Sunday, February 07, 2010

"Whoa Nelly!", Australian Iraq War Inquiry? {Brit Inquiry}

Catching this, not much up yet, gives me a chance to catch up on the Brit Iraq War Inquiry, still ongoing.

First the Brits with theirs, next the Dutch and theirs and now some very prominent Aussie's are calling for their own! Could the pressure start mounting on the Power that controlled the whole extremely failed policies of the previous decade? Time will tell but most residents of this country are apathetic and arrogant as to most everything especially baring their guilt and guilty in mass, as the The pitbull in lipstick said at the no American Flags tea gathering, "We don't want to look back'"!

With all the questions that need to be answered, especially as to the growing lists of proof debunking much of what was stated in the lead up to and continued occupation of there's one I never hear asked nor can find anything on, how much did it cost this country to buy the so called 'coalition of nations' that signed on their support to our countries leadership?! Especially the many who only sent a few military troops or most who sent none!

Doctors call for inquiry into Australia's war on Iraq

The Medical Association for Prevention of War has called for an independent inquiry into Australia’s involvement in the Iraq War.

MAPW president Dr Bill Williams said: “It’s time to quiz the men and women who sent Australians to war in Iraq. Let us scrutinise their reasons. Were they valid? Was our intelligence accurate? Was our participation legal? >>>>>


Australian Iraq war inquiry?

February 05, 2010

Does Australia need its own commission of inquiry into its decision to invade Iraq? >>>>>



That's it so far on hopefully a growing Australian story and better yet their own Inquiry, but we can help these doctors and the Australians in support of their call!

Now to catch up on the British Inquiry, since my last.

The Listening Post - Media coverage of the UK's Iraq war inquiry - Part 1


Short: Goldsmith 'misled' cabinet over Iraq

2 February 2010 Former international development secretary Clare Short accuses Lord Goldsmith, the former attorney general, of misleading the Cabinet over the legality of the Iraq war. Katie Razzall reports.



Why Clare's career was cut Short

4 February 2010 BLAIR lied over Iraq. The four words you'd think would dominate any inquiry into the war.

But amidst all the soft-soaping and issue-dodging, it came down to one brave woman to say them. Clare Short.

Snip

Her ovation from the gallery was well deserved.

But it will be scant consolation for a career lost because there's no room for principles in our politics any more. >>>>>


'Something profound has been lost'

6 February 2010 Clare Short believes she was right not to resign sooner over Iraq: 'If I'd wanted to be popular, I just would have gone'. Photograph: Eamonn McCabe

Clare Short's failure to resign before the Iraq war drew criticism. This week, she was applauded after giving evidence at the Chilcot inquiry. Now about to leave parliament after 27 years, does she have any regrets?

For once, the timing couldn't have been better. It wasn't just, as Clare Short points out, that the Chilcot inquiry gave her a full three hours, "so I could say the whole thing"; it was also that she's standing down at the next election, and "it felt really good to go out and sit there and say my piece, put it on the record," before she leaves. >>>>>


Not Holding Leaders Responsible

For Crimes Only Breeds More War

One reason the U.S. is continuously at war is that its leaders “are never held to any criminal responsibility for their actions,” a law school dean writes.

The U.S. hanged World War II German and Japanese war criminals “but no American leaders are held to criminal responsibility by America, no matter how dastardly their conduct,” writes Lawrence Velvel, dean of the Massachusetts School of Law at Andover.

“And we of course will not let any other country or body hold them to criminal responsibility for horrendous conduct,” writes Velvel, in his school’s “Long Term View” magazine. Indeed, he noted the President George W. Bush “with unaccustomed foresight refused to let America support and ‘participate’ in the International Criminal Court lest Americans be triable for their actions.” >>>>>


Archbishop of Canterbury chides Tony Blair over Chilcot inquiry

5 February 2010 More Dostoevsky please! Rowan Williams says ex-PM needs more soul-searching after evidence to Iraq war inquiry

The archbishop of Canterbury has renewed his criticism of Tony Blair by urging the former prime minister to recognise his "absurdity" in the wake of the Chilcot inquiry into the Iraq war — and suggesting he read more Dostoevsky.

Repeating a previous quip that Blair is "very strong on God, very weak on irony", Rowan Williams said the former prime minister had perhaps not done enough soul-searching. >>>>>


POODLE'S NEW TERRIER

Tony Blair asked "the 2010 question" at the Iraq War Inquiry: where would we be if we hadn't invaded in 2003? His self-appointed apologist Richard Madeley claims that no one has answered the question. Well, let's try.

Snip

Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilian victims of war would not be dead, two million would not be refugees in Jordan and Syria. 179 British servicemen would be alive. Untold billions of taxpayers' money would have been spent on the NHS or schools.

Snip

There may be a downside. Tony Blair could still be Prime Minister, with Richard Madeley his yapping Pekingese in Downing Street. But you can't have everything. >>>>>


A few more points are made in the above.

Chilcot will change the way Muslims see the west

5 February 2010 If there is any hint of whitewash in the Iraq inquiry, it will only exacerbate an already inflamed situation

As we watch the ­unfolding drama of the Chilcot inquiry, we should be aware that this is not simply an act of domestic cleansing. Whatever the implications for our political and judicial institutions, it is crucial that the British people learn how we came to go to war. But Muslims are also waiting for the outcome of the investigation, and this makes the inquiry an opportunity that we can ill afford to lose. >>>>>


The above is the reason the United States Must hold their own Inquiry but better yet hearings leading to possible indictments, for we have caused the hatreds to grow and shown exactly what others once only used as their propaganda towards us proving it wasn't propaganda but truth. It would minimize the blowback that continues and will for the coming decades, especially in those just born or not born yet having not grown up, this past decades within the death and destruction wrought, as we try to become what we say and think we are!

Iraq Enquiry - Tony Blair’s ‘no regrets’ may return to haunt him, according to Philippe Sands QC

Last September I testified before the Dutch inquiry, which was equivalent to the Chilcot inquiry. I believe only two foreigners testified, Hans Blix and myself. I was grilled for about three hours. It had seven members, four of whom were legally qualified. They were extremely knowledgeable and well organised. That inquiry was presided over by a former chief justice of the Dutch supreme court, a respected authority.

They certainly knew how to ask questions. It was a stark contrast to the kind of questioning from the Chilcot inquiry, perhaps with the exception of Sir Roderic Lyne. It’s true, the composition doesn’t look ideal when you look at background and identities. But you learn to keep an open mind on these things, and the proof will be in the pudding. Let’s see what they report.
The Dutch inquiry reported three weeks ago. It concluded in a unanimous report that the Dutch government had taken an early decision, not based on justifiable intelligence, and that it was an illegal act that violated international law. >>>>>


Ann Clwyd tells inquiry why she backed Iraq invasion

4 February 2010 THE Prime Minister’s special envoy to Iraq said last night she had backed the 2003 invasion after becoming convinced Saddam Hussein was again planning to use chemical weapons against his own people.

Ann Clwyd, the MP for Cynon Valley, told the Chilcot Inquiry into the conflict that other avenues for dealing with the Iraqi regime had been exhausted.

As a human rights campaigner she had worked with Iraqi exiles in the Indict movement to get member of the Saddam government tried for war crimes but despite passing files to Scotland Yard no action was taken. >>>>>


That last sentence leads to another question I've had this one since Gulf War !, "Why didn't the United States and that Coalition of Nations bring charges in the Hague against Saddam at that time or right after his military was destroyed on the Highway of Death retreating back into Iraq from Kuwait?". Some of that may have had to do with the fact that those that gave Saddam the wink and nod to invade Kuwait were his most ardant supporters for years and some having helped place him in power in the first place.

And now maybe a trial or another Inquiry looms on the British

66 Iraqis launch torture cases against British troops

6 February 2010 Lawyers for 66 Iraqis, claiming torture and abuse at the hands of UK soldiers, started legal action Friday calling for a single inquiry into Britain s detention policy during the Iraq war.

There are now so many cases and claimants that the Ministry of Defence (MoD), Royal Military Police and the Court cannot hope to deal with them all individually within any sort of reasonable timescale, said Public Interest Lawyers (PIL).

Thus, it will be argued in this fresh judicial review that the only rational approach now is for a single and independent public inquiry into all the issues and cases, PIL said in a statement obtained by IRNA. >>>>>


Bush, Cheney and the Great Escape

Photo: phxpma; Edited: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t

With each passing day, it becomes more and more astonishing to encompass the fact that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and their henchmen from the prior administration have managed thus far to escape any accounting whatsoever for the massive battery of criminal activity committed during their time in office. More than a year has passed since these men had their hands on the levers of power, and evidence of their myriad crimes and frauds is laying all over the countryside, yet nothing has come of it.

The British government has been running a wide-ranging inquiry into the manner in which the UK and United States were led to war in Iraq by then-President Bush and then-Prime Minister Tony Blair. An astonishing amount of damning evidence and information has been uncovered and publicly aired, including the following statements delivered by a senior member of Parliament (MP) on Tuesday: >>>>>


Still going through some articles, it's frankly amazing how well the British media not only is covering this Inquiry but actually does pretty extensive reporting on many issues, hell most of the best reporting of facts during the previous decade has come forth from the Brits and others, them times are long gone here across the pond!

Iraq War Inquiry

Watch the Inquiry Live when in Session

Written Transcripts by Date

Oral: The Video's by Date

See how the Inquiry is unfolding on the Sky News Timeline

BBC Iraq inquiry - day by day timeline of evidence given

Australian Iraq War Inquiry?

First the Brits with theirs, next the Dutch and theirs and now some Aussie's are calling for their own! Could the pressure start mounting on the Power that controlled the whole extremely failed policies of the previous decade? Time will tell but most residents of this country are apathetic and arrogant as to most everything especially baring their guilt and guilty in mass!

Doctors call for inquiry into Australia's war on Iraq

The Medical Association for Prevention of War has called for an independent inquiry into Australia’s involvement in the Iraq War.

MAPW president Dr Bill Williams said: “It’s time to quiz the men and women who sent Australians to war in Iraq. Let us scrutinise their reasons. Were they valid? Was our intelligence accurate? Was our participation legal? >>>>>

Wounded Warrior Veterans

And the republican reps, in lock-step obstructionist always of Veterans needs, will be adorned with their finest 'purple heart bandages', big smiles and their lapel flag pins, as they speak of how much they 'support?' the troops and veterans!!

America's Wounded Warrior Veterans March on the Congress

The Military Order of the Purple Heart is stepping up to the call from Congress for input on how best to resolve the issues most important to the nation's veterans. America's wounded warriors from across the country will converge on Washington, D.C. during 8-12 February, 2010 to meet with their state's Senators and Representatives to educate them on these important issues Coming by twos and threes from almost every State and Territory, Capitol Hill will be awash in a sea of color as some 100 members of the Military Order of the Purple Heart travel the halls of Congress, their distinctive blue blazers adorned with America's oldest military decoration, the Purple Heart Medal, established by General George Washington in 1782 in Newburgh, New York. >>>>>

Saturday, February 06, 2010

Friday, February 05, 2010

ACTION: Stop the Extradition of Marc Hall to Iraq

US military plans to extradite stop-lossed Iraq war vet to Iraq for court martial over protest rap song

IVAW Press Release: Please Share!

Fort Stewart, Ga. – The US military plans to extradite a stop-lossed Iraq war veteran to Iraq “within a few days” to face a court martial for allegedly threatening military officers in a protest rap song he made.

Spc. Marc Hall has been jailed in the Liberty County Jail near Fort Stewart, Ga., since Dec. 11 because he wrote a song called “Stop Loss” about the practice of involuntarily extending military members’ contracts.

"It is our belief that the Army would violate its own regulations by deploying Marc and it would certainly violate his right to due process by making it far more difficult to get witnesses. It appears the Army doesn't believe it can get a conviction in a fair and public trial. We will do whatever we can to insure he remain in the United States," said Hall’s civilian attorney, David Gespass. >>>>>>


Marc's song


From Veterans for Peace:

Stop the Extradition of Marc Hall!

The US military plans to extradite a stop-lossed Iraq war veteran to Iraq “within a few days” to face a court martial for allegedly threatening military officers in a protest rap song he made. Spc. Marc Hall has been jailed in the Liberty County Jail near Fort Stewart, Ga., since Dec. 11 because he wrote a song called “Stop Loss” about the practice of involuntarily extending military members’ contracts.

Marc served 14 months honorably in Iraq. Learn more about his story here.

I just sent a letter to LTC Eric Bloom in support of Marc, you should too! >>>>>


Thanks!!!

Thursday, February 04, 2010

"I'm Still Standing"

Ex-POW in Iraq war recalls nightmares, depression

Shoshana Johnson poses for a picture in New York, Tuesday, Feb. 2, 2010. Johnson, the nation's first female black prisoner of war, was shot and captured in Iraq along with Jessica Lynch.

Shoshana Johnson survived gunshot wounds to both legs and 22 days as a prisoner of war in Iraq. Life wasn't so easy when she came home, either.

In a new book out this week, the 37-year-old single mother describes mental health problems related to her captivity and tells how it felt to play second fiddle in the media to fellow POW Jessica Lynch, who was captured in the same ambush.

"It was kind of hurtful," the former Army cook said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "If I'd been a petite, cutesy thing, it would've been different."

Snip

Johnson's book, I'm Still Standing", is being released in time for Black History Month. Johnson said she hopes that by telling her story, she can set the record straight and bring attention to mental health issues affecting veterans. >>>>>


I'm Still Standing: From Captive U.S. Soldier to Free Citizen--My Journey Home

Playing For Change | Nda

We recorded this original song in a small studio in Cape Town, South Africa. Mermans Kenkosenki harmonized with Jason Tamba to give the song a beautifully rich feeling. And PFC Band anchor Louis Mhlanga tied the whole track together with a light and effortless guitar that made this track one of our all time favorites. We hope you enjoy it!

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

"Theater of War"

This was on the PBS News Hour 02.03.10, they do give a couple of links and extended interviews with the participants I'll also post below.

Using Drama to Understand and Heal the Wounds of War

A dramatic performance project called 'Theater of War' uses ancient Greek tragedies for a very special goal: To link ancient and modern warriors in an understanding of war's pain and mental agony.

Wednesday on the NewsHour, Jeffrey Brown talks to the artists, mental health professionals and soldiers who have been involved and who see the healing potential of theater for soldiers and veterans returning from combat.


The Program Video


Here's a clip from 'Theater of War'


An extended interview with Bryan Doerries, writer, director and creator of "Theater of War":

FreeVideoCoding.com


An extended interview with Brig. Gen. Loree Sutton, a psychiatrist who heads a mental health program for the Department of Defense:

FreeVideoCoding.com


An extended interview with Tamara Tunie and Bill Camp, actors who perform in "Theater of War":

FreeVideoCoding.com


An extended interview with Sgt. John Eubanks & Sgt. Major Ronald Green:

FreeVideoCoding.com

Short: Goldsmith 'misled' cabinet over Iraq

British Iraq War inquiry


Former international development secretary Clare Short accuses Lord Goldsmith, the former attorney general, of misleading the Cabinet over the legality of the Iraq war. Katie Razzall reports.



Not Holding Leaders Responsible


For Crimes Only Breeds More War

One reason the U.S. is continuously at war is that its leaders “are never held to any criminal responsibility for their actions,” a law school dean writes.

The U.S. hanged World War II German and Japanese war criminals “but no American leaders are held to criminal responsibility by America, no matter how dastardly their conduct,” writes Lawrence Velvel, dean of the Massachusetts School of Law at Andover.

“And we of course will not let any other country or body hold them to criminal responsibility for horrendous conduct,” writes Velvel, in his school’s “Long Term View” magazine. Indeed, he noted the President George W. Bush “with unaccustomed foresight refused to let America support and ‘participate’ in the International Criminal Court lest Americans be triable for their actions.” >>>>>

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

In Hunt for al-Qaida,

'Lone Wolves' a Rising Threat

AIR DATE: Feb. 1, 2010
The leadership of al-Qaida is, by and large, on the run, says counter-terror expert Marc Sageman. Unfortunately, he tells Margaret Warner, more "lone wolves," such as the accused Christmas Day airplane bomber, have emerged as the new face of the terror threat. Transcript


FreeVideoCoding.com
{this is some seven minutes long}


Marc Sageman's books:

"Understanding Terror Networks"

"Leaderless Jihad: Terror Networks in the Twenty-First Century"

Acts of Terrorism are Criminal Acts by a group or individuals, a State can wage Terror by it's lack of solid reasons of defense or security by invasive acts against another State!

al Qaeda is a ghost enemy that any can be labeled as by others, or quickly used by groups or individuals for their enhancement of their propanda needs, who also loosely use the label 'terrorist' for it's pure fear factor!

The quicker we start going after these groups as criminal terrorist, as we should have right after 9/11, along with the help needed by many other states and their intelligence, the quicker we minimize the threat of the blowback in retaliation for our actions which up to now have created the possibility of tens of thousands of criminal terrorist!

'The Quants':

It Pays To Know Your Wall Street Math

February 1, 2010

In 1962, Ed Thorp became every gambler's favorite mathematician when he published the first mathematically proven method for beating the dealer at blackjack.

Thorp's work revolutionized the game. But he went further: In 1967, Thorp devised a system that uses math and computers to predict the future of the stock market. His hedge funds and his personal portfolio have been profitable ever since. >>>>>



There's an Excerpt of 'The Quants' at the link above where you can also listen to the discussion later if not with this embedded player above. This was a real good discussion on the, for lack of anything sensable to call it, racket of the Wall Street Casino!

The Quants: How a New Breed of Math Whizzes Conquered Wall Street and Nearly Destroyed It

Monday, February 01, 2010

FY 2011 Veterans Affairs Budget

This was posted prior to Shinseki's press conference.

Breaking down the FY 2011 Veterans Affairs Budget

While most of the DC military press is focused down on the Pentagon today, the Department of Veterans Affairs is also unveiling its fiscal 2011 spending plans and ambitious goals for the near future.

But even though the $125 billion VA budget proposal is only a fraction of the proposed Defense Department budget, the plans could have wide-reaching ramifications for current servicemembers as well as veterans. For example: >>>>>


And this is the press release:

White House Seeks $125 Billion for Veterans in 2011

Homelessness, Claims Increases and Access - Priorities for VA Budget

To expand health care to a record-number of Veterans, reduce the number of homeless Veterans and process a dramatically increased number of new disability compensation claims, the White House has announced a proposed $125 billion budget next year for the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“Our budget proposal provides the resources necessary to continue our aggressive pursuit of President Obama’s two over-arching goals for Veterans,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “First, the requested budget will help transform VA into a 21st century organization. And second, it will ensure that we approach Veterans’ care as a lifetime initiative, from the day they take their oaths until the day they are laid to rest.”

The $125 billion budget request, which has to be approved by Congress, includes $60.3 billion for discretionary spending (mostly health care) and $64.7 billion in mandatory funding (mostly for disability compensation and pensions).

“VA’s 2011 budget request covers many areas but focuses on three central issues that are of critical importance to our Veterans – easier access to benefits and services, faster disability claims decisions, and ending the downward spiral that results in Veterans’ homelessness,” Shinseki said. >>>>>


Annual Budget Submission (FY 2011):

“The President’s vision for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is to transform into a 21st Century organization that is Veteran-centric, results-driven, and forward-looking. This transformation is demanded by new times, new technologies, new demographic realities, and new commitments to today’s Veterans.

VA’s budget request for 2011 provides the resources critical to achieving the President’s vision and will help ensure that Veterans—our clients—receive timely access to the highest quality benefits and services we can provide and which they earned through their sacrifice and service to our Nation.

The Department’s resource request for 2011 is $125 billion—up $11 billion, or 10 percent, from the 2010 enacted budget (excluding funds provided by the Agent Orange Supplemental). This is the second year of large budget increases in VA’s discretionary budget which is up almost 20% since 2009.” >>>>>


The budget information and requests are at the link above in PDF links for further study.

House Veterans Affairs Committee: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Budget Request for FY 2011 and FY 2012

February 4, 2010
10:00AM
Full Committee
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Budget Request for FY 2011 and FY 2012

Senate Veterans Affairs Committee: Hearing: VA's FY 2011 Budget

February 10, 2010
9:30 a.m.
418 Russell
Committee hearing on VA’s FY 2011 Budget


These hearings will more then likely be televised and streamed online for anyone interested in watching or listening.

There should be A Big Chuck taken out of the Defense Budget, in these times especially, as it's gotten way to bloated and to easy for the graft and corruption to seep in, as we've seen these last years, frankly for many years.

Take some of that and add to the Veterans Budget then some of the rest back to the Treasury. Add to that being already requested for investment into infrastructure to long overlooked. One place also to invest would be in small business loans to these younger Veterans who might want to go into businesses, after they've used the new GI Education Bill, especially in Green Technology and Green Building. Expand the upgrade to VA care clinics and hospitals, bring them further into the 21st century, also to long ignored, and possibly build new facilities making them all top line care, teaching and research facilities, not only for Veterans care but shared in the needs of the country and beyond.

Suicide Epidemic

Tough old soldier battles new enemy: Suicide epidemic

Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Samuel Rhodes keeps pictures of the dead in his pockets.

They're the faces of young soldiers whose eyes stare out resolutely from photocopied pages worn and creased by the ritual of unfolding them, smoothing them flat and refolding them.

They're the faces of men who, haunted by problems at home or memories of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — the dead children, the fallen comrades and the lingering smell of burnt flesh — pressed guns to their heads and pulled the triggers or tied ropes with military precision and hanged themselves.

The pictures remind Rhodes of how close he came to joining them and how, sometimes when the sadness presses in dark and suffocating, he still mentally pens suicide notes.....>>>>>


And from just one of the occupation battlefields:

Iraq Mends a System to Treat Trauma

Mohammed Ziara, 11, is taking part in therapy sessions at the Sara Center for Trauma in Basra, Iraq's first multidisciplinary clinic for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Iraq’s mental health care system was once advanced for the region, but by 2006 fewer than 100 psychiatrists remained in a population of about 30 million, and almost no psychologists. Patients were isolated in understaffed institutions, apart from their families and communities.

But now the government has embarked on an ambitious program to rebuild its ruined mental health care system in a country experiencing more than its share of traumas and stress.....>>>>>

On This Day In History

The Woolworth Sit-In That Launched a Movement

On Feb. 1, 1960, four students from all-black North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College walked into a Woolworth five-and-dime with the intention of ordering lunch.

But the manager of the Greensboro Woolworth had intentions of his own — to maintain the lunch counter's strict whites-only policy.....>>>>>



As reported from that time:

Negro Sitdowns Stir Fear Of Wider Unrest in South

Special to The New York Times

Charlotte, N. C., Feb. 14 -- Negro student demonstrations against segregated eating facilities have raised grave questions in the South over the future of the region's race relations. A sounding of opinion in the affected areas showed that much more might be involved than the matter of the Negro's right to sit at a lunch counter for a coffee break.

The demonstrations were generally dismissed at first as another college fad of the 'panty-raid' variety. This opinion lost adherents, however, as the movement spread from North Carolina to Virginia, Florida, South Carolina and Tennessee and involved fifteen cities.....>>>>>

Military Health System, New Leader?

Taking bets on who will place a hold on this nomination. Will it be the usual suspects, especially as to the Veterans Administration and National Security, or will it be another rising star of the "Strong on National Defense" group {just say 'no'}?

Stay tuned!

White House eyes Army Reservist, surgeon for Defense top doc job

The White House is considering naming Dr. Jonathan Woodson, a vascular surgeon and an associate dean at Boston University, to be the next assistant secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, Nextgov has learned.

Woodson, who also is a brigadier general in the Army Reserve, will fill a slot left vacant for nearly 10 months since Dr. S. Ward Casscells resigned in April 2009.

Snip

The Military Health System, which Woodson would lead if nominated and confirmed, has an enviable rate of success in its primary combat medical mission but has lacked solid leadership for years in other core missions, such as providing stateside care to 9.5 million active and retired military personnel and their families, and development of a full-scale medical record, sources who declined to be identified told Nextgov.

Snip

"I'd rate him a 10 out of 10 as an administrator," he said.

Casscells said he did not know Woodson but said, "He sounds well-prepared for the job. He is a clinician, educator, innovative administrator and served in {Operation} Desert Storm."....>>>>>


Sounds like another Great pick from this innovative executive branch administration, especially with a statement coming from someone who says he doesn't know him personally but has looked at Woodson's qualifications, across the board, and really needed in this position. If confirmed it will be also good to watch who he brings in to help in his administration.

2009 Arnold P. Gold Foundation Humanism in Medicine Award

Jonathan Woodson, M.D. Boston University School of Medicine

When the twin towers fell in New York, he was there to treat the victims. During Operation Desert Storm in Saudi Arabia, he was there to care for patients in an evacuation hospital. And, now, Dr. Jonathan Woodson, M.D., is there for medical students, underserved minorities, and the communities he calls home. The seemingly ubiquitous Dr. Woodson is not only a highly regarded vascular surgeon, but a decorated military leader, service-oriented academician, and esteemed mentor.

When not overseas treating critically wounded American soldiers, Dr. Woodson can be found stateside at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) where he has been a faculty member for more than 20 years. Today, he is an associate professor of surgery and associate dean for students, diversity, and multicultural affairs. He is also a senior attending vascular surgeon at the Boston Medical Center and serves on BUMC's institutional research board. Additionally, he is an adjunct assistant professor of surgery at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.

In the words of his students, Dr. Woodson has "served in so many countries around the world, yet recognizes and responds to the needs of his home communities in New York and Massachusetts."...>>>>>


Read the rest of this bio above, he's a keeper!