Saturday, August 02, 2008

Rape in the Military:

Congress Charges Cover-Up





Congress takes on the Department of Defense in the first oversight hearing held this year by the subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs on sexual assault in the military. Dr. Kaye Whitley, Director of Sexual Assault and Prevention and Response Office (SAPRO) failed to show at the hearing despite being subpoenaed. Her "no show" left some members accusing the DOD of a cover up.



Col. Ann Wright

Sexual Assault in the Military: A DoD Cover-Up?

There was quite a struggle in Congress this week. The Department of Defense refused to allow the senior civilian in charge of its Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office (SAPRO) to testify in Thursday's hearing on sexual assault in the military. Rep. John Tierney, chair of the House Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs, angrily dismissed Principal Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Michael Dominguez from the hearing when Dominguez said that he, the DoD chief of legislative affairs and the chief of public affairs, had ordered Dr. Kaye Whitley, chief of SAPRO, to refuse to honor the subpoena issued by the subcommittee for her appearance.



DoD official booted from sex assault hearing

The Pentagon's No. 2 personnel and readiness official was admonished and dismissed from a House subcommittee hearing on sexual assault in the military Thursday after admitting that he had directed a key subordinate not to appear.

Tierney said Whitley would be subpoenaed and that Dominguez's decision showed disrespect to the two women who had testified moments earleir - one a rape victim, one a rape/murder victim's mother - as well as other victims and the subcommittee itself.



Sex Assaults Against Women in Military 'Epidemic'
GAO Report: Sexual Assaults and Rapes in Military Under-Reported by Half


A look at slayings of 3 military women in 7 months



Rapists in the ranks
Sexual assaults are frequent, and frequently ignored, in the armed services.



Oversight Hearing on Sexual Assault in the Military
More information and video clips at The Gavel

Friday, August 01, 2008

The U.S. on Military and Veterans Issues........No

Senate report criticises care of peacekeeper veterans

The Age - Melbourne,Victoria,Australia

Sarah Smiles
August 2, 2008

HUNDREDS of mental health disability claims are being made by peacekeepers who have served in Iraq, Afghanistan and East Timor, a report reveals.


"I can say that from my own personal situation. You feel that you have done 120% for the ADF and the country and, when you come back you become ill and all the ADF seem to be doing to you is wanting to get rid of you. So it is quite a significant impact on that veteran and his family," he told the inquiry.



Defence, AFP must improve peacekeeping cooperation: Senate

A Senate inquiry has called for Australian troops and Federal Police to improve their cooperation in overseas peacekeeping missions.




Report: Peacekeepers need exit plans

AUSTRALIA should not take part in peacekeeping missions without clear objectives and exit strategies, a senate committee has recommended.


"We are of the view that it would be singularly unwise to be committing Australian men and women into theatres of operation without a clear understanding why we are going there, what and how we are seeking to achieve it, and when the job is done, and when the men and women are coming home," he said today.

Brave New Foundation: In Their Boots Episode 5

"Hero's Welcome" - Chapter 1

Originally aired on July 30th, 2008

When Domonicque Tatum returned from Iraq he expected to be treated like a hero,
instead he found himself homeless and suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress.




Domonicque Tatum
US Army Veteran

Mary Tatum Chappell
Domonicque's Mother

Floyd "Shad" Meshad
Founder and President
National Veterans Foundation

Thursday, July 31, 2008

War on Terror? Criminal Terrorism!! The Rand Report

On the 29th of July an extremely important think tank report, paid for by the government, came forth from the Rand Corporation, a favorite of the Pentagon on National Security matters.

I heard the report early that morning on a news blip on NPR and went over to the Rand Site and found the report. I than posted about it on a number of sites as well as sent it out, all with back links.
There was also a link for a Congressional Briefing to be held on that day on the report.

At first I was shocked that very few picked up on the importance of this report, that day and the next, as well as the hearing. Than thinking about it later maybe I shouldn't have been surprised that few political boards saw the need to report and most certainly fewer MSM outlets as well. There's an Awful Lot of sheepish guilty consciouses that supported this criminal administration, and criminal it is, in the direction it started selling this 'War on Terrorism', and the MSM, purely for commercial profit, would love to see what their advertisers were paying for ads than, happily went along, War Sells Big Time! Hell these political people, the boards, the MSM, the majority of the voters even fear bringing charges and accountability, fear of what that may mean on the political front, to hell with the Constitution the Politics are more important!

There were a few people who like me tried to rattle the cages of these boards to pay attention, sadly they to were ignored. This morning truong son traveler had another great report posted on a couple of boards, after the MSM finally started to Get It, such as Keith Olbermann, after two days:

{ had to edit the end, didn't need the two reports prior and uploading, even with those cut off his last words, so I edited and put them in as closing text plus }


Other News outlets have also started grasping the importance of the Conservative Rand Corporations report and it's real meaning and have written it up, like these:

U.S. News and World Report

Since 2001, al Qaeda has conducted a greater number of attacks across a larger geographic area than at any time in its history. "We find it hard to agree that al Qaeda has been significantly weakened since Sept. 11, 2001," says Seth Jones, coauthor with Martin Libicki of the report titled "How Terrorist Groups End: Lessons for Countering al Qaeda."

The authors evaluate al Qaeda since 2001 as being both "strong" and "competent."

What's needed, the report suggests, is a "fundamental rethinking of U.S. strategy" to focus on minimizing overt military action and increasing intelligence collection and partnerships with law enforcement agencies around the world.

The report couldn't have been clearer in its refutation of one of the central tenants of the Bush administration's strategy against al Qaeda: the characterization of the conflict as a "global war." The administration has frequently attacked critics—especially Democrats—who say that counterterrorism should be built around law enforcement strategies.


As well as this:

Countering al Qaeda, a must-read for Pakistan from Reuters.

It’s probably unusual to link to a report by the RAND Corporation and an op-ed on Foxnews.com in the same blog, but since both address the same subject – tackling al Qaeda in the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region – here goes.

The first is a detailed report by RAND called “How Terrorist Groups End”.

Its analysis of 648 groups that existed between 1968 and 2006 concludes that ”military force has rarely been the primary reason for the end of terrorist groups, and few groups within this time frame have achieved victory.” Calling for a rethink of U.S. strategy, it argues that policing and intelligence, rather than military force, should form the backbone of U.S. efforts against al Qaeda.”



And this:

Kerry Was Right from the Atlantic

As you may recall, back during the 2004 campaign John Kerry said something about counterterrorism being primarily a question to be dealt with through law enforcement and intelligence rather than something that should be understood as primarily a kind of war. George W. Bush was eager to pounce:

Some are skeptical that the war on terror is really a war at all. My opponent said, and I quote, "The war on terror is less of a military operation, and far more of an intelligence-gathering law enforcement operation." I disagree—strongly disagree.


After 9/11 many were saying exactly what this Rand Report is now saying, seven years into this so called 'War on Terror', as well as our allies and even countries considered our foes or rather not friendly towards us, in going after al Qaeda and international criminal terrorism. We, the United States, had universal support from all corners of this planet after the devastating attacks on our country, that support would have brought the intelligence, the law enforcement agencies, and the militaries, if needed, to our aid in tracking down these criminal terrorists. This administration saw it differently and much more dangerously, wage a War on unknown factions, label them all terrorists, kill and destroy, thus creating the hatreds needed to enhance the threat leading to a replacement for the phony 'Cold War' by a 'War on Terrorism' for the wealth and power of the few and a long lasting destructive endeavor for the World to handle, and soon they will walk away with their profits and we as a Nation will hold no one Accountable!

Let me tell a little story here. After we invaded Afghanistan and ousted the Taliban, still not catching the leaders of al Qaeda, Veterans started planning an action of a Teach In to take place in Washington and called Operation Dire Distress, we saw the writing on the wall, what we 'Nam Vets especially had promised we would never allow to happen again was about to do just that. The talk changed from Afghanistan to Iraq and invading that country and toppling that leader, though the Iraqi people had nothing to do with 9/11. As the drums of war with Iraq were beating louder the planning went on. The Teach In took place, at American University in DC, on Saturday March 22nd 2003, some two days after 'Shock and Awe' started destroying the country of Iraq and it's people, there were some 300 to 400 Veterans, from World War II to the 1st Gulf War, as well as family and friends of some, from around the country.

This link is a PDF of the VFP Newsletter from that time, after that weekend Veterans For Peace Newsletter

THE TEACH-IN - Saturday, March 22
The Kay Chapel at the American University, Washington, D.C.,
teach-in was packed all afternoon as speaker after speaker, with
solid knowledge and passionate eloquence, expertly laid out the fallacies
and falsehoods driving the war in Iraq, the ways it could have
been averted, with honor, and the need to end it quickly.
I was impressed by the sanity with which people who have
earned the right to speak as soldiers and citizens and patriots of the
highest order confronted the insanity of the actions of the Bush
administration. It was a long and illustrious list of combat nurses,
intelligence experts, academics, clerics, citizens of all stripes - people
like Bobby Muller, Daniel Ellsberg, Ray McGivern, Charles
Sheehan-Miles, Jamie Vasquez, Jonathan Schell, Charley
Richardson and Nancy Lessing of Military Families Speak Out, our
president, David Cline. C-Span saw fit to broadcast it for four solid
hours.


A number of the speakers listed above, and there were more, were saying almost the exact same thing this Rand Report is now saying and much more, and we along with a growing voice of millions, in this country and around the world, have said since!

The next day a wreath laying was planned for all the monuments to those lost in our previous conflicts in Honor to their Service as our Brothers and Sisters in uniform, at the time the World War II monument had just started to be constructed

Two things happened that next day that I'll never forget, one really moved me and others, the other showed us 'Nam Vets how far this country hadn't come and hos sheepish it's citizens truly are, first a cut from the newsletter:

THE PROCESSION - Sunday,
March 23

The day of the march was brisk and
sunny. Veterans and Military Families
from all over the country collected on a
knoll near the Vietnam Memorial. We listened
to a few, short speeches. Most of us
had our messages firmly placed in our
hearts and minds. In solemn procession
we made our way from one war memorial
to another.
At each, a small delegation of veterans
walked in and placed a wreath in
memory of those we knew and didn’t
know that were lost to their families.
Peter Shaw played his bagpipes on
each occasion but one; when he joined the
delegation to the Korean War memorial.
There we laid our arms on each others’ shoulders and kept a short
silence.
We visited the Office of Veterans Affairs. The Gulf War I vets,
of a war not yet memorialized, laid their wreath at the doorstep. In a
short speech, Erik Gustafson of EPIC and a member of VFP, noted
how the Congress voted out a resolution supporting the troops, yet,
at three the next morning, voted to cut billions from the budget of
the Office of Veterans Affairs over the next ten years.
The final official delegation delivered the VAIW statement of
purpose, signed by over 3000 veterans, ranking from Admirals and
Generals to PFCs, Airmen and Seamen, to the Whitehouse.
The President’s people refused to accept it.


The first, never to be lost memory, the one that moved me.

I had gotten to the Mall early in order to take some pictures of the War Memorials before the crowds started and the rest of the Veterans and friends showed up. There was a stage setup at the Lincoln Memorial didn't go over there and didn't know what it was for but was soon to find out. While there taking a few shots and waiting for the Vets I noticed people started showing up and heading down towards the stage area, none would look at me or if they did and I caught their eyes they would quickly look away. I asked a DC cop that was near by what the stage was for, it was a planned Clear Channel 'support The Troops' rally, now I understood why the no looks, I had my Veterans For Peace T-Shirt and Ballcap on, I'll explain in a moment.

The vets started coming to the mall, as we were talking DC park personal started showing up with crowd control tube barriers, they look like bicycle racks without the center bars, They set them up in a line along the hill between us and the Vietnam Memorial, i.e. the Lincoln Memorial. While this was taking place we were joined by some other Vets, from around the area, that hadn't been at the Teach In the day before. While talking I noticed one guy running towards us from the corner of the Mall. When he got up to us, out of breath, he asked who he should talk to to join VFP. Come to find out he had watched the Saturday Teach In on C-Span, jumped on a Red Eye out of Chicago and flew down to join us for Sunday's Wreath laying, he was a 'Nam Vet who hadn't been active prior to the debacle that had started a few days before.

Now to the second occurrence, the state of this Nations Citizens, and the Treatment of Veterans, though us 'Nam Vets had already lived with it for years.

See the picture above, see the horses, well about 8to10 of DC's finest showed up riding them and took a line along the barriers. They were extremely nice to us but told us we couldn't pass over, especially in masse to lay one of the Wreath's at the Vietnam Memorial as we planned, only a small group of 3 to 4 would be allowed to do that Honor. Now as there were Veterans from WWII, through Korea, to 'Nam and up to Gulf War I the majority were Korea to 'Nam and we weren't allowed to honor our Fallen Brothers of 'Nam because the police thought there might be trouble if we Veterans got to close to the Rally 'Supporting The Troops', it was at the rally organizers request to keep us Veterans Away! No one was approached by any attending this rally, some 200 or so, so not one Vet was asked if they wanted to attend a rally in Support Of Our New Generation Of Coming Conflict Veterans! They were waving American Flags, playing Patriotic Music, singing along with the Patriotic songs and making speeches of 'Supporting The Troops' while Spitting Once Again On The Veterans Who Had Served Them In Protection Of Their Freedom, supposedly, and Democracy, supposedly!

A problem arose, if we couldn't walk near this Patriotic Rally for our Service Members how does one get from the Vietnam Memorial and the others on that side of the reflecting pool to the Korean Memorial on the otherside, there was a fence up at the opposite end from the Lincoln Memorial for the WWII Construction, why one allows the DC Police to lead, enmasse, a walk through the reflecting pool which just happened to be empty for a well needed cleaning, like a miracle only the water didn't need to part!!

Think about the above and if you've ever been to DC you can get a picture of how we were treated and the Honor Wreath laying, about 400 Veterans Shunned by the Patriotic Americans they served and our brothers and sisters died for!!

You know, those Clear Channel Rallies were never attended by huge crowds nor did they last long, they sort of went quietly away as the cheap magnetic ribbons took over, they too have pretty much disappeared.

We were saying, and have since, Exactly what this Rand Corporation report is saying now, and Think how many have died, been maimed physically and mentally, not just soldiers but civilians of another small country and how much damage has been done and the hatreds now that have been created!!


you can get the press release here, you can get the full document here or a summary of the research brief here.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

"LEAVE NO SOLDIER"

TWO JOURNEYS, TWO GENERATIONS, BRINGING EACH OTHER HOME

"Leave No Soldier"

A feature length documentary directed, produced and co-written by Donna Bassin,
an official selection of the 2008 Rhode Island International Film Festival.


"LEAVE NO SOLDIER,” Tells the story of two impassioned journeys by two communities of American War Veterans who have carried a Military Oath from the Battlefield
to the home front. The two groups are divided by their politics, but united in their devotion to dead comrades and their compassionate commitment
to "Leave No Fallen Soldier Behind".

Below you will find mostly what is printed in the Documentaries Press Release, which if interested can be Downloaded Here in PDF with photo's and more information.

I was asked if I could pass the information on to others, so any interested can keep their eyes open for this important Documentary. And those, in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine and possibly as far away as New York and New Jersey as well as Pennsylvania that either knew or didn't know about the film festival, and might want to attend, can plan to see a host of films covering many subjects, as film does.

Will add, if visiting the Documentaries site, you will find some links. As yet there isn't a Trailor for the Documentary, have inquired as to if one will be available later, haven't heard back yet.


2006: The third year of the Iraq War. Rolling Thunder Inc and Veterans For Peace each undertake a highly emotional journey of remembrance, protest and reparation. In very different ways, each group has set out to redirect their grief and rage into a redemptive advocacy for soldiers at war overseas, and for wounded warriors at home. Occupying opposite sides of the political spectrum, both groups feel betrayed by their government, and vow that never again will one generation of veterans abandon another.


Rolling Thunder Inc organizes a motorcycle procession {which happens each Memorial day-JS} through the streets of Washington D.C. to the Vietnam Veteran Memorial. 500,000 Harley Davidsons echo the sounds of helicopters and B-52 bombers in a war torn sky. While supporting the U.S. commitment to the war, Rolling Thunder makes a powerful statement of protest against the governments inattention to our returning warriors.


A few months later, Veterans For Peace and the newly formed Iraq Veterans Against The War march 125 miles along the devastated Gulf Coast, supporting the politics of Social Transformation and repairing houses in solidarity with survivors of Hurricane Katrina. Like these survivors Veterans For Peace feel abandoned by a government indifferent to their plight. Unlike Rolling Thunder, Veterans For Peace is committed to a change in the U.S. policy on Iraq.


Set against the action of these two interwoven journeys, we follow two generations of American War Veterans -- Men and Women, Soldiers and Nurses -- as they make their passage from grief and rage to outspoken activism.

Directors Statement

As midwife to Leave No Soldier I have come to know a great deal both about
the struggle of many of our returning soldiers, and their extraordinary
courage in dealing with the painful aftermath of war. For this reason,
I chose not to make another film about war’s trauma, but instead to focus
on how some of our war veterans have come together in an effort to mourn.
Their mourning has not been a private affair; they have taken on acts
of social responsibility, and in doing so, they have taken back control
over their lives.
In part, the film is social commentary. It depicts a military culture that
encouraged detachment and numbing as a way to cope with both killing
and watching others killed. This is as true now as it was during the
Vietnam War years. When soldiers came home from Vietnam, many of us were
guilty of dismissing the needs of our returning warriors, of telling them
to “just get over it,” as Vietnam Veteran, Edie McCoy observed. We are less
guilty of this kind of dismissiveness today, but many of our veterans from
Iraq and Afghanistan still feel isolated and marginalized. They turn to each
other for recognition and understanding, maintaining the belief that “if you
haven’t been in war you can’t know what it is like”.
Now we are embroiled in Iraq and Afghanistan, and many Vietnam veterans are
re-experiencing painful memories of their war time experiences and returning home.
The press has picked up on a psychiatric diagnosis to describe this:
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). But is it actually a disorder?
Stan Goff, retired Master Sergeant, suggests that our vets’ PTSD is actually
a natural reaction to the deep distress of war experience. But too often our
society blames veterans for being unable to “get over it,” and they become
isolated and ashamed as a result. Is it surprising that so many turn to
self-destructive solutions of “forgetting” like drug and alcohol abuse?

In Leave No Soldier, Vietnam veterans emerge from the shadows and pledge
not to abandon today‘s generation of returning soldiers. The communities
of Rolling Thunder, Inc., Veterans for Peace, and Iraq Veterans Against
the War (among others) are reaching out to mentor the returning wounded
warriors from Iraq and Afghanistan, and thus are maintaining their commitment
to “leave no fallen soldier behind”. The veterans in the film insist that
our losses must be honored rather than forgotten. The wounds of war while
painful also hold great wisdom. Their wisdom suggests that rebellious grief
and memory redirected to witness the present can be a catalyst for change.
As a psychologist, I am convinced that we must develop the capacity to acknowledge
our losses, and manage them through acts of atonement and repair. By developing
a humane political consciousness, we have the capacity to transcend our need
for revenge and retaliation. Leave no Soldier follows this arduous journey
to counter the destructive impulses that are evoked by war, pain and fear
and to recover life, identity, and meaning.
Tim O’Brien, Vietnam veteran and author, has described the heavy loads that
combat soldiers carry on the battlefield: weapons, mine detectors, tents,
radios, bibles, fear and grief and most poignantly each other. This image
of one soldier carrying their brother or sister out of harms way lodged
itself within me as a powerful narrative of care. These deep bonds of responsibility
and the lived experience of brotherhood and sisterhood among those who have
fought together are the foundations of any healing community.
Like a Greek chorus, our veterans express our collective sorrow; they warn
of the dangers of ignoring and forgetting. They hold the grief of war for us
who will not, and in so doing help us come to grips with its catastrophic impact.
Their communal mourning forces us to reflect upon our politics, and to pause
and think critically about actions done in our name and that of our nation.
If we as a nation send our children to war we have a responsibility to share
the heavy load they carry.
I want to close with my appreciation to all those extraordinary veterans
and loved ones of those killed in action who gave deeply and freely of their
time and thoughts. Jan Barry, teenage Vietnam soldier turned world citizen,
deserves a special thank you and although he doesn’t directly appear in
Leave No Soldier, his counsel and poetry are very much a part of this film.


Cast

Master Sergeant Stan Goff served his country faithfully
for over 25 years and in 8 conflict areas. He enlisted
in the US Army at the age of 18 and did his first tour in
Vietnam the same year. Afterwards he went career, and
as part of the Special Forces units, Delta Force and the
Army Rangers, served in the conflict areas of Guatemala,
Grenada, El Salvador, Peru, Columbia, Haiti and Somalia.
Since his retirement from the Armed forces in 1996, Stan
has written three books on the subject of militarism and
currently serves as an adviser and mentor of Iraq Veterans
Against the War. He is also a contributor to the
Huffington Post.


1st Lieutenant Mary “Edie” McCoy Meeks
served in the Army Nurse Corps.
from 1968-1970 and served for one
year in Vietnam, splitting time
between the 3rd Field Hospital in
Saigon and the 71st Evac Hospital
in Pleiku. She is a member of
Rolling Thunder, Inc. and Veterans
for Peace and often spends her time
visiting with the sick at Veterans’
Hospitals. She now works as a clinical
spine specialist in the Hudson
Valley of New York.


Sergeant Kelly Dougherty served in the Army National
Guard from 1996-2004. She spent 10 months serving
in Southern Iraq near Nazaria as a member of the 220th
Military Police Company. Upon completion of her service,
Kelly co-founded Iraq Veterans Against the War. She now
resides in Philadelphia where she acts as IVAW’s
Executive Director.
Georgie

Georgie Carter-Krell has recently been re-elected to a second term as
National President of American Gold Star Mothers, Inc. Her son John
Wayne Carter, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his bravery in Vietnam.
She rides with Rolling Thunder, Inc. over Memorial day weekend. She is
working to get the Miami Veterans Hospital to be renamed in his honor.


Sergeant Artie Muller served three tours of duty in Vietnam
starting in 1967. In 1987 he founded Rolling Thunder,Inc.
a veterans’ advocacy organization committed to bringing
home all American POWs and MIAs from foreign conflicts.
Currently he is the National Executive Director of Rolling
Thunder,Inc. and resides in New Jersey.


Specialist Garett Reppenhagen served four
years in the United States Army, culminating
in a year served working as a sniper in Iraq.
He returned home in 2005 and immediately
joined Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Garett now lives in Colorado with his
daughter where he is completing degrees
in teaching and history.


Specialist Michael Blake served a year in Iraq from 2003-2004.
He applied for, and was granted, status as a Conscientious
Objector and received his dis-charge from the military.
He resides in Syracuse, NY where he splits his time between
pursuing a degree in political science from SUNY-Cortland and
serving on the Board of Directors of Iraq Veterans Against the War.


Specialist Bill Mitchell served 4 years
in the U.S. Army from 1971-1974.
His son, Staff Sergeant Michael Mitchell,
was killed in Iraq. Bill resides
in San Luis Obispo, California,
and is the co-founder of Gold Star
Families for Peace.


1st Lieutenant Diane Carlson-Evans served 6 years in the Army Nurse Corps
between 1968-1974, with the first year being served in Vietnam.
Diane is the founder and chair of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial Project.
She worked for many years to have the Vietnam Women’s Memorial created
and placed near the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C. She is also
a member of Rolling Thunder,Inc. and Veterans for Peace.


Specialist Abbie Pickett served 5 years in the Army
National Guard, and 11 months in Iraq as a member
of the Wisconsin National Guard 229th Combat Support
Equipment Company. Abbie is a member of Iraq Veterans
Against the War. She resides in Madison, Wisconsin
where she has organized a veterans’ support group.
Abbie tours the country speaking out against
the harassment of women in the military.


Corporal David Cline {RIP Brother David} served one tour of duty
with the 25th Infantry Division in Vietnam
in 1967. After being wounded 3 times and
receiving 3 Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star,
David was discharged. He spent the next
40 years as a full time peace activist,
serving twice as the President of Veterans
for Peace


Specialist Garett Reppenhagen served four
years in the United States Army, culminating
in a year served working as a sniper in Iraq.
He returned home in 2005 and immediately
joined Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Garrett now lives in Colorado with his
daughter where he is completing degrees
in teaching and history.




RHODE ISLAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

August 5-10, 2008


"How Terrorist Groups End"

The title above comes from a new Rand Corporation Report

After 7 years of conflict and occupations, with 893 coalition deaths -- 556 Americans, in Afghanistan and increasing, and 4,438 coalition deaths -- 4,124 Americans in Iraq and increasing, with tens of thousands of injured and maimed, physically and mentally, and millions of innocents in both countries killed, maimed, living as refugee's, fighting each other in sectarian civil wars, living in ethnically cleansed neighborhoods and area's in Iraq behind huge concrete blast walls, this "Think Tank?" comes out and says:

U.S. Should Rethink "War On Terrorism" Strategy to Deal with Resurgent Al Qaida

Current U.S. strategy against terrorist organization al Qaida has not been successful at limiting the group's capabilities. Since Sept. 11, 2001, al Qaida has been involved in more terrorist attacks than ever before and over an increasingly broader range of targets.


No F'in Shit!!!!!

Millions of us, here and around the world, before the invasions and occupations, were saying exactly the same and more, and we weren't called a "Think Tank" we were labeled as "Focus Groups" not to be listened to, those here were labeled as "Unpatriotic", "Traitors", "Enemy Sympathizers", you name it "We Were In The Wrong" and the lying bastards of power Were Right, over seventy percent of this countries people Said So, and now hide from that support and tune out what the reality is!

And what does this "Think Tank" think we should do, not only this country but the world, well according to their press release:

Current U.S. strategy against the terrorist group al Qaida has not been successful in significantly undermining the group's capabilities, according to a new RAND Corporation study issued today.


Oh if you click the link directly above they'll sell you the study in paperback. But you can download the Full Document (File size 3.1 MB, 13 minutes modem, 2 minutes broadband) in PDF or download the Summary Only (File size 0.1 MB, 1 minute modem, 1 minute broadband) also in PDF.

From the site page linked above, a short description:

All terrorist groups eventually end. But how do they end? The evidence since 1968 indicates that most groups have ended because (1) they joined the political process (43 percent) or (2) local police and intelligence agencies arrested or killed key members (40 percent). Military force has rarely been the primary reason for the end of terrorist groups, and few groups within this time frame have achieved victory. This has significant implications for dealing with al Qa'ida and suggests fundamentally rethinking post-9/11 U.S. counterterrorism strategy: Policymakers need to understand where to prioritize their efforts with limited resources and attention. The authors report that religious terrorist groups take longer to eliminate than other groups and rarely achieve their objectives. The largest groups achieve their goals more often and last longer than the smallest ones do. Finally, groups from upper-income countries are more likely to be left-wing or nationalist and less likely to have religion as their motivation. The authors conclude that policing and intelligence, rather than military force, should form the backbone of U.S. efforts against al Qa'ida. And U.S. policymakers should end the use of the phrase “war on terrorism” since there is no battlefield solution to defeating al Qa'ida.


If you noticed in the above the terms "leftwing" and "nationalists" are used. While both so called ideologies, across many spectrum's not only political have their extremists I would argue that we recently became witness to a terrorists attack, on innocents, in a church, that from the reporting of it coming out hardly shows this terrorists was of a "leftwing" ideology, a "nationalists" maybe, but I doubt he even knows what that is.

And those we presently label as "Terrorist", any we wish as those naming wage terror, are hardly "leftwing", more of the extreme "rightside" of political, religious, and corporate entities.

If you also noticed, near the end of the above, it says, "U.S. policymakers should end the use of the phrase "war on terrorism" since there is no battlefield solution to defeating al Qa'ida."!

Now where have I heard that before, oh ya, from the Millions of us in the "Focus Groups" for over seven years! And what do they suggest we call it exactly, why "CounterTerrorism" instead, and why, because Terror is a Criminal Act and can only be gone after as a Crime finding and arresting, and if a fight ensues possibly killing, those carrying out these crimes, breaking up the organizations big and small, and I'll add change the policies the powerful practice to suppress any need for the disenfranchised to rebel against that power and those failed policies!

From the Press Release:

Among the other findings, the study notes:

* Religious terrorist groups take longer to eliminate than other groups. Since 1968, approximately 62 percent of all terrorist groups have ended, while only 32 percent of religious terrorist groups have done so.

* No religious terrorist group has achieved victory since 1968.

* Size is an important predictor of a groups' fate. Large groups of more than 10,000 members have been victorious more than 25 percent of the time, while victory is rare when groups are smaller than 1,000 members.

* There is no statistical correlation between the duration of a terrorist group and ideological motivation, economic conditions, regime type or the breadth of terrorist goals.

* Terrorist groups that become involved in an insurgency do not end easily. Nearly 50 percent of the time they end with a negotiated settlement with the government, 25 percent of the time they achieved victory and 19 percent of the time, military groups defeated them.

* Terrorist groups from upper-income countries are much more likely to be left-wing or nationalistic, and much less likely to be motivated by religion.

"The United States has the necessary instruments to defeat al Qaida, it just needs to shift its strategy and keep in mind that terrorist groups are not eradicated overnight," Jones said.



It took over seven years for this thinktank to come up with the obvious.

We waged War, mostly on Innocent Human Beings, using such catch phrases as "They hate our Freedom and Democracy", "They want to convert all to Islam", the so called leader? of the pack even used a term describing it was another "Religious War" and called himself a "War President" and "The Decider".

What we have done is create not only new generations of Hatred, we have made New Enemies of us and the World, tens of thousands if not millions, by the Failed Policies, the Death and Destruction, the Want To Control Them. And the generations behind us will be left dealing with the New World We Have Given Them!!

Once again, you can get the press release here, you can get the full document here or a summary of the research brief here. There is also a link for a Congressional Briefing to be held today:

Speakers: Seth Jones Date: Tuesday, July 29, 2008 Time: 2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Location: 210 Cannon House Office Building Washington, D.C.


If televised I'm wondering if I should watch it, I'm afraid I might either start pulling out my hair or throw something into the tv screen, as I think of All that has been Done these past seven years and none can be taken back!!!!!!!

Desperate for Cannon Fodder, Recruiters Threatening Youngsters!!!

Army Recruiter Used Scare Tactics
Teen Who Signed Non-Binding Contract Told He'd Be Jailed If He Didn't Join Army


(CBS) From NASCAR to bull riding, Army recruiters are pulling out all the stops and have had remarkable success meeting their quotas despite two wars. But one recruiter was caught in a tape-recorded phone call doing it with threats, CBS News national security correspondent David Martin.

As CBS affiliate KHOU in Houston first reported, Irving Gonzalez signed a non-binding contract that left him free to change his mind about joining the Army up to the moment he reported for basic training - which is exactly what he did.

"I'd rather just stay here," he said. "Go to college."

But listen to what his recruiter, Sgt. Glenn Marquette, told him would happen.



SNIP Rest Here

Monday, July 28, 2008

Super-Rich Tax Cheats

They hide an estimated $100 billion a year from the IRS, but now the U.S. Senate is turning up the heat on offshore tax havens. The man who ratted out some of these tax dodgers now lives in hiding and has a $10 million bounty on his head. This is a story straight out of our new Gilded Age -- one of billionaires, foreign bankers, corruption, secrecy and, of course, greed.

Church Shooting, Another Terrorists Attack!!!

Just like School Shootings and one can name a whole range of Tragic incidents that fall under the Exact Description we give of Terrorism, in the Theaters of Iraq and Afghanistan and around the World. Nobody has stopped Terrorists Attacks in this Country, this one for the Hate against what the shooter was led to believe about a Political Ideology he didn't understand, nor even his own!!

Chief: Church gunman says he acted out of 'hatred for the liberal movement'

The church, like many other Unitarian Universalist churches, promotes progressive social work, such as desegregation and fighting for the rights of women and gays. The Knoxville congregation has provided sanctuary for political refugees, fed the homeless and founded a chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, according to its website.

Karen Massey, who lived two houses from Adkisson's home, told the Knoxville News Sentinel of a lengthy conversation she had with Adkisson a couple years ago after she told him her daughter had just graduated from Johnson Bible College. She said she ended up having to explain to him that she was a Christian.

"He almost turned angry," she told the newspaper. "He seemed to get angry at that. He said that everything in the Bible contradicts itself if you read it."


In one of the earlier breaking news articles they said the police found a 'manifesto' in his vehicle at the church. The quote about comes from an earlier report that's linked from the link title above.

Will we start seeing more of these attacks? Have we already but nothing was left and the shooters were killed? Is this a result of the Hate Speech News we get from outlets not giving Real News but opinions of a few who make money for themselves and others, huge amounts? So Many Questions??????

IF?

Thing about this Incident, if the guy had approached this church looking for Help, they probably would have reached out and givin what was needed, instead he blows a number of people away in front of the children of those attending, creating even more trauma!!

"PTSD Spells MIA" by Wes and Victoria

Raising Awareness Through Music

A new song just released by American folk artists Wes and Victoria hopes to raise awareness of and increase action around the issue of combat PTSD in our returning veterans. As Victoria gently plays her harmonica, Wes strums a guitar and sings:




Ilona has this posted up at her site, the top link takes you there, with backlinks to their site with a host of information and ability to download the song and video's.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Post Traumatic Stress Research

PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder): An anxiety disorder that can develop after exposure to a terrifying event or ordeal in which grave physical harm occurred or was threatened. People with PTSD have persistent frightening thoughts and memories of their ordeal. They may experience sleep problems, feel detached or numb, or be easily startled.


TBI (traumatic brain injury): Also called a concussion.


ASR (acute stress reaction): The immediate aftermath of a traumatic incident in a combat zone. The military describes it as normal reactions among troops confronted by abnormal situations.


CID (critical incident debrief): The Army's term for a mandatory session that takes place 24 to 72 hours after an event that may be sapping a soldier's will to fight.


National Institute Of Mental Health


At a recent conference for some of the area's leading neurologists, San Francisco physicist Norbert Schuff captured his colleagues' attention when he presented colorful brain images of U.S. soldiers who had returned from Iraq and Afghanistan and were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.



That conference is covered in this article PTSD leaves physical footprints on the brain in the San Francisco Gate.


The yellow areas, Schuff explained during his presentation at the city's Veterans Affairs Medical Center, showed where the hippocampus, which plays major roles in short-term memory and emotions, had atrophied. The red swatches marked hyperfusion - increased blood flow - in the prefrontal cortex, the region responsible for conflict resolution and decision-making. Compared with a soldier without the affliction, the PTSD brain had lost 5 to 10 percent of its gray matter volume, indicating yet more neuron damage.



The hippocampus is located in the medial temporal lobe of the brain. (In this illustration of the inferior surface (underside) of the brain, the frontal lobe of the brain is at the top, while the occipital lobe is at the bottom.)


Norbert Schuff, PhD, is Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Radiology, University of California San Francisco. Who gives this observation and asks these questions.


"But we're still in the infancy of neuroimaging," Schuff cautioned later in his office. "Do you get PTSD because you have a small hippocampus? Or does a small hippocampus mean you'll develop PTSD? That, we still don't know."



Many seem to be joining into the research and care, know of some youngsters in or entering college with a focus on psychiatry and particularly interested in PTSD, combat and in the civilian population, for it's finally being understood many suffer from PTSD from traumatic experiences in their lives, one is a niece of mine who is closing out her college years.


Schuff's research is at the forefront of a bold push by the Department of Defense to address PTSD, the psychological disorder that will haunt an estimated 30 percent of the veterans returning from the current two wars, according to the Pentagon. Forty thousand veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, Pentagon officials say, have already been diagnosed with PTSD, which is defined as an anxiety disorder triggered by exposure to traumatic events; symptoms can include nightmares, flashbacks and panic attacks.

Left untreated, clinicians say, patients with PTSD are more likely to engage in anti-social behaviors such as alcohol and drug abuse. The disorder, neurologists are now learning, can also lead to long-term maladies, such as Alzheimer's and dementia.



Better late than never but this country should have started the research, not just the few who had and the veterans who understood, extensively after it was finally recognized. For combat PTSD has always been there, not only in military troops but civilians in the countries and area's of the many conflicts man wages on man.


They break the article up into a few subtitles, such as this,


Manhattan Project urgency


The quest is to understand how the disorder begins inside the brain. The Defense Department has invested $78 million in San Francisco's Northern California Institute for Research and Education at the VA center in the past four years, making it the largest VA research institute in the country and the only one that specializes in neuroscience. With 200 researchers on staff, and an estimated 40 ongoing studies that rely on 60 to 80 veterans as research participants, the center has the urgency of a Manhattan Project site, this time searching for a way to end a mental health crisis.

The Department of Defense "has such a compelling need for these answers," said Dr. Thomas Neylan, an associate professor of psychiatry at UCSF and director of the post-traumatic stress disorder program at the VA center. "They want to know these answers now, which is the right approach. We want the answers now; people are still going off to the war, coming back, and a lot of them are suffering for a long time."



There's more under this heading but they close it out with this:


"We're using this opportunity to also see why some people are able to walk away from these situations and live healthy lives," he said, "and why others are not."



They go into:


The effects of IEDs


The link between mild brain trauma and PTSD is being studied at the VA center in San Francisco by Dr. Gary Abrams, whose preliminary studies show that the overlap between PTSD patients and sufferers of mild brain trauma injury "is tremendous." Abrams has yet to release definitive numbers.



And you will find a paragraph under this next subtitle that one might find interesting and can be viewed at the title link.


Recent attempts to estimate frequency


Under this next one they give a brief description of four experiments now being taken in attempts to ease the burden some have from the stress and trauma of Conflicts and Occupations


Experiments probe further into post-traumatic stress disorder


Nasal spray: Scott Panter is developing a battlefield-ready nasal spray for troops who suffer brain trauma. After the trauma occurs, the brain swells, causing tissue damage. Panter's nasal spray, applied within 20 minutes of a trauma, would aim to stop the swelling process. Troops could carry the spray in their packs and self-apply or administer to others.

D-cycloserine: Dr. Charles Marmar is conducting trials on PTSD patients using D-cycloserine. The drug, which was originally used as an antibiotic for tuberculosis, has also proved to help lab animals "unlearn fear responses." Given in small doses 30 minutes before a therapy session, D-cyclo is meant to help PTSD patients open up about their traumatic experiences and become more willing to engage in therapy. The hypothesis is that the group taking D-cyclo will make more and faster progress in therapy.

Blood/gene test: Dr. Lynn Pulliam is trying to establish a blood profile to diagnose PTSD. Using gene array technology, researchers will be able to take an RNA test, much like a DNA test, to determine whether a patient "tests positive" for PTSD.

Sleep experiment: Dr. Thomas Neylan is conducting a study on improving veterans' sleep habits without drugs. Neylan said PTSD patients often feel anxious about sleeping, in part because they anticipate insomnia but also because they worry about nightmares. Subjects are coached to avoid substances that interfere with their sleep. "If we get them to sleep better at night," Neylan said, "they'll have fewer nightmares and feel better during the day."



There is another recent report out hitting on what the military is doing for those who may be coming under the stress and trauma of the conflicts In - Theater.



Army treats combat stress in the field


Sgt. Seth "Doc" Musikant could be a recruiting poster for the Army's new approach to PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder.

In April, Musikant and his team were driving around a traffic circle in the city of Tuz. It was their second time through the roundabout that day, and between trips somebody had planted a homemade bomb. It blew up their Humvee.



Sgt. Musikant had this to say firther down:


"It's like there's an invisible wall," Musikant said about the anxiety that temporarily troubled him.



For one thing, it's cheaper to treat PTSD than it is to train a new recruit. For another, Bourque said, "the healthier their personnel, the better off the Army is."

Now the Army identifies a condition called acute stress reaction, or ASR -- the immediate aftermath of a traumatic incident in a combat zone. Since PTSD takes months, sometimes years, to manifest itself, military doctors and counselors prefer the new term to describe what they regard as normal reactions among troops confronted by abnormal situations.



You can read the whole report here, it isn't that long.


I'm been an advocate of PTSD, among other causes, since returning from Vietnam and knowing many who suffered from as well as the many of my brother Vets who took it on as a profession to help their brothers and others. It's once again one of the many extremely important causes that the society shuns, they don't want to spend the needed funds to research and help, yet it costs them more as time passes. They don't want to hear about those suffering who finally just break and cause problems, some extreme, within the communities, because they weren't receiving the help they were asking for, nor are there enough who understand to give the help needed.


For me, PTSD should be right up there along side 'War as a Last Resort' before this country sends it's Military into another's to invade, destroy than occupy. For the aftereffects of War on many as to PTSD are like the unexploded ordinance found throughout the many lands man wages conflicts, it keeps the continuation of War long after they supposedly end for the greater majority!


And in todays World the enemies we the so called powerful make leads to the less powerful to continue and intensify the Criminal Terror that has been occurring with rapid growth for a number of years!

Brave New Foundation: In Their Boots Episode 4

"Homecoming: Chapter 2"

Kim Roy has spent the last fifteen months taking care of her two young boys while her husband, Justin, was away in Afghanistan. Now he's coming home.
Justin Roy Captain, US Army

Virginia Ruehrwein
Armed Services YMCA, San Diego



In Their Boots

Over to your right I have some links to Brave New Foundation and In Their Boots