I Cogitate

Recent Posts My Best Blogs Archives Favorite Quotes Links Contact
May 1, 2007

Their's but to do and die no more


Read the amazing opening paragraphs of Mark Thompson's article "Broken Down" in the April 16 issue of TIME:
America's Broken-Down Army
Mark Thompson
TIME
April 5, 2007

For most Americans, the Iraq war is both distant and never ending. For Private Matthew Zeimer, it was neither. Shortly after midnight on Feb. 2, Zeimer had his first taste of combat as he scrambled to the roof of the 3rd Infantry Division's Combat Outpost Grant in central Ramadi. Under cover of darkness, Sunni insurgents were attacking his new post from nearby buildings. Amid the smoke, noise and confusion, a blast suddenly ripped through the 3-ft. concrete wall shielding Zeimer and a fellow soldier, killing them both. Zeimer had been in Iraq for a week. He had been at his first combat post for two hours.

If Zeimer's combat career was brief, so was his training. He enlisted last June at age 17, three weeks after graduating from Dawson County High School in eastern Montana. After finishing nine weeks of basic training and additional preparation in infantry tactics in Oklahoma, he arrived at Fort Stewart, Ga., in early December. But Zeimer had missed the intense four-week pre-Iraq training—a taste of what troops will face in combat—that his 1st Brigade comrades got at their home post in October. Instead, Zeimer and about 140 other members of the 4,000-strong brigade got a cut-rate, 10-day course on weapon use, first aid and Iraqi culture. That's the same length as the course that teaches soldiers assigned to generals' household staffs the finer points of table service.

The Army and the White House insist the abbreviated training was adequate. "They can get desert training elsewhere," spokesman Tony Snow said Feb. 28, "like in Iraq." But outside military experts and Zeimer's mother disagree. The Army's rush to carry out President George W. Bush's order to send thousands of additional troops more quickly to Iraq is forcing two of the five new brigades bound for the war to skip standard training at Fort Irwin, Calif. These soldiers aren't getting the benefit of participating in war games on the wide Mojave Desert, where gun-jamming sand and faux insurgents closely resemble conditions in Iraq. "Given the new policy of having troops among the Iraqis," says Lawrence Korb, a former Pentagon personnel chief, "they should be giving our young soldiers more training, not less." Zeimer's mother was unaware of the gap in her son's training until TIME told her about it on April 2. Two days later the Army disclosed that Zeimer may have been killed by friendly fire. "They're shipping more and more young kids over there who don't know what they're getting into," Janet Seymour said quietly after learning what her son had missed. "They've never seen war other than on the TV."

The truncated training—the rush to get underprepared troops to the war zone—"is absolutely unacceptable," says Representative John Murtha, the Pennsylvania Democrat and opponent of the war who chairs the House Appropriations defense subcommittee. A decorated Marine veteran of Vietnam, Murtha is experiencing a sense of déjà vu. "The readiness of the Army's ground forces is as bad as it was right after Vietnam," Murtha tells TIME. Even Colin Powell—a retired Army general, onetime Chairman of the Joint Chiefs and Bush's first Secretary of State—acknowledges that after spending nearly six years fighting a small war in Afghanistan and four years waging a medium-size war in Iraq, the service whose uniform he wore for 35 years is on the ropes. "The active Army," Powell said in December, "is about broken."

Go here for the rest.

Can you contain your fury?

Just like George Tenet speaking up and out years too late and about too many critical situations where he appears to simply be covering his behind, our current top generals have publicly and repeatedly professed their allegiance to George Bush over their country.

Folks, that's not patriotism, that's brown-nosing and unacceptable behavior especially so when so many lives of so many subordinates and civilians are on the line.

Sure, it's damn hard and especially career dangerous to go against the voluminous lies and distortions of the vile Bush Administration but that is when character shines through--good and bad.

If someone isn't willing to do so--call b******t--then he/she isn't in the appropriate position.

Tenet had ample opportunities to do so. Yet, he failed himself but more importantly, those in his organization and ultimately, the American people.

The same with our military leaders. Sending their charges into battle unprepared and unprotected is breaking faith, the bond that makes the military work.

Most of us can recall in our own lives the times when we should have spoken up, spoken louder and confronted others with our preception of 'truth.' I admit to such and I lambaste myself for these failures. It's no saving grace but I was also luckily never in a situation of failing to intercede into circumstances of life-and-death.

Of course, the kingpins of The American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars are also too busy fellating the president and vice president to give a damn about the common soldier. The needs hierarchy of these fifth columnists is providing loyalty first and foremost to any liar inhabiting the Oval Office, regardless of the unforgiveable travesties committed by this individual towards military grunts.

Until the major domos of the American military and the service (using that term VERY loosely) organizations finally actually begin representing and serving with equal loyalty those they are in charge of, then nothing will change. The young will be sent off to die, caught in the political web of the heartless bastards who think nothing of such atrocities--just of themselves.
"...Forward, the Light Brigade!"
Was there a man dismay'd?
Not tho' the soldier knew
Someone had blunder'd:
Their's not to make reply
Their's not to reason why,
Their's but to do and die:
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred..."

Alfred Tennyson - "The Charge of the Light Brigade"
top

RSS feed link RSS feed

Recent Posts My Best Blogs Archives Favorite Quotes Links Contact