Category: General

  • 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.

  • Palestinians Restrict Militants’ Weapons

    Ha! Go ahead and file this under toothless maneuvers.

    Palestinian officials took a tentative first step toward disarming militants, banning them from carrying guns in public and requiring all weapons to be registered, according to a new directive.

    According to senior Palestinian security officials, the Interior Ministry distributed letters outlining weapons restrictions to militants in the West Bank. The AP obtained a copy of the letter Monday.

    Militants said they would not comply until Israel completes a promised withdrawal from West Bank towns.

    The move was seen as a concession to the United States and Israel, who have long demanded the Palestinians crack down on militant groups. Palestinians leader Mahmoud Abbas has preferred to use persuasion to get the gunmen to lay down their arms.

    Israel welcomed the move. After four years of bloodshed, Israel has made disarming of militants and dismantling violent groups like Hamas a precondition for progress along the U.S.-backed “road map” peace plan toward a Palestinian state.

    The directive limits militants to a single weapon and bars them from loading the weapons or carrying them in public. It also obligates militants to license the weapons with the ministry and forbids them to change the serial numbers on the guns.

    Violators actually caught, prosecuted and convicted are expected to face a time-out.

    Many militants possess more than one weapon, and gunmen have become folk heroes by brandishing their arms openly on the streets and firing in the air at marches and funerals.

    The Palestinian Interior Ministry has asked militants to sign the letter and commit to the process.

    Leaders of the al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades confirmed they had received the document and said they were considering the offer.

    However, Kamel Ghannam, an al Aqsa leader in Ramallah, said militants would not sign the pledge until Israel carries out a planned military withdrawal from five West Bank cities.

    “Once Israel withdraws, we’ll be able to sign it,” Ghannam said.

    Sharon and Abbas agreed on Feb. 8 that Israel would withdraw from five West Bank towns it entered after the outbreak of Israeli-Palestinian violence in September 2000: Ramallah, Qalqiliya, Tulkarem, Jericho and Bethlehem.

    Israel handed Jericho last week, and on Monday, the two sides agreed on transfer of Tlkarem on Tuesday.

    I would say that we should expect that goal line to shift as the Israeli withdrawal progresses, but that would be obvious.

    C’mon, Abbas, actually show that you care more about the building of a Palestinian future than an Israeli destruction. Control your problem children. Build a society for your people. Do not, as I fear, become another Arafatish, terrorist-loving piece of dung.

  • Arab League Summit: More of the Same

    What? You expected progress? No, the Arab League chooses to keep their collective heads buried in the sand of the past.

    This week’s gathering of Arab leaders won’t open the doors to establishing ties with Israel because of opposition from Syria and other hard-line countries. Still, some Arab nations are moving forward with a more welcoming stance on peace.

    Some had predicted the summit, which opens Tuesday, would be “historic” in dealing with rapid changes in the Middle East: huge demonstrations in Lebanon and a Syrian military pullback there, new optimism in the peace process and increasing pressure for democratic change.

    In the end, it won’t be so daring. Arab League leaders are largely avoiding the issues of Lebanon and democratic reform, and they rejected Jordan’s proposal for a new peace strategy that would offer Israel normal relations and drop the traditional demand that it first return Arab lands. Instead, they’re likely to pay lip service to Syria’s concerns about U.S. pressure and consider reform of the Arab League itself.

    The world is changing around and among them. Despite this, the nations of the Arab League whistle the same old tiring tune that has led nowhere, demanding Israeli withdrawal to its pre-1967 borders, a Palestinian state with a capital in Jerusalem and a resolution to the Palestinian refugee problem.

    Also frozen in time are the wonderful relationships between the various members.

    The gathering will be attended by only 13 of the 22 leaders. The others are staying away for health reasons or because of personal disputes.

    For example, Crown Prince Abdullah, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, is not participating apparently because of the presence of Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi, whom Saudi officials accuse of involvement in a plot to kill Abdullah.

    […]

    Jordan’s King Abdullah II is staying away from the summit, apparently angered by the dismissal of his proposal. His government had argued a new stance would encourage Israel to make concessions in the peace process.

    As the Middle East nations try to maintain bouyancy above growing and tumultuous undercurrents of democracy, not all voices are silent about the nothing-new nature of the summit.

    And despite pressure from Washington for democratic reform, the summit will largely avoid the issue. Instead, the leaders are focusing on reforming the Arab League by endorsing a plan to set up an “Arab parliament” an unelected consultative body for the league.

    In an article in the Arab daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat, columnist Abdel-Rahman al-Rashid criticized the league for failing to deal with major issues facing the Middle East.

    “What is the benefit of a summit or even the League itself when it hides, waiting for each crisis to end by itself,” he wrote. “It is ridiculous that the summit has promised Arabs a big achievement, an Arab parliament. Is this what Arabs want? Another symbolic chatting council?”

    What benefit? Only the holding back of the hands of time.

  • Another Blogroll 10K Hat Tip

    Just wanted to congratulate Guy S. at Snugg Harbor for recently reaching the 10,000 hit plateau.

    Hey, we small bloggers have to stick together in celebrating every little victory we can. Besides, Snugg Harbor deserves much more attention than it currently receives.

  • Quote of the Week, 20 MAR 05

    Every citizen [should] be a soldier. This was the case with the Greeks and the Romans, and must be that of every free state.

    —Thomas Jefferson

  • Save Toby

    Only you have the power to save Toby.

    Toby is the cutest little bunny on the planet. Unfortunately, he will DIE on June 30th, 2005 if you don’t help. I rescued him several months ago. I found him under my porch, soaking wet, injured from what appeared to be an attack from an alley cat. I took him in, thinking he had no chance to live from his injuries, but miraculously, he recovered. I have since spent several months nursing him to health. Toby is a fighter, that’s for sure.

    Unfortunately, on June 30th, 2005, Toby will die. I am going to eat him.

    […]

    I don’t want to eat Toby, he is my friend, and he has always been the most loving, adorable pet. However, God as my witness, I will devour this little guy unless I receive 50,000$ USD into my account from donations or purchase of merchandise.

    Donations are at $18,462.12, as of this writing. Come on, PETA, step up to the plate and save da wabbit.

  • Out to Fest

    Running late, but now it’s time to head to …

    TexasBlogfest 2005
  • General: Iraq Insurgency on Decline

    Maybe, just maybe, Iraq is on the verge of finding its own footing.

    The Iraqis have voted, the holdouts and terrorists have repeatedly failed in their boastful threats and the American-led coalition has adjusted tactics and training as needed. Now, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff hints that efforts may be showing some serious returns.

    The military’s top general gave his most optimistic public assessment on Thursday of progress in Iraq, saying the insurgency shows signs of slipping as the U.S.-led international effort gains momentum in building Iraqi police and military forces.

    During a visit to a training base for Iraqi police cadets outside of Amman, Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in recalling his stop Monday in Iraq, “I came away more positive than I’ve ever been” about the prospects for overcoming the insurgency and stabilizing the country.

    He also saw evidence, however, that obstacles remain, even for the Iraqis who are training in the relative safety of the Jordanian desert. Myers was told by his guide at the police training academy that some cadets have used water bottles as simulated weapons because the academy has not acquired enough rifles.

    Myers said the number of attacks against U.S. forces across Iraq has fallen to between 40 and 50 a day, and about half of those cause no injuries or property damage. The number of daily attacks is about at the level of one year ago, he said — far fewer than in the weeks prior to the Jan. 30 elections.

    “I think we’re getting some momentum built up against the insurgency,” he told reporters at his hotel in the Jordanian capital at the conclusion of a weeklong trip that also took him to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan.

    Myers acknowledged that violence in Iraq continues to kill U.S. forces as well as Iraqi security forces and civilians.

    I’ve never said it was over. I, just like President Bush, have never said that the mission was accomplished. The mission continues and continues to be dangerous. But there is progress. If anything, the calls of “Quagmire!” sound all the more pathetic and shrill when the news of the entire region is taken into account.

    During his Amman stop, Myers also visited Jordan’s special operations command headquarters outside the capital and watched several dozen Iraqis demonstrate on a training range what they had learned in a 12-week counterterrorism course. Jordan’s special operations forces are conducting the training, along with U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers.

    With Myers standing almost within arm’s reach, several Iraqis clad in black uniforms and firing live ammunition from M-16 rifles blasted their way into a mock residence, shooting the locks off doors, and tossing flash grenades that threw smoke and dust into Myers’ face as he observed from a low-slung catwalk.

    Myers and some of his senior staff wore armor-plated vests.

    I’ll take the only-somewhat cheap shot here: I’ll bet some of the rodents at Democratic Underground.com (I will not give a real link to these freaks) would’ve been drooling over this “revolutionary” opportunity.

    Asked by a reporter to rate the Iraqis on a scale of one to 10, with 10 being the competency of U.S. Special Forces, one of the U.S. trainers said they are about a five. More than half of the 99 Iraqis in the counterterrorism training had no prior military experience, officials said.

    “They looked very disciplined,” Myers said later.

    At the police academy, where about 3,400 Iraqi cadets are in an eight-week training course, Myers saw a demonstration of the skills they have learned for stopping suspicious vehicles, searching them for weapons and homemade bombs and arresting suspected terrorists or insurgents with minimum use of force.

    Myers was told the entire curriculum for the police academy was overhauled after Lt. Gen. David Petraeus informed officials there last September that the program was not producing competent police officers. Instead of spending 75 percent of their time in classroom instruction and 25 percent in actual field training, the cadets are now getting less class time and more opportunity to practice on the training range.

    The Iraqis also are getting some practical advice on survival skills, which are a high priority given the large number of police who are attacked by the insurgents. For example: At home, don’t hang your laundered uniform on an outside clothes line, making your home a target for the insurgents.

    Don’t let your neighbors see your uniform. Sound bizarre? It shouldn’t. I remember protocols shifting back and forth on American military personnel wearing uniforms or civilian attire on even domestic civilian flights. And that was in the oh-so-joyous ’90s, long before President Bush could be blamed for anything.

    Progress. Chipping away at the support columns holding up the Islamist bastards. Baby steps in a nation possibly becoming giant strides in a regions.

    It almost hurts to hold back the hope.

  • Kuwait to Charge U.S. Military for Fuel

    Gratitude can only go so far. Actually, I’m surprised to learn this freebie even lasted this long.

    The days when a U.S. Army truck could fill up for free at a gas station in this oil-rich state are coming to an end. Kuwait’s energy minister said Thursday that U.S. troops are going to have to start paying for fuel.

    In a gift that must have saved the Pentagon a fortune, Kuwait has not charged the U.S. military for fuel since the invasion of Iraq in March 2003. Tens of thousands of American Humvees, trucks and armored vehicles have rolled through the country and across the desert border into Iraq during the past two years.

    “But now after the Iraqi elections … we have to create a mechanism for payment,” the energy minister, Sheik Ahmed Fahd Al Ahmed Al Sabah, told reporters.

    Kuwait and the United States have agreed in principle on the matter, but the prices and other aspects are still to be worked out, he said.

    The minister did not say when the new system would start and he did not give other details.

    No objections to this from me, really.

  • Some Like It Hot

    And some don’t, for obvious reasons.

    Eric at Eric’s Random Musings has put up the latest installment in his “When I Wore Green” series, a collection of his personal reflections on his days proudly wearing the Uncle-Sam-Ain’t-Released-Me-Yet (U.S. Army) uniform. In Hot!, Eric recollects back to his arrival during the Desert Shield build-up of 1990. Go read it.

    Yep, the sun wasn’t up yet and it was nearly 100 degrees. When we got off the plane there was no ground transport (an air force base, not a civilian airport) and we had to grab our bags and walk across the airfield. It was so hot I thought I was still in the jetwash of the airplane, until I looked up and realized I had walked about 250 yards or so.

    Seriously, go read it. And think about our current brave soldiers, as the hotter days approach.