May 23, 2005
Oh Yeah, Pat Tillman, We've Got Your Back
Spitting on the grave.
That's exactly what took place here. There is no acceptable excuse when
the organization you have given up your life to is willing to outright
lie in order to better serve itself. This was a predetermined
falsehood, a choice made by the military that a charade be concocted
rather than a slain soldier's family be provided the honest truth. If
losing a loved one cannot elicit veracity, what can? Should anything
further coming from the military be believed?
But this certainly isn't the first time.
Can you spell Jessica Lynch?
Go ahead, try and be all that you can be but remember, when it comes
down to it, you are an army of one--out there all by yourself because
the organization you represent isn't worthy of representing you.
Dylan said it years ago: 'you're only a pawn in the game.'
Here is the entire article (in order to be complete and fair) in today's Washington Post (apparently this one is actually an Associated Press article):
Tillman's Family Critical of Army Probe
The Associated Press
Monday, May 23, 2005
WASHINGTON -- The family of former professional football
Pat Tillman says the Army disrespected his memory by lying in its
investigation of his death in Afghanistan last year.
In interviews with The Washington Post, the Army
Ranger's mother and father said they believe the military and the
government created a heroic tale about how their son died to foster a
patriotic response across the country.
"Pat had high ideals about the country; that's why he
did what he did," Mary Tillman told the Post. "The military let him
down. The administration let him down. It was a sign of disrespect. The
fact that he was the ultimate team player and he watched his own men
kill him is absolutely heartbreaking and tragic. The fact that they
lied about it afterward is disgusting."
Tillman, a player for the Arizona Cardinals, left the
National Football League after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to
join the Rangers with his brother. After a tour in Iraq, they were sent
to Afghanistan in 2004 to help hunt for the Taliban and Osama bin Laden.
Shortly after arriving in the mountains to fight,
Tillman was killed in a barrage of gunfire from his own men, mistaken
for the enemy as he got into position to defend them.
After a public memorial service, at which Tillman
received the Silver Star, the Army told Tillman's family what had
really happened.
The separate interviews with Tillman's parents, who are divorced, appeared on the Post's Internet site for Monday's editions.
Patrick Tillman Sr., a lawyer, told the Post he is
furious about a "botched homicide investigation" and blames
high-ranking Army officers for presenting "outright lies" to the family
and to the public.
"After it happened, all the people in positions of
authority went out of their way to script this," the father said. "They
purposely interfered with the investigation, they covered it up. I
think they thought they could control it, and they realized that their
recruiting efforts were going to go to hell in a handbasket if the
truth about his death got out. They blew up their poster boy."
"In the case of the death of Corporal Patrick Tillman,
the Army made mistakes in reporting the circumstances of his death to
the family," Brig. Gen. Vincent K. Brooks told the Post. "For these, we
apologize. We cannot undo those early mistakes."
top
RSS feed
|