That's going to generate some heat. It's been nice having your Middle East dispatches, but I think you'd better dust off your Spanish.
Thanks for the attention to this issue. Hopefully you have made enough of a splash that it will eventually be addressed.
Thanks for the attention to this issue. Hopefully you have made enough of a splash that it will eventually be addressed.
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This commment is unpublished.Wow for sure: Right on: Michael. it is one thing to be "right", but another thing to be vociferous about it. These things have a bad habit of making the troops think. You know that they ere trained to think in a very special way, i.e. smart. But nagging about deficiencies gets under the skins. Thinking about your topic will no doubt distract the guys from thinking smart. They will start thinking when they should be reacting.
You are getting a bit squirrely. If you do "generate some heat" you will be the one to feel it.-
This commment is unpublished.In working on a Memorial for the fallen heroes of Afghanistan & Iraq (www.NorthwoodMemorial.com)we discovered that roughly 5% of the names on the official casualty lists are misspelled. I tried for 2 months with dozens of phone calls to the DoD and each military branch to get anyone to care. Only when I threatened to take the issue public with the conservative blogosphere and flood then Secretary Gates' email inbox with email complaints and news coverage did I get any traction.
When reason and quiet "diplomacy" don't work, then you are left to build a coalition that can make noise and raise the issue publicly to get the job done.
This is too serious a matter to allow it to be swept under the rug, or to vilify the messenger (which is happening in several circles).
If Obama REALLY supports the troops he'd haul the Joint Chiefs of Staff into the Situation Room and demand that they stay put until this is solved with a unified policy.-
This commment is unpublished.I honestly doubt it has anything to do with Obama supporting the troops or not. The last time the Red Crosses were respected was by the Germans during WW2, but the Japanese set the trend, so if Obama would be judged for not getting rid of the markings, well then no president has supported the troops since around WW1.
Still, it really ought to get tended to, sharpish!-
This commment is unpublished.I apologize for my snark. We are just inundated daily in every medium with loosely cloaked campaign dreck about how much Michelle Obama and Jill Biden LOVE the troops and their families and it is their first concern every day. I was just sayin' that taking real action regarding the safety of the wounded speaks more loudly than a hundred campaign outings on the topic.
From other reports, it appears that there are multiple layers of internal power struggles happening behind the scenes - some of which may be decades in the forming. Having been personally in contact with Chazray Clark's widow, I'm pretty confident that she couldn't care less who in the US Army "owns" the skies. What matters to her is that her husband might still be alive today if Army policy didn't keep its rescue copters grounded unnecessarily long.
This is life and death stuff here, and the President be made aware of this problem and he should act to have it resolved.-
This commment is unpublished.Hear hear! If only a fraction of the time spent by politicians over the last 60 or so years to make it look like they are genuinly concerned with the welfare of the troops had been spent on actually doing something to improve their welfare, then this would've been resolved before Chazray was even born and wouldn't have left him waiting for more than an hour when advanced medical help was needed from the instant he was wounded.
But then again, getting rid of obsolete markings doesn't look as good for politicians as a couple of pictures of them with veterans and their families in the papers. Couple that with the potential political backlash (claims of endangering the wounded when you remove the Red Crosses) and most politicians will probably feel that saving the lifes of people they don't even know isn't worth even a minor setback in their career.
Politicians. We can't live without them, and we can't live with them. -
This commment is unpublished.Further re: RE: Mr — in_awe
"From other reports, it appears that there are multiple layers of internal power struggles happening behind the scenes - some of which may be decades in the forming."
How about this? The 2nd WW was fought in part by the US with an Army, Navy, Marines etc., and the Army Air Force would you believe? The discombobulation was solved by the formation of the US Air force.
Is it impossible to combine the efforts of all the present medic fleets with one master-coordinated Field Recovery Force, fully armed-piss on the conventions when necessary-and move immediately on call-Force?? Am I thinking too clearly here? I see a whole lot of frontliners in this discussion, with obviously hurtful memories of the noise. If you were Panetta today, what would you do? -
This commment is unpublished.
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