Be INFORMED

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

U.S. Troops Caught In The Middle

George W. Bush said:

Listen, I understand Republicans and Democrats in Washington have differences over the best course in Iraq. That's healthy. That's normal. And we should debate those differences. But our troops should not be caught in the middle.

   As pointed out at the Daily Kos, he should be as concerned about our troops being caught in the middle of the civil war in Iraq.

-- Over the past six months, American troops have died in Iraq at the highest rate since the war began, an indication that the conflict is becoming increasingly dangerous for U.S. forces even after more than four years of fighting.

From October 2006 through last month, 532 American soldiers were killed, the most during any six-month period of the war. March also marked the first time that the U.S. military suffered four straight months of 80 or more fatalities. April, with 58 service members killed through Monday, is on pace to be one of the deadliest months of the conflict for American forces.

Senior American military officials attribute much of the increase to the Baghdad security crackdown, now in its third month. But the rate of fatalities was increasing even before...

    But hey, things are showing improvement because Vice Resident Cheney says so!

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Monday, April 16, 2007

Bush Speaks, Democrats Speak Back On War Funds Bill

    Resident Bush: "Listen, I understand Republicans and Democrats in Washington have differences over the best course in Iraq," Bush said. "That's healthy. That's normal, and we should debate those differences. But our troops should not be caught in the middle."

   This was that Bush clown speaking his usual bullshit only this time his photo-op included mothers and fathers and husbands and wives and the children of troops who have died in Iraq.

   Majority Leader Harry Reid had something to say about the Bush comments, of course.

   Harry Reid : "The president has a choice to make in the coming days: Cling to the discredited policies that have led our troops further into an intractable civil war, or work with a bipartisan majority of Congress to make us more secure."

"We're committed to pressing these goals to the administration until they do change course."

      Vice Resident Cheney said that he thinks the Democrats will cave into Bush's demands and will send him a clean bill, but Harry Reid had other ideas on that one also.

"The president is not going to get a bill that has nothing on it," Reid said. "It would be wrong for this legislative branch of government to capitulate to this wrong-headed policy that the vice president and the president have been leading."

  Bush also that he spoke with  P.M. Nouri al-Maliki who he said asked him to thank the military families and that Iraq would continue to work hard in the war on terror.      Source

   Yeah right! I hadn't been aware that the Bush Iraqi resident puppet and his group were fighting the war on terror. you most certainly can't tell that when you look at the number of deaths from U.S. troops and the Iraqis especially.

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Where Is The Outrage Over Women Raped By Our Military In Iraq?

Published on Monday, April 16, 2007 by CommonDreams.org

Outrageous Words, Outrageous Deeds

by Ralph Nader

Now that the Don Imus flameout has once again demonstrated that vile words energize many activist groups and many media more than do devastating deeds, it is useful to revisit this strange dimension of public furor.

The latest three word outburst in Mr. Imus’ practice of sexist and racist remarks may be compared with the continuing sexist and racist behaviors that civic opponents would argue should at the very least receive equal time from those who become indignant over cruel, bigoted language.

On March 18, the New York Times ran a lengthy cover story in its heralded Sunday Magazine about widespread sexual harassment and rape of female U.S. soldiers by their male colleagues in Iraq. Written by a reporter, Sarah Corbett, the article combined the available official studies, and statements of specialists, with poignant narratives by women soldiers whom she interviewed intensively.

The evidence she amassed included a report in 2003, funded by the Department of Defense (DOD), which declared that nearly one-third of a nationwide sample of female veterans seeking health care through the V.A. said they experienced rape or attempted rape during their service. Of that group, 37 percent said they were raped multiple times, and 14 percent reported they were gang-raped.

A change in DOD policy in 2005 allowing sexual assaults to be reported confidentially in “restricted reports” led to the number of reported assaults across the military rising 40 percent.

There are still many reasons why female soldiers are reluctant to report sexual violence, especially in combat zones. Solidarity is survival. Complaining about your superior or soldiers of comparable ranking ruptures the working hierarchy and its military mission. In addition, it is often the woman’s word against the man’s word. As one sailor told Ms. Corbett, “You just don’t expect anything to be done about it anyway, so why even try?” She said she was raped at a naval base on Guam before being deployed to Iraq.

Female soldiers coming back from Iraq relate their fears of even going to the latrines in the middle of the night for the fear of being sexually assaulted.

Sexual violence is often dismissed as fabricated, exaggerated or consensual. It is important not to tarnish many upstanding and respectful male soldiers and sailors with sweeping generalizations.

Abbie Pickett, who is a 24 year old combat-support specialist with the Wisconsin Army Naitonal Guard, told Ms. Corbett: “You’re one of three things in the military—a bitch, a whore or a dyke. As a female, you get classified pretty quickly.”

Particularly since the Tailhook episode in 1991 which involved sexual violence against women at a naval party, the Pentagon has become more concerned about such assaults. There are far more women in areas of combat now as well. Over 160,000 women have seen active duty in Iraq and Afghanistan already.

Bottom line to all the reports—official and individual—was summarized by the New York Times this way: “Many have reported being sexually assaulted, harassed and raped by fellow soldiers and officers.” (For more information see http://www.democracyrising.us)

Assault and rape are crimes, deeds of devastating impact on the lives of these young women. They are not just vile words. Yet in the month since the New York Times article was published, there has been almost no public outrage and no demands for more investigation, more corrective action, more law enforcement.

The members of Congress—women and men—have not mobilized for action. The press did not follow up on the article—“The Women’s War” by Ms. Corbett. The National Organization of Women (NOW) condemned Don Imus in no uncertain terms. They have not yet demanded multiple actions to be taken on this continuing violence against women.

Aside from the indifference of the male legislators, Congress is now graced by the largest number of women lawmakers in its history. The Speaker of the House is a woman—Nancy Pelosi. Sure, she has her hands full with the Iraq war. But this is an internal war against many women who need her leadership and her status to spark remedial or preventative action.

Words inflaming more than deeds is also too often the case when racial epithets are uttered by public figures. All those groups and civil rights leaders who conquered and ended the Don Imus media empire should ask themselves what have they done in any sustained manner, given their power and media access, about the brutality of racism by commercial interests in the urban ghettos. Deaths, injuries, disease and loss of livelihood are a daily occurrence, apart from raw street crime and drugs. Little children seriously poisoned by lead, asbestos and other toxics. Whole neighborhoods redlined without adequate corporate police protection. Predatory lending, predatory interest rates, marketing shoddy products and contaminated food proliferate.

Where have been the cries of outrage, the demands for removal of these conditions and prosecution of these crooks and defrauders? The abysmal conditions are daily, weekly, monthly. They have been occasionally reported in gripping human interest terms and statistics and maps.

If only the offenders used words, instead of committing these awful deeds. Maybe there would have been action, front page headlines and prime time television and radio coverage. If only they used words!

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Justice Department Defy's Subpoena's

  The Bush Crime Family's Department of Justice blew off giving the documents ( prosecutor purge ) to the House Judiciary Committee, which were requested by subpoena last week the DoJ had until  2p.m. today to turn them over. 

 

DOJ Fails to Comply with House Judiciary Subpoena

April 16th, 2007 by Jesse Lee  The Gavel

From the Judiciary Committee:

Justice Department Fails to Comply with House Judiciary Subpoena

(Washington, DC)- Today, U.S. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) issued the following statement in response to the Justice Department’s failure to comply with the Committee’s subpoena response deadline of 2 p.m. today. The subpoena seeks information the Department has continued to refuse to provide or has provided only in redacted form.

“We are disappointed that the Justice Department failed to produce the documents and other materials for which we issued a subpoena last week. While we understand that the Department considers this effort a priority and we plan to continue working with them, we will review all available legal options to secure compliance with the subpoena.”

  Gonzales, Bush, and Rove must have a lot to hide if they have seen fit to ignore a subpoena, but this should be no surprise since this group only acknowledges the laws that they see fit to follow, which are very few.

   Maybe the Congress can come up with law that would run much like a contempt of court law so that these hoods could be arrested until they do as they are ordered to do?

          IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Virginia Tech Death Toll At 31

    This is the worst shooting in history. This is a sad day in the United States and my heart goes out to the victim's families.

The Associated Press
Published April 16, 2007

BLACKSBURG, Va. -- A gunman opened fire in a Virginia Tech dorm and then, two hours later, in a classroom across campus Monday, killing at least 30 people in the deadliest shooting rampage in U.S. history, government officials told The Associated Press.

The gunman was killed, bringing to death toll to 31.

More HERE

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Shooting At Virginia Tech University Campus

    For those of you who haven't heard by some small chance, what appears to have been a lone gunman shot and killed 22 people and wounded 21 at the Virginia Tech University campus in Blacksburg, Virginia.  The police say that they think the shooter is now dead.

CNN

One person was killed and others were wounded at multiple locations inside a dormitory about 7:15 a.m., Flinchum said. Two hours later, another shooting at Norris Hall, an engineering building, resulted in multiple casualties, the university reported.

The first reported shooting occurred at West Ambler Johnston Hall, a co-ed dormitory that houses 895 students. The dormitory, one of the largest residence halls on the 2,600-acre campus, is located near the drill field and stadium.

The shootings came three days after a bomb threat Friday forced the cancellation of classes in three buildings, WDBJ in Roanoke reported. Also, the 100,000-square-foot Torgersen Hall was evacuated April 2 after police received a written bomb threat, The Roanoke Times reported. 

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Are The Democrats Finally Paying Attention?

Krugman: We're Doing the Dems a Favor

By mcjoan  at Daily Kos     Sun Apr 15, 2007

on 2008 elections

Looks like Krugman's been reading the blogs again. As usual, it's beyond the firewall, but here are some choice excerpts.

Normally, politicians face a difficult tradeoff between taking positions that satisfy their party’s base and appealing to the broader public.... But a funny thing has happened on the Democratic side: the party’s base seems to be more in touch with the mood of the country than many of the party’s leaders. And the result is peculiar: on key issues, reluctant Democratic politicians are being dragged by their base into taking highly popular positions.

Iraq is the most dramatic example.... It took an angry base to push the Democrats into taking a tough line in the midterm election. And it took further prodding from that base — which was infuriated when Barack Obama seemed to say that he would support a funding bill without a timeline — to push them into confronting Mr. Bush over war funding. (Mr. Obama says that he didn’t mean to suggest that the president be given "carte blanche.")
...
Health care is another example of the base being more in touch with what the country wants than the politicians. Except for John Edwards, who has explicitly called for a universal health insurance system financed with a rollback of high-income tax cuts, most leading Democratic politicians, still intimidated by the failure of the Clinton health care plan, have been cautious and cagey about presenting plans to cover the uninsured.

But the Democratic presidential candidates — Mr. Obama in particular — have been facing a lot of pressure from the base to get specific about what they’re proposing. And the base is doing them a favor.... There’s no conflict between catering to the Democratic base and staking out positions that can win in the 2008 election, because the things the base wants — an end to the Iraq war, a guarantee of health insurance for all — are also things that the country as a whole supports. The only risk the party now faces is excessive caution on the part of its politicians. Or, to coin a phrase, the only thing Democrats have to fear is fear itself.

It's hard to know what to say to that other than, "hear, hear." The Democratic base has become the majority opinion when it comes to Iraq, health care, ethics in government. The polls have been showing it for months. The netroots has been shouting it for months years. And now, maybe, our Dems are getting it.

* * * *

   It would also be nice if our Dems would get with the program and begin looking at impeaching Gonzales if he doesn't resign from his position, and then to start working their way up the ladder towards the "Coward in Chief " in the White House.

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Sunday, April 15, 2007

Dick Cheney Still Visiting the State Of Denial

"There is no question it's a very difficult assignment, but we’ve got a new commander in the field, we’ve got a good strategy in place, and I think we will soon see positive results."   Vice President Dick Cheney.... when he appeared on CBS' Face the Nation today.

"I think the Congress will pass clean legislation," Cheney said. "I don't think that the majority of the Democrats in Congress want to leave America's fighting forces in harm's way without the resources they need to defend themselves."

When suggested by CBS Evening News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer that a majority of Americans want a timetable for American troop withdrawals from Iraq, as has been voted on in Congress, Cheney said, "Well, there is also a majority that I think would prefer to have us win. And there is a fundamental debate going on here in terms of whether or not our objective in Iraq is to quote 'withdrawal' or whether our objective in Iraq is to complete the mission. And I think a majority of Americans would prefer the latter."

"There is no question it's a very difficult assignment, but we've got a new commander in the field, we’ve got a good strategy in place, and I think we will soon see positive results."

    So once again, we hear Cheney saying that we should see positive results soon. We have heard this line of crap for quite a few years now and things are still getting worse, not better.

   Cheney seems to forget that, yes, the majority of Americans would prefer a win in Iraq, but that same majority knows full well that it isn't going to happen. Cheney and Bush also know that it isn't happening.

 

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Baghdad Gets Bombed In Spite Of Crackdowns

  Once again, it was not a good Sunday for many in Baghdad as mini buses and cars and roadside bombs exploded killing some 45 people in the usual sectarian violence.

   It is so nice to see Reident Bush's new way forward ( escalation ) going so well. I actually wish that it would work but we all know that is not going to happen.

   In the mean time, two of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's officials have said that al-Sadr followers would be quitting their cabinet post on Monday. That would be six spots vacated. That may well be the straw that breaks the camel's back for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki because he then may not have enough support to stay in power. He's barely hanging on as is.   Source

   But it just gets better in Iraq because Bush/Cheney, and McCain says things are improving. Here's proof.

   Apparently a few dozen Iraqi policemen held a demonstration in front of their police station and accused U.S. troops of having been treating them like " slaves " and " animals." 

   "No, no to America! Get out occupiers!" were some of what they shouted.

    From what I have been reading as of late, things such as this are quite common. But it has been my understanding that most of the abuse has come from the private army provided by Blackwater USA. That would be the  paid mercenaries hired by Bush.

      Three American service members were killed in the bullshit today.

"The security plan has made more troubles for Iraqis than helping them," said Juma'a Khamis, 42, a technician who lives in the capital. "There have been no positive results. It's a failure, and so is the government."

Others retained hope that the campaign could carve out breathing room for Iraqi forces to regain control of the city.

"We need to build our security forces, and step by step we can achieve stability," said Nassir Amir, a 31-year-old civil engineer. "The Iraqi government is trying its best but it faces a lot of difficulties ... It needs more time — maybe one year at least."

   Did you read that? Unlike Fox News I do post both sides of the issue!

  Just thought that I would throw that in there.

 

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" General Pelosi " Preferred Over Bush

Currently, President Bush and Congress disagree about what to do about U.S. troop levels in Iraq. Who do you think should have the final say about troop levels in Iraq, the President or Congress?

President: 44%
Congress: 49%         Source

 

67. Percentage of Americans who believe that Congress should allow funding only with a time limit (58 percent) or block all funding for the war in Iraq (9 percent), according to a new CBS poll. Fully 69 percent believe the escalation in Iraq has either made conditions worse (26 percent) or made no impact (43 percent), compared to 25 percent who believe it’s made conditions better     Source

 

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Gonzales: I Didn't Do It!

   Alberto Gonzales has an op-ed piece in the WaPo just on the eve of him having to testify this week.

   Of course, he is still in denial saying that there was nothing done that was improper in the firings of the eight U.S. attorneys, blah, blah, blah.

  I guess that he hasn't read some of the emails and documents released   this past week which are saying that Mr. Gonzales is a liar. 

I know that I did not -- and would not -- ask for the resignation of any U.S. attorney for an improper reason. Furthermore, I have no basis to believe that anyone involved in this process sought the removal of a U.S. attorney for an improper reason.     Alberto Gonzales

   Better read those emails, idiot, before you go and perjure yourself.

 

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Saturday, April 14, 2007

The Truth About Vet's Disabilities Being Downgraded

   Crossposted from TruthOut

 Original

Insult to Injury
    By Linda Robinson
    US News & World Report

    16 April 2007 Issue

New data reveal an alarming trend: Vets' disabilities are being downgraded.

    In the middle of a battle in Fallujah in April 2004, an M80 grenade landed a foot away from Fred Ball. The blast threw the 26-year-old Marine sergeant 10 feet into the air and sent a piece of hot shrapnel into his right temple. Once his wound was patched up, Ball insisted on rejoining his men. For the next three months, he continued to go on raids, then returned to Camp Pendleton, Calif.

    But Ball was not all right. Military doctors concluded that Ball was suffering from a traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), chronic headaches, and balance problems. Ball, who had a 3.5 grade-point average in high school, was found to have a sixth-grade-level learning capability. In January of last year, the Marine Corps found him unfit for duty but not disabled enough to receive full permanent disability retirement benefits and discharged him.

    Ball's situation has taken a dire turn for the worse. The tremors that he experienced after the blast are back, he can hardly walk, and he has trouble using a pencil or a fork. Ball's case is being handled by the Department of Veterans Affairs-he receives $337 a month-but while his case is under appeal, he receives no medical care. He works 16-hour shifts at a packing-crate plant near his home in East Wenatchee, Wash., but he has gone into debt to cover his $1,600 monthly mortgage and support his wife and 2-month-old son. "Life is coming down around me," Ball says. Trained to be strong and self-sufficient, Ball now speaks in tones of audible pain.

    Fred Ball's story is just one of a shocking number of cases where the U.S. military appears to have dispensed low disability ratings to wounded service members with serious injuries and thus avoided paying them full military disabled retirement benefits. While most recent attention has been paid to substandard conditions and outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the first stop for many wounded soldiers stateside, veterans' advocates say that a more grievous problem is an arbitrary and dysfunctional disability ratings process that is short-changing the nation's newest crop of veterans. The trouble has existed for years, but now that the country is at war, tens of thousands of Americans are being caught up in it.

    Now an extensive investigation by U.S. News and a new Army inspector general's report reveal that the system is beset by ambiguity and riddled with discrepancies. Indeed, Department of Defense data examined by U.S. News and military experts show that the vast majority-nearly 93 percent-of disabled troops are receiving low ratings, and more have been graded similarly in recent years. What's more, ground troops, who suffer the most combat injuries from the ubiquitous roadside bombs, have received the lowest ratings.

    One counselor who has helped wounded soldiers navigate the process for over a decade believes that as many as half of them may have received ratings that are too low. Ron Smith, deputy general counsel for the Disabled American Veterans, says: "If it is even 10 percent, it is unconscionable." The DAV is chartered by Congress to represent service members as they go through the evaluation process. Its national service officers are based at each rating location, and there is a countrywide network of counselors. Smith says he recently asked the staff to cull those cases that appeared to have been incorrectly rated. Within six hours, he says, they had forwarded him 30 cases. "So far," Smith says, "the review supports the conclusion that a significant number of soldiers are being fairly dramatically underrated by the U.S. Army."

Magic Number

    In an effort to learn how extensive the problem is, U.S. News spent six weeks talking to wounded service members, their counselors, and veterans advocacy groups and reviewing Pentagon data. At first glance, the disability ratings process seems straightforward. Each branch of service has its own Physical Evaluation Boards, which can comprise military officers, medical professionals, and civilians. The PEBs determine whether the wounded or ill service members are fit for duty. If they are, it's back to work. Those found unfit are assigned a disability rating for the condition that makes them unable to do their military job. The actual rating is key, and here's why: Service members who have served less than 20 years-the great majority of wounded soldiers-who receive a rating under 30 percent are sent home with a severance check. Those who receive a rating of 30 percent or higher qualify for a host of lifelong, enviable benefits from the DOD, which include full military retirement pay (based on rank and tenure), life insurance, health insurance, and access to military commissaries.

    But the system is hideously complicated in practice. The military doctors who prepare the case for the PEBs pick only one condition for the service member's rating, even though many of the current injuries are much more complex. The PEBs use the Department of Veterans Affairs ratings scale, which grades disabilities in increments of 10-a leg amputation, for example, puts a soldier at between 40 and 60 percent disabled. The PEBs claim they have the leeway to rate a soldier 20 percent disabled for pain, say, rather than 30 percent disabled for a back injury. If rated at 20 percent or below and discharged, the soldier enters the VA system as a retiree where he is evaluated again to establish his healthcare benefits. Ball, for example, was found by the VA to be 50 percent disabled for PTSD.

    Since 2000, 92.7 percent of the disability ratings handed out by PEBs have been 20 percent or lower, according to Pentagon data analyzed by the Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission, which Congress formed in 2004 to look into veterans' complaints (Page 47). Moreover, fewer veterans have received ratings of 30 percent or more since America went to war in Afghanistan and Iraq, according to the Pentagon's annual actuarial reports. As of 2006, for example, 87,000 disabled retirees were on the list of those exceeding the 30 percent threshold; in 2000, there were 102,000 recipients. Last year, only 1,077 of 19,902 service members made it over the 30 percent threshold (chart, Page 49).

    The total amount paid out for these benefit awards has remained roughly constant in wartime and peacetime, leading disabled veterans like retired Lt. Col. Mike Parker, who has become an unofficial spokesperson on this issue, to allege that a budgetary ceiling has been imposed to contain war costs. A DOD spokesperson, Maj. Stewart Upton, said that the Pentagon "is committed to improving the Disability Evaluation System across the board and to ... a full and fair due process with regard to disability evaluation and compensation."

    Other data reveal glaring discrepancies among the military services. Even though most of those wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan have been ground troops, the Army and Marine Corps have granted far fewer members full disabled benefits than the Air Force. The Pentagon records show that 26.7 percent of disabled airmen have been rated 30 percent or more disabled, while only 4.3 percent of soldiers and 2.7 percent of marines made the grade. Services engaged in close combat, experts say, could be expected to find more members unfit for duty and meriting full retirement benefits. Instead, the Air Force decided that 2,497 airmen fall into that category while the much larger Army, with its higher tally of wounded, has accorded those benefits to only 1,763 soldiers since 2000.

    How many of these veterans' cases have been decided incorrectly? Nobody knows. These statistics show trends that are clearly at odds with what logic would dictate, but there has been no effort to discover how many of those low ratings were inaccurately conferred or to ascertain why the number receiving full benefits has declined during wartime or why there is such a discrepancy between the Air Force and the other services. But there is abundant anecdotal evidence of a process cloaked in obscurity and riddled with anomalies, and of ratings that are inconsistent and often arbitrarily applied.

    DAV lawyer Smith, for example, took on the case of a soldier whose radial nerve of his dominant hand had been destroyed, the same affliction former Sen. Bob Dole has. Like Dole, the soldier was unable to write with a pen or to button his shirt. "There is one and only one rating for that condition, which is 70 percent disability," says Smith. The PEB gave the soldier 30 percent, the lawyer said, "which I found to be fairly outrageous." Upon appeal to the Army Physical Disability Agency, the entity that oversees that service's disability evaluation process, the rating was raised to 60 percent. Smith recently took on another case, that of Sgt. Michael Pinero, a soldier who developed a degenerative eye condition called keratoconus that required him to wear contact lenses. Army regulations prohibit wearing contacts in combat, which should have made him ineligible for deployment and therefore unfit to perform his specific military duties. But the PEB ignored the eye condition, which Smith believes merited a 30 percent rating or more, and rated Pinero 10 percent disabled for shin splints. Smith has asked the Army to clarify whether it considers the regulation on contact lenses binding or, as one board member alleged, merely a guideline. Disputes over such distinctions are common in the Alice in Wonderland world of disability ratings.

    Controversy frequently surrounds decisions on which conditions make a soldier unfit for duty. Smith took issue with a recent statement made by the Army Physical Disability Agency's legal adviser, quoted in Army Times newspaper. The official said that short-term memory loss would not necessarily render soldiers unfit for duty since they could compensate by carrying a notepad. "Memory loss is a common sign of TBI," Smith said, using the abbreviation for traumatic brain injury, which has afflicted many soldiers hit by the roadside bombs commonly used in Iraq. "The rules of engagement are a seven-step process.... If a suicide bomber is coming at you, you cannot stop and consult your notepad," he added. "I find this demonstrative of the attitude that pervades the Physical Disability Agency," which is in charge of reviewing evaluations for accuracy and consistency.

    Trying to overturn a low rating can be a full-time job-and an exasperating one. Take Staff Sgt. Chris Bain, who lost the use of his arms but not his sense of humor. "They call me T-Rex because I have a big mouth and two hands and I can't do nothing with them," he jokes. He left the Army in February, but he still has plenty of fight in him. During an ambush in Taji, Iraq, in 2004, a mortar round exploded 2 feet away from him, ripping through his left arm and hand. A sniper's bullet passed through his right elbow. His buddies saved his life, throwing Bain on the hood of a humvee and rushing him to a combat hospital. Once transferred to Walter Reed, Bain refused to have his arm amputated and underwent eight surgeries to save it. That choice cost him. While an amputation would have automatically put him over the 30 percent threshold, the injury to his left arm was rated at 20 percent even though he cannot use the limb.

    Bain was angry. A noncommissioned officer who had planned on 20 or 30 years in the Army, he knew his career was over, but he wasn't going to go quietly. "I wanted to be an example to all soldiers," he said. "My job was to take care of troops." He went to find Danny Soto, the DAV representative at Walter Reed he'd heard so much about. "Danny is just an awesome guy. He took great care of me, but he should not have had to," Bain says. Soto is a patron saint to many soldiers at Walter Reed. He walks the halls, finding the newly injured and urging them to collect documents for their journey through the tortuous-and, to many, capricious-system. Many soldiers are young, and after they have spent months or years recuperating, they just want to get home and are unwilling to argue for the rating they deserve. Even though he missed his wife and three children, Bain decided: "I've already been here two years, another one ain't going to hurt me. Too many people are getting lowballed."

    With Soto's help, Bain gathered detailed medical evidence of his injuries and went to face the board. They gave him a 70 percent rating for injuries related to the blast except for his hearing loss, which was not considered unfitting since he had a hearing aid. Oddly enough, however, the board put him on the temporary disabled retirement list instead of the permanent list. "What do they think, that after three years, my arm is going to come back to life?"

    A lifetime of adjusting lies ahead for Bain. "I can't tie my shoes, open bottles of water, or cut my own food," he says. "I have to ask for help." The 35-year-old veteran has found a new sense of purpose. He's decided to run for Congress in 2008, and fixing the veterans' system is his top priority. "I do not want this s--- to happen again to anyone. No one can communicate with each other. The paper trail doesn't catch up." It's a tall order, but the soldier says that he has "100,000 fights" left in him.

    A systemic fix doesn't appear to be anywhere in sight. A March 2006 report by the Government Accountability Office found that Pentagon officials were not even trying to get a handle on the problem. "While DOD has issued policies and guidance to promote consistent and timely disability decisions," the report concluded, "[it] is not monitoring compliance." But the GAO report did spur Army Secretary Francis Harvey, who was forced to resign last month in the wake of the Walter Reed scandal, to order the Army's inspector general to conduct an investigation of the disability evaluation system. After almost a year of work, the inspector general's office last month issued a 311-page report that begins to pierce the confusion and opacity surrounding the process. While it does not determine how many erroneous ratings were accorded to the nearly 40,000 soldiers rated 20 percent disabled or less since 2000, it does make three critical points: 1) the ambiguity in applying the ratings schedule should end; 2) wide variance in ratings is indisputable, even among the three Army boards, and 3) the Army's oversight body is not doing its job.

Way Overdue

    Army officials met with U.S. News to discuss the inspector general's report. "This is something that has been near and dear to our hearts for a long time, and it's probably way overdue as far as having someone go and take a look at it," says a senior Army official. The inspector general's team found that Army policy was not consistent with the policies of either the Pentagon or the Department of Veterans Affairs. It recommended that the Army "align [its] adjudication of disability ratings to more closely reflect those used by the Department of Veterans Affairs." For years, the Army has asserted that it has the right to depart from VA standards on grounds that it is assessing fitness for duty and compensating for loss of military career, not decreased civilian employability.

    Veterans' advocates argue that federal law requires the military to use the Veterans Affairs Schedule for Rating Disabilities as the standard for assigning the ratings. But over the years, Pentagon directives on applying the schedule have opened up a whole new gray area by saying the schedule is to be used only as a guide. And the services have interpreted them in different ways, engendering further discrepancies. Soto, the DAV national service officer at Walter Reed, says that inconsistencies are especially prevalent in complex cases of traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder. "There is a saying going around the compound here," Soto says, "that if you are not an amputee, you are going to have to fight for your rating."

    The inspector general's report calls for ending the ambiguities. "What we're saying is it shouldn't be left to interpretation; it should be clearly defined," says one Army official. "If there were a way to cut down on that ambiguity, I think that variance would decrease."

    Finally, the report bluntly concludes that the system's internal oversight mechanism is not functioning. "The Army Physical Disability Agency's quality assurance program does not conform to DOD and Army policy," it says-the same conclusion the GAO came to a year ago. The inspector general's report adds evidence of just how little the watchdog is doing to ensure that cases are correctly decided. The agency is supposed to send cases to either of two review boards when soldiers rebut their rating evaluations, but from 2002 through 2005, the agency sent only 45 out of 51,000 cases to one of the boards. The other review board has not been used at all.

    The inspector general's team made 41 recommendations in all, finding among other things that the Army lacks a formal course for training the liaison officers who are supposed to guide soldiers through the PEB process, that the disposition of cases lags badly, that the computerized information systems are antiquated, and that the two key medical and personnel databases are not integrated and cannot communicate with each other. The report has been forwarded to the action team that Army Vice Chief of Staff Richard Cody convened-one of many official groups formed since the revelations of substandard conditions and bureaucratic delays at Walter Reed.

    Veterans' advocates are skeptical that the administration or the military bureaucracy will make major changes anytime soon. In testimony to Congress last month, Veterans for America director of veterans' affairs Steve Robinson recommended taking the entire ratings process away from the Pentagon and giving it to the Department of Veterans Affairs. "It's hard to ignore the fact that in time of war they are giving out less disability," he says. "Is it policy? I don't know. But it is a fact."

    Congress has not responded to this problem. Says Rep. Vic Snyder, the Arkansas Democrat who chairs the House Armed Services subcommittee on military personnel: "This whole issue of disability ratings is very complex. It is not well understood by many people, including many in Congress. That is why we set up the [ Veterans' Disability Benefits] Commission in 2004. We are hoping it will help us sort this out."

    A lot is riding on the commission. Its chairman is Lt. Gen. Terry Scott, who retired in 1997 and ran Harvard's Kennedy School of Government's National Security Program until 2001. After the Pentagon data on the disability process were presented to the commission last week, Scott said "we still don't understand the whys and wherefores" of the skewed ratings. The core problem, he believes, is that "the military was not designed to look after severely wounded people for a long time." The commission has not yet decided what changes it will recommend, but he said there is a general sense that "one physical exam at the end of service should be enough for both agencies, DOD and VA."

Cash and Staff

    Any solutions that call for transferring more responsibility to the Department of Veterans Affairs will have to be matched by enormous infusions of cash and staff. Already, the VA is reeling under a backlog of over 600,000 claims from retired veterans, which the agency predicts will grow by an additional 1.6 million in the next two years. Harvard Prof. Linda Bilmes, an economist who has published two studies on the costs of the Iraq war and the associated veterans' costs, projects that as much as $150 billion more will be required to deal with the wounded returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Meanwhile, people like Danny Soto want to know who is going to stop the military boards from giving out ratings like the 10 percent given to one soldier for a skull fracture and traumatic brain injury, when the VA later assigned a 100 percent rating. Soto is also frustrated by a recent case in which a soldier whose legs had been severely injured in a blast in Iraq was given only a 20 percent disability rating for pain and by the treatment of a man who has a bullet hole through his eye and suffers from seizures. As Soto sat with that soldier in front of the board, he asked why he had been placed on the temporary list. "At what point do you think he is going to fall below 30 percent?"

    Soto is unsparing in his criticism of the bureaucracy. "This system," he says, " is so broke." Old soldiers say the root of the problem is an Army culture that preaches a "suck it up" attitude. "If you ask for what you are due, you are perceived to be whining or trying to pad your pocket," says a retired command sergeant major. "If you're not bleeding, you're not hurt. That's what we were taught."

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At Least 289 Killed In Iraq On Saturday

   Today in Iraq, the troop surge brought these kinds of Bush improvements.

By Hussam Ali and Leila Fadel

McClatchy Newspapers

KARBALA, Iraq - Two months into the U.S.-led Baghdad Security Plan, at least 289 people were killed and injured across Iraq on Saturday, including 36 dead in a car bomb attack in the holy Shiite city of Karbala. The carnage of a crowd teeming with women and children set off an angry mob of hundreds against the governor and police.

Bodies littered the street and body parts were found as far as 160 yards from the site of the explosion. Three buses of passengers were charred and storefronts lay in shambles.

At least 167 people were injured in the bombing, but the death toll was expected to increase because of still-unidentified bodies and serious injuries, said Saleem Kadhim, spokesman for the Karbala health directorate.

   But things are improving. even John McCain says that they are.

Aqeel al-Khazaali, the governor of Karbala, blamed the Baghdad Security Plan for the attack inside the relatively safe southern city. Karbala is about 50 miles south of Baghdad.

"The Baghdad crackdown and the tribes in Ramadi are forcing the terrorists to leave their cities," he said. "Now Karbala is under fire from terrorists, and the central government has to take the necessary steps to help us to protect the holy city."

   Let's send in some more troops and really improve things!

In a phone interview Thafir al-Ani, a Sunni parliament member, said the security plan had little hope of success if it continued as a military force without a political solution. He said insurgents had learned to hit more high-profile places such as bridges and government buildings.

      Reid and Pelosi need to put impeachment back on the table and you, reader, need to tell them to do so.

 

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The Bush/Cheney Idea Of Iraq Improvements

        While Bush and Cheney insist that things in Iraq are improving, studies and facts tell a much different story.

 Crossposted from CommonDreams.org

      Saturday, April 14, 2007

The Growing Toll of Iraqi Civilian Deaths

by Dr. César Chelala

“The suffering that Iraqi men, women and children are enduring today is unbearable and unacceptable,” the director of operations of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Pierre Kraehenbuehl, stated Wednesday on releasing a ICRC report on the situation in Iraq after four years of the US-led war. Entitled “Civilians Without Protection - The Ever-Worsening Humanitarian Crisis in Iraq,” Mr. Kraehenbuehl added that the humanitarian situation is “affecting in one way or another, directly or indirectly, all Iraqis today.”

Studies of this nature have been systematically rejected by the Bush and Blair administrations. When, in October 2006, a team of American and Iraqi epidemiologists estimated that 655,000 more people had died in Iraq since the beginning of the war than would have died if the invasion had not taken place, the British foreign secretary, Margaret Becket, stated that the figures, published in the prestigious medical journal The Lancet, were inaccurate. President Bush stated that the Lancet study was not a credible report.

In contrast, however, scientists at the UK’s Department for International Development concluded that the study’s methods were “tried and tested,” and that the authors’ approach, if anything, underestimated civilian mortality. That conclusion was supported by President Bush’s own Iraq Study Group in indicating that violence in Iraq is markedly under-reported.

The new ICRC report lends added credibility to The Lancet report. Civilians, it says, many of them children, bear the brunt of relentless violence, while inadequate security conditions are disrupting the lives of millions of Iraqis. Food shortages have contributed to the rise in malnutrition; inadequate water, sewage and electricity infrastructure contribute to a decline in public health. Fuel shortages affecting power stations further aggravate the worsening crisis. Hospitals and primary healthcare centers lack supplies and are forced to rely on unreliable back-up generators,

It is estimated that some two million Iraqis are now displaced persons within their own country, while two more millions have are now refugees abroad. The Iraqi Red Crescent estimates that since February 2006, more than 100,000 families have been displaced. High among those fleeing the country are medical professionals and nurses; according to estimates published by the Iraqi Ministry of Health more than half of Iraq’s doctors have left. With fewer personnel, the additional influx of civilian casualties in the hospitals places the system under inconceivable strain.

Despite all evidence, some political leaders continue to insist that the situation is improving, as though the brutal TV images of the war did not exist, as if it were a fantasy invented by evil spirits. The chasm between the people’s view of reality and that of their leaders has rarely been greater.

The editor of The Lancet, Dr. Richard Horton, stated recently: “Our collective failure has been to take our political leaders at their word”. Senator John McCain, speaking recently to cadets at the Virginia Military Institute, affirmed that to continue the war is, indeed, to pursue the right road. And, added McCain, one of the leading contenders for the Republican presidential nomination, “it is necessary and just.” The above-mentioned facts should prove to him that it is neither.

Dr. César Chelala, an international public health consultant, is a foreign correspondent for the Middle East Times International (Australia).

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Bush Approval Rating Still down At 38%

  Most of those 38% are probably family members and household pets.

 

Here is the latest CBS News poll in PDF.

Do you think the United States should or should not set a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq sometime in 2008?

Should   57         Should not   38    DK/NA      5

Which of these comes closest to your opinion? 1. Congress should block all funding war in Iraq no matter what OR 2. Congress should allow funding only for a limited period of time OR 3. Congress should allow all funding for the war in Iraq without a time limit.

Block all funding
9

Allow only w/time limit
58

Should allow all funding
29

Don't know/No answer
4

 

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The Bush Talking Points Memo, Part 24,386.3

REMEMBER THIS: "The president is vetoing the bill to provide money for soldiers -- readiness, health care, armaments, etc and a timeline to get out of Iraq."

   So today, the Idiot in Chief was out spouting his usual bullshit about how the Democrats will be hurting the United States troops in Iraq if they do not bow down to him and provide another blank check to his war profiteering enterprise. as is his usual rhetoric, the Democrats plan for an end to this fiasco are giving "our enemies the victory they desperately want."

  This man is so pathetic that he makes me vomit every time I read his same old garbage. Him and Cheney both. If this is the best that they can come up with then it is no wonder that we have lost the support of the Iraqi people and everyone else.

   The " dumbass at large ' still says that his version of the funding is negotiable. Maybe we should give Bush a nonnegotiable transfer to a foreign prison, in Iraq.

"Instead of approving this funding, Democrats in Congress have spent the past 68 days pushing legislation that would undercut our troops. They passed bills that would impose restrictions on our military commanders and set an arbitrary date for withdrawal from Iraq, giving our enemies the victory they desperately want."  

"The longer Congress delays the worse the impact on the men and women of the armed forces will be. I recognize that Republicans and Democrats in Washington have differences over the best course in Iraq, and we should vigorously debate those differences. But our troops should not be trapped in the middle."   

"I call on members of Congress to put partisanship on hold, resolve their differences, and send me a clean bill that gets our troops the funds they need."  Source

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid had something to say about Bush's radio speech, of course.

"Democrats are continuing to fight to fully fund our troops and give them a strategy for success worthy of their sacrifices. President Bush continues to insist that we follow his same failed strategy that has drawn our troops further into an intractable civil war."    Source

  Sign the bill stupid, and the military will have most of what they need, not what they want.

   The Democrats need to seriously start the impeachment proceedings against Bush and Cheney because this is the only way that this mess is going to end!

 

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The Bush Administrations Greatest Hits

Blasts at Karbala market, Baghdad bridge kill dozens

A car bomb blast in a crowded shopping area in central Karbala, a holy Shiite city southwest of Baghdad, killed at least 43 people and wounded 55 on Saturday morning, a hospital official said. A short time later, a car bomb exploded on the Jadriya bridge spanning the Tigris River in Baghdad, killing at least 10 people, Iraqi police said.    CNN

* * * *

E-Mail Listed Possible G.O.P. Replacements for Attorneys

A Justice Department message appears to be at odds with officials’ repeated statements that no successors were selected before several U.S. attorneys were dismissed.  NYTIMES

* * * *

Shaha Ali Riza: “I have now been victimized for agreeing to an arrangement that I have objected to and that I did not believe from the outset was in my best interest.”  NYTIMES

* * * *

U.S. postpones release of alleged Iranian agents seized in Iraq

By News Agencies    Haaretz

The Bush administration decided this week that it will hold five seized alleged Iranian intelligence agents for several more weeks, at least, instead of freeing them quickly in the aftermath of last week's release of 15 British military personnel who had been taken by Iran, U.S. officials said Friday.   

* * * *

Sadr's party says split from Iraq govt inevitable  

BAGHDAD, April 14 (Reuters) - The political movement of Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr was on the verge of withdrawing from the Iraqi government because of Baghdad's close ties to Washington, a senior official in the movement

"Our withdrawal from the government is now inevitable and might take place in a matter of days," he said.   AlertNet

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Bush and Our Messed up Military

quote

- Gen. Barry McCaffrey

  I am not even going to comment on this as I could not do it justice.

   Here is a look at what the Bush people have done to our military, and this comes crossposted  from  Daily Kos

    James Kitfield is more than a war correspondent or Pentagon  or national security reporter.  He's lived and breathed military issues for many years.  No one except Kitfield has won the Gerald R. Ford Award for reporting on national defense issues more than once - he's the only two time winner in the award's history.  So, when Kitfield writes a lengthy and well sourced article on the readiness of the U.S. military, people listen (except for, naturally, the obvious tone deaf non-readers in the Bush administration's chain of command).

Why do I need to give you this introduction?  To preface the diary by credentialing Mr. Kitfield - because the story he tells isn't brought to us by some far left cassandra - and it ought to be leading every news broadcast and frontpaged above the fold in every newspaper...

This past Friday, the National Journal published Kitfield's latest article, "Army Strained to the Breaking Point".  It's a humdinger. (Note: National Journal is a paid subscription website, but the entire article is available at the above link.)  

The article is nothing short of a shocking expose of how the Bush regime has broken the Army during the regime's relatively short time in office.  Kitfield's experience in writing about military affairs has allowed him to, for perhaps the first time, conduct interviews with current and former military officials, and to actually cut through the glossy verneer that's been painted on the term "military readiness" by the Bush administration.  It's frightening.

There are a number of components that comprise an overall view of how military ground forces are ready and capable of dealing with hotspots (and potential hotspots) in various corners of the world.  In short summary, it boils down to a few categories:

Personnel recruitment, retention, and training

The support system and framework for dealing with the personal issues that all military families face

Equipment readiness

Civilian leadership and support

In every one of these areas, Kitfield's investigation concludes that the U.S. Army is exceptionally broken - and will take years, if not decades, to repair.

 

In the runup to the 1980 presidential election between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, Time Magazine published an article titled, "Point Man Harold Brown", in reference to Carter's former Secretary of Defense.  The first sentence of the article tells you everything you need to know about how much things have changed in the subsequent 27 years (or maybe, remained the same):

Has the Pentagon chief become too political?

...Brown himself has become something of an issue. Indignant Republicans charge that he has painted far too rosy a picture of the state of U.S. defenses...

The article goes on to (essentially) champion Ronald Reagan as a savior of the U.S. military.  Even Carter's own Army Chief of Staff, General Edward Meyer, was unusually candid in his assessment of military readiness as he spoke before a congressional subcommittee:

Meyer testified that he was seriously short of trained troops that could be quickly moved to Europe in case of war. Because of the lack of manpower, Meyer declared, the U.S. has a "hollow Army."

Flash forward 27 years.  Kitfield uses Meyer as a jumping off point in his article by asking Meyer the question - "Is today's war-weary Army hollow?"  Meyer responded:

"I absolutely see similar challenges confronting the Army today as we faced then in terms of stresses being placed on the force," retired Gen. Meyer told National Journal in a recent interview. "And in terms of the National Guard and Reserves, the force is even more stressed today, because in the past they were always sort of the backup we had available in case the active force got overly engaged. Today the Guard and Reserve are almost as busy as the active force. So I think the Army is stressed at this point more than in all the time I've watched it since at least the end of the Cold War."

Remember, this is the former presidential adviser who publicly took Jimmy Carter (who is a military veteran) to the woodshed for not fixing Nixon and Ford's sins fast enough.  Yes, George Bush, another Republican, has given America another "hollow army".  Kitfield notes:

If anything, equipment shortages are arguably worse today than in 1980, when the Army was recovering from Vietnam. Judging by their recent actions, Iran, North Korea, and other potential adversaries have taken note...

It's not just equipment issues, though.  Based on my own military experience, overall personnel readiness is as much an issue of "quality of life" as anything - in other words, when dad (or mom) is deployed repeatedly for long stretches, the entire family undergoes unimaginable stress.  Perhaps that's why Kitfield summarizes some rather shocking numbers:

Fort Hood is also seeing a sharp increase in demand for marriage-enrichment counseling for spouses who cannot understand why their partners are willing to leave them for a second, third, or even fourth combat tour. An Army survey revealed that soldiers are 50 percent more likely to suffer from post-traumatic stress if they serve more than one tour.

Reliable figures are not available for the mental stress put on soldiers in the 11 Army brigades that have served three or more yearlong tours in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001. However, according to a Pentagon health study released in January, the rate of binge drinking in the Army ballooned by 30 percent between 2002 and 2005, and the increase in illicit drug use nearly doubled between 1998 and 2005.

The number of soldiers who killed themselves in Iraq and Kuwait from 2004 to 2005 nearly doubled, rising to 22 from 12. Because of the strains of multiple yearlong deployments, whispers about affairs and divorces are also heard frequently at Fort Hood...

To be honest, things have changed significantly for the better since the time I served - soldiers in the field now have internet access, and can at least have occasional video conversations with their families.  Long gone are the days when someone like myself either had to pay outrageous commercial phone charges ($10 / minute or so for an international call) or wait in a long line for a limited 2 minute phone call home on a DOD line.  Even so, the stresses of being gone for very long stretches in repeated deployments wrecks families (and the distant soldier's frame of mind).  Is it any wonder that the divorce rate among military families is skyrocketing, and that military family support groups are a cottage industry?

One hole in Kitfield's piece is a summary of the number of domestic violence and suicide reports after soldiers have returned from the battlefield.  ASZ has documented quite a few of those incidents, but perhaps Kitfield didn't research these numbers, at least as a metric of military readiness, because many of these incidents have occurred after personnel have left the military.

Recruitment and retention are another topic that Kitfield addresses in some depth.  In terms of military readiness, it's a mixed bag (at least as he portrays it, but more on that in a moment).  Here's an interesting viewpoint from retired General Barry McCaffrey:

"Despite all of those gimmicks, young battalion commanders tell me that recruiting standards have slipped terribly due to waivers; drug and alcohol abuse have increased dramatically; the word has come down not to flunk anyone out of basic training; and we've increased the age limit to allow 42-year-old grandmothers to enlist in the Army," McCaffrey said. "And still there is a sense of denial of the problem in the Pentagon that I find utterly beyond belief..."

One apparent bright parameter in Kitfield's otherwise depressing article is the retention rate of personnel.  While he calls out ongoing issues with recruiting as a problem (quantity, and particularly quality), Kitfiield cites a relatively glowing appraisal of retaining trained and combat hardened veterans by Col. Larry Phelps:

Phelps acknowledges that he constantly asks himself at what point such a breakneck pace will begin to seriously damage the Army. "Is it the third tour? The fourth? I don't know," he said. "But the one metric I follow most closely is retention, because you're talking about troops who have already endured the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune during combat deployments. And yet our retention levels are the highest I've ever seen."

When I read this sentence, I had to ask myself: Did Col. Phelps ever consider why retention levels are so high?  There are two reasons - stop loss, and exceptionally high bonuses for reenlistment.  It's the Army's carrot-and-stick approach.  The fine print in any enlistment contract states that the soldier's enlistment can be involuntarily extended at any time, for any reason, at and for the convenience of the government.

Armed with that knowledge, at the end of an enlistment period, many soldiers are being given two choices: re-up for another two years and take the money, or face an indeterminate stop-loss extension anyway (and not receive any compensation).  For many soldiers living on the financial and emotional edge, it's not even a choice.  It's a WTF moment.  They sign the papers, cash the check, and head back to their units for another two years.

Sacrifice.  It's something that George Bush has never done himself, and after the events of 9/11/2001, never asked sacrifice of any American in prosecuting the global war on terror - except for the military.  

James Kitfield writes:

Senior Army officers, active and recently retired, accept part of the blame for this predicament. But some also speak of their resentment of President Bush for not putting the full force of the Oval Office behind an all-out effort to get the public to understand that it has to sacrifice to keep the wars going.

Brigadier General Stephen Mundt puts it more succinctly:

"The U.S. is not at war.  The military is at war."

As of this writing, more than 3200 men and women in uniform have been killed in Iraq.  Many, many more have been severely wounded, and will require a lifetime of care.  Yet, Donald Rumsfeld, Doug Feith, Paul Wolfowitz, Dick Cheney, George Bush, Richard Armitage, and many others in the Bush regime felt that the Iraq battle could be fought on the cheap, and be over in the blink of an eye.  Ergo, no sacrifice was required.

Certainly, Halliburton / KBR, Blackwater, Custer Battles, and many other private contractors have sacrificed nothing (except, again, for their employee's lives in some cases).  It's a win-win for the Bush regime, Big Oil, and the contracting firms who have profited handsomely from participating in the engagement.

Sacrifice?  Get the public to understand that it "must sacrifice"?  There are no Rosey Riveters in the GWOT.  There is no gas rationing as there was in WWII.  There is no seriousness to the situation at all.  The only thing that 9/11/2001 brought to the table for America was a missed opportunity - or rather, many missed opportunities that a true leader would have exploited for the long term benefit of everyone.

And that's the most tragic failure of the GWOT - America's army has once again become hollow, because of the policies of profiteering over diplomacy and actual, true, battle engagement at all levels in the chain of command.

sep

 

In the past two days, it's been announced that the National Guard will be called upon once again to supply an additional level of staffing for the war in Iraq, and that the tours of 15,000 soldiers already in the field will be extended significantly.  

While the Bush regime continues to rearrange the deck chairs on their middle eastern Titanic, more military personnel continue to die in Iraq.  As I noted the other day, the past week has been particularly bloody for U.S. forces, yet the regime continues to roll out apologists to spritz perfume on their pet pig.

There is no good ending to this story.  The Bush regime is in the process of breaking the U.S. military (if it's not already broken).  At this point, Kitfield's article is no more than well-researched and sourced documentation of issues.  As Andrew Krepinevich, a retired Army lieutenant colonel and the director of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington said:

"He also bet that the Iraqi security forces would be able to shoulder a much larger share of the burden by now, yet it's clear that they are still not ready for prime time. Meanwhile, the canaries in the mine shaft of Army readiness are dropping right and left. It's the classic dilemma for military leaders: How much calculated risk can you take with the force in order to achieve the mission and succeed in Iraq and Afghanistan, without breaking it in the effort?"

Mr. Krepinevich, some would say that the bet is already lost.  And we're all going to be paying for that losing bet for years, maybe decades, to come.

                                                                                                                     Originally posted at All Spin Zone...

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Friday, April 13, 2007

Paul D. Wolfowitz, More GOP Corruption

  Another one of Resident Bush and Dick Cheney's friends who was given a position for which he had no experience.

  As if that isn't bad enough, Paul  Wolfowitz gives a woman that he happens to be sleeping with a nice transfer and a cushy raise to go along with it.

   A $193,590 salary from $132,660 is a pretty good climb in income especially since it is all tax-free with his woman ( Shaha Ali Riza ) having status as a diplomat.

   That in itself is bad enough, but to get transferred from the World Bank to the State Department and then on to another position and to still be drawing the income from the World Bank is just a little over the top!

  This from the man ( Wolfowitz ) who is supposed to be looking into corruption in other countries who deal with or want to deal with the World Bank. That is the equivalent George Bush  running a war. It ain't going to work!

   Wolfowitz said that, “I made a mistake, for which I am sorry.”  He  got caught so now he is sorry.

   Here's another good quote from the crook. “In hindsight, I wish I had trusted my original instincts and kept myself out of the negotiations.” Source

   Mr. Wolfowitz directed the people at the World Bank to issue these raises to his girlfriend, so what negotiations would he be referring to?

  I'm sorry, I forgot. In Republican lingo, negotiating is telling someone what to do without giving them any options.

  Wolfowitz needs to resign or be fired and his girlfriend needs to reimburse the United States for the money that she has been paid since she left the job. Or Wolfowitz needs to pay it back.

 

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Thursday, April 12, 2007

Representative Brad Miller For North Carolina

  Yes, you read that correctly.  Rep. Brad Miller ( D ) may be inching towards a run at Elizabeth Dole ( R ) in 2008.

  According to Public Policy Polling, this is what the match-up looks like right now among likely voters.

Dole (R) 44%
Miller (D) 33%

Mr. Miller's problem is that he is not to well known outside of his district 13 and that has got to change. I do intend to help change that rather quickly. Dole can be beaten and, as with John McCain, she needs to be fired and let out to pasture. North Carolina needs some new, fresher blood instead of the old guard such as Dole.

   I do live in Rep. Miller's district, so I will be pushing, Hard!

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Memo From Rahm Emanuel to House Democrats

   From TPM once again.

   We have a letter from Rahm Emanuel ( chairman of the House Democratic caucus ) telling the House Democrats to stay on Bush's ass when it comes to the troop/war funding battle that is ongoing with White House war profiteers. Nancy Pelosi and the rest of the House could probably use some letters of encouragement from us out here in the fields.

Emanuel's full memo:

To: Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, Majority Whip James Clyburn, Caucus Vice Chairman John Larson

From: House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel

Date: April 11, 2007

Re: Status of the Debate over the Iraq Supplemental

As we return from the district work period, the Congress continues to have an historic opportunity to change direction in Iraq, protect and provide for American troops, and pressure Iraqis to take responsibility for their own country.

We find ourselves in a strong position because the American people support our policy objectives and our plan for Iraq, especially as they measure up against the failures of the administration’s policies. As we continue through the process of sending an Iraq spending bill to the President for his approval, we need to go beyond the debate about the funding for the war, and remind the American people of the policies we are recommending -- benchmarks for the Iraqis, support for our troops through training and equipment, and a plan for a responsible and strategic redeployment of our troops. It is also important that we remind the country of the policy position of Congressional Republicans on Iraq – their rubberstamping of the President’s Iraq policies, and their refusal to conduct responsible oversight.

This memorandum summarizes the current state of play on the Iraq supplemental, and the steps we must continue to take in the coming weeks to convey our message and position to the American people.

Where We Stand

President Bush has continued to demand Congress provide him with a blank check for an open-ended commitment of American troops in Iraq. Democrats and the American people agree that we must change direction in Iraq by providing our troops with the resources and protection they need, while planning for a strategic and responsible redeployment of US troops. Meanwhile, the President believes his attempts to ratchet up political pressure about funding the troops will persuade members of our caucus to abandon their support for the Democratic bill that changes direction in Iraq.

Although he is not saying anything new, the President's recent efforts have generated significant news coverage, but polling shows his efforts have done little to bolster his claims or generate support for his plan from the American people. Instead, the President remains incredibly weak and at odds with public opinion. Despite the attacks from the White House, nearly 70% of the American people continue to support our plan for a new direction in Iraq and a responsible, strategic redeployment of American troops over the course of the next year.

Americans Support the Democratic Plan: A Polling Update

The President and his stay the course plan are increasingly unpopular. A Time Magazine poll released a little more than a week ago found that, when given a choice, 68% of Americans endorsed a proposal to withdraw combat troops compared to 28% who favored maintaining troops in Iraq “as long as needed until the Iraqis can handle the situation themselves.” This is a clear comparison between our plan, which the American people overwhelmingly support, and the President’s plan.

Americans Oppose President Bush and His Plan for an Open-Ended Commitment of U.S. Troops in Iraq

Not surprisingly, the country continues to strongly oppose President Bush's efforts to further escalate the war in Iraq. Polling conducted by Newsweek confirms that 64% of Americans, including 62% of independents, oppose the escalation of the war. The fact that the President is changing the goalposts on the American people – now claiming the surge has only just begun, and calling up more troops even though we are three months into the escalation – and his efforts to abandon his own benchmarks for the Iraqi people only serve to frustrate the American people even more.

Bush’s job performance rating also continues to languish – he has remained at or below 35% for more than a year and is showing no signs of improvement. His approval rating streak is now in the ballpark of Richard Nixon’s in the months leading up to his resignation.

Going Forward

As we move forward, we should not lose sight of the fact that nearly 70% of the country supports our plan for Iraq. The country is more engaged in this issue than any other, and has paid close attention to the plans offered by Democrats and the President. The country has made a conscious decision to support our approach. With that support at our backs, Democrats must:

* Continue to pressure the President to negotiate with Congressional leaders on the Iraq supplemental spending bill.

* Highlight the President's stay-the-course, status quo strategy for Iraq

* Highlight the President's willingness to provide Iraq with an open-ended commitment of U.S. troops

* Emphasize the President now walking away from the benchmarks he laid out in his January speech.

* Remind the country that Congressional Republicans are willing to rubberstamp the President’s stay-the-course policies but have no plan of their own for Iraq.

Negotiating with the President While the Republicans Lack a Plan

Given the Republicans' unwillingness to offer their own alternative or plan for funding our troops and changing direction in Iraq, Democrats must remain resolute while publicly urging the President to join us for meaningful negotiations on the supplemental. While we will never reject out of hand any offer from the President to meet and discuss the supplemental, we must insist on meaningful negotiations with the White House.

Indeed, meaningful negotiation can and should move us toward a new direction in Iraq. While there are significant differences between the President and Democrats, there are areas of agreement that should offer fertile ground for negotiation and compromise. Like the President, Democrats are committed to ensuring our troops have the resources they need to succeed. The major difference is that Democrats believe the Iraqi people must meet the strategic benchmarks the President outlined in early January, while the President has walked away from those benchmarks.

If the President continues to reject these efforts to negotiate, his unwillingness to meet with Democrats and continued insistence on a blank check for the war will only further damage his standing with the American people

Highlighting the President's Mismanagement of Iraq

As we seek to negotiate with the President, Democrats must also continue to highlight the impact of the President's chronic mismanagement of the war in Iraq. The most important facets of this mismanagement are the two positions the President has taken in direct opposition to the will of the American people: 1) his willingness to provide Iraq with an open-ended commitment of U.S. troops as the violence in Iraq gets worse every day; and 2) his abandonment of the benchmarks the Iraqis need to meet to take responsibility for their own country.

Additionally, we must continue our oversight on a series of issues including the use of taxpayer dollars in Iraq and troop and veterans' health care. This aggressive oversight is necessary to improve health care for troops and veterans and discover how taxpayer dollars have been misused. Democrats pledged to bring accountability to Washington in the 2006 campaign and the American people support our efforts to keep that promise and conduct real oversight.

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    That is right Democrats. Get Up and Be Somebody!

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Was Karl Rove Deleting His Own Emails?

   From a letter to Alberto Gonzales from Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA), chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform:

According to Mr. Kelner ( RNC counsel ), the RNC had a policy, which the RNC called a "document retention" policy, that purged all e-mails from RNC e-mail accounts and the RNC server that were more than 30 days old. Mr. Kelner said that as a result of unspecified legal inquiries, a "hold" was placed on this e-mail destruction policy for the accounts of White House officials in August 2004. Mr. Kelner was uncertain whether the hold was consistently maintained from August 2004 to the present, but he asserted that for this period, the RNC does have a large volume of White House e-mails. According to Mr. Kelner, the hold would not have prevented individual White House officials from deleting their e-mail from the RNC server after August 2004.

Mr. Kelner's briefing raised particular concems about Karl Rove, who according to press reports used his RNC account for 95%o of his communications. According to Mr. Kelner, although the hold started in August 2004, the RNC does not have any e-mails prior to 2005 for Mr. Rove. Mr. Kelner did not give any explanation for the e-mails missing from Mr. Rove's account, but he did acknowledge that one possible explanation is that Mr. Rove personally deleted his e-mails from the RNC server.    ( My Emphasis )

Mr. Kelner also explained that starting in 2005, the RNC began to treat Mr. Rove's emails in a special fashion. At some point in 2005, the RNC commenced an automatic archive policy for Mr. Rove, but not for any other White House officials. According to Mr. Kelner, this archive policy removed Mr. Rove's ability to personally delete his e-mails from the RNC server. Mr. Kelner did not provide many details about why this special policy was adopted for Mr. Rove. But he did indicate that one factor was the presence of investigative or discovery requests or other legal concerns. It was unclear from Mr. Kelner's briefing whether the special archiving policy for Mr. Rove was consistently in effect after 2005.

   The hoods in the White House have been systematically trying to cover their tracks since Bush swore to uphold the laws and the Constitution! Do we really need to see any more proof of the crimes committed by these whores? Yes we do, but only for impeachment and prison sentencing when the time comes.

   If they have a problem getting those emails back, point them to the ad below!

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WaPo Editorial Page Still Playing Politics

     We have so much new un-ethical things to look at this evening that I do not even know where to start! All may not be quite un-ethical but hiding in the Bush Crime Family shadows is close enough.

   I am referring to Liz Cheney and The Washington Post slamming Nancy Pelosi in an op-ed piece that Cheney submitted today. For those of you who may not be aware of it, Liz Cheney is the daughter of Vice President Dick Cheney, and she should have been identified as such by the Post.

   The Washington Post has been a non-stop supporter of the Bush/Cheney regime when it comes to the war in Iraq, mainly in the editorial page, so this is no shock but it is quit questionable.

   Talking Points Memo points out that this op-ed piece is similar to  one submitted by Dick Cheney himself.

    Of course Fred Hiatt, the editorial page editor sees nothing wrong with the omission.

   TPM email the following question to Mr. Hiatt:

Given that Vice President Dick Cheney has been one of the leading critics of Pelosi on a variety of fronts, and given that Mr. Cheney's administration is in the midst of an extremely high-stakes political battle with Pelosi over the future of Iraq, what is the justification for not identifying Ms. Cheney as the Veep's daughter?

   And Hiatt's response:

We published Liz Cheney's piece based on her qualifications as a former high-ranking State Dept. official with oversight of Near Eastern Affairs. I don't believe qualified professional women need to be identified by their husbands or fathers, even when well-known.

   A conflict of interest never occurred to Mr. Hiatt, I guess.

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66% Say More Law Enforcement For Illegal Aliens, 45% Say High Corruption In The White House If Clinton Becomes President

   Here is an interesting poll for you from Judicial Watch-Zogby:

    66% of likely voters- including majority of Hispanics- support using more law enforcement to stop illegal immigration.

   While we are speaking of polls:

According to New Judicial Watch – Zogby Poll : 45% of Likely Voters Concerned there will be “High Levels of Corruption in the White House” if Hillary is Elected President

    Overall, 26% of likely voters are “very concerned,” and 19% are “somewhat concerned” there will be “high levels of corruption in the White House” if Hillary is elected president, including approximately one in five Democrats (18.8%).

• A total of 42% of likely voters describe Hillary Clinton as “very corrupt” (17%) or “somewhat corrupt” (25%), including 21.2% of the Democrats likely to vote.

• 36% of likely voters agree with the statement:  “If Hillary Clinton is elected president, Bill Clinton cannot be trusted to behave honestly in the White House.”

• 69% strongly agree with the statement that “corruption is a significant problem in Washington.”  An additional 24% “somewhat agree” with the statement.

• More than three in four (78%) agree that bigger government leads to more corruption.

   I wonder how Mrs. Clinton will react to this bit of information and what her campaign managers will do to change this outlook by the voters.

    45% is a high number to have to overcome and it will not be tough since she is pretty much cast as not having any type of personality.

 

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