GI SPECIAL
4H24:
FORT LEWIS, WASHINGTON (August 16, 2006) On the eve of Lt. Ehren Watada’s first
military hearing resulting from his refusal to deploy in support of the illegal
war in Iraq, three hundred supporters rallied in his defense at the gates of
Fort Lewis, Washington. Photo: by Jeff
Paterson, Not in Our Name Aug 18th, 2006.
(Indybay.org)
Bush Calls On American Civilians And U.S. Troops To Organize For Revolution And Overthrow The
Government
August 22, 2006 Guardian Unlimited
Mr Bush said US troops would not leave Iraq
"so long as I'm the president".
TRAITOR
SOLDIER-KILLER
DOMESTIC ENEMY
UNFIT FOR COMMAND
(8.23.06:
AFP/Paul J. Richards)
IRAQ WAR REPORTS
101st Soldier Killed In Combat
August 8, 2006 The Leaf Chronicle
A 101st Airborne Division infantry soldier
died Saturday at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany from injuries
he suffered last Wednesday in Baghdad, Iraq.
Pfc. Brian J. Kubik, 20, of Harker Heights,
Texas, was assigned to Company A, 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd
Brigade Combat Team. He was wounded when
his unit came under enemy small arms fire.
Kubik joined the Army in January 2005 and
arrived at Fort Campbell four months later.
He is survived by his parents, Barbara and
James Flynn, also of Harker Heights.
During his time in the Army, Kubik was
awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge, Army Commendation Medal, Global War on
Terrorism Service Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal and posthumously the Overseas
Service Ribbon, Army Good Conduct Medal and Purple Heart.
A memorial service for Kubik will be held in
Iraq by his unit. He also will be honored during an Eagle Remembrance Ceremony
Wednesday at Fort Campbell.
A total of 165 Fort Campbell
soldiers have died while supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom since March 2003.
Bend Marine Mourned:
“All-American
Kid”
Aug. 21, 2006 By Barney Lerten, KTVZ.com and
AP
Marine Lance Cpl. Randy Lee Newman of Bend
was killed in not his first, but his third encounter with improvised explosive
devices in Iraq, including one that gave him a concussion and put him in the
hospital for a week, a family friend said Tuesday as the military confirmed his
death.
The family of the 21-year-old Marine, born in
Bend and raised in La Pine, learned of his death when Jerry and Ramona Newman
got the fateful visit to their Bend home around 7:30 p.m. Sunday, family friend
Cecil Wilson said.
They were told Newman was riding in a light
armored vehicle when an improvised explosive device blew it up just outside of
Iraq's capital.
On Tuesday, flags lined the driveway to the
family home east of Bend. Newman homes from a large family; his father is a long-time
painting company owner in Bend, and has eight brothers and two sisters, while
mother Ramona has four brothers and a sister.
Newman, who was deployed to Iraq in the
spring, "was like my son," Wilson said. "My son's in
Afghanistan. This is his best friend."
Newman, born at St. Charles Medical
Center-Bend, grew up in La Pine and moved to Bend in the fall of 2000 with his
parents and two younger brothers, Dan, 18, who graduated from Mountain View
last year, and Ken, who is 8, Wilson said. Newman was on the Cougars' wrestling
team and was in the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps.
"Randy was involved in sports at all
levels, baseball and basketball," and was on the varsity wrestling team,
Wilson said.
Newman was in the Marines within a year of graduation,
just as he'd wanted, the family friend said.
"The family's very pro what Randy
wants," he said. "We're not
negative - no bitterness. There's extreme sadness, of course. It's a solid
family, been around here for a long time and well-established in the
community."
Newman was the second Central Oregonian
killed in the Mideast war this summer, following the June abduction and killing
of Army Pfc. Thomas Tucker of Madras in Iraq.
A count kept by Gov. Ted
Kulongoski's office shows 67 people with strong ties to Oregon have been killed
in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Three British Troops Wounded By Amara Base Mortar
Barrage;
Imperial Command Declares Victory And Abandons
Base
23 Aug 2006 Reuters & AP
Three British serviceman were wounded during
a prolonged mortar barrage on Tuesday on a British base near Amara, 365 km (230
miles) south of Baghdad, the British military said on Wednesday.
17 mortar rounds were fired Tuesday at the
British base in Amarah, 180 miles southeast of Baghdad, said Maj. Charlie
Burbridge, spokesman for the British forces at Camp Abu Naji. One wounded British soldier was hospitalized
in stable condition, he said.
Police had earlier reported
that Katyusha rockets had been fired at the base, but later said it was a mistaken
assumption because they found four rocket launchers near the base. [Oh.]
Burbridge said the camp, which
has come under frequent attack in the past three years, was being closed down
"imminently, in the next couple of days," as Iraqi forces were in a position
to take over security in the area. [And
see below whose Iraqi forces those will be!]
British forces would be repositioned to the
east of Amarah and would focus on tackling smuggling, particularly of weapons,
from across the border with Iran, he said.
Amarah, 180 miles southeast of
Baghdad, is a predominantly Shiite city where anti-U.S. [translation: anti-U.S.
Imperial government] cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia wields
considerable influence. British troops
have come under frequent attacks there.
"If two days go by without
some kind of attack in the direction of the camp, we'd be surprised,"
Burbridge said.
REALLY
BAD IDEA:
NO MISSION;
HOPELESS WAR:
BRING THEM ALL HOME
NOW
8.10.06:
US soldiers at the site of a bomb and missile attack in Baghdad. (AFP/Ahmad al-Rubaye)
AFGHANISTAN WAR REPORTS
Another Classic Of Imperial Arrogance And
Stupidity:
Idiot Reporter Matched By Idiot Officer
23/08/06 Kandahar, Canadian Press & AP
& CBC News
A Canadian soldier was killed and three others
wounded Tuesday in an attack in southern Afghanistan.
Troops fearing a follow-up
attack after the blast fired a single bullet at the two youths as they
approached the scene of the bombing on a motorbike, a NATO statement said. The bullet hit both youths, killing one and
wounding the other.
The body of a 10-year-old boy
shot and killed by a Canadian soldier in southern Afghanistan was returned
Wednesday to his grieving parents.
When approached by The Canadian Press at his
home, the father of the boy grew angry, denouncing Canada's military for the
shooting.
He refused to speak about the incident or
give his name.
Several women in the family's
compound began screaming and crying, their fists shaking as they tried to
contain their sorrow.
[Gee, Canada must be a very odd
place. To this reporter, “fists
shaking” is an expression of “sorrow,” which the first
shakers are trying to “contain.”
[Everywhere else in the world,
outside the mind of the shithead who wrote this, fist shaking is a fairly clear
indication that those engaging in it would like to rip your face off. But then this reporter probably is thinking
of these people as quaint natives with their odd little customs. Another of their quaint little customs is
killing foreign Imperial propagandists, which the reporter hopefully will learn
about sooner rather than later.]
Colonel Fred Lewis, deputy commander of the
Canadian contingent of ISAF, said he was concerned about a potential negative
response from the community for Tuesday's shooting, and urged people to remain
calm.
"I think we need to pass
the right message to the Afghan people," he said. "The message is
that we're here to help them and we certainly would never want to hurt
them."
[Not to be outdone by the idiot
reporter, the idiot officer, after his troops kill the 10 year old and
seriously wound his 17 year old friend, babbles about how occupation troops
“would certainly never want to hurt them.”
[All that’s missing from
this condescending comment is the offer of pretty glass beads to take the minds
of the simple natives of their dead and wounded kids. Doubtless they will
devise some reply to him also.
[No lie lives forever, nor no
liar neither. Careening towards some
unknown particular end, this occupation will unfold surprises before it
achieves the only thing now known about it that is certain: that it will end,
and not end well for the occupiers, who thought themselves world-conquerors and
masters of forces beyond any mastering they could devise. T]
“Beneath The Surface, It Is Boiling”
August 23, 2006 By CARLOTTA GALL, The New
York Times [Excerpts]
Corruption is so widespread, the government
apparently so lethargic and the divide between rich and poor so gaping that Mr.
Karzai is losing public support, warn officials like Ahmad Fahim Hakim, deputy
chairman of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission.
“Nothing that he promised has
materialized,” Mr. Hakim said, echoing the comments of diplomats and
others in Kabul, the capital. “Beneath the surface, it is boiling.”
An opposition politician, Abdul Latif Pedram,
said: “There has never been so much corruption in the country. We have a
mafia economy and a drug economy.” Most galling to average people is the
corruption of judges, which makes redress nearly impossible. There have been virtually no prosecutions of
corrupt high-level or local officials. Corrupt police chiefs and governors
remain in their positions or, if complaints grow too loud, are rotated to other
jobs, said Mr. Hakim, of the human rights commission.
In southern Afghanistan the
situation is so bad that people have begun turning to the Taliban for the
swift, if severe, justice administered by mullahs, said Abdual Qadeer Noorzai,
a human rights official in that region.
Afghan and international forces
find themselves fighting daily battles across five provinces of the south,
while casualties are rising sharply among civilians, foreign troops and
government forces alike. The scale of
the insurgency has virtually wiped out the government’s ability to
provide services in many places.
TROOP NEWS
[Thanks
to Elaine Brower]
Finally, Somebody Tells The
Truth:
British Troops In Iraq To “Protect Our
Investment”
23/08/2006 By Thomas Harding, Defence
Correspondent, Telegraph Group Limited [Excerpt]
After more than three years of
fighting, with more than £3 billion spent and the loss of 115 British lives,
the country has an "obligation to protect our investment", say senior
defence sources.
IRAQ RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
(Graphic:
London Financial Times)
Assorted Resistance Action
8.22.06 Reuters & VOI & 23 Aug 2006
Reuters & Evening Echo & (KUNA) & AP
A roadside bomb exploded Wednesday in Baghdad
and narrowly missed the interior minister's convoy, killing two civilians and
wounding several traffic policemen, officials said.
Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani was unhurt
and it was not clear if he was the intended target or whether the bomb had been
meant for a U.S. military convoy that was about 500 yards behind.
The explosion in the neighborhood of Dora
injured five traffic policemen, said Dora police officer Mohammad al
Baghdadi. Dora is an area US troops now
regard as secure. [So much for
that.]
Resistance fighters killed one of the
bodyguards of the governor of Anbar in a drive-by shooting in Fallujah. The governor was not present during the
attack.
Resistance fighters killed a police major and
seriously wounded his driver as he was heading home in Baquba, 65 km (40 miles)
north of the capital.
Two policemen were killed down in different
incidents in the religiously mixed city of Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) north of
Baghdad, police said.
Eight policemen and two civilians were
wounded when a bomber wearing an explosive belt and a police uniform blew up
himself near a police check point near the court in the northern city of Mosul,
390 km (240 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
The bomber was apparently trying to enter the
police directorate building when he was stopped at the first of the several
checkpoints around it, said Maj. Gen. Wathiq al-Hamdani, the city police chief.
He said the bomber detonated the belt outside
the barricade.
Three traffic policemen were wounded by a
roadside bomb near a U.S. patrol in Falluja, 50 km (35 miles) west of Baghdad,
police said.
Guerrilla fighters killed a policeman on
Tuesday in the small town of al-Hay, south of Kut, 170 km (105 miles) southeast
of Baghdad.
A car exploded Wednesday near an army special
ops check-point in Dorra area in southern Iraq, said a security source.
The source which preferred to be unnamed told
KUNA that the explosion resulted in several deaths and injuries among the
special ops troops in the area.
According to eyewitnesses the explosion
caused the death of three soldiers and the injury of nine others. The security
source did not verify this information.
Wednesday, an Iraqi army officer, 1st Lt.
Hassanein Saadi al-Zerjawi, 29, was killed in a drive-by shooting in Amarah
while a policeman was shot to death in a similar incident Tuesday night in
Al-Hay, north of Amarah, police said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD OBSERVATIONS
“American Soldiers Were The Beating Heart Of
The Anti-Vietnam War Movement”
JULY 16 By Lydia Howell, KFAI [Excerpts]
Common to the point of cliché is the story
that soldiers returned from the Vietnam War, met at the San Francisco Airport
by hippie anti-war protesters, spit on by girls with love beads, who called the
warriors "baby-killers".
The "spitting image", was almost
totally-manufactured to erase a rebellious reality recovered with stirring
immediacy in David Zeiger’s "Sir No Sir!".
That reality is that many
American soldiers, in many different ways, joined the anti-war movement, when
they returned or while still in uniform.
"Sir No Sir!" perfectly captures
the sense of how the Vietnam War, a malignant a force as the massive bombing
raids over rice fields and villages, also swept over the country from the
mid-1960s, gaining ferocity through the war's close in 1975, and the movement
to end the war was an equal and opposite driving force.
Zeiger mixes archival footage with current
interviews, to focus on several Vietnam veterans' testimonies. Discovering these lost stories, no one can
doubt that (no less than combat), standing on individual conscience demands
courage.
Refusing orders to go to Vietnam or refusing
to fight after being there meant facing not only court martial but, years in
prison. Simply encouraging other
soldiers not to go, was often termed "fomenting mutiny" and risked
serious prison terms. A Navy nurse was
courtmartialed just for marching in a protest wearing her uniform.
We see the GI Coffeehouses, set up in the
small towns near American military bases--and forbidden to soldiers who were
drawn there like thirsty men in a desert.
Anti-war veterans created newspapers, with
names like "Fatigue News", "The Last Harrass" and "Fed
Up", eagerly awaited contraband shared in barracks across the country.
In a real way, American
soldiers were the beating heart of the anti-Vietnam War movement: the friends,
brothers and boyfriends of the more familiar images of students and activists.
So artfully has Zeiger allowed Vietnam
veterans' voices to carry his film, we're feel we’re back in the 1960s
vortex.
This is the absolutely right film at the
right time, as support for the war in Iraq continues to decline and as
resistance by American soldiers begins to grow: from veterans of the war in
Iraq forming groups like Operation Truth to soldiers like Camilo Mejia, who
spent a year in prison for refusing to do a second tour in Iraq.
Of special note are African-American
soldiers, often disproportionately put in harm's way on the battlefield, yet,
also increasingly awakened by the Black Power Movement. They make deep connections between their
experiences in a still-racist U.S. military and domestic discrimination.
In the voices of these black soldiers, Zeiger
brings back pieces of the more militant aspects of the Civil Rights Movement,
which has been as erased, vilified or both, as the GIs' anti-war movement has
been.
Zeiger is even bold enough to reclaim Jane
Fonda, who has been completely demonized (and misrepresented) for her anti-war
activism.
Wonderful footage of Fonda's collaboration
with fellow actor Donald Southerland and others to make an irreverent USO show
that toured Japan and the Philippines: "FTA"---a play on an U.S. Army
recruitment slogan "Fun Travel Adventure", known alternately as
"Free The Army" or "Fuck The Army," and was a resounding
success with the soldiers who saw it.
But, the core of Zeiger’s film is the
warrior resisters, both in their grainy black and white, poignantly younger
selves and the middle-aged men they are now.
From a young army doctor to
white working class or urban black draftees, from individual refusals to
participate in acts sometimes termed "genocidal" (such as pilots who
wouldn't fly bombing runs) to mass resistance like organizing to stop the USS
Constellation from leaving the San Diego port for Vietnam, this is a history
the current war-makers don't want us to know.
The national VFP president, David Cline is
one veteran in the film. To bring this
full circle, John Lamboke is another Vietnam veteran, also in the film, who did
years of research and demolished the myth that soldiers were spit on by antiwar
protesters, documented in his book "The Spitting Image".
SIR NO SIR fulfills what all
great documentaries do: discovers something we might never have seen otherwise.
In honoring these soldiers who
became warriors for peace, David Zeiger’s SIR NO SIR inspires us to
redefine what true patriotism is and that "serving one's country" can
be by waging peace.
Sir! No Sir!:
At A Theatre Near You!
To find it: http://www.sirnosir.com/
The Sir!
No Sir! DVD is on sale now, exclusively at www.sirnosir.com.
Also
available will be a Soundtrack CD (which includes the entire song from the FTA
Show, "Soldier We Love You"), theatrical posters, tee shirts, and the
DVD of "A Night of Ferocious Joy," a film by me about the first
hip-hop antiwar concert against the "War on Terror."
Do you have a friend or relative in the
service? Forward this E-MAIL along, or
send us the address if you wish and we’ll send it regularly. Whether in Iraq or stuck on a base in the
USA, this is extra important for your service friend, too often cut off from
access to encouraging news of growing resistance to the war, at home and inside
the armed services. Send requests to address up
top.
Enemy Fire
From: Dennis Serdel
To: GI Special
Sent: August 23, 2006
Subject: Enemy Fire by Dennis
Written by Dennis Serdel, Vietnam 1967-68
(one tour) Light Infantry, Americal Div. 11th Brigade, purple heart, Veterans
For Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against The War, United Auto Workers GM Retiree, in
Perry, Michigan
************************************************
Enemy Fire
Barry was loving it shooting at the Colonel's
whirlybird, the great god in the sky.
His Lieutenant came running back panting,
“Barry, will you stop shooting
at the Colonel's helicopter, he's calling
on the radio telling me
my men are shooting at him.”
With moss on his teeth clenched,
eating out of cans, salt white sweat rings
around his neck shirt like a target, Barry spoke,
“Tell him to come down here
and fight with us and he will figure out
that we shouldn't even be in this war
and let's all go home.”
“But Barry,” “NO, instead, he is sitting
in his outfitted leather helicopter lounge,
with his ice and bar
so he can knock down one
if the stress gets to the pig.”
“Then after a tough day,
he flies back and takes a shower
and his Vietnamese whore child
helps him dress, buffs his boots
a couple of more times.” “But Barry.”
“NO, listen, then he saunters over
to the Officer's Club and orders
a thick steak medium rare,
mushrooms and onions,”
“take it easy on the onions,
heartburn, you know.”
|