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“Faggots” and Women are Unfit for Combat: The Face of a Broken Army

16 Comments

03 October 2012

Image2Face of our Broken Army, and the Taliban's Best Friend

Grisham contacted a lawyer today, who contacted me.  This must be hitting home.  So let’s keep exposing what has gone wrong with our Army.

General (ret.) Barry McCaffrey warned us many times over the years that we are breaking the Army.  Today, it appears that we have passed that point.  Our signal-to-noise ratio now favors the noise.

The Taliban hardly needs to dress up like American Soldiers to hit our jets when enough real Soldiers do worse, all on official business.  The Army pretends to have the luxury of sending liabilities to Afghanistan who have little better to do than post on Facebook, play at being journalists, and then claim to be under combat stress.  Meanwhile, real combat troops go toe-to-toe with the Taliban 24/7.

Read more: “Faggots” and Women are Unfit for Combat: The Face of a Broken Army

Rotten Rose Petals in War

34 Comments

02 October 2012

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Brigadier General Jeffrey Sinclair recently was sent home from Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan.  Sinclair was charged by our own military with forcible sodomy (rape), inappropriate sexual relations with several female subordinates, multiple counts of adultery, stealing government money, and the list goes on.

While it is almost true in America that a man is considered innocent—in the eyes of the law—until proven guilty, the extraordinary charges made by our own military is already a death sentence for Sinclair’s current and future career.

The circumstance is demonstrative of the malignant leadership that is bringing shame to the military, while spilling blood unnecessarily on the battlefields.  Either Sinclair really did these things, or he did not do these things and is wrongly accused.  Either way, the military is covered with slime.

Slime likes to surround itself with slime so that it looks normal.  And slime oozes downhill.

Read more: Rotten Rose Petals in War

F-18 Demise

7 Comments

02 October 2012

[This came to my inbox as is; none of these images or text is mine.]

Incredible photos from last Friday's accident in Canada ( Lethbridge ). Check out the sequence of the canopy leaving the scene, the pilot in his rocket-powered seat coming out, the parachute opening sequence, and the separated seat falling away. Modern technology at its best. All of this happened in about two seconds from canopy off to the fireball.

00395-1000Check out all the smoke from the canopy rocket motors.

Read more: F-18 Demise

‘The Good War’ Has Gone Terribly Wrong

3 Comments

02 October 2012

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TexasSparkle
A blog about politics and issues with Kathleen McKinley.
(Editor's note: The author is responsible for this blog, which is not edited by the Chronicle.)

 


 

‘The Good War’ Has Gone Terribly Wrong
Monday, October 1, 2012
Written by: Kathleen McKinley

Really disturbing news out of Afghanistan that may be being overlooked with all the Presidential election news going on. The New York Times reported in August that the number of U.S. soldiers killed in Afghanistan has more than doubled since Pres. Obama took office.

From Michael Yon:

“Afghan forces are infested with Taliban suicide killers. Two more “green-on-blue” attacks have occurred in the last few days, killing six more troops.

Days ago, the Taliban executed an audacious attack on Camp Bastion in southern Afghanistan where Prince Harry is stationed. Under darkness without moon, at least fifteen attackers breached the wire, killed two U.S. Marines, and wounded numerous other people.

Read more: ‘The Good War’ Has Gone Terribly Wrong

False Sense of Something: Some observations and thoughts on the unfolding wars

16 Comments

01 October 2012

img001-1000Camp Bastion Sanger circa 2011. Camp Bastion is a major foothold in Afghanistan.

If your enemy is secure at all points, be prepared for him. If he is in superior strength, evade him. If your opponent is temperamental, seek to irritate him. Pretend to be weak, that he may grow arrogant. If he is taking his ease, give him no rest. If his forces are united, separate them. If sovereign and subject are in accord, put division between them. Attack him where he is unprepared, appear where you are not expected. - Sun Tzu, the Art of War

Despite the past eleven years in Afghanistan, U.S. ground troops are less prepared than ever for “small wars.”  We have become so dependent on gadgets and contractors that we would not know what to do without them.  Contractors provide much of the security at major bases in Afghanistan, and even on many smaller bases.

We like to use contractors because they are cheaper and politically expedient.  When they are killed by car bombs at the gates, they are not added to the only body count that Americans care about.  Leaders do not have to deal with photographs of grieving families.

Read more: False Sense of Something: Some observations and thoughts on the unfolding wars

Standing Well Back

3 Comments

01 October 2012

An excellent and thought provoking website by a British bomb expert.  We treat IEDs as if they are something new.  In fact, they have been in use probably for a thousand years.

The latest from Standing Well Back:

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For more:

http://www.standingwellback.com/home/2012/9/28/fulton-and-royal-navy-ieds-1805.html

Soldier did Not Commit Suicide

17 Comments

mark-farah-1000Major Mark Bieger with Farah. (Mosul, Iraq, May 2005.)

27 September 2012

Through time, numerous people have asked me if Mark Bieger committed suicide a couple of years after this photograph was made. The answer is NO.

At first, I dismissed the rumor because it seemed random and small. Yet apparently many people believe this. Another person just asked. The answer remains absolutely not. I talked with Mark’s wife early in the year.  He is doing fine, as expected.

Read more: Soldier did Not Commit Suicide

America’s Dumbest War, Ever

46 Comments

26 September 2012

police-1000Afghan Police in Zhari District, 2011.

Yesterday a concerned father forwarded to me a letter from his son in Afghanistan. I confirmed authenticity, and republish with permission:

Dad,

I am fed up. I cannot believe the lack of attention the recent changes in this war is receiving by the media or the country. I think I saw one thing on CNN about the following subject, but I had to dig extensively to find it. The purpose of this letter is to let you know of the garbage that our soldiers are going through right now. With this knowledge, I hope that you take action by writing your congressmen.

Read more: America’s Dumbest War, Ever

Armed Medics in Bloody Combat

13 Comments

l-ed-wooden-and-stauffer-1000Zhari District, Kandahar Province, Afghanistan (2011)

25 September 2012

Much controversy continues to swirl around the fact that our “Dustoff” MEDEVAC helicopters fly unarmed into combat.  They wear the Red Crosses, alerting the enemy that they are unarmed.  Note that this Afghan medic is armed, and wearing a Red Cross and Red Crescent.

Please see these links on the issue:

Medevac Links

Stuck in the Mud

41 Comments

24 September 2012

2011-09-23-0001-1000Chazray Clark was blown up in September 2011. His buddies posted his image on the door, and on the wall of our tent. Nearly everyone in the tent had been wounded at least once.

Before Staff Sergeant Matthew Sitton was blown up and killed in Afghanistan, he wrote to U.S. Representative Bill Young about incompetent leadership and meaningless risk-taking in this hollow war.  Matthew was on his third Afghan tour.

The Soldier’s words are emblematic of the realities and frustrations of a war that many Americans do not realize is still on.  The veteran wrote, “As a Brigade, we are averaging at a minimum an amputee a day from our soldiers because we are walking around aimlessly through grape rows and compounds that are littered with explosives.”

Read more: Stuck in the Mud

Red Air: One Year Later

8 Comments

19 September 2012

Last Friday night, 14 September, I was asleep and had a strange dream.  I was walking and a car stopped in front of me so that I could not pass.  I looked inside and it was Chazray Clark.  I said, “hey, Chazray.”  Chazray said, “let’s go.”

So we were talking, and I said to him, “you got killed by that bomb.” Chazray said something like, “keep up the fight.”  What a strange dream.  I woke up ready to fight.

Chazray was killed last September 18th during combat operations in Zhari District, Kandahar Province, Afghanistan.  The mission began with an air assault that was unopposed on the landing zone.

Read more: Red Air: One Year Later

Afghanistan: When the Moon Sets, Watch Out

26 Comments

18 September 2012

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Last Friday night, the moon phase left Afghanistan in near total darkness.  Even with clear skies, the enemy knew that at the brightest moment, the moon would only appear as an irrelevant orange sliver.  Such times are called “red illumination,” or “red illum.”  Planning calendars in Afghanistan highlight periods of red illum because they hamper aviation.

Even though this is the year 2012, and the Curiosity Rover is beaming images from Mars more than four decades after astronauts first trod on the lunar surface, the moon phase remains important when planning operations.  The moment that the nighttime attack on Camp Bastion was reported, the moon phase could have been safely guessed without looking up.

Read more: Afghanistan: When the Moon Sets, Watch Out

John Giduck Defamation Lawsuit

1 Comment

18 September 2012

John Giduck has been accused by various people of puffing up his military and experience resume.  He has responded with a defamation lawsuit that names a long list of defendants and John Does.  The lawsuit:

giduck-v-socnet-14-september-2012-1

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Killing Prince Harry: Could the Taliban do it?

29 Comments

3673-1000Base in Southern Afghanistan

17 September 2012

Afghan forces are infested with Taliban suicide killers. Two more “green-on-blue” attacks have occurred in the last few days, killing six more troops.

Days ago, the Taliban executed an audacious attack on Camp Bastion in southern Afghanistan where Prince Harry is stationed.  Under darkness without moon, at least fifteen attackers breached the wire, killed two U.S. Marines, and wounded numerous other people. 

They badly damaged two jets and destroyed six more Harriers with a reported price tag of about $30 million each.  The Harriers are no longer produced.  This is not the way our force should be downsized.  This loss is reportedly affecting ground operations.

The enemy also destroyed or damaged other facilities.  In addition to lives lost, the total destruction could easily tally $200 million.

Read more: Killing Prince Harry: Could the Taliban do it?

Important from Afghanistan

6 Comments

Two sources report similarly:

"ALL OPERATIONS ARE CURRENTLY SUSPENDED. A 3 STAR MUST APPROVE ANY ACTIONS.  ADDITIONALLY, ALL ISAF FORCES ARE TO SEPARATE FROM THEIR AFGHAN COUNTERPARTS."

END

Ground Sign Awareness: What is this about?

5 Comments

IMG 4840-1000Emplacing "IED" at night. It was dark but the sensitive camera got the moment.

08 September 2012

The first week of Ground Sign Awareness (GSA) training with the Norwegian Army is finished.  One more week to go.  We are not actually learning combat tracking, but GSA.  GSA is like the alphabet needed for the language of combat tracking.  For the most part, good GSA and other military tactics will catch most bombs that are hidden in Afghanistan.

This must be stressed: most bombs are NOT caught by dogs or billion-dollar gizmos.  Most bombs are caught because some 19 year-old Soldier says to himself, “If I were going to kill me, I would do it right here.”  And he looks, and spots the bomb, or more likely he spots something that does not feel right, so he calls back and someone is sent up and finds it.  We know that most bombs are emplaced at night.  It is very difficult to dig in a bomb at night, then lay out the trigger and wire (some are just pressure plates), and not leave obvious ground sign.

Read more: Ground Sign Awareness: What is this about?

Norway Training Day 4

6 Comments

06 September 2012

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This morning brought frost to the windshield for the first time this week.  Day by day, winter is creeping in and we can feel it.    Yesterday I was unable to publish because we trained late into the night, and started again early today.  And so please excuse the unedited dispatches, written quickly with some fatigue.  (And I have homework to do.)

In tracking, the word “sign” means any change in the natural state of the environment due to man, beast or machine.  Spoor is a Dutch word that is used in our training course to mean animal sign.  And so, when you see the word spoor, it might be moose tracks, or waste, or basically anything done by an animal or insect.  There is a lot of moose spoor out there, and we are seeing spoor from deer and other creatures.

Read more: Norway Training Day 4

Counter IED training in Norway: Day Two

9 Comments

04 September 2012

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Day two of Ground Sign Awareness (GSA) training has just come to a close.  Before I get cracking on tonight’s homework assignment, here comes a quick, unedited dispatch.  Please excuse the roughness.  Time is limited.

Today started with a short written test about yesterday’s lessons and last night’s homework.  After the quiz, there were a few hours of classroom instruction on the elements of sign, and what affects sign, such as weather, time, terrain, and spoor.  Spoor is a Dutch word, and for purposes of our instruction, spoor is caused by animals and bugs.  After that, we headed to the field and began numerous ground exercises.

Read more: Counter IED training in Norway: Day Two

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