Category: Military

  • Who Will Guard the Guards?

    Specifically, I’m talking about soldiers of the California National Guard. Once again, their back in the news and, once again, not in a good way.

    At least 23 members of a California National Guard battalion serving in Iraq are under investigation for the alleged abuse of Iraqi detainees and for a $30,000 extortion scheme involving promises to protect shopkeepers from insurgents, the Los Angeles Times reported on Wednesday.

    Citing military officials and unnamed members of the unit, the newspaper said the abuse allegations focused on an incident in which a stun gun was apparently used to torture Iraqi detainees after an insurgent attack in June on a Baghdad area power plant. At least 17 soldiers are under investigation.

    […]

    The extortion scheme under investigation is said to have involved at least six soldiers on night patrols in the Baghdad areas who demanded more than $30,000 from shopkeepers in exchange for protection from insurgents.

    Add these investigations from abroad to the California Guard’s recent difficulties at home and you’re well on your way to a very ugly black eye for the reserve components.

  • “Over There”

    I’ll admit, I went into tonight’s premier of FX’s Over There with much trepidation. Simply put, I generally don’t trust Hollywood.

    More thoughts later, but I’d like to throw out a few initial observations.

    • It just wouldn’t be Hollywood if we didn’t quickly show drug use and racial tension in the ranks
    • “Keep quiet” and “keep down” apparently means little to soldiers
    • One very realistic line from the sergeant during a lull in the action: “Do something useful … eat!”
    • Soldier stereotypes? Check, we got’em
    • Surprisingly questionable portrayal of women in combat. I doubt this will last many episodes
    • Six soldiers loudly sound off down the line and relay back, even though they appear to be less than twenty meters apart (nice spacing tactics, Hollywood, repeatedly)
    • Nice mention of my alma mater Texas A&M
    • Overall, visually good but is air support for a lengthy mosque siege beyond the series budget?
    • Flags on an IED (or mine) on the side of the road?!
    • What’s up with the guy without a kevlar in the IED aftermath?!!

    My overall impression: negative. Well, at least Battlestar Galactica‘s position as the best show currently on the tube is safe.

    Charmaine Yoest at Reasoned Audacity live-blogged it, as did elgato at the Swanky Conservative.

    UPDATE: Well, I’m having a little connectivity issue so, while I’m waiting to actually publish this post, I wanted to point out something. I thought I saw an issue with a tank shown silhouetted on the horizon. During the immediate rebroadcast, the problem was obvious and more clear in another shot where an “M1” was in the background — obvious mock-up. While pretty good on the turret and body outline (that is, without the ability to pause and really nitpick), apparently there was nothing they could do about the position of the bore evacuator on the gun tube. Gunner no likey! If anybody can nab some screen captures of these few scenes, I’d love to take a further peek.

    UPDATE 2: Well, I linked two who live-blogged the show. How about two MilBloggers who intentionally avoided it? For your reading entertainment, Eric explains his avoidance at Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave and Blackfive‘s commenters weigh in heavily.

  • Media and Morale in Iraq

    The same news piece, a survey on morale among U.S. Army troops stationed in Iraq. The same data. So many different ways to look at it.

    First, let’s look at the unnecessarily negative headline.

    Army: GI morale low in Iraq

    Why do I say unnecessarily negative? The piece, by far the shortest of the three that I will examine, has a negative headline followed by a brief, mostly positive story of improvement. Also, I just pick up some negative vibes of consensus without a frame of reference from the header. It’s hard to put a finger on the problem, but the assertion of “majority” in the following story comes off as less dismaying.

    Majority of Soldiers Say Iraq Morale Low

    A majority of U.S. soldiers in Iraq say morale is low, according to an Army report that finds psychological stress is weighing particularly heavily on National Guard and Reserve troops.

    […]

    The report said 54 percent of soldiers rated their units’ morale as low or very low. The comparable figure in a year-earlier Army survey was 72 percent. Although respondents said “combat stressors” like mortar attacks were higher in the most recent survey, “noncombat stressors” like uncertain tour lengths were much lower, the report said.

    The headline is accurate, as the following paragraph I quoted shows. How lengthy was my omission before the story actually reached the supporting figures? I had to jump eleven paragraphs in a sixteen-paragraph story. I would put forth that the slim majority of those who felt their unit morale was low was quite tucked away. More about the unit morale issue in a bit, but I’d like to say that this version of the reporting does not exactly waste the intervening paragraphs.

    National Guard and Reserve soldiers who serve in transportation and support units suffered more than others from depression, anxiety and other indications of acute psychological stress, the report said. These soldiers have often been targets of the insurgents’ lethal ambushes and roadside bombs, although the report said they had significantly fewer actual combat experiences than soldiers assigned to combat units.

    The report recommended that the Army reconsider whether National Guard and Reserve support troops are getting adequate training in combat skills. Even though they do less fighting than combat troops, they might be better suited to cope with wartime stress if they had more confidence in their combat skills, it said.

    Only 55 percent of National Guard support soldiers said they have “real confidence” in their unit’s ability to perform its mission, compared with 63 percent of active-duty Army support soldiers. And only 28 percent of the Guard troops rated their level of training as high, compared with 50 percent of their active-duty counterparts.

    While confidence in training could be a reasonable difference in attitudes between reserve and guard troops, I would put forth another difference as contributing to disparities between support and combat personnel — a sense of control. I would be interested to see the numbers comparing those who drive or ride along, fearing the likes of an IED, and those who actually go forth with the intent to confront the enemy.

    Another point: did you notice that the majority of those saying unit morale was low was comprised of both the “low” and “very low” groupings, but the reporting of reservist support focused only on the “real confidence” sector. I would surmise that their was also a “confidence” option; how do those two groups collectively compare with the full-time troopers in a similar position? Is the discrepancy severe, or are we watching degrees of confidence being spun in a different manner than morale?

    Now, on to a third piece.

    Morale of soldiers in Iraq improving, Army survey finds

    Holy crap, a positive and accurate headline. See, how tough was that?

    Morale among U.S. soldiers in Iraq has improved since the start of the war in 2003, and the soldiers’ suicide rate dropped by more than half last year, according to an Army mental-health survey released yesterday.

    The Army’s second Mental Health Advisory Team report paints an improving picture of how soldiers are handling their tours and how medical personnel are dealing with mental-health problems. The team surveyed more than 2,000 soldiers from August to October and concluded that aggressive efforts to improve mental-health care and to make soldiers aware of the stresses of combat have succeeded.

    A majority of soldiers fighting in Iraq, however, reported that morale is still a problem, with 54 percent saying their unit morale is “low” or “very low,” and 9 percent reporting “high” or “very high” morale.

    During the first survey in late summer 2003, 72 percent of soldiers reported low morale.

    Balanced and accurate.

    This story also includes a little morsel left out of the other two representaions.

    The survey also reported that when soldiers were asked about their own morale — as distinct from their unit’s morale — there was improvement from 2003 to 2004: 52 percent described their morale as low or very low in the first survey, and that dropped to 36 percent in 2004.

    Based on this detail, all three of these stories could have said morale was high. Two chose to go negative. Hmmm…

    To sum up, two points and a question.

    First, individual morale is up, and apparently significantly so.

    Second, the individual’s confidence in the unit is improved but still negative. Why the dichotomy? I would submit the difference can be attributed to the nature of soldiering. The soldier has five basic jobs: performing his mission in a competent and professional manner, bitching, whining, grumbling and gossipping. It’s the human reaction to a situation where an individual’s control over his activities is greatly impaired and his outlets for tension are limited. The soldier’s own bitching and moaning are white noise to him, nothing more than a release. The result is an individual, confident in his own abilities, who is inundated with the same grumbling from those around him. But hey, I’m not a shrink; that’s just a common-sense way at viewing the difference, in my view. To back this up a bit and possibly support my idea, I would like to see the raw numbers on unit confidence, including both the confident and really confident categories.

    Now, to that important question, I know we did morale and psychological surveys among our troops during World War II, but did we publish them before the world while still engaged? Did we give the enemy (both foreign and domestic) the ability to spin and impair our efforts?

  • I Was a Cylon

    “Obedient, robot-like killers.”

    For nine years, that was me, at least one weekend a month and two weeks a year. That is, after all, the description of American soldiers, according to a delightful piece of email sent to Blackfive.

    Whew! Glad I escaped that. Hell, brainwashed little ol’ me thought I was doing a service for the likes of the gent who wrote that. I’m sure that, in his own little peculiar way, the email author really meant, “Hey, y’all, thanks for the sacrifices[, baby-killers]. I really appreciate it[, you murderous slaves].”

  • Honoring the Blogroll: the MilBlogs

    I haven’t done a tribute to my blogroll faves in quite some time. Today, I’d like to tip my hat to the top five sites currently on my blogroll whose content focuses exclusively or very heavily on the military. I should note that, while not qualifying for this little personal list, my blogroll is well stocked with veterans and current military personnel, all of which deserve your time.

    5. Grim’s Hall
    4. Chapomatic
    3. Blackfive
    2. Argghhh!!!

    and, of course, the father of the MilBloggers:

    1. Mudville Gazette

    I highly recommend starting each day over at the Gazette, if only for Mrs. Greyhawk’s Dawn Patrol round-up postings.

    On a related note, longtime blogroll denizen Joan of Seven Inches of Sense has recently shifted focus to a group blog for a handful of military girlfriends and spouses with her Seven Inches of Service announcement:

    I’ve been working on this little project and it’s time to let you all in on it.

    For quite some time, a couple of years probably, I’ve belonged to a support group for girlfriends of deployed soldiers. It’s a hard life. And most people don’t understand it. So to surround yourself with a group of ladies who are living through the same purgatory you are is comforting, to say the very least.

    Who else is going to understand when you tell them you’re so worried you’ve been checking the obituaries to make sure the man you love isn’t among the latest casualties and his family didn’t tell you? Who else will understand when you tell them that you passed a convoy of tanks on transport trucks and you got so swept up in the emotion of it that you drove ten miles past your exit? Who else will understand when you tell them that after two years of dating you’re nervous because you’re going on a date with your longtime boyfriend?

    These are things that it sometimes seems as if people have a hard time wrapping their minds around unless they’ve been there. So, in order to hopefully shed some light on the women behind the men, and give a collective voice to the women themselves, I’m starting a new feature here at Seven Inches of Sense.

    I’ve asked six other military girlfriends (one who is a wife now) from my support group, all in various stages of the military relationship (from the ended relationships to marriage), to join me here from time to time as we discuss life and our service in the silent ranks.

    As any soldier knows, those in uniform are never the only ones sacrificing.

  • Army Declines to Discipline Gitmo General

    Hmmm…

    Military investigators said they proposed disciplining the prison commander at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, because of abusive and degrading treatment of a suspected terrorist that included forcing him to wear a bra, dance with another man and behave like a dog.

    They said Wednesday they recommended that Army Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller be reprimanded for failing to oversee his interrogation of the prisoner, who was suspected of involvement in the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

    But Gen. Bantz J. Craddock, commander of U.S. Southern Command, said he overruled their recommendation and will instead refer the matter to the Army’s inspector general. Craddock concluded that Miller did not violate any U.S. laws or policies, according to officials familiar with the report.

    I don’t know that the details of this story constitute abuse, as they really sound more like mild hazing. I do actually hope that the bra portion is true, because the thought of a violent terrorist wearing Victoria’s Secret dainties in lieu of a bomb vest is freaking funny.

  • More National Guard News

    National Guard chief says Iraq danger “misrepresented”

    The head of the National Guard says the dangers American troops face in Iraq have been exaggerated — complicating recruitment efforts at home.
    Lieutenant General Steven Blum says the casualty rate for Guardsmen is low compared to any previous armed conflict. He says he loses more people in private car and motorcycle wrecks.

    Blum says Iraq is dangerous — but that the degree of danger has been “misrepresented.”

    Surveys of potential recruits and their parents show fear of being hurt as one of the major reasons young people don’t enlist.

    Blum says more than 250-thousand National Guardsmen have been mobilized since Nine-Eleven. Only 262 of them have been killed. Pentagon figures show more than 90 percent of those were in Iraq.

    Part-Time Forces on Active Duty Decline Steeply

    The number of Reserve and National Guard troops on domestic and overseas missions has fallen to about 138,000, down from a peak of nearly 220,000 after the invasion of Iraq two years ago, a sharp decline that military officials say will continue in the months ahead.

    The decrease comes as welcome relief to tens of thousands of formerly part-time soldiers who, with their families, employers and communities, have been badly stressed by their long call-ups for duty in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Reserve and National Guard members from all of the armed services make up about 35 percent of the troops in Iraq, a share that is expected to drop to about 30 percent by next year; the vast majority are from the Army Reserve and Army National Guard.

    Despite these pieces, a lag is to be expected before reality sinks in, if in fact the media truly ever lets the reality be well broadcast.

    U.S. National Guard chief sees recruiting shortfall

    The Army National Guard, tapped heavily by the Pentagon for soldiers in Iraq, likely will miss its recruiting goal for the third straight year, the general who runs it said on Tuesday.

    U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Steven Blum, chief of the National Guard Bureau at the Pentagon, argued that the Army National Guard was not in “serious crisis mode” even as it stood about 19,000 troops below the 350,000-strong force authorized by Congress.

    Perhaps there’s a need for this old soldier, perhaps not. I know a dear friend has gone back in and is over there in the sandbox. That little fact lives as a daily itch.

  • Nat’l Guard Criticized for Anti-Islam Poster

    The California National Guard, already facing an investigation into allegations of spying on anti-war activists [discussed here], is now under attack for being culturally insensitive towards our enemies.

    Islamic leaders and peace groups are criticizing the California National Guard for a flier posted in its headquarters suggesting the United States should execute Islamic terrorists with bullets dipped in pig’s blood to deny them entry to heaven.

    The poster attributes the practice to World War I General John J. Pershing.

    “Maybe it is time for this segment of history to repeat itself, maybe in Iraq?” the flier stated. It was posted outside a cubicle in the Guard’s Civil Support Division.

    A second flier showed the wings and tail of a bomber forming a peace sign with the slogan, “Peace the old fashioned way.” Also posted was a cartoon from a Web site showing a Red Crescent ambulance stuffed with weapons and a caricature that looks like the late-Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat unloading the weapons.

    Let’s see. The peace-through-strength poster, an idea that has stood the test of time, isn’t even worth mentioning beyond saying it sounds like a cool graphic. Yes, the other two posters sound culturally insensitive … to terrorists. Cue the freakin’ violins. Frankly, I have no problem with insensitivity towards our enemies. However, these fliers should not be on display in a home-front headquarters, at least not in today’s overly sensitive, politically charged world. At the absolute very least, they most definitely should not be up when it is known that CAIR and peaceniks are going to be visiting. That’s just stupidity.

    Guard spokesman Lt. Col. Doug Hart at first defended the postings to the San Jose Mercury News, which reported the posters Tuesday but later said they had been removed.

    Peace activists spotted the fliers during a tour last week. The tour came after peace groups and a state senator questioned whether a new Guard unit had been formed to spy on U.S. citizens and had monitored a Mother’s Day anti-war rally.

    “It’s troubling to see a governmental organization dedicated to the security of our country promoting culturally and religiously insensitive ideas,” said William Youmans, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Santa Clara. “It’s very possible to combat terrorism without offending the cultural values of a major world religion.”

    No, what’s troubling is that this political correctness garbage is trying to make an issue with how our military views our enemies. We’re talking about a dark-humored flier suggesting a foul way of treating animals who would want nothing more than to carve off the heads of our soldiers. We’re talking about posters not insensitive to Islam but rather fairly insensitive to terrorists. It was dumb for the posters to be up during the visit; it will be tragic if this story gains any further mileage.

    For the soldier or soldiers who put up the fliers, give the mildest of reprimands and maybe an annoying one-hour sensitivity lecture. Slightly more to the commander. For those offended, give a sample of caricatures of our enemies from WWII-era for maybe some hopefully annoying perspective.

    As an aside, Snopes.com has more on the Gen. Pershing story.

  • Retention and Recruitment

    Here is a piece from Gullyborg of Resistance is Futile that I consider a must-read look at the state of military recruitment issues (courtesy the first Carnival of Liberty).

    Since leaving active duty, I have maintained an active interest in our Armed Forces, following every news story and keeping abreast of military developments long before 9/11 put our Soldiers and Sailors at the forefront of public opinion. And never in my memory has there been such a relentless attack on the morale of our troops.

    I was too young to remember the Vietnam War. But I am afraid I may living through its reincarnation, at least as far as our media establishment and our more liberal politicians are concerned.

    […]

    But retention is up. As Glenn Reynolds points out, our Troops in the field have a more positive view of things. They are seeing what’s really happening, and they believe what’s happening is a good thing.

    Go read the whole thing to understand the undeniable dichotomy that the American military is currently facing — keeping those currently in uniform, especially those who have been in areas of operation, has been easier than usual but filling new uniforms has proven difficult.

  • U.S. Considers Dropping Two-war Doctrine

    The reality of the impact of actual warfare has left the post-Cold War planning for two simultaneous campaigns shaken, not stirred.

    The Pentagon, stretched by the war in Iraq, is considering dropping a linchpin of American military strategy, the doctrine that requires it to be prepared to fight two major wars at the same time.

    Since the end of the Cold War the need to be able to fight two “near-simultaneous” wars in different theatres has dominated military thinking, with Iraq and North Korea seen as the most likely battlefields.

    Now, with military resources under increasing strain from commitments in Iraq, the Pentagon is considering a new doctrine to take into account the post-September 11 world.

    The mission in Iraq has overturned previous military thinking. While it is not officially seen as a “war” it has clearly taken one of the slots from the two-war doctrine, as it continues to absorb the manpower required for a medium-sized war.

    Officials said yesterday that among the options for the quadrennial defence review, due early next year, was preparing the military to fight just one major war while setting aside more resources for fighting terrorism and defending the homeland.

    Ryan Henry, the principal deputy undersecretary of defence for policy, suggested the “two-war doctrine” may be near the end of its shelf life. The two-war doctrine was born out of the rubble of the Pentagon’s Cold War strategy, which for 40 years had envisaged the Third World War being fought on the plains of Germany.

    It was formalised in the wake of the 1991 Gulf war, when the first President George Bush and then his successor, Bill Clinton, were slashing military budgets and the Pentagon saw it as a way of setting a limit to the cuts.

    Donald Rumsfeld, the defence secretary, has long promoted an overhaul of military thinking and, when he came to office in 2000, floated the idea that the two-war strategy was on its way out. But it survived the previous review.

    I have long held that the cuts of the 1990s were too sharp, too fast. But hey, who am I to judge? I remember in 1996 taking my tank into the field for a weekend field exercise. Because of budget constraints, each and every tank was limited to a whopping twenty gallons of fuel Sunday morning for the return to the motor pool. Here’s a newsflash: twenty gallons doesn’t go very far in a vehicle whose fuel efficiency is calculated in gallons per mile. As per the norm, we were a sweaty bunch at the end of the weekend, but I attribute the stench to more than just the heat of the turret in the late Ft. Hood springtime — no, there was the additional stress of watching the fuel guage on the roadmarch home. Nobody wanted to be on the track that sputtered to a halt and had to be towed.

    Obviously, I digress.

    Just as obvious, though, is the problem posed by the two-war doctrine, its shift of pressure onto the reserve components, the drag of a decade-long high rate of deployment for policing and peace-keeping, and the strain of the Afghani and Iraqi theaters of operations. The possibilities? First, deny the issue and maintain the present course of pretending. Second, expand the military to actually be to handle the requirements of the two-war doctrine. Third, revise the doctrine to face the current needs of the war against Islamist terror by streamlining forces and planning for a capability of one war and defensive postures elsewhere. McQ at QandO points out a key deficiency in the latter.

    OK. That means going back to a one conventional conflict army which may, may I say, be seen as a weakness by various players out there (such as China, North Korea and Iran).

    Tie the US up with a conventional confrontation (maybe via proxy) and then have your way (many have seen that as something China might consider in regards to taking Taiwan)on a second front.

    Yes, there is always the threat of a truly bloody and involved ground campaign to be considered.

    How you loving that peace dividend now?