Author: Gunner

  • An Airman’s Farewell

    Michael James Reed, known in the blogosphere as Bunker Mulligan, has been laid to rest.

    Bunker’s family has been extremely kind to us, blessing us with photos even as they deal with their own great personal loss. Yesterday, they showed us the honors that the United States Air Force paid to one of their own.

    Even more important, the family also has graciously shared a great many pictures that portray how Bunker lived.

    It is obvious from the devotion of his family, from the service of Bunker, and the many remembrances of others who knew him either in person or only from the internet that we have lost a good man. Indeed, the very willingness by his family to share a look at cherished personal moments, even in the midst of their own time of sorrow, with complete strangers on the internet stands as an incredible testament to the character of Mike Reed and his legacy. Thank you, sir, and thank you to your loved ones.

  • Reciprocity XVII

    It’s been a while since I’ve done this, but every so often I like to take an opportunity to express my gratitude to those who have blogrolled or linked to Target Centermass.

    First, thanks to the following fine blogs for adding TCm to their blogrolls:

    Second, thanks to the following for recent links to TCm:

    As always, if you’ve linked or blogrolled Target Centermass and I haven’t found you, please send an email or post a comment. No good deed should go unacknowledged.

  • Just in Case You Haven’t Heard

    The Michael Jackson verdict was announced today.

    That’s all I have to say about that.

  • Quote of the Week, 12 JUN 05

    Television brought the brutality of war into the comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of America — not on the battlefields of Vietnam.

    —Marshall McLuhan

  • Time Report Fuels Guantanamo Criticism

    A new storm is building around Gitmo, and the winds this time around are blowing from a pressure system built on a report in Time of a detainee interrogation log.

    The U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay drew fresh criticism Sunday following a Time magazine report on a logbook tracing the treatment of a detainee who officials believe was intended to take part in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

    Time’s report on the treatment received by Mohammed al-Qahtani prompted a quick defense from the Pentagon along with outrage from several members of Congress.

    Al-Qahtani was denied entry to the United States by an immigration officer in August 2001 and later captured in Afghanistan and sent to the detention camp at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

    The 84-page logbook obtained by Time and authenticated by Pentagon spokesman Larry Di Rita is the “kind of document that was never meant to leave Gitmo,” a senior Pentagon official told the magazine.

    According to the logbook, which covers al-Qahtani’s interrogations from November 2002 to January 2003 [emphasis added], the Time article reports that daily interviews began at 4 a.m. and sometimes continued until midnight.

    Remember those dates, folks.

    The interrogation techniques included refusing al-Qahtani a bathroom break and forcing him to urinate in his pants.

    “It’s not appropriate,” said Sen. Chuck Hagel on CNN’s “Late Edition.” “It’s not at all within the standards of who we are as a civilized people, what our laws are.

    “If in fact we are treating prisoners this way, it’s not only wrong, it’s dangerous and very dumb and very shortsighted,” the Nebraska Republican said.

    “This is not how you win the people of the world over to our side, especially the Muslim world.”

    During the period covered by the logbook, Time reported, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld approved 16 additional interrogation techniques for use on certain detainees.

    Afterward, interrogators began their sessions with al-Qahtani at midnight and awakened him with dripping water or Christina Aguilera music if he dozed off, the magazine article reported.

    Okay, I’ll grant that Christina Aguilera music may be a tad much.

    The magazine said the techniques approved by Rumsfeld included “standing for prolonged periods, isolation for as long as 30 days, removal of clothing, forced shaving of facial hair” and hanging “pictures of scantily clad women around his neck.”

    Hagel said such treatment should offend the sensibilities of “any straight-thinking American, any straight-thinking citizen of the world.”

    Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, said on the same program that the treatment outlined in the article presents “a kind of ludicrous view of the United States.”

    “I don’t know what tree we’re barking up,” she said. “It is a terrible mistake.”

    “I don’t know why we didn’t learn from Bagram,” she added, referring to a U.S. base in Afghanistan. “I don’t know why we didn’t learn from Abu Ghraib [prison in Iraq], but here we are in Guantanamo with many of the same things surfacing.”

    I said pay attention to the dates. That is something seemingly beyond Feinstein’s capabilities. Apparently, by the senator’s reasoning, the discovery of the Abu Ghraib abuses in late 2003 and their resulting media frenzy in April 2004 should have caused these Gitmo interrogation tactics to cease in late 2001 and early 2002. That, my dear senator, is an impossibility without a functioning flux capacitor. Please be so kind as to check your facts, senator, before denouncing our efforts before the world.

    Hagel raised questions about the quality of leadership that would allow such things to happen, drawing a comparison to his own experience fighting in Vietnam.

    “We’ve been reassured for the last two years it’s not happening when in fact it is happening,” he said.

    Again, check the dates.

    Maybe, somewhere in this story, we can find a voice of reason.

    Others, however, said they did not see the treatment as abuse.

    Rep. Duncan Hunter, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, defended the Guantanamo facility and flatly rejected suggestions that prisoners are mistreated.

    “I think that’s accepting a falsehood and giving to the American people that somehow we don’t treat prisoners right,” said Hunter, a Republican from California.

    Hunter cited a menu of food served to prisoners Sunday — including oven-fried chicken, rice pilaf, fruit and pita bread — as a sign that they are treated well.

    “These are the people who tried to kill us,” he said. “It includes the guy — the 20th hijacker, that was Mr. Qahtani who was caught coming in — who didn’t make it to the planes that drove into New York,” Hunter said following an appearance on “Fox News Sunday.”

    Congressman Hunter, how about a money shot?

    Earlier on the program, Hunter said the “legend” of Guantanamo Bay is “different than the fact” and repeatedly cited the menu.

    “Here you have a guy who was on his way to kill 5,000 Americans,” he said. “And we have people complaining because he had a dog bark at him in Guantanamo.”

    Keep in mind the story of the actual detainee in question.

    Nineteen hijackers commandeered four commercial airliners on September 11, 2001, piloting two into the World Trade Towers and one into the Pentagon. Another, United Airlines Flight 93, crashed in a Pennsylvania field. The death toll from the attacks was just under 3,000.

    All the planes were hijacked by five men except Flight 93, which was commandeered by four. Some officials have speculated that al-Qahtani might have been the missing hijacker on Flight 93.

    According to the Time article, lead hijacker Mohammed Atta was waiting for al-Qahtani outside the airport in Orlando, Florida, when he was detained by an immigration officer a month before the attacks.

    In the CNN piece’s “Related” links, there’s a brief collection of extracts from the interrogation log in question. Please allow me to extract from the extracts.

    13 December 2002
    1115
    : Interrogators began telling detainee how ungrateful and grumpy he was. In order to escalate the detainee’s emotions, a mask was made from an MRE box with a smily face on it and placed on the detainee’s head for a few moments. A latex glove was inflated and labeled the “sissy slap” glove. The glove was touched to the detainee’s face periodically after explaining the terminology to him. The mask was placed back on the detainee’s head. While wearing the mask, the team began dance instruction with the detainee. The detainee became agitated and began shouting.

    20 December 2002
    1115:
    Detainee offered water—refused. Corpsman changed ankle bandages to prevent chafing. Interrogater began by reminding the detainee about the lessons in respect and how the detainee had disrespected the interrogators. Told detainee that a dog is held in higher esteem because dogs know right from wrong and know how to protect innocent people from bad people. Began teaching the detainee lessons such as stay, come, and bark to elevate his social status up to that of a dog. Detainee became very agitated.

    That is as bad as the extracts get — a smily-face mask, a “sissy slap” glove, and dog training. Add to that repeated offers of food and water, as well as attention to bandages to prevent chafing.

    I can only actually hope that there is far worse in the unextracted log. No, I don’t hope for abuses and violations. I do, however, hope that it takes far more than the treatment detailed in the story and linked extracts, treatment I would have laughed at as a fraternity pledge, to stir the need in the media to feed our enemy’s propaganda. I doubt anybody involved with the publishing of this story does not believe we are dealing with an actual terrorist here, and yet, this story and it’s “tortures” will echo.

    Close Gitmo — a detainee’s face was touched with an inflated latex glove, condemning him as a sissy! Shut it down! Move the sissies!

    This is beyond a lost sense of perspective. The utter recklessness and disregard for our security efforts shown by our media is simply disgusting.

  • Texas Scottish Festival

    The girlfriend and I spent last Saturday at the 19th Annual Texas Scottish Festival and Highland Games in Arlington. We had a grand time watching the games, shopping and enjoying some of the wide array of food available. Nope, we decided against haggis.

    There were kilts aplenty, but only in Texas would someone opt for this outfit — kilt, hose and flashes, sgian dubh, cowboy boots and hat (click for larger).

    Texas Scottish Cowboy
  • Nothing Tonight

    The oncall pager owns me.

  • N. Korea: ‘Nuclear Capability to Take on US’

    Sometimes, little dogs don’t realize that they are, in the scheme of things, nothing more than ankle-biters. Sometimes, these dogs think they are ready to square off with bigger dogs. Sometimes, these little yappers press their luck and, if lucky, survive to learn a harsh lesson.

    Enter North Korea, stage left.

    North Korea has enough nuclear weapons to defend itself against an attack by the United States and is building more, according to a member of the regime interviewed on American television.

    The country’s vice-foreign minister, Kim Gye Gwan, also hinted that it had the technology to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile.

    “We have enough nuclear bombs to defend against a US attack,” he said in the interview with ABC. “As for specifically how many we have, that is a secret.”

    When asked about delivery systems, he added: “Our scientists have the knowledge, comparable to other scientists around the world.”

    North Korea is not in danger of an unexpected ground attack from the United States. The fact that we’ve established only a trip-wire defensive stance on the Korean Peninsula has been well known for half a century. The silliness of the statement by communist North Korea is that any attack from the U.S., unprovoked by actual action on the ground, would be delivered by air. The North Korean nukes are worthless against this except as a retaliation. That does not fit into the idea of being a sufficient defense, as it is woefully undemonstrated and falls obviously short of the mutually-assured destruction threshold that is implied.

    The interview, given after the American network was granted a rare visit to Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, is the most detailed public discussion yet by the regime of its capabilities. It will embarrass the Chinese government, which has been trying to convince North Korea, its close ally, to abandon its nuclear weapons programme and stop promoting a Far Eastern arms race.

    China only values North Korea as a geographic buffer between the politically and economically successful South Korea. Red China is currently geographically insulated from any sizable and successful neighbor that it doesn’t control, though it does obviously chafe at the island state of Taiwan. China does not want North Korea to push its bluff too far and fail.

    North Korea has been building plutonium-based bombs since expelling inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency more than two years ago, and the Pentagon estimates it has material for at least six.

    The United States also believes it has one or two bombs based on enriched uranium, manufactured with the help of the Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, whose alleged existence triggered the current crisis over its weapons programme.

    What intelligence has been unable to determine is whether North Korea has the ability to deliver the bombs. It is currently developing a version of the long-range Taepodong missile that it hopes will bring the west coast of the United States within range.

    North Korea has wrapped too much of its economy around its military and its nuclear program — it must expand or eventually collapse upon itself. Any conventional victory must be fast and decisive, something it probably cannot attain. However, any nuclear exchange would most likely be one-sided, as the U.S. cannot endanger allies in South Korea and Japan with fallout. Barring actual and truly threatening provocation from the North, the ball is in the commies’ court in terms of initiating conflict. I have little doubt that we can buy enough time on the ground to flatten what remains of the North with conventional means before the South could be completely overrun. That leaves the North’s nukes — used on the peninsula, devastating to the region but useless in the long term of a potential war. Launched overseas, again useless in the long term for North Korea’s hopes for anything other than spiteful destruction.

    That said, now would be a good time to strengthen our efforts into a missile defense and, on a personal note, shy away from investment in West Coast real estate.

  • Arroyo Heading into Political Whirlwind

    Remember Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Philippine president and the great Manila Folder whose troop withdrawal and ransom payout bankrolled terrorists in Iraq to the tune of $6 million and who wants to buddy up to China’s military? Well, it seems she suddenly has a few problems of her own.

    Arroyo Son, Relative Took Gambling Payoff, Woman Says

    A witness in a Philippine Senate investigation today said she delivered illegal gambling payoffs to President Gloria Arroyo’s son and brother-in-law, who are both congressmen. Stocks, bonds and the peso slumped.

    Philippine president hit by electoral tampering claims

    President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo of the Philippines could face fresh political turmoil following the release of recordings of telephone conversations she made in the weeks after the hotly contested May 2004 elections.

    Alan Paguia, a lawyer for Joseph Estrada, former president, admitted preparing compact discs containing excerpts of Mrs Macapagal’s phone conversations, and said she was talking to a senior member of the independent electoral commission about keeping her lead over rival candidate Fernando Poe Jr, the film actor who died last December.

    Damage control fails as Arroyo’s scandals grow

    It began as a coffee-shop rumor four weeks ago. Then it started circulating in telephone text messages, which, in this SMS-obsessed part of the world, usually indicates something is afoot. This week, the administration of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo decided to step in and take control of the situation. Or so it thought.

    […]

    Analysts and politicians say the latest scandal, which they deem to be potentially more damaging than the jueteng problem, could plunge the Philippines into political chaos similar to uprisings in 1986 and 2001, when presidents were removed from office.

    Analysts and politicians are predicting massive protests, and businessmen have warned of “dire economic consequences.”

    It couldn’t have happened to a more deserving person. Reap the whirlwind, babe.

  • More on Proposed UNSC Reform

    ‘Group of Four’ drop UNSC veto demand

    Japan, Brazil, Germany and India have proposed a 15-year freeze on veto powers for new permanent members of the U.N. Security Council as part of a revised version of its draft resolution to expand the council, diplomats and governments said Wednesday.

    The so-called Group of Four has been campaigning vigorously to become permanent members of the U.N.’s most powerful body, but were forced to back down in the face of opposition from a number of countries, including some of the current permanent members with veto power.

    China rejects peppered-over UNSC reform plan

    China again poured cold water Thursday on the revised version of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) reform plan spearheaded by Japan, which describes an additional six new permanent members would not exercise the right of veto until 2020.

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said in Beijing June 9 that China firmly opposes the “immature plan” proposed by some countries on UNSC reform. He said that a peppered-over plan will lead the United Nations reform nowhere.

    “China is very concerned about this action,” Liu said.

    […]

    Other countries like Italy, Republic of Korea, Pakistan and Mexico have opposed the G-4 plan, and put forward their own plan to restructure the UNSC, by adding 10 non-permanent members. China supports the plan.

    Of the five current permanent members, China is firmly against Japan’s bid to become a permanent member of UNSC, on account of Japan’s consistent whitewashing of WWII history. Its Primer Minister Koizumi has been paying homage to the Yasukuni Shrine at the center of Tokyo, where 14 WWII Class-A criminals were honored together with 2.5 million war dead.

    The Bush administration is reluctant to support Germany’s bid, according to the New York Times.

    The G-4 has indicated they will put their revised plan to a vote by the UN General Assembly before the end of June.

    […]

    The G-4 plan needs to be approved by two-thirds of the 191 UN member states, or 128 at least, in order to be adopted.

    I find it interesting the the China and the U.S. find two different reasons to come to a similar stance, a stance with which I happen to agree.