. soldiers have discovered newfound admiration among the general public, and in May, Bush himself donned a flight suit in an elaborate visit to the USS Abraham Lincoln to announce that major fighting in Iraq had ended. Immediately after Bush’s whirlwind victory in Iraq, his relationship with the armed forces seemed untouchable.

But in recent months, the GOP and the Bush White House have suddenly faced a new, increasingly chilly reception from men and women in uniform. There are the growing ranks of retired generals who have turned Bush critics, like Gen. Anthony Zinni, former head of the U.S. Central Command and a special envoy to the Middle East. Zinni endorsed Bush in 2000, but recently during a particularly scathing public critique compared Iraq war strategy to a “brain fart” emitted from a Bush “policy wonk.”

But perhaps more troubling for Bush is the increasing frustration and anger being voiced by officers and enlisted personnel alike. It’s a frustration fueled not only by the unexpectedly difficult military situation in Iraq and the absence of a clear exit strategy, but by broken promises over veterans issues. Could 2004 be the year when the military vote swings to the Democrats? That might seem too farfetched a hope for Democrats, who have watched the military become a solidly Republican bloc over the past 30 years, to the point where a recent study found Republicans outnumber Democrats 8-to-1 among today’s officers. But that trend, at least, could very well come to an end — and the entry of four-star Gen. Wesley Clark into the presidential race as a Democrat and powerful Bush critic surely helps.

“What you have going into 2004 is the potential for some [political] forces, usually pushing in the direction of Republicans, to not be pushing so hard, or some maybe even be pushing towards Democrats,” says Peter Feaver, military expert and professor of political science at Duke University. Feaver says Bush starts out with the political support of the armed forces. “But if Iraq worsens — if Bush faces hostile relations both on the ground overseas and economically at home — and the Democrats nominate somebody who looks strong on national defense, like Wesley Clark, then the military vote becomes more ambivalent.”

It’s already easy to spot strains in the once unwavering relationship between the White House and the armed forces. The blunt assessments of the administration are often scathing. “[Bush] pats us on the back with his speeches and stabs us in the back with his actions,” Charles Carter, a retired Navy senior chief petty officer, recently told a Knight-Ridder reporter. “I will vote non-Republican in a heartbeat if it continues as is.”

A recent posting on a Military.com chat room bulletin board is not atypical: “It is likely a lot of Active and Retired Military who supported this President will find ’staying home’ a strong option at the next election. We put our trust in President Bush and he has let us down.”

Even more stinging was this first-person Army account: “For the past six months, I have been participating in what I believe to be the great modern lie: Operation Iraqi Freedom.” That was published last month in the Peoria Journal Star, by a U.S. soldier named Tim Predmore serving on active duty with the 101st Airborne Division, based near Mosul in northern Iraq. (And there is this complaint of an ex-G.I. whose wife was deployed.) The harsh words from military men are especially poignant “when you consider how Bush became president by a few military absentee ballots,” says retired U.S. Army Col. David Hackworth. “I suspect a huge number of those overseas ballots will not be marked Republican in 2004.”

The reason is simple, says Hackworth, a White House critic whose Web sites, Soldiers for the Truth and Hackworth.com, have been documenting the contempt many service men and women feel for the Iraq war planners. “Most military guys who understand war, professional soldiers, they recognize America is engaged in its largest and nastiest war. And like in Vietnam, they don’t see any light at the end of the tunnel,” he says. “My e-mail, overwhelmingly from soldiers and vets, says these guys are really pissed off about the handling of the war. And what’s amazing is the huge number of folks from this group no longer relating to the Republican Party.”

Today’s list of military complaints is long: Many fighting men and women are upset over how the war in Iraq has been conducted (i.e. trying to prosecute the war “on the cheap”); feel that forces are being stretched too thinly; think that Pentagon civilian planners are not listening to generals; worry that part-time National Guard and reservists are being asked to carry too much of a burden; and find the administration’s rationale for the war slippery. They also seem to have a visceral dislike for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who’s seen as having a vendetta against the Army, and think the Bush White House seems eager to send troops off to war yet reluctant to help Congress pass more comprehensive health benefits for disabled veterans.

During a 1999 campaign speech at the Citadel military school in South Carolina, Bush complained that under President Clinton, military “resources are over-stretched. Frustration is up, as families are separated and strained. Morale is down. This administration wants things both ways: To command great forces, without supporting them. To launch today’s new causes, with little thought of tomorrow’s consequences.”

Today, those critiques strangely mirror the precise complaints being leveled against the Bush White House by some within the military. Veterans groups, for instance, are furious that the White House is blocking legislation that would help ease the burden of medical bills for 670,000 disabled vets. The Pentagon says it cannot afford the $5 billion-a-year budget buster and has recommended a presidential veto.

Vets fume when they contrast that belt-tightening talk against Bush’s request to Congress for $87 billion to secure and rebuild Iraq, a number that’s sure to escalate in the coming years. The former G.I.’s have even launched an online campaign, dubbed “Out the Door in 2004,” targeting politicians who stand in the way of the bill’s passage. Chief among those politicians is Bush.

The veterans bill remains bottled up in Republican committees — and in a strange role reversal, it’s the Democrats wearing the white hats in this Capitol Hill showdown over the military. Democrats are collecting congressional signatures for a “discharge petition” in an effort to the get the benefits bill to the floor for a vote where it would certainly pass in an up-or-down roll call. The Republican leadership, though, has forbidden its members from signing the petition despite the fact more than 100 of them cosponsored the bill.

Drawing even more ire today is the stretched-too-thinly troop rotation schedule for Iraq, exacerbated by the administration’s inability to get additional allies to send soldiers to ease the burden on the U.S. That failure has placed extraordinary strains on young families in America, especially for National Guard members and reservists, some of whom, instead of being called up for five days of local flood duties, are being lifted out of their communities and jobs for more than a year at a time to serve in Iraq.

Adding to the drip-drip frustration was a trial balloon floated this summer by the Pentagon to cut hazardous pay for soldiers in Iraq. Also, some G.I.’s recovering from battle wounds were getting billed for their hospital meals.

“An opportunity has been created to talk to this group. We’ll see if Democrats take advantage of it,” said Steven Nider, director of foreign and security studies at the Progressive Policy Institute, a centrist Democratic think tank in Washington. It will be tough. In part, because Democrats will have to thread the needle in criticizing the Iraq war effort without being seen as criticizing the troops.

More importantly, the military, once seen as so apolitical that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s party affiliation remained a mystery right up until he entered the 1952 presidential campaign, has become an increasingly Republican voting bloc.

During the post-Vietnam 1970s, Democrats were perceived as being anti-military. In the 1980s, President Reagan broke ranks with traditional fiscal conservatives and ushered in massive defense spending increases. And during the 1990s, President Clinton forever alienated the military with his gays-in-the-military initiative.

A 1999 survey directed by Feaver and historian Richard H. Kohn, conducted for the Triangle Institute for Security Studies, found that 64 percent of officers identify themselves as Republicans, while only 8 percent call themselves Democrats. Indeed, Clark himself recently admitted that as an officer he routinely voted for Republican White House candidates. (It’s true the Army’s enlisted ranks are made up increasingly of minorities and women, but studies show those soldiers vote for a more conservative ticket than their counterparts in the general population, who lean strongly Democratic.)

Merle Black, professor of government at Emory University in Atlanta and an expert on politics in the modern South, thinks that for now the military is with Bush. But a change in fortune would be disastrous for the White House: “If Bush loses the military vote, he loses the election,” says Black. While the number of votes that come out of the military community, including family members and retired veterans, is relatively small in comparison to all the ballots counted on Election Day, Florida’s disputed recount proved just how critical a voting bloc it is. (As a political entity, there are roughly 2 million active-duty soldiers and reservists currently serving, not to mention their extended families. There are an additional 10 million veterans, with the largest percentage made of up of aging World War II fighters.)

More importantly, the voting bloc represents a larger civilian population, largely white, male and somewhat Southern, that today places national security at the top of its concerns. It’s a voting bloc that has become increasingly hostile to the Democratic Party in recent years.

That’s where the Democrats’ retired general comes in. “If Clark were able to pull the military his way, the likelihood is he would have greater support from the general population as a whole,” says ex-Marine Lou Cantori, who has taught at West Point and is an expert in military policies in the Middle East at the University of Maryland.

“That’s why Republicans fear him the most,” says Clark campaign advisor Mike Frisby. “He’s the one Democrat who can attract attention from that segment of the American society that care about our military and America being strong in the world.”

To be sure, Clark does not enjoy unanimous support within the military community. Last week, Clark’s former colleague, retired Gen. H. Hugh Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on 9/11, made it known that if Clark were nominated by the Democrats, “Wes won’t get my vote.” Some old Army professionals, who say Clark had the reputation as a brown-noser, joke that the applause he won upon entering the presidential race was equal to the applause he received behind his back when he exited the Army. But Hackworth, who recently posted an interview with Clark on his Web site, reports that two former three-star generals called asking for Clark contact information because they want to establish “generals for Clark” fundraising programs. “There is a certain amount of magic that comes out of West Point,” he says.

If there is any magic surrounding Clark, it stands in stark contrast to the loathing that clouds Rumsfeld’s relationship with the Army. “It’s taken on an almost mythical, urban-legend quality,” says Feaver, author of “Armed Servants,” an examination of the civilian relationship with the military. “Everybody knows somebody who heard about how Rumsfeld dissed a general.”

“This is the most anti-soldier secretary [of defense] we’ve had since Robert McNamara,” says Ralph Peters, a retired Army intelligence officer, referring to the architect of President Johnson’s Vietnam War troop buildup in the 1960s. “Rumsfeld is hated by the officer corps.”

Part of the friction stems from Rumsfeld’s obsession with transforming the “heavy” Army, equipped and trained to fight battles on the open fields of Eastern Europe, into something more modern, more agile and more responsive. He became convinced wars could be won with air power and small bands of special operations troops, not hundreds of columns of tanks.

In Iraq, a great showcase for his modern strategy, Rumsfeld got it half-right. The U.S. did not need 300,000 boots on the ground, or overwhelming force, to oust Saddam Hussein and take control of Iraq. But Rumsfeld’s transformation blueprint has fallen apart during postwar reconstruction. The Army urged him to commit 200,000 troops to oversee a nation of 25 million. Rumsfeld refused, and today, in the wake of daily attacks on American soldiers and weekly terrorist attacks, there’s near universal agreement that his Pentagon plan was a major blunder. (Rumsfeld insists the battle plan was approved by the Army; military critics say it was approved by a couple of chosen yes men.) “This administration came in with an idea of transforming the military into something — God knows what — lighter, smaller, quicker, whatever,” says Zinni. “The bill payer was going to be [Army] ground units, heavy units. And now we have a shortage of exactly what we needed out there.”

But the Rumsfeld-Army battle is not just over guns and ammo; it’s also about a feeling that the secretary and his civilian Pentagon aides hold the Army in contempt. “Within the military there’s a perception they don’t care. That they — Rumfseld and the OSP crowd — have their strategy and don’t care what the military thinks about how to conduct war in Afghanistan and Iraq,” says Nider.

One former senior military official recalls the cynical joke making the rounds inside the Pentagon just days after the Sept. 11 attacks: “If Saddam Hussein wasn’t responsible for 9/11, he should have been, because we’re going to nail him for it.” It was being told among officers who saw exactly where the administration hawks were taking the war on terrorism, regardless of whether the targets were connected to actual terrorist attacks.

According to one veteran military insider, Bush’s political guru, Karl Rove, has been briefed about the growing political problem Rumsfeld is creating among military voters, but Rove made it clear that nothing is going to change since Rumsfeld has Vice President Dick Cheney’s full backing.

Peters, a hawk on the Iraq war and a supporter of Bush’s war on terrorism, doubts Rumsfeld will hurt the president politically. “Troops compartmentalize,” he says. “One friend of mine, highly placed in Iraq and who hates Rumsfeld, who thinks he’s put troops at risk unnecessarily, he said, ‘I’d crawl over barbed wire to vote for George Bush again.’”

But for now, the frustration grows louder and louder as a traditional Republican bedrock community makes its feelings known about Bush.

Last week, Larry Syverson, a Richmond, Va., father with two military sons serving in Iraq, was featured in a full-page New York Times ad. “Donald Rumsfeld Betrayed My Sons and Our Nation. It’s Time For Him to Go,” read the headline. It called for Rumsfeld’s resignation as secretary of defense.

Also last week, Fernando Suarez, whose 20-year-old son Jesus was among the first fatalities in Iraq, told reporters, “My son died because Bush lied.”

In his Peoria Journal opinion column, the G.I. Predmore wrote: “There is only one truth, and it is that Americans are dying. There are an estimated 10 to 14 attacks every day on our servicemen and women in Iraq. As the body count continues to grow, it would appear that there is no immediate end in sight.” He added, “I can no longer justify my service on the basis of what I believe to be half-truths and bold lies.”

And at his Naval Institute address, Zinni, who served in uniform for 39 years, compared Iraq to Vietnam. Speaking of his contemporaries in the room, he said: “Our feelings and our sensitivities were forged on the battlefields of Vietnam, where we heard the garbage and the lies, and we saw the sacrifice. We swore never again would we allow it to happen. And I ask you, Is it happening again? And you’re going to have to answer that question, just like the American people are. And remember, every one of those young men and women that come back [a casualty] is not a personal tragedy, it’s a national tragedy.”

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

Bush Goes AWOL When Soldiers Need Care

September 27th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

Bush Goes AWOL When Soldiers Need Care
By George McEvoy
Palm Beach Post

Saturday 20 September 2003

“He likes war. He should go fight in a war for two days and see how he likes it.”
“I went into a public-’ouse to get a pint of beer,
The publican ‘e up and sez,
‘We serve no red-coats here.’
The girls behind the bar they laughed and giggled fit to die,
I outs into the street again an’ to myself sez I:
‘O it’s Tommy this an’ Tommy that, an’ Tommy go away”;
But it’s, ‘Thank you, Mister Atkins,’ when the band begins to play… ”

Tommy Atkins is what the British have called their typical soldier in the ranks since the Duke of Wellington coined the term in 1843. Rudyard Kipling, in his poem Tommy, wanted to show how civilians treat the military as heroes in time of war, and as drains on the taxpayers once peace is won.

The words of that old poem flashed through my mind a week ago Friday as I watched President Bush greet members of the Army’s combat-weary Third Division and welcome them back from Iraq. As the soldiers, wearing berets and camouflage fatigues, sat in bleachers at Fort Stewart, Ga., Mr. Bush strode onstage with that John Wayne walk he assumes when he’s playing soldier.

The Third Division supplied more than 20,000 troops to the Iraq war, most of them front-line combat soldiers. They saw more action than just about any other outfit. Some of them returned to the U.S. only three weeks ago.

“America is grateful for your devoted service in hard conditions,” Mr. Bush told the troops. Their applause was described as “polite.” They probably knew that some of their units already were being redeployed back to Iraq and that they probably would follow in a short while.

“You’ve made history,” Mr. Bush went on. “You’ve made our nation proud… ” And he presented the Third with a Presidential Unit Citation for “extraordinary heroism” in action.

Again, the applause seemed to lack a certain enthusiasm usually found when the president speaks to military groups. After the speech, Pvt. Kenneth Henry, 21, a Third Division radar operator with a field artillery unit, was quoted in the Los Angeles Times as saying of Mr. Bush:

“He likes war. He should go fight in a war for two days and see how he likes it.”

Mr. Bush’s military experience consists only of serving as a jet pilot with the Texas Air National Guard during the Vietnam War. But his outfit never left Texas, and he since has been accused of going AWOL for a year to campaign for a political pal of his father’s.

But what brought the Kipling poem tramp-tramp-tramping across my mind was another story that ran the same day as the one about the president’s trip to Fort Stewart. This story said that senior Republicans on the House Veterans Affairs Committee were joining with the Democrats in an attempt to keep the Bush administration from taking benefits away from disabled veterans.

Under the Bush plan, the Department of Veterans Affairs would disqualify about 1.5 million veterans, two-thirds of those now in the VA disability program.

In Kipling’s day, at least, the civilians and the government would wait until the killing fields had been quieted before deciding to act like ingrates and treat the disabled troops as a needless expense.

The Bush administration is trying to cheat the veterans while continuing to send today’s troops back into action, all at the same time, thereby creating more casualties and new disabled veterans who can be denied benefits. And don’t think the troops don’t know.

Rudyard Kipling understood the soldier’s mind as few men have, and so he wrote:

“For it’s Tommy this, an’ Tommy that, an’ ‘Tommy wait outside’; But it’s ‘Special train for Atkins,’ when the trooper’s on the tide — The troopship’s on the tide, my boys, the troopship’s on the tide, O it’s ‘Special train for Atkins,’ when the trooper’s on the tide.”

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

U.S. Soldiers Talk About the Occupation of Iraq

September 27th, 2003 by Andy in Support Our Troops

U.S. Soldiers Talk About the Occupation of Iraq
Compiled by Occupation Watch Center

July 11th, 2003

“Most soldiers would empty their bank accounts just for a plane ticket home.”
-Anonymous Army soldier in a letter to Congress, Christian Science Monitor, July 7, 2003
“Make no mistake, the level of morale for most soldiers that I’ve seen has hit rock bottom.”
-Unidentified officer from the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division in Iraq, Christian Science Monitor, July 7, 2003

“The way we have been treated and the continuous lies told to our families back home has devastated us all.”
-Unidentified soldier in a letter to Congress, Christian Science Monitor, July 7, 2003

“U.S. officials need to get our [expletive] out of here. I say that seriously. We have no business being here. We will not change the culture they have in Iraq, in Baghdad. Baghdad is so corrupted. All we are here is potential people to be killed and sitting ducks.”
-43-year-old reservist from Pittsburgh, who arrived in Iraq with the 307th Military Police Company on May 24, Washington Post, July 1, 2003

“What are we getting into here? The war is supposed to be over, but every day we hear of another soldier getting killed. Is it worth it? Saddam isn’t in power anymore. The locals want us to leave. Why are we still here?”
-Sergeant from the U.S. Army’s 4th Infantry Division, The American Cause (founded by Patrick Buchanan), June 30, 2003

“This duty is absolutely ridiculous. We are combat troops. We are trained in combat. We are not trained in peacekeeping. We should all be home by now. It’s like we won the Super Bowl, but we have to keep on playing.”
-Sgt. 1st Class Richard Edwards, Los Angeles Times, June 29, 2003

“At night time you think about all the people you killed. It just never gets off your head, none of this stuff does. There’s no chance to forget it, we’re still here, we’ve been here so long. Most people leave after combat but we haven’t. Some soldiers don’t even f****** sleep at night. They sit up all f****** night long doing s*** to keep themselves busy - to keep their minds off this f****** stuff. It’s the only way they can handle it. It’s not so far from being crazy but it’s their way of coping. There’s one guy trying to build a little pool out the back, pointless stuff but it keeps him busy.”
-Cpl. Richardson, The Evening Standard, June 19, 2003

“For me, it’s like snap-shot photos. Like pictures of maggots on tongues, babies with their heads on the ground, men with their heads halfway off and their eyes wide open and mouths wide open. I see it every day, every single day. The smells and the torsos burning, the entire route up to Baghdad, from 20 March to 7 April, nothing but burned bodies.”
-Sgt. Meadows, The Evening Star, June 19, 2003

‘’Little kids wave at us and their parents slap them in the back of the head and make them stop. It makes me feel like I wasted my time over here and they don’t appreciate what we did'’
-Spc. Anthony Combs, Associated Press, June 17, 2003

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

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