Author: Gunner

  • Escape Tunnel Found at Iraqi Prison

    I always loved Hogan’s Heroes. It was so fun to watch Col. Hogan outsmart and manipulate that silly inept German, Col. Klink (skillfully portrayed by the late Werner Klemperer). Oh, the tunnel system those POWs had! They could move about at will, and had a great map attached to a bunk. Poor ol’ Sgt. Schultz — he knew nothing!

    Ahh, but the real world is slightly different.

    U.S. troops believe they have thwarted a massive escape from one of the coalition’s main prison camps in Iraq, Pentagon officials said Friday.

    A 600-foot-long (183-meter) escape tunnel with an exit point outside the prison camp walls was discovered Thursday at Camp Bucca in southeastern Iraq.

    The tunnel is believed to have been dug with improvised tools. Military authorities discovered it after a tip initiated a campwide search.

    The tunnel is about 10 feet below ground and 2 to 3 feet wide.

    Pentagon officials did not know how long the tunnel had been under construction.

    Camp Bucca houses about 5,600 detainees.

    That no one had used it to escape so far was verified by a head count of prisoners, which found all accounted for. But the tunnel appeared to be completed and ready to use, and officials speculate that detainees were waiting to use it when the weather turned poor and visibility on the ground was low.

    The discovery of the tunnel also solved another mystery camp officials were trying to figure out.

    Machinery that pumps sewage out of the prisoners’ toilet system has been getting jammed with sand and dirt. Apparently, it was caused by soil that detainees have been disposing of while digging the tunnel.

    I fault not the prisoners for trying. I do, however, question prison oversight for the attempt coming this close to fruition. Better security procedures have to be considered, as a sizable influx of these prisoners would be a great boost to a terrorist movement that seems to be shaken by events of late.

  • Iraq TV Helps Break Holy Warrior Mystique

    I must say that the headline and leading paragraph had me intrigued.

    Say the word mujahid– or holy warrior – these days and many inhabitants of Baghdad are likely to snigger.

    I had my doubts quickly, however, with the second paragraph.

    An appellation once worn as a badge of pride by anti-American insurgents has now become street slang for homosexuals, after men claiming to be captured Islamist guerrillas confessed that they were holding gay orgies in the popular Iraqi TV programme Terror in the Hands of Justice.

    I think the terrorists are scum, a bunch of cowardly bastards. While this article is worth a read and it’s nice to know that the Iraqis are seeing something besides pro-terrorist propaganda (e.g. al-Jazeera, CNN), I still feel a need to apologize for the worst side effect of the Iraqi campaign — the export of the horror of “reality” TV. It was obviously another shortcoming in the planning of the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld axis.

    It started innocently enough.

    When the programme first aired two months ago, it mostly featured non-Iraqi Arabs who claimed to have entered the country to aid the insurgency, reinforcing many Iraqis’ belief that the insurgency is driven by foreign extremists such as al-Qaeda.

    In time, however, the programme began to feature men who said they were petty criminals, killing “collaborators” for a few hundred dollars’ bounty.

    In fact, the US and Iraqi security forces have for some time claimed to have ample evidence that many insurgent attacks were launched by out-of-work soldiers desperate for money. Some well-known insurgent captains had former lives under the old regime as gang leaders.

    In recent weeks, however, the insurgents’ confessions have become increasingly at odds with the movement’s reputation for stringent Islamic austerity.

    One long-bearded preacher known as Abu Tabarek recently confessed that guerrillas had usually held orgies in his mosques, secure in the knowledge that their status as holy warriors would win them forgiveness of their sins.

    Hopefully for the Iraqi people, sanity will soon reign.

    Sabah Khadim, spokesman for Iraq’s interior minister, says that the programme may have run its course, and should be reviewed.

    He denies that the confessions were extracted by torture but has his doubts as to whether those confessing are being truthful or simply saying whatever they think their captors want to hear. He also has reservations over whether the display of prisoners on television violates the Geneva Convention.

    But, Mr Khadem says, the programme has been immensely effective in getting Iraqis to come forward with information about guerrillas, leading to a surge in the number of insurgents captured.

    “If this were not an emergency situation, we would not have run this,” he says. “But it is an emergency situation, and this produces results.”

    Now, if only we could get rid of some of this crap on our own airwaves , I would really believe that civilization is progressing.

  • DoD Gives New Health Insurance to Reserves

    Here’s a bit of good news for members of the National Guard and Reserve components activated or facing activation. It’s surprising, but something like this has slipped by for so long.

    A new health care plan, with coverage comparable to that enjoyed by federal employees under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health insurance plan, will be available to eligible members of the National Guard and Reserve and their families April 25, Defense Department officials announced today at the Pentagon.

    The new plan, called Tricare Reserve Select, will serve as a bridge for reserve component members entering or leaving active duty who are not covered by civilian employer or other health insurance plans. It applies to all reserve component personnel who have been activated since Sept. 11, 2001, and who agree to continued service in the Selected Reserve. The coverage will be applied retroactively, officials said.

    Principal Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness Charles Abell, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs Thomas Hall, and Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Dr. William Winkenwerder announced the plan at a Pentagon news conference.

    “We are committed,” Abell said, “to providing the proper combination of compensation and benefits that will allow us to attract and retain the world’s best fighting force.”

    Abell said that while large numbers of National Guard and Reserve members have health insurance through their employers, the department “recognizes the importance of maintaining a continuity of care as they transition from their employers to serve with us and then back, as well as the need for some of them who may be self-employed or who work for small businesses to have health coverage.”

    […]

    Winkenwerder praised the members of the National Guard and Reserve. “They have shouldered a tremendous share of the global war on terror in which we are deeply engaged,” he said, “and they have performed exceptionally well.

    “They mobilized and deployed side by side with active duty forces, many serving in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Winkenwerder continued. “They served with pride and loyalty. And while we have, in the past, offered full healthcare benefits for these servicemembers, and for their families, this change will shortly offer a more comprehensive benefit for transition back to private life, and, importantly, the opportunity for those who have served in contingency operations, the option for obtaining Tricare coverage on a longer term at very attractive rates.”

    I also wanted to blog this because Winkerwerder is a funny name, and I’m not above that (the name Jihad Ballout still makes me chuckle).

  • U.S. Death Rate Down in Iraq Since Elections

    Progress. Slow but steady progress.

    The rate of U.S. deaths in the Iraq war has fallen sharply since the historic January elections as American military leaders tout progress against the insurgency but warn of a long road ahead.

    March is on pace for the lowest monthly U.S. military death toll in 13 months, and the rate of American fatalities has fallen by about 50 percent since the parliamentary elections in which millions of Iraqis defied insurgents to cast ballots.

    Defense analysts noted that while violence aimed at U.S. forces has declined in the 7 1/2 weeks since the election, insurgent attacks on Iraqis have escalated. They added that previous lulls in attacks on U.S. forces in the two-year war have been followed by intense periods of violence.

    “We have seen a downward trend in attacks,” Lt. Col. Steve Boylan, a U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad, said on Thursday, calling the elections a turning point.

    “There’s still a very good chance that they (insurgents) can do some spectacular events. But the situation does get better each day, all the time,” Boylan added.

    At the current pace, the U.S. military death toll in March will reach about 35. That would be the lowest monthly death toll since 20 U.S. troops died in February 2004, the smallest count of the war. But that proved to be a temporary lull followed some of the most bloody months of the war that spring.

    Analyst Charles Pena said gauging the progress of the war against insurgents is months, if not years, away.

    “I think what you get is a mixed picture in Iraq,” said Pena of the Cato Institute. “Whatever progress we’re making in terms of violence against U.S. troops, it is being offset by violence against Iraqis and Iraqi security forces.”

    Gen. George Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, seemed to agree.

    “The average counter-insurgency in the 20th century was about nine years, so it takes time to snuff out the insurgency. And also, I think you know, most insurgencies are defeated by political means rather than necessarily by military means,” Casey said in Washington earlier this month.

    Since the election, the rate of U.S. military fatalities in Iraq has been about 1.7 per day, compared to about 3.4 per day from November to election day — a 50 percent drop. It is also about one-fifth lower than the rate experienced from the start of the war until the election.

    November through January marked one of the bloodiest periods of the war for U.S. forces, with the Falluja offensive in November and insurgents staging a deadly series of attacks before the election. The 137 U.S. troops killed in November was the highest monthly toll of the war, and the 107 killed in January was the third highest.

    The official Pentagon count released on Thursday listed 1,519 U.S. military deaths since the March 2003 invasion to topple President Saddam Hussein. It said another 11,442 U.S. troops have been wounded.

    Casey said he was not ready to declare the elections a “tipping point” toward victory.

    “We’re in a good position following the elections, but … we have a lot of work ahead to get to our final objective in Iraq,” Casey said.

    Here’s a graphical representation that agrees (current month figures are latest projected), from GlobalSecurity.org. Please note the the two largest spikes (APR 04 and NOV 04) were during American offensives and the third largest (JAN 05) was when the terrorists failed to stop the elections.

    US KIA as of 24-MAR-05

    Note, the mission continues. It is not accomplished, but it is progressing.

    I say again for the dense, the mission continues.

  • Kyrgyz Opposition Sieze Power

    The dominoes keep falling, and this time things may be coming up tulips.

    Demonstrators in the central Asian nation of Kyrgyzstan have siezed that country’s seat of government and forced the country’s long-time president to flee his office, political observers and reporters in the nation’s capital of Bishkek tell CNN.

    It was what amounted to a swift and popular shift of power.

    Opposition leaders are attempting to establish a smooth, stable transition after a day of passionate demonstrations that led to the toppling of the Ashkar Akayev government.

    “The Akayev government, for intents and purposes, is no longer in charge,” a Western source told CNN.

    “I’d say the new government is in the process of being formed. The leaders of the opposition realize they need to put together a regular, working government for the Kyrgyz people.”

    There are reports that Akayev, his family and his advisers have left the country.

    As usual of late for the region, Publius Pundit is all over the story, as Daniel Berczik has put together a nice collection of related links and analysis.

    Don’t go popping the champagne corks just yet, though, as some see the upheaval in Kyrgyzstan as an opportunity for radical Islamists.

    Although the Bush administration supports pro-democracy movements, the turmoil in the region also has created a potentially dangerous opening for extremist Islamic parties.

    Hizb ut-Tahrir, or the Party of Liberation, has a following among the young in Central Asia. It has called for Islamic rule to replace secular governments and unite the Muslim world. And its pamphlets criticize U.S. bases established in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks to support the war on terror.

    A senior Western diplomat in Tajikistan confirmed that Hizb ut-Tahrir’s influence is growing across the region, particularly among the young who are looking for alternatives to what they perceive as corrupt, totalitarian regimes with links to the Soviet past.

    The United States has not declared Hizb ut-Tahrir a terrorist organization because it does not advocate violence, but the diplomat said some of its literature is virulently anti-American and anti-Semitic and could inspire violence.

    We are truly living in interesting times.

  • US Deserter Denied Canada Asylum

    I blogged in December about Jeremy Hinzman, the coward who had deserted his comrades as they went to Iraq, instead applying in Canada for refugee status. Well, Canada’s decision was handed down today, and Hinzman’s hopes of staying yellow in the Great White North were denied.

    A former US soldier who quit the army in protest against the Iraq war has been denied refugee status in Canada.

    Jeremy Hinzman, 26, was the first to receive an answer from a number of US deserters seeking Canadian residency.

    Mr Hinzman, who served in Afghanistan in a non-combat role, left the 82nd Airborne Regiment when he was deployed to Iraq.

    Correspondents say the decision may affect eight other ex-servicemen, but improve Canadian-US relations.

    In its judgement Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board said Mr Hinzman had not convinced its members that he would face persecution or cruel and unusual punishment if he were sent back to the US.

    Board member Brian Goodman wrote in the judgement: “The treatment does not amount to a violation of a fundamental human right, and the harm is not serious.”

    Mr Hinzman’s lawyer said he planned to appeal, and that they remained confident of success.

    “He is disappointed. We don’t believe that people should be imprisoned for doing what they believe is illegal,” Jeffry House told Canadian TV.

    Man, I really hope that is a misquote.

    Mr House also settled in Canada after dodging the US military draft during the Vietnam War.

    Well, maybe it’s not.

    If Mr Hinzman’s appeal is not successful, his final option would be a direct plea to Canada’s immigration minister for leave to remain on compassionate grounds.

    He faces up to five years in prison if he fails and is returned to the US.

    Mr Hinzman fled his unit in January 2004, shortly before the 82nd Airborne was due in Iraq.

    He had served three years in the army, but had asked to be classified as a conscientious objector ahead of deployment to Afghanistan in 2002.

    Mr Hinzman now lives with his wife and young son in Toronto, where his case has been championed by Quakers and anti-war activist groups.

    I have little sympathy for a volunteer who runs out on his fellow soldiers. Okay, maybe a touch of sympathy, as I’ll stand by my original conclusion from December:

    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.

    See, I have a heart.

  • Iraqi, U.S. Forces Overrun Terror Base

    I may not be too confident about the body count, as reports have ranged from “dozens” all the way up to 85 dead scumbags, but I am certain which side has momentum in Iraq after government forces crush a terrorist base.

    After a two-hour firefight, Iraqi forces and U.S. helicopters captured an insurgent base north of Baghdad, killing 85 rebels, U.S. and Iraqi military officials said Wednesday.

    “A previous safe haven for planning attacks has been removed,” a U.S. military official said of Tuesday’s battle.

    Although the Iraqi military said it killed 85 insurgents during the firefight, the U.S. military said the number of rebel dead was “undetermined.”

    […]

    After entering the camp, Iraqi commandos found non-Iraqi passports, training publications, propaganda documents, weapons and ammunition, the U.S. military said.

    The U.S. military said the camp is at a remote location about 60 miles northwest of Baghdad, near Lake Tharthar, along the border of Salaheddin and Anbar provinces. But the Iraqi Interior Ministry said the camp was in Samarra, which is east of the lake.

    […]

    The U.S. role in the battle was primarily to provide helicopter support, the U.S. military official said. The battle “is another indication of [the insurgents’] diminished capabilities,” the official said.

    “This in an indication that they have been forced from major population centers and forced to operate in more remote areas,” he said.

    Dr. Rusty Shackleford over at the Jawa Report has a rather colorful post about the engagement.

    It turns out that there were 85 pieces of terrorist shit that were splattered by our Iraqi allies today, not 80. Hey, five more dead mujahidin going to meet their 75 white grapes is a good numerical adjustment in my book.

    Dr. Rusty’s post also includes a nice round-up of others writing on the matter.

    Add to the story this Associated Press summary of the recent success against the Saddamist and radical Islamist terrorists.

    Battles that have killed large numbers of Iraqi insurgents over the past few days:

    SUNDAY: Dozens of insurgents ambush a U.S. convoy near the infamous “Triangle of Death” south of Baghdad, and 26 militants are killed in the resulting gunbattle. Eight others are taken into custody, including seven wounded. Seven soldiers are also injured.

    MONDAY: Militants ambush a convoy of security officials in Mosul, sparking a gunbattle that left 17 dead and 14 injured, according to Iraqi police. No security forces were hurt.

    TUESDAY: Iraqi forces, backed by U.S. troops, raid a suspected insurgent training camp near Lake Tharthar, leaving 85 people dead, according to Iraqi officials. At least seven Iraqi commandos were also killed.

    You can double-check my math, but that looks like a three-day winning streak with a cumulative score of 128-7. And that, folks, is a sweet scoreboard.

  • Aggie Hoops Rebound Season Ends

    The curtain just came down on the Texas A&M men’s basketball season as the Ags fell 58-51 to St. Joseph’s in the quarterfinals of the NIT.

    Still, I have to feel good about a team that, under the tutelage of new coach Billy Gillispie, improved from 7-20 (0-16 in Big 12 play) to 21-10, 8-8 in conference. Add to that not one but two post-season victories, a huge milestone for a program that hadn’t seen an NCAA or NIT win since 1982.

    Thanks, Ags, it’s been a fun ride. Can’t wait ’til next year.

  • Guard Shines Against Ambush in Iraq

    Weekend warrior.

    Yeah, I was called that. Derisively, and more often than I was thanked for my service and sacrifices. Maybe that was my fault, as I left the National Guard in 1999. That was well before the patriotic fervor of 9/11 swept the land and people began to see Guardsmen and Reservists performing in the roles for which we trained.

    Now, with the war against radical Islamist terror having active theaters in Afghanistan and Iraq, the reserve components have been called upon extensively. Sometimes with praise, sometimes with condemnation.

    How now, when serious blood has been shed? Initial responses to Sunday’s engagement, where 27 insurgents were killed in a brutal failure of an ambush on a coalition convoy, centered on questions about another Tet and whether the size was a sign of a desperate or growing opposition.

    Little reported until today (and still little reported) was that it was a Guard unit that kicked ass on Sunday, killing 27 while suffering only three casualties after being ambushed.

    A Kentucky National Guard unit is being credited with responding in “textbook” fashion during an ambush here March 20, killing 27 insurgents and capturing a sizable weapons cache and valuable intelligence.

    The insurgent death toll is the highest in Iraq since the Fallujah operation in November 2004 and, according to Army Capt. Todd Lindner, commander of the Richmond, Ky.-based 617th Military Police Company, represents “without a doubt, one of the most significant impacts an MP company has had in this war.”

    Lindner credits his unit’s dogged commitment to training and unwillingness to cut corners with preparing his soldiers for the firefight along an alternative supply route about seven miles southeast of Baghdad.

    Three squads from the 617th MP Company were providing security for a convoy along the supply route when it came under attack by 40 to 50 insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons.

    According to Lindner, the soldiers positioned themselves between the convoy and the attackers, “putting down a heavy volume of fire” and flanking the enemy, when they began receiving fire from the rear.

    “They were armed to the teeth, and looked like they were ready to fight for a long time,” Linder said of the insurgents.

    Ultimately, the unit killed 27 of the insurgents and captured several more. After the attack, they recovered a cache of RPGs, rockets, machine guns, assault weapons, hand grenades and ammunition.

    Three unit soldiers were wounded, two seriously.

    “These guys were amazing,” Linder said of his soldiers. “This proves what we’ve been saying all along: These guys rock.”

    Lindner credits training with making the vital difference in his unit’s ability to respond under fire.

    “We’ve been training for this mission for the last year before we got here,” he said. “Once we knew we were coming (to Iraq), we changed our training to focus specifically on this mission.”

    That training, he said, “absolutely made a difference” in his unit’s response during the weekend attack, sharpening its ability to maneuver while firing.

    Sgt. 1st Class Marshall Ware, platoon sergeant for the squads involved, agrees the training the unit received “absolutely” made a difference during the attack.

    “From Day 1, there was an emphasis on training,” he said. “We trained and trained and trained.”

    Equally critical, he said, was the unit’s strict adherence to standards — conducting precombat inspections, making sure weapons are clean, and requiring use of body armor, Kevlar helmets and eye and hearing protection.

    These steps have protected his company against numerous attacks, Ware said. “You can’t completely take the risk out of what we’re doing, but you can mitigate it,” he said.

    Ware, who served 10 years on active duty before becoming a full-time National Guardsman, said he came to the Guard with prejudices that its members played second string to the active force. But he said the Guard members he worked with quickly proved him wrong.

    “The Guard is not the same Guard it was two years ago,” he said. “They’re as good as any active duty unit.”

    The average Guard unit is most assuredly not up to par with their counterparts in the active Army, but the difference is in training time. It most assuredly is not in motivation or talent.

    After Action Report follows: the terrorists should learn not to jack with a bunch of “weekend warriors,” even if trying to use the two-year anniversary of the war’s opening for a Tet-type media response.

    And certainly not on a weekend. That’s prime time, baby.

    Hooah, troops!

  • Artfully Honoring the Fallen

    An exhibit is soon to open that will pay a rather special tribute to our soldiers who themselves have paid the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan and Iraq — a collection of over 1,300 personal portraits to be displayed at Arlington National Cemetary.

    Spc. Brandon Tobler, an Army reservist from Portland, Ore., grew up with one mom.

    But now that Tobler’s life has ended — cut short at age 19 in a vehicle crash during a blinding sandstorm in Iraq on March 22, 2003 — the young soldier has two moms: his birth mother, and Washington portrait artist Annette Polan.

    Now Tobler “is my baby, too,” Polan said March 15, as she ran her fingers gently over the surface of the 6-inch-by-8-inch portrait she created for the new “Faces of the Fallen” project.

    Polan traced a finger over the portrait’s full lips.

    “His mouth is so alive for me,” she murmured. “I see it and think, ‘I hope he had a girlfriend. I hope he had his first kiss.’ ”

    The power of art to spark emotions in that manner — emotions a photograph may leave untouched — is what Polan and more than 150 volunteer artists are hoping to evoke with “Faces of the Fallen,” an exhibition of 1,327 individual portraits of servicemembers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The exhibit, which opens to the public March 23 at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery and runs through Labor Day, Sept. 5, includes portraits or silhouettes of every servicemember killed while deployed as part of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom through Nov. 11, 2004.

    This is not a disrepectful protest of flag-draped faux coffins. This is not a stab at our troops’ efforts in Iraq. I hasten to point out that, unlike the casualty figures so commonly bandied about, our losses in Afghanistan are being included and honored.

    The military and the families obviously agree.

    Retired Brig. Gen. Wilma Vaught, the Women’s Memorial Foundation president and a friend of Polan, was an early supporter.

    Vaught acted as a liaison with the Defense Department, as well as offering the memorial as the exhibit space.

    Before the project got under way, the different military services mailed letters to each family whose portrait was scheduled to be part of the exhibit, giving them the opportunity not to participate if they so chose.

    They were also informed that once the exhibit is done touring, each honored servicemember’s family would be given the portrait.

    Not a single family declined, Polan said.

    […]

    The intent of the portraits, however, is not to remind viewers of death, but to celebrate lives that are normally noted only in ever-growing statistics, said Dennis O’Neil, an expert in print-making who provided 200 hand-screened silhouettes for the exhibit that are “place holders” for servicemembers whose photos were not available, or whose assigned artists have not completed their assignments.

    “When one artist deals with one soul, you’re re-humanizing the fact that these people lost their lives,” said O’Neil, who in addition to working as an artist is also a professor of art at the Corcoran.

    […]

    Before the exhibit opens to the public, there will be a special reception and viewing for the families of the servicemembers. Polan said that 1,800 family members have indicated that they will attend, including a family traveling from India for the event, and a military widow who is coming from Australia.

    For all the viewers of “Faces of the Fallen,” Polan said, “what I really hope [the exhibit] ultimately has is the quality of healing.”

    “We as a country are going through a very divisive time,” Polan said.

    “But we can all agree as Americans that the troops who sacrificed their lives, deserve to be honored and remembered.”

    Here’s hoping the families are helped in their search for solace and healing, and I want to thank Polan and the other artists involved for their efforts.

    More information, including a slide show of some of the portraits, can be found at the Faces of the Fallen website. Hmmm … might be time for another trip to D.C. soon.