Month: December 2004

  • The Future of TargetCentermass.com

    Well, it ain’t looking too good right now. My current host, Bloghosts, is getting out of the business. Unfortunately, they have registration on the domain targetcentermass.com. On their homepage is the following message:

    If Bloghosts owns your domain it is imperative that you contact us soon so we can put your registration in your name. This is a very simple process that we can do free of charge. To assume complete ownership of your domain, please send us your first and last name, full address (street, city, state, zip, and country), valid email address and phone number to domains@bloghosts.com. We cannot transfer ownership to you without all of this information so please make sure it’s accurate.

    UPDATE: We are literally swamped with these types of requests. Please make sure you submit all the above info and then wait for our reply. If all the information is there we will get to you.

    UPDATE #2 (READ ME): A lot of people have been complaining about their domain names in various public forums. If you have not received word from us, it was because you have not followed the simple instructions above. As we are busy with these requests, emails without the proper information will be ignored. This is a simple and FREE process. We need ALL of the requested information to place the domain in your name. If this cannot be done then we cannot help you. It’s really that simple.

    Well, after multiple email requests, no word has been received and the registration has not changed. A quick google search of the company quickly reveals that I’m not the only one in this situation.

    So, as it now stands, I will lose targetcentermass.com in three weeks. What then of my blogging future? As I see it, I have a number of choices to make:

    • Walk away from blogging
    • Take a break until this domain is available
    • Move to a new domain, perhaps targetcentermass.net, or possibly something completely different. You know, fresh start and all that
    • Try to catch on as a contributor on another site
    • Start a completely new blog. I’ve toyed with the idea of a starting a group blog for Texas hawks and/or conservatives

    Any feedback or suggestions would be appreciated. Comments are open and email is occasionally checked.

  • Marine ‘Hostage’ Faces Desertion Charges

    I refrained.

    And then I refrained again.

    Now this.

    A U.S. Marine who disappeared in Iraq and then showed up in a purported hostage video before later appearing as a free man in Lebanon, is being charged with desertion, Pentagon officials said Thursday.

    Cpl. Wassef Ali Hassoun will also be charged by the Marine Corps with larceny and wrongful disposition of military property in connection with his service-issued 9 mm handgun that disappeared with him and never turned up, officials said.

    ….

    If found guilty of desertion, he could receive a dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of pay and allowances, and five years’ confinement for each specification.

    Maximum punishment for each specification of larceny and for the wrongful disposition charge is a dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of pay and allowances and 10 years’ confinement.

    ….

    Military investigators re-opened the Hassoun case last month after several personal items — including his military ID and civilian passport — were found in Falluja, the city from which he disappeared in June.

    “The circumstances of his alleged capture and subsequent return to military control are still being investigated,” the Marines said in a statement.

    Hassoun reappeared July 7 in Lebanon, where he was born and has relatives.

    What happened to Hassoun is a mystery to military investigators.

    After the initial report that Hassoun was missing, military officials assumed he had walked away from camp. He was listed as a deserter.

    His status was changed to captured after the release of a videotape that showed him blindfolded with a sword suspended above his head. A few days later, a posting to three Islamist Web sites claimed Hassoun had been beheaded.

    Hassoun denied being a deserter and staging his own kidnapping.

    A Marine Corps official said representatives of the Naval Criminal Investigative Services did not interview Hassoun until after he completed his 30-day home leave, following his repatriation back to the United States. Its report was submitted to Hassoun’s command November 30.

    I will still refrain. Innocent until proven guilty, right? Let the processes of the UCMJ run their course, right?

    Yeah, I’ll refrain again. Just enough to say that, if this sonofabitch is found guilty, I want him punished to the abso-freaking-lute maximum.

  • The Terrorists are Coming!

    One if by land,
    two if by sea.

    Okay, substitute “bioterrorism” for “land” and it works, though not poetically.

  • Six Feared Dead in Chopper Crash

    Often overlooked when praise is lauded upon our servicemen, the Coast Guard plays a vital role in our national security. Beyond this, they have the additional burdens of their roles in drug-traffic interdiction and maritime safety. Today, tragedy struck during a treacherous helicopter rescue.

    Six people were feared dead after a US Coast Guard helicopter crashed into the icy Bering Sea while rescuing the crew of a Malaysian ship that broke up off the Alaska coast.

    As rescuers searched for survivors, a new danger loomed: nearly 500,000 gallons of the vessel’s fuel could contaminate the area, officials.

    The air crash occurred in bad weather about 6:20pm Wednesday (1420 AEST) as the Jayhawk helicopter, with 10 people aboard, was plucking the last sailors from the freighter Selendang Ayu.

    “They were making their last series of hoists to evacuate the 26 crew members from the freighter,” Chief Petty Officer Roger Weatherall, a Coast Guard spokesman, told AFP.

    “At the moment before the crash, they were preparing to rescue the crew’s captain. Something happened and before they could hoist him, the helicopter crashed next to the ship,” he said.

    Four people were rescued from the ice cold, choppy and pitch-black seas by a second helicopter, but the six other crew were still missing 19 hours after the accident.

    Those rescued were wearing life jackets but not survival suits.

    “We are continuing the search for the missing and have a Coast Guard cutter, three helicopters and a C-130 aircraft involved in the rescue effort,” CPO Weatherall said. “There is always a chance they will be OK.”

    The evacuation was ordered after the ship lost power to its engines on Tuesday and was drifting toward a rocky coast off Unalaska Island, in the Aleutian chain, by late Wednesday.

    Three other ships were on their way to the crash site, where the water was about 6C and waves were as high as 6m. Snow was falling and the seas were rough, rescuers said.

  • ‘Twas the Night before Blogothon

    In our continuing attempts to raise fundage for the Spirit of America, the Fighting Fusileers for Freedom bring you this seasonal entertainment, courtesy of BloodSpite.

    If that doesn’t work, here’s more cowbell from Ben.

    The Fighting Fusileers for Freedom — working harder to entertain you for your charity dollar. Please click the image below to donate. Pretty please. With a freakin’ cherry on top already.

    Join the Fighting Fusileers for Freedom!
  • More U.S. Soldiers Survive War Wounds

    Perhaps the most deserving and most unheralded story of the current war is the astonishing success of the military’s medical cadre.

    For every American soldier killed in Iraq, nine others have been wounded and survived — the highest rate of any war in U.S. history. It isn’t that their injuries were less serious, a new report says. In fact, some young soldiers and Marines have had faces, arms and legs blown off and are now returning home badly maimed.

    But they have survived thanks, in part, to armor-like vests and fast treatment from doctors on the move with surgical kits in backpacks.

    “This is unprecedented. People who lose not just one but two or three extremities are people who just have not survived in the past,” said Dr. Atul Gawande, a surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston who researched military medicine and wrote about it in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine.

    ….

    By mid-November, 10,369 American troops had been wounded in battle in Afghanistan or Iraq, and 1,004 had died — a survival rate of roughly 90 percent. In the Vietnam War, one in four wounded died, virtually all of them before they could reach MASH units some distance from the fighting.

    Please go read this examination of the effects of advancements in both the protection of soldiers and the treatment of casualties. The story also highlights the courage, determination and skill of our medical personnel. I’ve never met a medic I didn’t like. Apparently, it’s a calling that summons a better, stronger person than I am.

    There is the other side of the story, though.

    “This war is producing unique injuries — less lethal but more traumatic,” he said.

    In one traumatic case, Gawande tells of an airman who lost both legs, his right hand and part of his face. “How he and others like him will be able to live and function remains an open question,” Gawande writes.

    We now face a new generation of injured combat veterans, many of whom would not have survived their wounds in times past. We, as a nation, must welcome and care for them. We must thank them and help them hold on to their humanity and rebuild their lives.

    We owe that to them. And to their caregivers.

  • New DVD Has Dual-Layered Surface

    Don’t junk that old TV and DVD player just yet.

    Two Japanese companies said Tuesday they have developed a DVD that can play on both existing machines and the upcoming high-definition players, raising hopes for a smooth transition as more people dump old TV sets for better screens.

    Toshiba Corp. and Memory-Tech Corp. said their disc has a dual-layered surface that can store both types of data on the same side.

    For consumers, that would eliminate the potential headache of having to own two types of DVD players: Both will be able to read such discs, though only the newer equipment can take advantage of the higher-resolution technology.

    The discs, which took six months to develop, will be able to hold 4.7 GB in the current format and 15 GB in high resolution, Memory-Tech spokesman Masato Otsuka said.

    Making the discs won’t cost any more than the companies now spend on producing current DVDs, Otsuka said.

    Whew! That’s a relief for the ol’ budget. Or is it?

    The new DVDs rely on the HD-DVD format, which has the backing of the DVD Forum, an international association of electronics makers and movie studios. New DVD players using the format are expected to hit stores by late 2005.

    Its competitor, Blu-Ray, is backed by Sony Corp., its Hollywood studio and News Corp.’s Fox Entertainment Group Inc. Blu-Ray has more storage space, but HD-DVD is expected to be cheaper to produce because its technology closely resembles current DVDs.

    It’s still unclear which will become the dominant technology.

    Meanwhile, Disney has thrown its massive weight behind Blu-Ray, though not necessarily exclusively.

    Disney — along with its home-video division, Buena Vista Home Entertainment — announced late Wednesday that it will release movies on the Blu-ray format in North America and Japan when the discs become available. Manufacturers and disc makers said players and discs should start hitting the market in late 2005 or early 2006.

    The announcement means consumers will be able to get movies from Buena Vista Home Entertainment on the Blu-ray Discs. Also part of the library of films are those from Walt Disney Home Entertainment, Hollywood Pictures Home Video, Touchstone Home Entertainment, Miramax Home Entertainment, Dimension Home Video and Disney DVD.

    ….

    Disney said its plans to release movies on the Blu-ray format are nonexclusive, meaning it could publish movies on other formats as well.

  • U.S. GIs Hit Rumsfeld With Hard Questions

    In a time of war, this disgusts me on many levels.

    In a rare public airing of grievances, disgruntled soldiers complained to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Wednesday about long deployments and a lack of armored vehicles and other equipment.

    “You go to war with the Army you have,” Rumsfeld replied, “not the Army you might want or wish to have.”

    Spc. Thomas Wilson had asked the defense secretary, “Why do we soldiers have to dig through local landfills for pieces of scrap metal and compromised ballistic glass to up-armor our vehicles?” Shouts of approval and applause arose from the estimated 2,300 soldiers who had assembled to see Rumsfeld.

    Rumsfeld hesitated and asked Wilson to repeat his question.

    “We do not have proper armored vehicles to carry with us north,” Wilson, 31, of Nashville, Tenn., concluded after asking again.

    Wilson, an airplane mechanic whose unit, the 278th Regimental Combat Team of the Tennessee Army National Guard, is about to drive north into Iraq for a one-year tour of duty, put his finger on a problem that has bedeviled the Pentagon for more than a year. Rarely, though, is it put so bluntly in a public forum.

    First, media coverage of such an event should be better controlled, if not completely banned. I have no problem with top brass getting feedback from the lower echelons, but this should be an opportunity to exchange information, concerns and reassurances, not a chance to create political footballs. That was the fault of those in charge.

    The soldier’s question was out of line in a public forum. Grumbling and complaining are more than a soldier’s right — they’re practically an obligation. However, said grumbling and complaining is not to be done in a manner to cast an ill effect upon morale. Especially in a war zone. Rumsfeld’s response was correct — ya fight with what ya got. We fought in World War II with tanks tragically inferior to those of the Germans. Such shortcomings are made up for in other areas until they can be feasibly addressed. This improper questioning, this verbal poison, was the fault of the soldier. Why did it have to be a freakin’ Guardsman?!

    As to the “shouts of approval and applause,” I saw video of this and, while some shouting and clapping occurred, it was a very small percentage of those present. That this was presented in the manner above was an attempt to politicize and enhance the negativity of the story. That is the fault of the media.

    What is the actual armor situation?

    Rumsfeld said the Army was sparing no expense or effort to acquire as many Humvees and other vehicles with extra armor as it can. What is more, he said, armor is not the savior some think it is.

    “You can have all the armor in the world on a tank and a tank can (still) be blown up,” he said. The same applies to the much smaller Humvee utility vehicles that, without extra armor, are highly vulnerable to the insurgents’ weapon of choice in Iraq, the improvised explosive device that is a roadside threat to Army convoys and patrols.

    U.S. soldiers and Marines in Iraq are killed or maimed by roadside bombs almost daily. Adding armor protection to Humvees and other vehicles that normally are not used in direct combat has been a priority for the Army, but manufacturers have not been able to keep up with the demand.

    At the Pentagon, spokesman Larry Di Rita said production of armored Humvees had increased from 15 to 450 a month since fall 2003, when commanders in Iraq started asking for them because of insurgents’ heavy use of roadside explosives.

    Overall, there are 19,000 armored Humvees in the Iraqi theater. Some were built with additional armor, others had it added on later. That’s, 2,000 short of what commanders are asking for, Di Rita acknowledged.

    Military policy is that troops driving into Iraq in Humvees drive only in armored ones, Di Rita said. Some $1.2 billion has been included in the defense budget to pay for armored vehicles, he said.

    Any other complaints, troops, while you have the SecDef and the cameras here?

    Wilson and others, however, had criticisms of their own — not of the war but of how it was being fought.

    During the question-and-answer session, another soldier complained that active-duty Army units seem to get priority over National Guard and Reserve units for the best equipment used in Iraq.

    “There’s no way I can prove it, but I am told the Army is breaking its neck to see that there is not” discrimination of that kind, Rumsfeld said.

    Shut up, do your job and quit embarrassing the Guard and Reserves. Regarding this and other such embarrassments, Stryker has created an entire Reservist category on his Digital Warfare site. As a former Guardsman, I don’t blame him one freaking iota.

  • AWOL Soldier Seeks Canadian Help

    An American is making headlines for deserting and begging our neighbor to the north for refuge.

    An American soldier who fought in Afghanistan two years ago but deserted and fled from the United States before he could be sent to Iraq has launched a long-shot bid for political refuge in Canada.

    Jeremy Hinzman, 26, has appeared before Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board, claiming he would face persecution if sent home to the US.

    Mr. Hinzman testified that while his comrades regarded him as a “soldier’s soldier”, he realised over time that he could not kill another human being.

    I wonder if the brave troops Hinzman left behind still consider him a “soldier’s soldier.” Actually, no, I don’t. I think his former comrades could come up with more colorful terms now.

    The South Dakota-born soldier of the 82nd Airborne Division is claiming refugee status based on his contention that he was right to refuse to fight in the war in Iraq, which he says is illegal and violated human rights.

    Mr Hinzman said he had requested conscientious objector status in the US in 2002.

    But his case failed and he was sent to Afghanistan, where he eventually made 18 combat parachute jumps.

    Late last year he learned he was to be deployed to Iraq, prompting him to flee to Canada early this year with his Laotian wife Nga Nguyen and two-year-old son, Liam.

    His case, and that of two other fugitive American soldiers, has stirred sympathy in Canada, which opposed the Iraq war.

    But it has also raised fears that a positive ruling could spark a flood of US deserters across the border, as the toll of the Iraq war and occupation deepens, having already cost more than 1000 US lives.

    The chances of Mr Hinzman getting refugee status are seen as slim. No such decision has ever been made in Canada.

    ….

    He testified that his growing awareness that killing was wrong was partly born from an interest in Buddhism and attendance at Quaker religious meetings.

    Outside, a knot of anti-war supporters, waved banners reading, “Let him stay.”

    Yes, please let him stay, Canada. We’ll keep the red, white and blue, and y’all can coddle our yellow.

    Should he remain in Canada as a deserter, Hinzman’s citizenship should be revoked if possible. If it can’t be, that’s a shame that I would love to see corrected. Should any such deserters elect to return, I would like to see Hinzman and his ilk given a choice: prison or finish service in one of the historical roles of conscientious objector, such as a medic or chaplain’s assistant. See, I have a heart, especially for Quaker Buddhists.

  • Afghanistan Swears in First Democratic Leader

    There is more than infamy to the date December 7. Today, history added a glorious achievement born from the war against Islamic terror.

    For 30 years coups, assassinations and invasions were the usual means of power transfer in Kabul. But yesterday Hamid Karzai broke with bloody tradition and assumed office with a simple formula of words.

    Laying a hand on the Qur’an, Afghanistan’s first democratic president swore his allegiance inside the former royal palace that was once the scene of thunderous gunbattles but has since been renovated to welcome 600 guests.

    “We have left a hard and dark past behind us, and today we are opening a new chapter in our history,” said the blue-blooded Pashtun leader, who has led his country since the US-led invasion in 2001.

    But the perils of power reverberated silently during the short, simple ceremony, which opened with a reading of Islamic verses and songs from a children’s choir.

    Beside Mr Karzai sat Zahir Shah, the king who went into exile in 1973 after being deposed by his cousin. Outside the palace, US, Afghan and European soldiers buckled a tight security perimeter designed to deter Taliban attacks.

    Several streets were sealed off, surveillance helicopters droned overhead, and German peacekeepers patrolled on foot.

    But yet again the fundamentalists failed to deliver on threats of violence and mayhem, lending credence to suspicions that their insurgency has lost its potency.

    That triumph will have pleased the US vice-president, Dick Cheney, who flew in with the defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, to salute the Bush administration’s pet foreign policy success.

    Earlier, Mr Cheney rallied American troops in a speech at Bagram airbase, north of Kabul. “Freedom still has enemies here in Afghanistan, and you are here to make those enemies miserable,” he said.

    There is a long way to go to achieve enduring success in Afghanistan. Karzai is on record as desiring to end the power of both the local militias and the opium trade. In this endeavor, he will acquire a great many enemies, which only compounds the peril of radical Islamists and terrorists.

    Despite this, the swearing in of a democratically elected president is a testament to the hopes of the Afghan people and it should be celebrated. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer published an opinion piece doing that to a degree, along with a good look at what lies ahead.

    But an election is just one step. Now the country must move forward on the real difficult tests, such as creating a democratic identity and sustainable economy.

    It’s critical that the world (and especially the United States) present Karzai the resources to combat the Taliban and terrorist elements and to limit the drug trade. This is a tall order. The United Nations reports Afghanistan contributes 87 percent of the world’s opium and heroin.

    Democracy is an experiment; Afghanistan’s test is about to begin.

    If the Afghan people fail the test, it absolutely must not be from the neglect or half-measures of the U.S. and its allies.