COL Gene COL Gene

IRAQ IS A DISASTER

IRAQ IS A DISASTER

Time to GET OUT!




Within the past 24 Hours the following events have been reported:

43 Iraqis were found shot execution style.

Iraq people cheer when a British helicopter is shot down in Basra and stone the British troops attempting to reach the crash site.

Four more explosions were reported killing 17 and injuring 44 more.
We are headed for another record level of deaths in May

The atrocities we saw under Saddam are continuing the only difference is which side is inflicting the killing. The elections that were to bring stability took place four months ago and the violence continues without improvement.

It is time to allow the Iraqi people decide what is to become of Iraq. Our continued presence is NOT solving the conflict among the three factions in Iraq. All we are doing is sustaining more deaths, injuries and spending money that would be far better spent on the needs of Americans.
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Reply #26 Top
Failure to obey your commanding officer and violation of regulations are MAJOR issues especially for a Commissioned Officer. Failure to report for drills was also a serious issue during Vietnam. There is also a mandatory board of inquiry required when a pilot is grounded for failure to take a REQUIRED physical. For some unexplained reason that mandatory board of inquiry in the case of Lt Bush either did not take place as required or the report is mission. I wonder HOW THAT HAPPENED.

Military discipline is essential and Bush did not obey either regulations or the directions of his commanding Officer. Do not tell me those are not serious issues!
Reply #27 Top
There is also a mandatory board of inquiry required when a pilot is grounded for failure to take a REQUIRED physical.


This is false, at least according to my Air Force fighter pilot source.

I'm sure Bush's boots weren't polished to a high enough shine for you, either, Gene, but none of your allegations withstand scrutiny. Just because you huff, puff & bluster doesn't make any of it true. It only makes you look more foolish and shows how blinded you are by your disdain for someone you clearly consider beneath you. How does a mind get as tightly shut as yours, anyway?
Reply #28 Top
Daiwa

Your source is NOT correct. There was such a requirement for a board of inquiry. Training a pilot is and was an expensive operation. Ask yourself this simple question-- WHY would a reasonable person risk the serious consequences that Lt Bush risked by not taking a Simple Physical? It is not as if that physical could not have been rescheduled if there was a legitimate conflict on a particular day. They are given EVERY day of the work week in the military. Why after Lt Bush was ordered by his CO to take the physical, apart from being REQUIRED by Air Force Regulations, did Lt Bush not just take the physical? The only rational answer is Bush was on Drugs and that would have showed up if he took the required physical. Testing positive for drugs would not have been something Bush or his Father's friends could have kept quiet.

When Bush ran for office, he signed a statement that he had not used drugs back to 1975. Why did h not certify that he was drug free at least back to when he was a pilot i.e.1968-73? There is a reason why GWB did not take that physical. That reason is not that it was JUST INCONVIENT!

http://dir.salon.com/story/news/feature/2004/04/27/bush_guard/index.html?pn=1


Bush's flight from the Guard
Why was he abruptly grounded from flying? Why did he leave the Texas Guard two years early? A key report answering those questions is still missing from George W. Bush's records.
By James C.
Pages 1 2 3 4
April 27, 2004 | The story keeps changing. And regardless of what the White House says about George W. Bush and his time in the Texas Air National Guard, journalists tend to accept the explanation. I can't. The president of the United States is lying to hide his behavior while he was a young pilot during the Vietnam War, and he has almost taken away reporters' ability to get the whole story. Unfortunately, the national media have other distractions, and they apparently don't think the Guard story is important enough to warrant additional effort. I think they are wrong.
The president's behavior while under oath to serve in the military is an important matter. By George W. Bush's own admission, there were at least eight months in 1972 when he was not performing assigned Guard duty. What if today's Guard members behaved as irresponsibly as Bush did during his hitch? Where would our war on terrorism be if they all acted as capriciously as he did and they took off to go do something else while they were still under oath to serve? That's what the records prove George W. Bush did. Aren't there young Americans in Iraq, who have been called to active duty in a war zone, who would rather be in Alabama?
The president and his staff are doing a very good job of convincing the public he has released all of his National Guard records and that they prove he was responsible during his time in Alabama and Texas. But the critical documents have still not been seen. The mandatory written report about Bush's grounding is mysteriously not in the released file, nor is any other disciplinary evidence. A document showing a "roll-up," or the accumulation of his total retirement points, is also absent, and so are his actual pay stubs. If the president truly wanted to end the conjecture about his time in the Guard, he would allow an examination of his pay stubs and any IRS W-2 forms from his Guard years. These can be pieced together to determine when he was paid and whether he earned enough to have met his sworn obligations.
The narrative trail of the president's time in the Guard isn't easy to follow, and I have been pursuing it since Bush ran for governor of Texas in 1994. When he began planning his race for the presidency, a few journalists filed Freedom of Information requests for Bush's retained records at the Texas National Guard Headquarters at Camp Mabry in Austin. The file they received contained 160 pages. Dan Bartlett, now the White House communications director, who was working for the campaign at that time, said that represented the entirety of the record. However, when the Bush administration provided White House reporters with the "complete" file in the dead-news zone of a Friday night in early February, there were about 400 pages. Two hundred forty pages, unavailable to us during the presidential campaign, had suddenly been discovered. Nonetheless, the most important documents were still missing. Reporters just didn't know what was absent.
In April of 1972, the young lieutenant made a unilateral decision that he was no longer going to fly. Although he had taken an oath to serve for six years in his privileged position in the Texas Air Guard, George W. Bush left for Alabama two years before his hitch was up. Taxpayers had spent close to a million dollars training him to fly a fighter jet, but he was intent on working in a U.S. senate campaign. Bush's Guard file shows that he did not request a transfer until a few months later, and it was turned down. Bush, who was due to report to his Houston air base for a physical on or before his July 6 birthday, failed to return from Alabama. He was subsequently grounded on orders from Maj. Gen. Francis Greenlief. And this is where the mystery begins.
Next page: Bush's archived Guard records were vetted twice before being released publicly
Taking away a pilot's wings was not a minor decision. During the course of investigating this matter over the past decade, I was told by numerous Guard sources that pilots simply did not skip their physicals for any reason. Bush may have thought this was a good strategy for getting out of his obligation to the Guard. However, there had to be an investigation into his grounding. Normally, a formal board of inquiry would have been convened to examine the pilot's failure to keep his physical status current. At a minimum, a commanding officer would have been expected to write a narrative report on why one of his pilots had been taken off the flight duty roster. Either that report, or the findings of the board of inquiry, would then be sent to the Air Reserve Personnel Center in Denver and to the Texas Guard headquarters in Austin. A pilot simply did not walk away from all of that training with two years remaining on his tour of duty without a formal explanation as to what happened and why. This narrative report is the document the public has never seen and the Bush White House is unlikely to ever release. Disciplinary action taken against Bush ought to be a part of his personnel record. No such files have ever been disclosed.
When the Bush campaign began pressuring Sen. John Kerry to release his complete military file, Bartlett spoke as though Bush were occupying the moral high ground on the issue. "The president made a pledge before the American people, and he made his complete file available to the media and the public," Bartlett told the Boston Globe. "They were able to review all of his medical records." Bartlett, who acted as liaison between Gov. Bush's administration and the Texas Guard, has insisted all of the president's service points documents, performance sheets, and any existing records have been made public. This is, of course, patently not true. There is nothing that offers a report of disciplinary action against the young pilot, nor has anyone seen pay stubs or a total retirement-points sheet.
And there are simple explanations as to why those documents disappeared. If the materials were ever provided to reporters, it would be an uncomplicated exercise to determine whether Bush served enough time to have met his legal obligation. We would also learn if his grounding was a product of inappropriate behavior for an officer, and if, in fact, the rumors of excessive use of alcohol and drugs played a role in his loss of flight status.
Unlike lawyers, journalists pay little attention to concepts like chain of custody for evidence. In the case of the president's Guard records, whoever possessed them and had the motive and opportunity to clean them up is a critical question. When Bush left the Guard about a half year early to attend Harvard Business School, his hard-copy record was retained in a military personnel records jacket at the Austin offices of the Texas Guard. Eventually, those documents were committed to microfiche. A copy of the microfiche was then sent to the Air Reserve Personnel Center in Denver and the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis. Those records are considered private, and they cannot be released to anyone without the signature of the serviceman or woman. The White House has never indicated that Bush has signed the authorization form. And this is what prompts unending suspicion.
The documents given to Washington reporters were printed from one of those two microfiches. According to two separate sources within the Guard who saw the printout and spoke with me, the microfiche was shipped to the office of Maj. Gen. Danny James, commander of the Air National Guard Bureau in Arlington, Va. James' staff printed out all of the documents on the film and then, according to those same sources, James vetted the material. Subsequent to being scrutinized by James (who commanded the Texas Guard and was promoted to Washington by Bush,) the records were then sent to the White House for further scrutiny prior to release to the news media.
Next page: "Clean up the governor's files and remove any embarrassments"
Bush's flight from the Guard
Pages 1 2 3 4
This is a considerably different process from what was practiced by Sen. John McCain during the 2000 presidential campaign. McCain, who spent several years in solitary confinement during the Vietnam War, was the target of a whispering campaign during the South Carolina primary. Political reporters, who suspected the story originated with Bush political strategist Karl Rove, were being told by third parties that McCain had mental problems that made him a presidential risk. McCain signed a release form, and his entire record, a stack of papers more than a foot tall, was made available to reporters without being vetted by the campaign. The allegations about his mental health died shortly after McCain authorized full disclosure.
The Bush administration is playing semantic games with the public regarding the president's Guard files. While Bartlett insists they have been released, there is no proof that Bush has even signed a release-authorization form. The limited release of those 400 pages may have been over his signature. However, the White House is clearly deciding what papers to share and what to keep private. No one has ever seen proof that the president did sign the necessary release forms, and officials at the Denver and St. Louis records centers are no longer commenting. If the president did write his name on the necessary forms, why not share that with the public? It would be a positive indication that he was in favor of the flow of information about his Guard years, and it could be expected to have a positive political effect.
Even if Bush had cleared the public viewing of his entire file, he ought not to have shipped it to James for printing and examination. According to Lt. Col. Bill Burkett, who was a strategic planning officer for the Texas National Guard during Bush's gubernatorial administration, James ordered a cleanup of the Bush Guard files in 1997. Burkett said he was waiting outside James' office when he heard a speakerphone conversation between the commander of the Texas Guard and Joe Allbaugh, Bush's chief of staff in Texas. Recounting the conversation, Burkett said he heard Allbaugh tell James to "clean up the governor's files and remove any embarrassments in case he wants to run for reelection or something higher."
"Karen [Hughes] and Danny [Bartlett] are going to be coming out to take a look at this file," Allbaugh said. "They're going to write a book."
In a telephone conversation with me late last year, James denied the conversation ever occurred. Burkett, nonetheless, said James repeated the orders the next morning around the coffee machine while Burkett, James and two other officers were having a conversation. I leaked Burkett's story to the national media shortly after filmmaker Michael Moore described the president as a "deserter" and set off a furor. White House reporters suddenly began asking questions and the Bush administration was compelled to respond. Allbaugh went on NBC News with correspondent Norah O'Donnell and called Burkett "some goober from West Texas."
But Burkett's story fits with what we know.
About 10 days after he overheard the conversation, Burkett said he was led to the museum on Camp Mabry by an old friend, Chief Warrant Officer George Conn. According to Burkett, he and Conn came upon Gen. John Scribner, who was standing next to a 10-gallon gun-metal-gray wastebasket. Scribner had the military personnel records jacket of George W. Bush open in front of him and was sorting through papers it contained.
"What are you doing?" Conn is said to have asked.
"Just going through this," Burkett recalled Scribner answering. "It looks like they are going to have to reconstruct this out of Denver."
In Burkett's recollection of this meeting, Conn took Scribner aside to talk and Burkett went through papers that had been placed in the trash. He said he saw critical documents, such as retirement and cumulative-points records, being discarded. He was unable to determine if the report on Bush's grounding was in the trash.
Scribner, who is now retired, refused to take questions from me. However, when the story broke nationally, he denied the incident.
"I have no memory of anything like that taking place," he said.
Burkett, though, had already taken up his claims about the Bush file cleansing in official channels, and there was earlier evidence to corroborate his claims. He had written a letter to Texas State Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, and, in testimony before legislators, spoke of numerous irregularities in the Texas National Guard. But no one wanted to hear it. The hometown boy, George W. Bush, was running for president, and everyone was getting on the bus.
Next page: "They contacted all of Bush's commanders and friends to make sure they would all stand by Bush"
Bush's flight from the Guard
Pages 1 2 3 4
A few years later, Dave Moniz of USA Today spoke with Burkett about allegations that the lieutenant colonel had witnessed a senior official at the Guard removing documents from Bush's military personnel records jacket. Burkett again said the papers bearing Bush's name were being dropped into a wastebasket. Conn, in interviews with Moniz, confirmed Burkett's description of events for the paper. For whatever reason, Moniz's editors chose not to run the story.
The key to proving Burkett's allegations was Conn. I contacted him in Europe via e-mail. He was nonresponsive to my inquiries. Conn did, however, offer a character reference on Burkett to Ralph Blumenthal of the New York Times, which described Burkett as truthful and honorable. Conn wasn't the only one who felt that way. Harvey Gough, another Texas Guard officer, recalled being told about the Bush file incident by Burkett right after it happened, and several others within the Guard attested to Burkett's integrity. Conn, in fact, had stuck by Burkett throughout his Texas senate testimony on Guard malfeasance, in his letter to the state senator, and while serving as a source for USA Today's eventual report. In seven years, Burkett's story has never changed. The only thing new is Conn's failure to support his friend. Why?
Conn is a civilian employee of the U.S. Army in Germany. The White House can pull any number of levers to influence his comments. Conn, undoubtedly, had reason to worry about his employment if he stuck by Burkett. Burkett, however, understands what he is confronting. He still considers Conn a friend. "But I can't expect him to give up his life for me over this," Burkett told me.
In an interview with the Boston Globe, Conn said Burkett's memory was inaccurate and no such encounter had ever happened. Reporter Michael Rezendes failed to explore why Conn may have decided not to back up Burkett. In a half hour conversation with me, Rezendes ended up using one terse quote in his piece where I described the standoff as a classic "he said, she said." He did not tell his readers all of the people I interviewed about Burkett's claims. Rezendes' piece was ultimately posted on the Bush/Cheney campaign Web site because it did such an effective job of discrediting Burkett.
A writer's job includes connecting the pieces. I told Rezendes that a combination of facts made Burkett's story believable. Reporters had discovered there were documents missing from the Bush file in Austin. Combine that fact with Karl Rove's history of deceptive political tactics, Burkett's impeccable reputation as an officer and a man, and his story is worth telling, even after Conn withdrew his affirmation of events. The information speaks for itself, and rather loudly. Burkett is in poor health, living on the edge of the desert in West Texas, and trying to enjoy his retirement after 28 years of service in the National Guard. His wife was an organizer in the state for Republican presidential candidate John McCain. Burkett is uncomfortable on camera, and, as a result of a virus contracted while on duty in Panama, is subject to physical collapse. This is hardly the profile of a man who would choose to make up a story and take on the White House.
Burkett's story about the manipulation of Bush's "retained record" has never changed nor has he ever wavered in its retelling. And the "retained record" of Bush's time in the Texas National Guard is what reporters were using to write their first stories on the presidential candidate. If it had been cleaned up, as Burkett alleged, the only place to find the complete file would be on the microfiche. This is undoubtedly why the president has not simply ordered the entire file printed out and released without restriction to news media outlets. The paper records, which may explain the grounding and prove the president did not serve sufficient time to meet his legal obligation to the Guard, have likely been removed from the Austin files. But the microfiche has the whole truth, and that's why its dissemination is being controlled.
The irony in all of this is that I am largely responsible for reducing access to those records. During the 1994 Texas gubernatorial race between Ann Richards and George W. Bush, I was a panelist on the only televised debate between the two candidates. The question I chose to ask Bush first was about the National Guard. I had lost friends in Vietnam, and many of them had tried to get into the Guard. We were all told that there was a waiting list of up to five years. The Guard was the best method for getting out of combat in Vietnam. You needed connections. George W. Bush had them.
"Mr. Bush," I said. "How did you get into the Guard so easily? One hundred thousand guys our age were on the waiting list, and you say you walked in and signed up to become a pilot. Did your congressman father exercise any influence on your behalf?"
"Not that I know of, Jim," the future president told me. "I certainly didn't ask for any. And I'm sure my father didn't either. They just had an opening for a pilot and I was there at the right time."
Maybe. But it's more likely he was there at the right time with the right name. Col. Buck Staudt, who ran the air wing in which Bush served, had filled his "champagne unit" with the politically connected and wealthy. The sons of U.S. Sens. Lloyd Bentsen and John Tower of Texas were in that unit, along with the son of Texas Gov. John Connally and the two sons of Sidney Adger, George H.W. Bush's closest friend in Houston. I should have let that speak for itself.
"As soon as you asked that question," one Guard officer told me, "they went about the business of building their alternative story. They contacted all of Bush's commanders and friends from that time to make sure they would all stand by Bush."
And, undoubtedly, Rove and company went to work on cleaning up the files. The stonewalling on this is still succeeding. Reporters calling the National Guard offices in Arlington and the Pentagon are being told the staff is no longer authorized to speak about the president and his time in the Guard. One national reporter, who is still trying to get to the bottom of the controversy, told me the White House said they were not going to talk about the Guard matter any further.
And, sadly, the questions have stopped.

Reply #29 Top
When Bush ran for office, he signed a statement that he had not used drugs back to 1975. Why did h not certify that he was drug free at least back to when he was a pilot i.e.1968-73? There is a reason why GWB did not take that physical. That reason is not that it was JUST INCONVIENT!


Got "any" proof at all for this? Or is this just another of your flights of fantasy?


Your source is NOT correct. There was such a requirement for a board of inquiry.


Now you know more than someone who is currently in and a pilot to boot. The key here is semantics. You say at the moment that there "was" such a requirement. Yet your "original" assertion was is that there "is" such a requirement.

There is also a mandatory board of inquiry required when a pilot is grounded for failure to take a REQUIRED physical


Find something else to hammer on, will ya? Dems are NOT going to get control of congress in September. So you're stuck with the GOP running things until at least 2008! Maybe even longer
Reply #30 Top
drmiler

The Order grounding Bush is on the Web. It clearly states it is because he did not take a REQUIRED PHYSICAL.

The copy of his OER is also on the Web that states, He was not observed attending drills and could not be evaluated.

Air Force Regulations REQUIRE either a board of Inquiry or a Formal Report by the Pilot's Commanding Officer as to WHY the pilot was grounded and did not take the PHYSICAL.

Please give me ONE GOOD REASON why Bush did not take the mandatory physical.

The statement about not using drugs was reported before the 2000 election.

The other issue is that when his records were released on Microfiche by DoD, they went to Bush and then were released. The records that are missing are as follows:

The report of the Board of Inquiry or the Formal report from his CO as the reason for him not taking the physical and being grounded.

The retirement point summary. Some have said he attended drills at other times to get the minimum drills to qualify for a GOOD RETIREMENT Year. The fact is that a pilot must attend twice that minimum in order to maintain Flight Qualifications.

The third document that is missing is the Order from the CO of Bush (the famous fake on CBS) that the secretary said she did type. Although the copy used by CBS was NOT the original, such a document did exist as proven by the secretary that said she typed it. There must be someone that has screen that order to be able to make the fake that CBS Used.
Reply #31 Top
The third document that is missing is the Order from the CO of Bush (the famous fake on CBS) that the secretary said she did type. Although the copy used by CBS was NOT the original, such a document did exist as proven by the secretary that said she typed it. There must be someone that has screen that order to be able to make the fake that CBS Used.


You undermine yourself so well, ignoring inconvenient facts, imagining non-facts into existence out of thin air and relying on unproven assumptions, I don't need to add a thing. Your own words are the best rebuttal.
Reply #32 Top
This crap of an article is still going? We do we keep trying to prove anything to Col who's head has enough missing screws to build a battle ship but none of the holes are designed to let anything in. The guy desperately searches the internet looking for anything, anything he can use to put Bush down. Regardless of what website it is. This is pointless and a waste of bandwith. Col is not a debater, he's the president of the All American Bush Bashing Clan. What a waste.
Reply #33 Top
Gene,

In that same 24 hour period -
BOMBMAKERS IN MOSQUE BLOW THEMSELVES UP

Release Date: 5/7/2006

Release Number: 06-05-07P

Description: BAGHDAD, Iraq – An explosion occurred in the basement of the Sheik Abdel Kader mosque at approximately 6 p.m. May 7 in Rusafa, a neighborhood of east Baghdad.

According to the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Brigade, 6th Iraqi Division the bomb exploded in the basement of the mosque causing a fire.

The Iraqi fire department responded and began suppressing the fire when firefighters noticed an improvised explosive device inside the mosque.

The Iraqi police explosive ordinance disposal team arrived at the mosque to clear the holy site of bombs and bomb making materials. The team dismantled six IEDs.

Initial reports indicate that two terrorists were wounded and another one was killed in the blast.

Iraqi army officials are engaging local leaders to gain more information about the mosque and activities occurring there

and,

Title: FIVE SUSPECTS DETAINED IN SERIES OF RAIDS

Release Date: 5/7/2006

Release Number: 06-05-07PP

Description: BAGHDAD, Iraq – Coalition forces detained five suspects and killed an unknown number of terrorists May 5 in a series of raids at approximately 6 p.m. in the vicinity of Samarra. As the troops moved to intercept a vehicle occupied by three suspected al-Qaida associates, the assault force simultaneously took small arms fire from a nearby house. While the troops positioned to stop the car, armed men exited the house, two carrying shoulder-fired rocket launchers and one firing a light machine gun. The forces quickly neutralized the threat emanating from the structure, located approximately 20 kilometers southwest of Samarra, with small arms and rockets fired from supporting aircraft.

The troops then detained the three suspects located in the vehicle, finding two AK-47s, ammunition, two improvised grenades and one hand grenade.

The forces were then provided another location of a second, related vehicle occupied by suspected al-Qaida associates; two more detainees were taken after the troops stopped the vehicle approximately 15 kilometers east of the first intercepted automobile.

Troops later searched the safe house discovering mortar rounds and grenades.

One of the five suspects detained is believed to be a senior al-Qaida associate. All are currently being questioned for their level and involvement in terrorist activity.

and,

Airmen share lunch, love with local elderly

By Staff Sgt. Lara Gale
376th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan -- Olga finished school 70 years ago. After graduating, she became a teacher of Russian, German and finally mathematics for more than 30 years. She has so much to share about that time, but today, she has fewer and fewer people to hear her stories. Brothers and sisters, husbands and children have passed on or moved too far away to visit.

That’s why lunch with the American Airmen is such a treat, said Tech. Sgt. Victoria Querido.

Thursday, Sgt. Querido led her final trip of the rotation, with a dozen Airmen from the medical group and chaplain’s office here. The trip included a stop at the store, as always, where the Airmen pitched in to buy three large bags of groceries, and a stop at the offices of Babushka Adoption.

Babushka Adoption sponsors more than 700 babushkas and dedushkas – grandmothers and grandfathers – in Kyrgyzstan. It’s not uncommon to see elderly people asking for handouts on the streets in this post-Soviet nation. Since the collapse of the Soviet economy, elderly people who have worked all their lives and once earned or anticipated earning a government pension have seen their pensions decrease to often less than $20 a month. Babushka Adoption seeks out those elderly most vulnerable – those with medical problems, those without family or friends to help – and supports them financially and socially.

Sgt Querido’s group supports 20 of the agency’s babushkas, bringing them money, clothing, food, and comfort items like blankets and linen.

The material and financial assistance is important, said Sergeant Querido, but what the women seem to appreciate the most is the love and friendship shared during the group’s bi-monthly lunch outings.

“They really appreciate everything we do for them, you can see it in their eyes,” she said. “The only time they ever get to be with people, and touch and give hugs is when we visit with them. Their husbands are all dead. A couple of have sons or daughters, but most of them don’t see people unless they’re from the foundation.”

Five at a time attend the lunches, though half are unable to attend at all because of health or other issues that make travel difficult. Sgt. Querido arranges a driver to pick them up and transport them to a Bishkek restaurant.

Thursday, the meeting place was a Turkish restaurant. As the babushkas arrived, they found the Airmen they recognized and squeezed them tight, exchanging Russian greetings before finding seats at the table. Interpreters intermingled, translating as discussions about the past emerged from the small talk.

My grandmothers have all passed,” said Major Valerie Johnson, who will take responsibility for the Babushka focus group when Sergeant Querido leaves in a few weeks. “So I really love being with these women, it makes me feel like I’m with them again. I can’t give to mine anymore, but I can give to these babushkas.”

Sgt. Querido said the first meeting was difficult, because they reminded her of her grandmother who has passed, but once she really knew them she loved them like her own, she said. “I can’t say enough about them, I really love them,” she said.

Before they parted ways Thursday, every Airman had been kissed and every babushka had been given a colorful gift bag and a set of sheets. Nobody seemed ready to finish their time together.

“We give, but it’s not much compared to their need, and compared to what they give to us,” said Sgt. Querido

KIRKUK, Iraq – Bastogne Soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division advised soldiers from the 2nd Battalion, 4th Iraqi Army Division during a cordon and search mission near Kirkuk, Iraq, May 7, resulting in the capture of nine suspected members of a terror cell.

As Soldiers from the 1st Brigade Combat Team provided oversight, Iraqi soldiers moved into the targeted residence in the village of Tawilah, just outside Kirkuk. Inside, they found the five suspects they were looking for; members of a local terror cell responsible for making and emplacing improvised explosive devices. The five suspects, along with four other individuals who were in the home at the time, were taken to a U.S. military compound in Kirkuk.

Iraqi security forces continue to take giant strides in their ability to provide security in the region of Kirkuk. In a ceremony just last week, the ISF were given responsibility for security in a major portion of Kirkuk City. This is the second transfer of responsibility in the region since Bastogne Soldiers arrived in Iraq last September.

Oh and yo may want to read this http://www.centcom.mil/sites/uscentcom1/Iraq%20Reconstruction%20Weekly/20060505%20Weekly%20Iraq%20Reconstruction%20Update.pdf a weekly report put out by the Corps of Engneers over in Iraq outlining all the project in progress and such. You forgot to mention all that..
Reply #34 Top
ShadowWar

It's a shame that all that stuff will fall on death ears with Col. His mind is set only to receive data that conforms to his agenda, all else is ignored, deleted or behind a firewall.

Good stories.
Reply #35 Top
There are many good things our troops are doing. It is not our troops that are wrong it is the President who sent them to a WAR that served no purpose of protecting America. That does not alter the fact that the death and injuries continue and there is no outlook that says the sectarian violence will be brought under control.

This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings. Two days ago 43 we found shop in the back of the head. These are the police WE ARE TRAINING. The people are so fearful on them they are turning to local self defense squads. There are the people we are training to take over and stop the killing! What has happened is we have allowed the majority element in Iraq to begin killing the minority elements. THE same tactics as Saddam used jut a different group inflecting the killing!
Reply #36 Top
This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings. Two days ago 43 we found shop in the back of the head. These are the police WE ARE TRAINING. The people are so fearful on them they are turning to local self defense squads. There are the people we are training to take over and stop the killing! What has happened is we have allowed the majority element in Iraq to begin killing the minority elements. THE same tactics as Saddam used jut a different group inflecting the killing!


You talk as if you were there when you're not. So there are a few people here and there murdering, probably some Iraqi cops, maybe some Iraqi military people, that does not mean the entire Iraqi military force and the entire Iraqi Police dept are all murderers and criminals. That is what you portray when you open your mouth and garbage comes out like this article. You do not point out the few incidents as things that happen from a few nut cases, you portray it as the entire Police dept or Military Force and that's where we get upset with you. everyone here knows that bad things happen in Iraq, but we don't ignore the good things like some of you do. Even with all the crime and power the US has, people still want to come here. It's just the way things are. Iraq will never stop having murders unless they change their entire lifestyle, but we can at least show them the way to a better lifestyle low in crime and abuse.

There are many good things our troops are doing. It is not our troops that are wrong it is the President who sent them to a WAR that served no purpose of protecting America. That does not alter the fact that the death and injuries continue and there is no outlook that says the sectarian violence will be brought under control.


Anything good that comes out of Iraq is just as much part of Bush as everything bad that you like to point out. Don't try to keep Bush out of the all-good-things-from-Iraq loop. He is responsible for everything that goes on there that our military is involved in. If innocent people die, Bush is responsible, if innocent people are saved Bush is responsible. You can't give point to who you want Col. Grow up already.
Reply #37 Top
Charles.C

The Good that has come out of Iraq compared with the harm is the problem. To have paid with over 2,400 dead, 18,000 injured and what may well be a Trillion dollars for the benefits is a BAD DEAL. That is what the VAST MAJORITY of Americans think. They do not agree with the war and DO NOT think it will make us safer.

THE news story about the police did not say nor did I say all or even the majority of the police are killing the Iraq People. However, even Gen Casey has acknowledged that some of the police are killing Iraqi people AND THAT IT IS A PROBLEM!
Reply #38 Top
The Good that has come out of Iraq compared with the harm is the problem.


No, it's what you consider a problem. The real problem is that people like you only focus on the bad and ignore the good. You think the bad outweighs the good, it's probably true, but to ignore any good at all and only report on the bad stuff is the real problem here.

To have paid with over 2,400 dead, 18,000 injured and what may well be a Trillion dollars for the benefits is a BAD DEAL.


Ever heard of the saying you can't have your cake and eat it too? How do we know that all of this was not worth it? Iraq is still undergoing changes. For some reason people like you think that these kinds of changes happen over night and can be done with no problems at all. Look at all the wars that happened here in within the US, so many deaths, so many problems, but we overcame them and now look at us. We are a great nation, sure we are having some problems today but who doesn't have them? How are people suppose to change when they are not given the chance? How do we expect this world to become a better place when we still have dictators and cruel people in charge of other peoples lives? I say if the death of a few can make a difference in the world and they are willing to give their lives, then I say it's not a lose, it's not a waste, it's not a bad deal. I would agree with you if these soldiers were being forced to fight and die, but they are not. They signed up cause they wanted to and they continue to fight cause they believe in what they do.

That is what the VAST MAJORITY of Americans think. They do not agree with the war and DO NOT think it will make us safer.


Let me tell you something Col in words that you can understand, YOU DO NOT, I REPEAT, DO NOT SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. WHEN YOU TALK, YOU TALK FOR YOUR OWN OPINION. READ EVERY POLL YOU WANT, THEY CAN NEVER TRULLY EXPRESS THE TRUE FEELING OF EVERY AMERICAN, I TIRE AND BORE OF YOUR MISSION TO SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY AS IF YOU WERE SOMEHOW PICKED BY THEM. CAN'T YOU FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE HAVE AN OPINION OF YOUR OWN?

THE news story about the police did not say nor did I say all or even the majority of the police are killing the Iraq People.


No Col, the way you express yourself when writing an article explains the situation according to how you see or read it. Here is an example of what I mean:

This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings.


You do not specify the few cops that are doing the supposed execution style killings, you don't even say the rouge cops, you just say "from the Police", that means they hide from the entire Police force. That is how you portray it. Do you understand now?

However, even Gen Casey has acknowledged that some of the police are killing Iraqi people AND THAT IT IS A PROBLEM!


Some is a lot of people, it maybe be a few but this is a situation that the Gov't of Iraq must deal with. To find those who are abusing their powers and punish them, like jail. We have bad cops here in the US, there are tons of them. Does that make us like Iraq? Sure they may not execute people all over the place, but the things they do can easily be compared. Stop nit-picking already. This is getting rediculous. you couldn't see a good thing in Iraq if 95% of the population said it to you.
Reply #39 Top
The Good that has come out of Iraq compared with the harm is the problem.


No, it's what you consider a problem. The real problem is that people like you only focus on the bad and ignore the good. You think the bad outweighs the good, it's probably true, but to ignore any good at all and only report on the bad stuff is the real problem here.

To have paid with over 2,400 dead, 18,000 injured and what may well be a Trillion dollars for the benefits is a BAD DEAL.


Ever heard of the saying you can't have your cake and eat it too? How do we know that all of this was not worth it? Iraq is still undergoing changes. For some reason people like you think that these kinds of changes happen over night and can be done with no problems at all. Look at all the wars that happened here in within the US, so many deaths, so many problems, but we overcame them and now look at us. We are a great nation, sure we are having some problems today but who doesn't have them? How are people suppose to change when they are not given the chance? How do we expect this world to become a better place when we still have dictators and cruel people in charge of other peoples lives? I say if the death of a few can make a difference in the world and they are willing to give their lives, then I say it's not a lose, it's not a waste, it's not a bad deal. I would agree with you if these soldiers were being forced to fight and die, but they are not. They signed up cause they wanted to and they continue to fight cause they believe in what they do.

That is what the VAST MAJORITY of Americans think. They do not agree with the war and DO NOT think it will make us safer.


Let me tell you something Col in words that you can understand, YOU DO NOT, I REPEAT, DO NOT SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. WHEN YOU TALK, YOU TALK FOR YOUR OWN OPINION. READ EVERY POLL YOU WANT, THEY CAN NEVER TRULLY EXPRESS THE TRUE FEELING OF EVERY AMERICAN, I TIRE AND BORE OF YOUR MISSION TO SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY AS IF YOU WERE SOMEHOW PICKED BY THEM. CAN'T YOU FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE HAVE AN OPINION OF YOUR OWN?

THE news story about the police did not say nor did I say all or even the majority of the police are killing the Iraq People.


No Col, the way you express yourself when writing an article explains the situation according to how you see or read it. Here is an example of what I mean:

This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings.


You do not specify the few cops that are doing the supposed execution style killings, you don't even say the rouge cops, you just say "from the Police", that means they hide from the entire Police force. That is how you portray it. Do you understand now?

However, even Gen Casey has acknowledged that some of the police are killing Iraqi people AND THAT IT IS A PROBLEM!


Some is a lot of people, it maybe be a few but this is a situation that the Gov't of Iraq must deal with. To find those who are abusing their powers and punish them, like jail. We have bad cops here in the US, there are tons of them. Does that make us like Iraq? Sure they may not execute people all over the place, but the things they do can easily be compared. Stop nit-picking already. This is getting rediculous. you couldn't see a good thing in Iraq if 95% of the population said it to you.
Reply #40 Top
The Good that has come out of Iraq compared with the harm is the problem.


No, it's what you consider a problem. The real problem is that people like you only focus on the bad and ignore the good. You think the bad outweighs the good, it's probably true, but to ignore any good at all and only report on the bad stuff is the real problem here.

To have paid with over 2,400 dead, 18,000 injured and what may well be a Trillion dollars for the benefits is a BAD DEAL.


Ever heard of the saying you can't have your cake and eat it too? How do we know that all of this was not worth it? Iraq is still undergoing changes. For some reason people like you think that these kinds of changes happen over night and can be done with no problems at all. Look at all the wars that happened here in within the US, so many deaths, so many problems, but we overcame them and now look at us. We are a great nation, sure we are having some problems today but who doesn't have them? How are people suppose to change when they are not given the chance? How do we expect this world to become a better place when we still have dictators and cruel people in charge of other peoples lives? I say if the death of a few can make a difference in the world and they are willing to give their lives, then I say it's not a lose, it's not a waste, it's not a bad deal. I would agree with you if these soldiers were being forced to fight and die, but they are not. They signed up cause they wanted to and they continue to fight cause they believe in what they do.

That is what the VAST MAJORITY of Americans think. They do not agree with the war and DO NOT think it will make us safer.


Let me tell you something Col in words that you can understand, YOU DO NOT, I REPEAT, DO NOT SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. WHEN YOU TALK, YOU TALK FOR YOUR OWN OPINION. READ EVERY POLL YOU WANT, THEY CAN NEVER TRULLY EXPRESS THE TRUE FEELING OF EVERY AMERICAN, I TIRE AND BORE OF YOUR MISSION TO SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY AS IF YOU WERE SOMEHOW PICKED BY THEM. CAN'T YOU FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE HAVE AN OPINION OF YOUR OWN?

THE news story about the police did not say nor did I say all or even the majority of the police are killing the Iraq People.


No Col, the way you express yourself when writing an article explains the situation according to how you see or read it. Here is an example of what I mean:

This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings.


You do not specify the few cops that are doing the supposed execution style killings, you don't even say the rouge cops, you just say "from the Police", that means they hide from the entire Police force. That is how you portray it. Do you understand now?

However, even Gen Casey has acknowledged that some of the police are killing Iraqi people AND THAT IT IS A PROBLEM!


Some is a lot of people, it maybe be a few but this is a situation that the Gov't of Iraq must deal with. To find those who are abusing their powers and punish them, like jail. We have bad cops here in the US, there are tons of them. Does that make us like Iraq? Sure they may not execute people all over the place, but the things they do can easily be compared. Stop nit-picking already. This is getting rediculous. you couldn't see a good thing in Iraq if 95% of the population said it to you.
Reply #41 Top
The Good that has come out of Iraq compared with the harm is the problem.


No, it's what you consider a problem. The real problem is that people like you only focus on the bad and ignore the good. You think the bad outweighs the good, it's probably true, but to ignore any good at all and only report on the bad stuff is the real problem here.

To have paid with over 2,400 dead, 18,000 injured and what may well be a Trillion dollars for the benefits is a BAD DEAL.


Ever heard of the saying you can't have your cake and eat it too? How do we know that all of this was not worth it? Iraq is still undergoing changes. For some reason people like you think that these kinds of changes happen over night and can be done with no problems at all. Look at all the wars that happened here in within the US, so many deaths, so many problems, but we overcame them and now look at us. We are a great nation, sure we are having some problems today but who doesn't have them? How are people suppose to change when they are not given the chance? How do we expect this world to become a better place when we still have dictators and cruel people in charge of other peoples lives? I say if the death of a few can make a difference in the world and they are willing to give their lives, then I say it's not a lose, it's not a waste, it's not a bad deal. I would agree with you if these soldiers were being forced to fight and die, but they are not. They signed up cause they wanted to and they continue to fight cause they believe in what they do.

That is what the VAST MAJORITY of Americans think. They do not agree with the war and DO NOT think it will make us safer.


Let me tell you something Col in words that you can understand, YOU DO NOT, I REPEAT, DO NOT SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. WHEN YOU TALK, YOU TALK FOR YOUR OWN OPINION. READ EVERY POLL YOU WANT, THEY CAN NEVER TRULLY EXPRESS THE TRUE FEELING OF EVERY AMERICAN, I TIRE AND BORE OF YOUR MISSION TO SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY AS IF YOU WERE SOMEHOW PICKED BY THEM. CAN'T YOU FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE HAVE AN OPINION OF YOUR OWN?

THE news story about the police did not say nor did I say all or even the majority of the police are killing the Iraq People.


No Col, the way you express yourself when writing an article explains the situation according to how you see or read it. Here is an example of what I mean:

This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings.


You do not specify the few cops that are doing the supposed execution style killings, you don't even say the rouge cops, you just say "from the Police", that means they hide from the entire Police force. That is how you portray it. Do you understand now?

However, even Gen Casey has acknowledged that some of the police are killing Iraqi people AND THAT IT IS A PROBLEM!


Some is a lot of people, it maybe be a few but this is a situation that the Gov't of Iraq must deal with. To find those who are abusing their powers and punish them, like jail. We have bad cops here in the US, there are tons of them. Does that make us like Iraq? Sure they may not execute people all over the place, but the things they do can easily be compared. Stop nit-picking already. This is getting rediculous. you couldn't see a good thing in Iraq if 95% of the population said it to you.
Reply #42 Top
The Good that has come out of Iraq compared with the harm is the problem.


No, it's what you consider a problem. The real problem is that people like you only focus on the bad and ignore the good. You think the bad outweighs the good, it's probably true, but to ignore any good at all and only report on the bad stuff is the real problem here.

To have paid with over 2,400 dead, 18,000 injured and what may well be a Trillion dollars for the benefits is a BAD DEAL.


Ever heard of the saying you can't have your cake and eat it too? How do we know that all of this was not worth it? Iraq is still undergoing changes. For some reason people like you think that these kinds of changes happen over night and can be done with no problems at all. Look at all the wars that happened here in within the US, so many deaths, so many problems, but we overcame them and now look at us. We are a great nation, sure we are having some problems today but who doesn't have them? How are people suppose to change when they are not given the chance? How do we expect this world to become a better place when we still have dictators and cruel people in charge of other peoples lives? I say if the death of a few can make a difference in the world and they are willing to give their lives, then I say it's not a lose, it's not a waste, it's not a bad deal. I would agree with you if these soldiers were being forced to fight and die, but they are not. They signed up cause they wanted to and they continue to fight cause they believe in what they do.

That is what the VAST MAJORITY of Americans think. They do not agree with the war and DO NOT think it will make us safer.


Let me tell you something Col in words that you can understand, YOU DO NOT, I REPEAT, DO NOT SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. WHEN YOU TALK, YOU TALK FOR YOUR OWN OPINION. READ EVERY POLL YOU WANT, THEY CAN NEVER TRULLY EXPRESS THE TRUE FEELING OF EVERY AMERICAN, I TIRE AND BORE OF YOUR MISSION TO SPEAK FOR THE VAST MAJORITY AS IF YOU WERE SOMEHOW PICKED BY THEM. CAN'T YOU FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE HAVE AN OPINION OF YOUR OWN?

THE news story about the police did not say nor did I say all or even the majority of the police are killing the Iraq People.


No Col, the way you express yourself when writing an article explains the situation according to how you see or read it. Here is an example of what I mean:

This AM on my Web Site was another story that said groups of Iraqi people are forming defense squads to protect themselves from the Police that are conducting execution style killings.


You do not specify the few cops that are doing the supposed execution style killings, you don't even say the rouge cops, you just say "from the Police", that means they hide from the entire Police force. That is how you portray it. Do you understand now?

However, even Gen Casey has acknowledged that some of the police are killing Iraqi people AND THAT IT IS A PROBLEM!


Some is a lot of people, it maybe be a few but this is a situation that the Gov't of Iraq must deal with. To find those who are abusing their powers and punish them, like jail. We have bad cops here in the US, there are tons of them. Does that make us like Iraq? Sure they may not execute people all over the place, but the things they do can easily be compared. Stop nit-picking already. This is getting rediculous. you couldn't see a good thing in Iraq if 95% of the population said it to you.
Reply #43 Top
System is going crazy. Maybe it's a good thing, they say repetition is the key to success, though it doesn't work for Col.
Reply #44 Top
Charles.C

I think the system knows just how much BS you put out.

I NEVER SAID I spoke for ANYOINE but myself. However, Poll after Poll and political commentator, both GOP and democratic say the same thing, there is only a small percent of the people that support the Iraq war. Bush has about 31% of the population in agreement with him and his policies. Congress is at 25%. Sounds like a change is coming in November 2006!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Reply #45 Top
OK so your saying you agree the Congress, both GOP and Dem suck worse than Bush?? Right? So why do you only pick on Bush? Start writing about the Congress and all the crap they are doing (or better not doing).
Reply #46 Top
Congress has rubber stamped what Bush has wanted. I consider BOTH Bush and the GOP in Congress at fault for not solving ANY of the issues that need fixing:

Social security
Medicare
Iraq
The Deficit and growing debt
Tax Cuts to the wealthy and Big Oil
Lack of Border security
Lack of an Energy Policy that moves us to energy independence
No Progress in education
Very little progress to rebuild after Katrina
No solutions for 46 Million without health care
Creation of jobs that pay far less and have fewer benefits
Growing Trade Deficit.

Bush and the GOP in Congress have either created the problem (Iraq and the deficit) or they have allows existing problems to get worse. We need a change in policy starting in Jan 2007 after the November election.
Reply #47 Top
Until you have served in the military, KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT.

As to my military service, you and Bush are the cowards. He is great at sending other peoples children into harms way but when it was his time he got Daddy to get him into in the National Guard which in 68-73 was the BEST WAY to stay out of Vietnam. I was Regular Army for 4 years and the only reason I was not sent was because I was given a very sensitive assignment which I did not request. Don't you DARE call me a coward you ASS. For 30 years I was subject to defending my country and I did not ask or received any preferential treatment like Bush received! (18 additional exclamation points removed)

Hey ASS I served two years in Europe and that is when I was a Nuclear Weapons officer. It was the policy of the military not to assign people like me with the sensitive knowledge gained from that assignment to combat. I did not do anything to avoid service in Vietnam like your President George. I also EARNED my HONORABLE DISCHARGE unlike you BOY! You have no concept of the responsibility that my assignment carried. DROP DEAD YOU SCUM!

This is hilarious and too good to pass up. Wow, Charles really had the COL going there, didn't he? Great job of calling Gene out, Charlie boy. Let me see if I can help call a spade a spade.

The Army of George Washington was a rag tag outfit that fought what at that time was an unconventional type of warfare. They attacked when they should no have attacked and did not stand in line with red coats on so they were targets. WHAT HAPPENED? That rag tag army defeated the MOST POWERFUL force at the time. They were fighting for something they believed in and drove out the occupying force. Sound Familiar.

My analogy was to show how a smaller military using unconventional tactics can be effective. That is just what took place in 1776- 1781.

Seems that COL Gene feels he can compare the insurgent scum who are murdering our troops and innocent Iraqi people to the revolutionaries who freed our nation from British tyranny all he wants. Then if someone impugns his patriotism, Gene's nose gets bent all outta shape and he trots out his service record to prove that he's a true blue American.

Any idiot can see where your true intentions lie, Gene.

You clearly want to see our troops killed so it can prove that you were right about Bush all along. You would love to rub the blood of thousands of soldiers in GWB's face if you had the chance.

Because that's what you do every time you paste another headline onto your blog. You dance on the corpses of dead American soldiers so that you can feel good about yourself. Are you disloyal? You bet. You are disloyal to America, your branch of service, your uniform, your eagle that sat on your collar, your pension check, your fellow Americans, and every poor JoeUser who has to see your worthless, incendiary headlines on your macabre blog every day.
Reply #48 Top
For the record, US Army, active duty. 1999-2005. Sergeant, 15th Military Intelligence Bn, Fort Hood TX.


Honorably discharged 30 September 2005.

Impugn this.
Reply #49 Top
For the record, US Army, active duty. 1999-2005. Sergeant, 15th Military Intelligence Bn, Fort Hood TX.


Honorably discharged 30 September 2005.

Impugn this.


Can I add one to it?

US Navy, active duty. 1975-1981 Second class petty officer, VAW 123 (E-2C Hawkeye squadron) Naval Air Station Norfolk, VA attached to USS Saratoga CV-60.

Honorably discharged June 15 1981.

Eat that one col!
Reply #50 Top
Oh Oh me too!!

US Army, 3rd INfantry Div (Rock of the Marne Boys!!), 981st MP co, Nuclear Weapons Recovery Unit. 84-87, Honorably Discharged and Disabled to boot!!

Currently a speaker for the US Army Recruiting Unit, North Central Florida.

Hooooahhhhhh Dave!! BTW Col. of what? Why do we call him that??