September 16, 2008

Another Example of the "Truth"

Comedian Al Franken is running as a Democrat to take Republican Norm Coleman’s place in the US Senate. To that end, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee is running the following ad:

I feel for these people. They need our prayers.

One problem, however: Norm Coleman wasn’t in the Senate when The Authorization of Use of Military Force against Iraq was agree to on October 11, 2002. Coleman wasn’t sworn in until January 7, 2003.

For using these poor people and lying to them, Al Franken and the DSCC deserve a…stern talking-to.

And...Godspeed to Major Stuart Anderson.

(Thanks to Hot Air)

August 26, 2008

'I am the Surge'

Vets for Freedom produces an ad demanding that the Democratic Party--specifically its leader, Barack Obama--acknowledge the success of Iraq Surge and, therefore, its authors, the United States Armed Forces:

Senate Resolution 636

(Thanks to Hot Air)

July 29, 2008

Milblogs TV: Anbar Rising

Part 1
Part 2

July 25, 2008

The Landstuhl Visit That Wasn't (UPDATED)

It turns out that Barack Obama had originally intended visit to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center--which is near Ramstein Air Base, Germany--but canceled the visit because the Pentagon did not want to pay for a campaign event for the senator.

The Obama camp said they canceled the event after the Pentagon ruled it was a campaign event, and needed to be funded from the senator’s election kitty.
“Senator Obama did not want to have a trip to see our wounded warriors perceived as a campaign event when his visit was to show his appreciation for our troops and decided instead not to go,” Obama advisor, retired Gen. Scott Gration, said in a statement.
To be sure, the Pentagon authorities were happy about the cancellation, since they are loath for anyone to use injured troops as campaign props.
The Obama campaign’s chief spokesman, Robert Gibbs, said: “The senator decided out of respect for these servicemen and women that it would be inappropriate to make a stop to visit troops at a U.S. military facility as part of a trip funded by the campaign.”
Granted this is a valid concern, but I bet that the Pentagon would have paid for the visit had Obama skipped the “We Are the World” campaign speech in Berlin.

But there was never any chance of that happening.

Am I being unfair? Maybe. But neither the candidate nor the campaign has shown that either is capable of making a decision that does not put Obama's self-promotion first.

Next stops for the candidate: Paris and London.

UPDATE: As I suspected, the Obama campaign canceled the visit because the military wouldn't allow him to be photographed with injured troops. Predictably, some news and blogging outlets are reporting that it was the Pentagon who did the canceling. Wrong. The DOD simply imposed preconditions that Obama didn't like.

(Thanks to reader 'me')

PREVIOUSLY: C-in-C Preview

July 21, 2008

Milblogs TV--Episode One

(Thanks to Mudville Gazette, of course)

July 11, 2008

Coming Home

To Rest.

Foutyjimenez
The Department of Defense announced the deaths of two soldiers previously listed as missing.

Fourteen months after they were kidnapped in Iraq, the remains of two American soldiers have been found.

The Pentagon said that the remains of Army Sgt. Alex Jimenez [r.] and Pvt. Byron Fouty were found Wednesday, south of Baghdad.

Jimenez was 25 years old at the time of his capture, Fouty was 19.

They were both kidnapped during an ambush in May of 2007.

July 04, 2008

How They Spent Their Fourth of July

...and the 21st century's 'Greatest Generation' follows suit: 1,215 troops re-enlist in Baghdad.

“You and your comrades here have been described as America’s new greatest generation, and, in my view, you have more than earned that description,” [MNF-I commander General David] Petraeus said. “It is the greatest of honors to soldier here with you.”
What else need be said?

(Thanks to Hot Air)

June 26, 2008

Move America Forward Telethon

To raise money for Biggest Care Package Shipment Ever to the troops.

Happening NOW.

Site

June 05, 2008

USAF Leadership "Invited to Resign"

Let's just bend over, put our heads between our legs and kiss our own individual a**es goodbye.

Or have faith and believe that Someone is having mercy on us. Why? Because of what might have happened but didn't.

From Wired's Danger Room:

The Air Force's top civilian and uniformed leaders are being booted out of the Pentagon. Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael "Buzz" Moseley has resigned. Secretary Michael W. Wynne is next.

The move, initially reported by Inside Defense and Air Force Times, isn't exactly a shocker. The Air Force has come under fire for everything from mishandling nukes to misleading ad campaigns to missing out on the importance of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Most importantly, the Air Force's leadership has been on the brink of open conflict for months with Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England. That's because in the halls of the Air Force's chiefs, the talk has been largely about the threats posed by China and a resurgent Russia. Gates wanted the service to actually focus on the wars at hand, in Iraq and Afghanistan. "For much of the past year I’ve been trying to concentrate the minds and energies of the defense establishment on the current needs and current conflicts," he told the Heritage Foundation. "In short, to ensure that all parts of the Defense Department are, in fact, at war."

The article outlines the tug-of-war, so to speak, between the general and the SECDEF regarding the mission of USAF--a metaphor for the struggle between the autonomous fighter pilot-driven USAF and the joint and sometimes subordinate role of a new kind of Air Force, a change which some feel is necessary to fight a new type of enemy.

However, what got the the general and his civilian counterpart fired...er...asked to resign, wasn't their lack of enthusiasm for the USAF's new role. It was their failure to competently execute an old one--a failure that could have led to catastrophe.

The service inadvertently shipped "four high-tech electrical nosecone fuses for Minuteman nuclear warheads were [t]o Taiwan in place of helicopter batteries. The mistake was discovered in March — a year and a half after the erroneous shipment," The New York Times reports. "The mishandling of the nosecone fuses was viewed as another indication of lack of discipline within America’s nuclear infrastructure, and was another embarrassment for the people in charge of those weapons."

Last fall, the Air Force's 5th Bomb Wing lost track of six nuclear warheads. Then, in mid-May, the service flunked a nuclear surety inspection[.]

Noah Shachtman, the author of the Danger Room post, thinks that the nuclear issue is merely excuse for Gates to get rid of the two. Oh yeah, sure. He isn't really concerned that their lack of attention to their assigned responsibilities might accidentally kill millions of people. /s

Consider this twelve-page .pdf stinging rebuke from Gates (excuse the caps; methinks it was a decision made at the O-6 or higher level) and tell me that Gates is acting:

Rather than an isolated occurrence, the shipment of the four forward section assemblies to Taiwan was symptom of a degradation of the authority, standards of excellence, and technical competence within the nation's ICBM force.

Similar to the bomber-specific August 2007 Minot/Barksdale nuclear weapons transfer incident, this incident took place within the larger environment of declining Air Force nuclear mission focus and performance. Specifically, the investigation identified systemic issues associated with this decline.

Gates goes on to outline the problem areas: lack of standard authority, malfunction of oversight programs and dearth of expertise. To fix the problems, Gates has created an outside senior-level task force to be headed by Dr. James Schlesinger, a SECDEF under Nixon and Reagan and DCI under Nixon.

Gates then delivers a final blow:

Individuals in command and leadership positions not only fell short in terms of specific actions, they failed to recognize systematic problems, to address those problems, or--where beyond their authority to act--to call the attention of superiors to those problems. Each had the leadership responsibility to identify and correct--or flag for others--procedural and performance deficiencies identified in just a few weeks time by Admiral [Kirkland H.] Donald.
Lots more lesser heads are due to roll. See video of the statement and press conference at Danger Room.

(Thanks to the Donovan and to Iron Mike)

PREVIOUSLY: B-52 Flies With Live Nukes

AFTERTHOUGHT: I think I need a category entitled 'Holy Crap!!!'

May 26, 2008

Memorial Day 2008: Words and Images

Memorialday1
History of Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day (Thanks to Dean Esmay)

The Daily Brief: Reflections on the The Wall

David J. Rusin at Pajamas Media: Most Likely To Succeed — and Serve, and Sacrifice

WaPo: An Iron Procession of Honor

Classical Values: Remembrances

AP: Last known [American] WWI veteran honored for Memorial Day

Claudia at Babalu Blog: Willing to have Been Memorialized on Memorial Day

Soldier’s Angels Germany: Buy Coffee for the Troops! (Thanks to Laughing Wolf at Blackfive)

NRO: Mike Spann and the Meaning of Memorial Day

Edwin Feulner at Real Clear Politics: Saluting Those Who Serve

Amy Alkon: Thank You

Hot Air: A Memorial Day Reflection

Baby Troll Blog: Decoration Day

Armies of Liberation: Thanks to the US Military

Tom Mountain: "We are Their Children" (Thanks to Power Line)

Bill Kristol at NYT: Remember to say Thanks

(And thanks to my own Personal and Very Much Alive Hero, CLP)

MORE:

One Cosmos: Remembrance of Things Surpassed

CBS: Wounded Soldiers Do Vegas on Mogul's Dime (Thanks to Gabriel at Ace of Spades)

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