Thursday, November 6, 2008


Number 76



The 76th Kentuckian to die in Smirky's Iraq/Afghanistan Clusterfuck Fiasco is 27-year-old Daniel Wallace of Dry Ridge.

Wallace died on October 31 in Badin Kheyl, Afghanistan of wounds suffered when insurgents attacked his unit using small arms fire. He was assigned to the 201st Combat Engineer Battalion, Kentucky Army National Guard in Cynthiana, Ky.

He is the 17th Kentucky National Guard member to die in our War on a Tactic, and the 11th Kentuckian and 3rd KNG member to die in Afghanistan.

Wallace was a 2001 graduate of Grant County High School. He enlisted in the Kentucky Army National Guard in May 2006 and was a member of Company C, of the 201st in Cynthiana. In Afghanistan, he was assigned to the battalion’s Company B, out of Olive Hill.

Wallace was mobilized for Operation Iraqi Freedom in March of 2008 and deployed to Afghanistan in May, where he was part of “Task Force Workhorse”, which is responsible for maintaining hundreds of miles of roads and removing roadside bombs or IEDs.

Wallace was serving as a gunner on an armor-protected vehicle. When a piece of equipment was knocked loose, he stepped outside the vehicle and was killed by a single bullet, (Kentucky Adjutant General Edward) Tonini said.

SNIP

At the time of his death, Wallace held the rank of Specialist (E4), but was posthumously promoted to the rank of Sergeant (E5) and awarded the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart and the Army Good Conduct medal.

SNIP

Survivors include his parents, Karen and Kenneth Wallace, two brothers, Charles and Alex Wallace, a sister, Kim and a 6-year-old son.

Cross-posted at Blue in the Bluegrass.




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Saturday, June 21, 2008


Number 71


Kentucky's 71st casualty in Smirky/Darth's spreading Middle East clusterfuck is Eric Terhune of Lexington.

The 34-year old was a captain in the Marine Corps and also a helicopter pilot. Terhune was on his third tour. He spent the first two in Iraq before heading to Afghanistan, where he'd been since April.

According to the Department of Defense, Terhune "died June 19 while conducting combat operations in Farah Province, Afghanistan. (He was) assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif."

The Herald-Leader reports today that family members of Terhune declined to comment Friday.

Cross-posted at Blue in the Bluegrass.




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Tuesday, March 25, 2008


An Image in My Head

So we have over 4,000 KIA at this point. It’s a big number, a pretty abstract number.

When I think of this number, when I try to put it in perspective, I think of a parade field I stood on some eighteen or so years ago. This was in Germany, at least a year before the entire 3rd Armored Division got on planes bound for Saudi Arabia. This was a muggy, hot, day in the height of summer, and through the smell of fresh cut grass our sergeants were harping on us about not locking our knees, keeping our lines dressed, and all the other things that go into a military parade and have nothing to do with anti-nerve agent pills, fire missions, or digging foxholes in sand, all that was a ways off yet. This day in Germany was all about the change of command ceremony for Army V Corps, so there were a lot of soldiers on the field. A brigade numbers about 4,000 troops, and though my entire brigade—the 41st Field Artillery—wasn’t in the ceremony, there were well over 4,000 soldiers on that field. So I know what 4,000 troops standing there on a parade field, in the sun, in Germany looks like.

And that’s the image in my head the last few days, and it’s the image in my head when I read this:

The president carries the biggest burden, obviously," Cheney said. "He's the one who has to make the decision to commit young Americans, but we are fortunate to have a group of men and women, the all-volunteer force, who voluntarily put on the uniform and go in harm's way for the rest of us.

Yes, we are fortunate. More fortunate than he can ever know or, and let’s be honest, more than he even really cares. Leaving behind that parade field, let’s think for a few minutes about all the other people, the families and friends of 4,000 dead soldiers and marines. If you’re part of a military family, then you’ve woken up in the middle of the night wondering how your husband, wife, son, or daughter is doing right then at that very moment, you’ve had to find ways to pay bills and make ends meet while your spouse is on his or her second, third, or maybe fourth, deployment, and maybe you’ve even had to try find answers to those seemingly simple but weighty questions that only children can ask. But that’s just what it means to be a part of a military family. There are 4,000 other families in America who have paid the ultimate price. Think about them this week and if you care to, check out these links:

National Military Family Association

TAPS




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Wednesday, December 12, 2007


Baseball & Steroids & Stars, Oh My!

Does anybody want to take bets that within 24 hours of the release of George Mitchell's report on drug use in baseball that someone in Congress will call for Congressional Hearings. I'll also take bets that it will be one of the questions that Presidential candidates will be tasked with. History is about to repeat itself.

Let's jump in the house for a cyclonic ride to the past when the last Congressional Hearings on Baseball were being held to see what else was going on:

  • Terry Schiavo was having a feeding tube removed and reinserted and removed and the GOP was asking her to testify before Congress.
  • Prince Ranier of Monico was dying.
  • Robert Blake was being acquitted of killing the baby momma.
  • Bush was trying to privatize some old government program called Social Security.
  • Scott Peterson was sentenced to death for killing his wife and unborn child.
  • Bernie Ebbers was found guilty in the WorldCom scandal.
  • Martha Stewart was complaining about wearing her house-arrest ankle bracelet.
  • Michael Jackson was on trial for child molestation.

In other words, a lot of crap - large and small - that caught the eyes of politicians nationwide. There was much saber rattling on many of these subjects. Outrage was expressed; gloom and doom predicted. Looks like our politicians had a lot on their plates.

One thing that wasn't on the Action agenda in March: 35 US Soldiers died in Iraq bringing the 2005 total to 200, bringing the total US war death toll over 1500 (1535) for the war.

I know. They had many other important things going on. I don't doubt the same will happen today.




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Monday, December 3, 2007


The Uncounted

Ran across this post about the death of Sfc. Anthony Raymond Wasielewski from Ladysmith WI. My father was born in Ladysmith, and that's what initially caught my attention. He's never mentioned the Wasielewskis (and I DEFINITELY would have remembered the name) so I don't assume any connection other than that my dad was born in Ladysmith...a town name I've always liked. But back to the post.

[Sfc. Wasielewski] had been injured in Iraq last May and died at his home in early October. It appeared his death was related to his comabat injuries but from the article that was not conclusive. I wondered if he would be counted as a casualty of the war. I checked Iraq Coalition Casualty Count site and found he was not listed.

Recently I checked back at the site and found that Sfc. Anthony Raymond Wasielewski is listed in a separate count of "Post Iraq Deaths Not Confirmed By the DoD".......


It seems there are several soldiers who died from wounds received in Iraq, but the DoD does not include their deaths in the official count of the soldiers killed in Iraq.

Coupled with the news that the Pentagon has underreported the number of US servicemen and women wounded in Iraq by a whopping 40%, I wonder if anyone at the Pentagon could pass a 5th grade math test.

(crossposted at Lost Chord)




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Friday, November 16, 2007


Struggles of war follow vets home

I can't think of one reason why Marine sergeant Tyler Ziegel should need a news organization to intervene on his behalf to pressure the Dept. of Veterans Affairs to do the right thing. During Ziegel's second tour in Iraq in 2004, a suicide bomber's explosion blew away part of his skull, caused brain damage, disfigured his face, and severed fingers from his right hand. Half of his left arm was amputated.

In Ziegel's case, he spent nearly two years recovering at Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas. Once he got out of the hospital, he was unable to hold a job. He anticipated receiving a monthly VA disability check sufficient to cover his small-town lifestyle in Washington, Illinois.
Instead, he got a check for far less than expected. After pressing for answers, Ziegel finally received a letter from the VA that rated his injuries: 80 percent for facial disfigurement, 60 percent for left arm amputation, a mere 10 percent for head trauma and nothing for his left lobe brain injury, right eye blindness and jaw fracture.
"I don't get too mad about too many things," he said. "But once we've been getting into this, I'm ready to beat down the White House door if I need to."
"I'm not expecting to live in the lap of luxury," he added. "But I am asking them to make it comfortable to raise a family and not have to struggle."
Within 48 hours of telling his story to CNN this summer, the Office of then-VA Secretary Jim Nicholson acted on Ziegel's case. The VA changed his head trauma injury, once rated at 10 percent, to traumatic brain injury rated at 100 percent, substantially increasing his monthly disability check.
What of other wounded war vets with similar problems? Ziegel's situation isn't an isolated case that fell through the cracks. Another example...
Garrett Anderson with the Illinois National Guard, for example, has been fighting the VA since October 15, 2005. Shrapnel tore through his head and body after a roadside bomb blew up the truck he was driving. He lost his right arm.
The VA initially rejected his claim, saying his severe shrapnel wounds were "not service connected."
"Who would want to tell an Iraqi or Afghanistan soldier who was blown up by an IED that his wounds were not caused by his service over there?" said Anderson's wife, Sam.
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) had to act before the VA provided Anderson with compensation for his traumatic brain injury.

From a political party that seemingly glorifies our men and women serving in uniform -- unless they're deemed phony soldiers for opposing the war -- you would think that a Repub administration that lauds the patriotism of American troops would sufficiently care for our wounded soldiers. But it hasn't.

The VA still remains MIA on recommendations from a commission appointed by Bush back in July of this year to revise the antiquated disability ratings system. And we've been at war for how long?! There's simply no excuse for the lack of planning to deal with wounded vets the minute that Bush ordered U.S. troops into combat.

These few soldiers' stories emphasize how a grossly incompetent executive branch reacts when a Repub preznut occupies the WH...

Agonizingly slow. If at all.

RELATED LINKS:
* A Radical Notion: Bilmes, of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, has been studying veterans’ medical care and disability benefits and said the current backlog overwhelmed a system that was already struggling under budget cuts before the wars started; and that now things only stand to get worse.
* Which is worse? When outrages occur, or when they stop surprising you? Using the 5-13 discharge to cull injured troops from service and deny them future benefits through the VA.
* Pointing Up a Vital Distinction: Fallout from the DOD's Walter Reed scandal puts spotlight on VA funding cuts.
* Time For President to Come Clean On Tillman Cover-up: Iraq War vet and chairman of VoteVets.org Jon Soltz discusses the friendly-fire death of Pat Tillman.
* Finding Yet More Ways to Fuck Vets Over: Sending PTSD-disabled vets back to Iraq and the tragic end of Jamie Dean.




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Tuesday, September 4, 2007


Spinning Right Into the Ground


Another month of missed benchmarks, another "surprise" visit from Il Douche'™, ("surprise" as in if we announced beforehand, too many people would try to kill us, so "shhh!") into Iraq. What's running through the spin cycle this time around? "The Surge is Working, The Surge is Working!" To illustrate how well the "Surge" is working, he landed in Al-Anbar province, which not only was not part of the surge, but has been largely handed back over to local Sunni leaders to pacify. In fact, Bush met with a number of local Sunni leaders, to thank them for their help in beginning to stabilize the region. Yeah, just one problem with all that; these leaders may have American blood on their hands.

But, seriously, ya gotta do what ya gotta do, right? Otherwise, you know the "terrists" will follow us home (yeah, he's still saying that).




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Wednesday, July 25, 2007


Bush: We're Still in Iraq Because Osama Wants to Know Who Wins

In his Tuesday speech at Charleston Air Force Base, Bush claimed the reason we must stay in Iraq is because Osama Bin Laden thinks we should so that a winner may be declared:

He's proclaimed that the "third world war is raging in Iraq." Osama bin Laden says, "The war is for you or for us to win. If we win it, it means your defeat and disgrace forever."
So Osama bin Laden is dictating American policy. Nice to know who's actually in charge, at least in George Bush's world.

In case you've forgotten, today is the 2,144th day since 9/11 and the man who ordered the massacre of nearly 3,000 people is still at large. Unfortunately, the men responsible for the deaths of 3,637 American soldiers in a country which had nothing to do with 9/11 are still in office.

John Conyers, Nancy Pelosi. . .are you listening?




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George Bush's Handiwork

The Decider observes the results of his decidin'.
[based on an idea by Holden Caulfield]




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Wednesday, May 30, 2007


S.Sgt. Donald B. Farmer

Yesterday, 29 May 2007, on the Western Washington University campus in Bellingham, Washington (the school at which I am currently earning an MA), a local anti-Iraq War group who displays the names of all the war dead around town on the weekend passed out little cards for students to wear in an effort to draw attention to the number of U.S. soldiers who have died since March 2003. Each card, about 2''X4'', had written on it the name of a fallen soldier, their home down, and the date on which they died. Attached to a long string, the WWU campus community spent the day with these cards our their necks. Protesting wars can be difficult, particularly in communities which host military bases or include large veteran communities. All too often "supporting the troops" is equated with "supporting the war," and when speaking out against the travesty of military action in Iraq, many misinterpret anti-war sentiment with, somehow, speaking out against U.S. soldiers. Of course, this is silly, as war protests are focused on criticisms of bad policy and not bad people (except, of course, bad policy makers). The Bush administration has made a concerted effort to disarticulate the war effort from the war dead - no photographs of home-bound coffins, limited media access to the front (tightly controlled 'embedded' reports not withstanding), and more recently, the moratorium on combat photojournalism which indicates, in anyway, the name of soldiers or the units involved. The action yesterday is, in my opinion, an important step toward recognizing that war affects individuals, and that soldiers are people with families, friends, and lives from which they were extracted to extend U.S. federal government policy beyond our borders. I am not a veteran. Nor are my brothers, my father, my mother, my aunts or my uncles. My grandfather was in the Army Air Corp./Air Force from 1947-1951 and never saw combat. The last member of my family to fight in an American war was my Mother's grandfather who fought in World War One. Of course, like many my age, I have friends from high school and college who are in the military and have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in the era of the volunteer military, I, like many, have few personal connections to these wars. It's easy, then, for me to ignore, in a self-interested way, the goings-on in the Middle-East and Central Asia. My taxes pay for bullets and bombs, prosthetics, and night-vision goggles, but I am not in a position to lose much, personally, from these wars. However, as a citizen of the republic, I do take very personally the policies of my government, and as a democratic citizen, I am in part responsible for such policies. While I do not fight, and do not stand to lose a loved one in these wars, it is my duty to participate in the public square and to work hard to end this conflict. I whole-heartedly support local civil actions like those at WWU's campus yesterday, and this blog entry is my little way of bringing to the public square the story of one soldier.

I've never met S.Sgt. Donald B. Farmer. I don't know his family, or his friends, and I am unaware of his hopes, dreams, goals, hobbies, or his political affiliation. My only connection to S.Sgt. Farmer is that his name, home town, age, and date of death were printed on a small white card that I wore around my neck for 9 hours on the Tuesday after Memorial day. I would like to apologize to anyone who knows him if they feel like I am politicizing his death; that is not my intention.

S. Sgt. Donald B. Farmer died in Kuwait on 19 December 2004, he was struck by a passing vehicle and killed, along with another soldier, while changing a tire. He told his mother that, after serving in combat in Iraq, his assignment to Kuwait would be safe; he was 33. In his final contact with his 16 year old daughter, he wrote that he would send money home for Christmas. He is survived by his wife and high school sweetheart, his mother, his 16 year old daughter, an 8 year old son, and a 12 year old step-daughter. He was the son of Zion Illinois, and a standout football and track athlete who joined the Marines after two years of college in North Dakota. On 18 January 2006, the Zion city council passed a Resolution of Respect for S.Sgt. Farmer and it passed, of course, unanimously.

His friends and colleagues remembered him as mature, social, and fond of barbecues. When stationed in Italy, one soldier-friend of his recalled a time in which Farmer saved her from getting hurt while in a fight, and noted how he always kept his subordinates in line and protected. While stationed in Germany, Farmer impressed upon a Captain a sense of responsibility and friendship, exchanging Christmas care-packages prior to his death on 19 Dec. The spouse of one of his soldiers recounted a time at which, while in labor, S.Sgt. Farmer took her husband off a mission so that he could witness the birth of his son; he was a man who understood priorities. He was a beloved member of the 180th Transportation Battalion, 13th Corps Support Command, Fort Hood, Texas, and has been sorely missed by all accounts.

S.Sgt. Farmer was a soldier, and he survived combat to die while performing a mundane task that any one of us has done time and again. His family most likely did not receive the financial benefits that come with combat death, yet his mission in support of the ground forces in Iraq was a critical part of the war effort. We hear, often, of soldiers and marines being killed by IEDs, snipers, and helicopter crashes, but it is not often that the soldiers who die in accidents are showcased. Farmer, I am sure, would have taken a bullet to save the life of one of his subordinates, and surely would have given his life in an effort to complete a combat mission. But his job was not to go out on patrol, or to defend the Green Zone from mortar attacks; his mission was to keep the machines of war in good condition, and to ensure that the tools combat soldiers rely on worked dependably. He did his job, internalized it, loved it, and made it a career.

I am not one for hero worship, and I don't put members of the military on a pedestal simply because they are in the military - soldiers are people, and people are good and bad. I know men and women in the military who I wouldn't trust to take care of a goldfish, and I know others who are Westpoint Graduates or career oriented Marines with whom I have shared some of the best moments of my life, and I judge them on their merits. I cannot say much about S.Sgt. Farmer with any certainly, but I respect him, and I respect how he lived his life, how he maintained contact with friends from afar, and how he built what is, by all accounts a fine family. It's a shame that he's passed.

It's easy to say that we will "never forget," but those words are cliche. Of course we will never forget the Iraq War, and the loved ones of the war dead will never forget their lost friends and family members, but we as a people must not forget what happens when we send our military to war. There exists a sacred promise between the people of the United States and the men and women of the military; soldiers will go anywhere and fight anyone so long as the civilians make sound choices as to when and where. The civilian leadership of the Untied States has besmirched that promise, and when this war ends, we all have an obligation to atone for that violation of trust.




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Sunday, May 27, 2007


3,454 and Counting


This Memorial Day, remember the dead, and the politicians who killed them.

Since last Memorial Day, roughly one thousand more Americans have died in this inhumane, horrible, foolish war.

In the period from Memorial Day 2006 through Saturday, 980 soldiers and Marines died in Iraq, compared to 807 deaths in the previous year. And with the Baghdad security operation now 3 1/2 months old, even President Bush has predicted a difficult summer for U.S. forces.

"It could be a bloody — it could be a very difficult August," he said last week.
A "very difficult AUGUST?" What about June? July? Evidently, Bush thinks it's going to get worse.

At least 103 American troops have died in the first 26 days of May, an average of 3.96 deaths a day. At that pace, 123 troops will have died by the end of the month, nearly double the 69 who died in May 2006. And it will be the highest monthly total since 137 soldiers died in November 2004, when U.S. troops were fighting insurgents in Fallujah.

And now, according to the New York Times, terrorists trained in Iraq are starting to take their fight to other parts of the world.




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