Category: War on Terror

  • Calif. Guard Story and Major K.

    It looks like the investigations into some of the deployed California National Guard units, blogged about here last night, has had an impact on TCm blogroll member Major K.

    There are many things that I have to post about, but this is the elephant in the room that I must get out of the way. We have apparently found evil in our midst. I cannot comment on the on going investigation save to say that I am disgusted by the actions of a few that have tarnished the good work of so many others. I am not involved in this situation, and for that I am thankful. Morale has taken quite a hit, but the NightStalkers will bounce back, and be stronger and better for it. The Battalion is currently under a microscope, and many people have been relieved or moved. I, although not involved, got moved as well.

    Best wishes to Major K. as he soldiers on in a new role. He’s on target about the bad apples, and I fully expect the Army and the California National Guard to address the issues in question post-haste.

  • Man Gets 22-year Term in Bomb Plot

    Sentencing for the would-be millennium bomber has been handed down, and it isn’t enough for a man whose hopes and intentions were to kill thousands.

    Ahmed Ressam, the Algerian man who sought to explode a bomb at Los Angeles International Airport on New Year’s Eve 1999, was sentenced Wednesday to 22 years in prison.

    Some considered that date the eve of the millennium.

    Ressam, 38, became a key U.S. government informant on the Al Qaeda network in the months before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, but he later ended his cooperation.

    He was arrested by U.S. authorities in December 1999 as he tried to pass through U.S. Customs at Port Angeles, Wash., in a car with bomb-making materials.

    In April 2001, he was convicted of trying to plant a bomb at Los Angeles International Airport, but his sentencing was delayed as Ressam agreed to aid the Justice Department.

    Ressam recounted a saga that took him from Algeria, to Montreal, through Europe to an Al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, then back to Montreal to prepare the Los Angeles bombing attempt.

    He offered full or partial identities of more than 120 people he met as he embraced a jihad against the West.

    […]

    But Ressam has refused to help the Justice Department move forward with prosecutions of two men suspected of being Al Qaeda operatives.

    Ressam will be eligible for parole in fourteen years. I hope he doesn’t live to see it.

    Left out of this version of the sentencing story was a little political play by the judge.

    The sentence itself was fairly straightforward: An Algerian man received 22 years for plotting to bomb the Los Angeles airport on the eve of the millennium. It was what the judge said in imposing the term that raised eyebrows.

    U.S. District Judge John C. Coughenour said the successful prosecution of Ahmed Ressam should serve not only as a warning to terrorists, but as a statement to the Bush administration about its terrorism-fighting tactics.

    “We did not need to use a secret military tribunal, detain the defendant indefinitely as an enemy combatant or deny the defendant the right to counsel,” he said. “The message to the world from today’s sentencing is that our courts have not abandoned our commitment to the ideals that set our nation apart.”

    He added that the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks have made Americans realize they are vulnerable to terrorism and that some believe “this threat renders our Constitution obsolete … If that view is allowed to prevail, the terrorists will have won.”

    First, there was absolutely no reason for this little bit of ankle-biting by Coughenour other than a personal need to inject his own political view. Second, while the judge is right that our court system could be used to handle the likes of the scum we currently are holding at Gitmo, that does not mean that they must be used or that military tribunals should not be used. Third and quite key in this matter, there is a major difference between Ressam and the Gitmo detainees — Ressam was snagged within our borders in the process of committing criminal, though admittedly terrorist, acts and the Gitmo folks were captured in a foreign combat theater acting not as part of a uniformed enemy force. These detainees are not even eligible to be guaranteed the protections of the Geneva conventions, much less the American legal system. That they have been subjected to military tribunals is not a threat to the Constitution of the United States of America. The same cannot be necessarily said of judges who wander from only tangentially related rulings to offer criticisms of executive-branch policies.

  • 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.

  • Poll: Fewer People Link Islam, Violence

    This little tidbit should not come as a surprise to anyone.

    The percentage of Americans who believe Islam is more likely than other religions to inspire violence has declined in the past two years, according to a poll taken after the London bombings.

    Just over a third, 36 percent, now say the Islamic religion is more likely to inspire violence, while 44 percent said that in July 2003, according to the poll conducted by the Pew Research Center and the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.

    […]

    Just over half in the poll, 55 percent, said they have a positive view of Muslim-Americans. That’s roughly the same number who felt that way in July 2003 and higher than the number who said they have a positive view of Muslim-Americans in March 2001, before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

    About the same number in the poll, 57 percent, said they have a favorable view of evangelical Christians. Three-fourths had favorable views of Jews and Catholics.

    “The more people know about Islam, the less critical they are,” said Kohut.

    After all, we are talking about the religion of peace.

  • Today in the War against Islamist Terror

    I have to open with my favorite story of the day.

    Hanoi Jane takes on Iraq war with US bus tour

    Hollywood star and activist Jane Fonda is planning to take a bus tour across America to call for an end to US military operations in Iraq in a move that has already drawn sharp reactions from both the pro- and anti-war camps.

    Ms Fonda, who earned the nickname Hanoi Jane after she was photographed sitting on a north Vietnamese anti-aircraft gun at the height of the Vietnam war, said she would be joined by families of Iraq war veterans and her daughter on the tour.

    “I’ve decided I’m coming out,” she told a cheering audience during an appearance in New Mexico to promote her autobiography, explaining that Iraq veterans had encouraged her to break her silence.

    “I have not taken a stand on any war since Vietnam,” she added. “I carry a lot of baggage from that.”

    Ms Fonda said her anti-war tour in March would use a bus that runs on vegetable oil.

    “I can’t go into any detail except to say that it’s going to be pretty exciting,” she said.

    By exciting, I assume she’s talking about more than the vegetable oil. Look, there is enough to dislike about this woman without erroneous hyperbole, so check the facts of her history.

    It is my opinion that this woman cost lives, both American and our allies. It is apparently her intent to do so again by providing support to the hopes of our enemies. In my view, she has previously committed treason. She seems less intent to do so as blatantly today; I extend to her an invitation to fly over for a photo-op with the beheading terrorists. Perhaps she could feature them in a new exercise DVD. Otherwise, I wish her no success in this latest endeavor but would have no regret for any deserved emotional anguish she may have coming. I truly hope that she suffers no physical harm at the hands of private individuals, but I also don’t want her to enjoy a single welcome reception.

    Truce as French sign up for joint action

    Britain and France called a truce in their disputes over Europe’s future and its financing yesterday to announce fresh co-operation in the fight against terrorism, including sharing the names of “jihadists” living in their countries.

    After talks in Downing Street, Dominique de Villepin, the French Prime Minister, and Tony Blair played down recent disagreements and set out a four-point programme of joint action as a result of the London bombings.

    They agreed that France and Britain would exchange the names of persons in each country who had been trying to incite extremism. They would also retain communications data from telephone calls and e-mails for longer, exchange information about how to protect vulnerable targets and work together to combat the “radicalisation” of the Muslim community.

    Their meeting came as Mr Blair told Muslims in Britain that they had a duty to come forward with information about those involved in terrorist attacks. “My message to anybody who may know of any information about those responsible for last Thursday’s attack is to give that information to the police.

    “There will be people who know information about those that have participated in the attack. The photographs [of the suspects] are pretty strong, good quality has been given. There will be people who know something. It is part of our duty, in order to protect our country, that people come forward and give the police the information they can.”

    I don’t doubt the genuine concern of the French about Islamist terror, as they currently have a sufficient threat of it within their own borders. My continued disdain for the French is greatly stirred by their willingness to impair American efforts, meant for the betterment of survival for the U.S. and all of western culture, to squelch the Islamist movement, just for the sake of France’s own short-term geopolitical gain. President Jacques Chirac’s willingness to enable a continued global threat by opposing U.S. international policy, merely for the purpose of setting up a Franco-led European Union as an alternative global power, has been simply disgusting.

    Egyptians surround villages said to be harboring Sharm bombers

    Egyptian sources say that security forces surrounded two Bedouin villages next to Sharm El-Sheikh on Monday suspected of harboring terrorists responsible for the bombings that killed 88 people last Friday.

    The two suspects reportedly hiding in the villages of Al-Royasat and Hurum are said to be Pakistani nationals.

    According to earlier reports published in the Arab press, the Egyptian police are looking for nine Pakistani citizens that apparently disappeared after the attacks took place, leaving their passports and possessions in the hotel rooms they were staying in.

    The current leadership in Egypt has as much to fear from Islamist terror as does the West and other authoritarian Arab states. The difference is that the West is working to subvert a radical culture; the Arab states are looking to prolong despotic reigns. That is where Iraq provides the hub — a possibly democratic, econically and culturally free, alternative to the typical Arab state is a severe danger to the Islamist movement, but it is also a threat to the existing governments in the region. Is it any wonder that Arab support has been lukewarm at best, behind-the-scenes hostile at worst?

  • Russia sees Global Jihad on Southern Flank

    Think it’s not a global war against an expansionist radical Islamist ideology? Russia disagrees.

    A powerful explosion ripped through a half-empty carriage of a commuter train near the Dagestani town of Khasavyurt Sunday, killing a young woman and wounding several people.

    Police announced the apparent terror bombing as an almost routine event, the latest of nearly 80 deadly attacks by Islamic extremists that have rocked the multiethnic mountain republic of Dagestan so far this year. The Kremlin insists the wave of attacks that threaten to unhinge Russia’s mainly-Muslim Caucasus region is being orchestrated by the same global jihad groups that have struck in London and Sharm-el-Sheikh in recent days.

    […]

    Our forces have captured or killed citizens of 52 countries operating with the terrorists in the north Caucasus,” says Sergei Markov, a Kremlin adviser. “The enemy brings an ideology of radical Islam that seeks political power through terrorist methods.”

    Recent incidents, including a bath-house bombing that killed 10 Russian soldiers in the Dagestani capital of Makhachkala two weeks ago, suggest the attackers have absorbed sophisticated tactics used by jihadis in Iraq and elsewhere. A report issued last week by Igor Dobayev, an expert with the official Academy of Sciences, found that as many as 2,000 Islamist insurgents, many belonging to the Al Qaeda-linked Sharia Jamaat, are behind the wave of roadside explosions, car bombings, and assassinations.

    I would argue that this is indeed World War IV, with the oft-feared World War III already having been survived with the end of the Cold War and its collection of multiple hot theaters. At stake this time around is no less than western civilization as we know it. Again.

    A secret report by the Kremlin’s special envoy to the north Caucasus, Dmitry Kozak, leaked to a Moscow newspaper earlier this month, warned of the emergence of “Islamic Sharia enclaves” amid the high Caucasus peaks.”Further ignoring the [social, economic, and political] problems and attempts to drive them deep down by force could lead to an uncontrolled chain of events whose logical result will be open social, interethnic, and religious conflict in Dagestan,” Mr. Kozak wrote.

    Sharia law. That is what our opponents want to enforce upon the future generations of the entire world. That is, on those that they allow to live at all.

    Even within this article, there is finger-pointing to Russia’s tactics in separatist Chechnya. Perhaps, at one time, there was some validity to this. That time, however, has passed.

    The first Chechnya war, 1994-96, was effectively won by the nationalist, independence-seeking rebels. But experts say that since rebel president Aslan Maskhadov was killed by Russian security forces earlier this year, the Chechen insurgency is led by Islamic radicals such as Shamil Basayev, architect of a mass hostage-taking in a Moscow theater two years ago and last September’s bloody school siege in Beslan. “We are no longer talking about Chechen secessionists challenging Moscow,” says Mr. Markov. “Now it’s radical religious ideologues who aim to destroy the unbelievers and establish an Islamic caliphate.

    It seems that the United States is not the only one cursed with a blame-America-first, keep-wearing-blinders crowd. Russia certainly has its own equivalent.

    “In the [north Caucasus crisis] we can see the complete failure of Putin’s policies,” says Andrei Piontkovsky, director of the independent Center for Strategic Studies in Moscow. “It is a fairy tale to explain it as the work of outside factors, Islamic terrorists from the Middle East, or whatever. The truth is that internal problems are generating social unrest, which leads people to turn to Islamic ideas.”

    Internal problems are an issue, but trying to pass it all off as such is ludicrous. The fairy tale is ignoring outside factors with scumbags from at least 52 countries in the fray for the Islamists.

    Sooner or later, we will have to wake up to the fact that Russia is fighting the same opponent that has attacked us, attacked Europe, attacked the Asian Pacific, and attacked their own fellow Moslems in Iraq, Afghanistan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere.

  • Police Concede Slain Suspect Not Bomber

    Tragic.

    London’s police commissioner expressed regret today for the slaying of a Brazilian electrician by officers who mistook him for a suspect in the recent terror bombings, but he defended a police shoot-to-kill policy as “the only way” to stop would-be suicide bombers.

    […]

    The man shot Friday at the Stockwell subway station was identified as Jean Charles de Menezes, 27. Witnesses said he was wearing a heavy, padded coat when plainclothes police chased him into a subway car, pinned him to the ground and shot him five times in the head and torso in front of horrified passengers.

    Blair initially said Menezes was “directly linked” to the investigation of Thursday’s attacks, but police then said Saturday he had no connection to the bomb attempts.

    “This is a tragedy,” Blair said today of the shooting. “The Metropolitan Police accepts full responsibility for this. To the family I can only express my deep regrets.”

    Here is a lengthy look at the slain man and his grief-stricken family: Man shot by police was in wrong place at wrong time.

    From that sad tale I would like to highlight the following:

    Within 20 minutes, the Brazilian whose interest in all things electrical was sparked at the age of eight by dismantling a broken transistor radio and making it work again, would be dead.

    Witnesses described how he vaulted the ticket barriers at Stockwell, then started running down the escalators before bursting into a carriage of a stationary northbound Northern Line train looking “petrified”.

    So, to wrong place and wrong time, let’s add wrong attire and wrong behavior. As a rule of thumb, I’d like to suggest not looking and acting like a threat in public places. At least not while Islamists are doing the same with the intent of killing.

    Tragic? Yes. A mistake. Certainly not. As I blogged my reaction to the initial reports, I wrote essentially the same, though I would like to withdraw a little now that more is known.

    Justified? Check the circumstances, check the attire, check the weather. Then ask the Israelis if they have any experience with unusual attire and things going kaboom. Justified? Oh hell yes. Unfortunate? Yes, as well. I’d much rather have this piece of trash in custody spilling his guts than in the Tube spilling his blood. Still, I’ll settle for the blood.

    The last two sentences were incorrect in this specific case. The rest stands.

    At least for the time being, this unfortunate incident will not change the Brits’ shoot-to-kill tactics.

    British police admitted today that a Brazilian electrician they shot dead in a crowded London Underground train had nothing to do with the terror bombings, but they will stick to a policy of shooting suspected suicide bombers in the head.

    […]

    London’s police chief Ian Blair conveyed the force’s “deep regrets” to the family of the dead man which has made angry protests, but he urged people to understand the context of the killing.

    He said police first had to deal with the danger of stopping suicide bombers.

    Blair also said the Brazilian was pursued because he had emerged from a block of apartments which police were watching as they hunted men who made a failed attempt to bomb subway trains and a bus last Thursday, he said.

    “It was not just a random event… It was firmly linked to the ongoing operation,” said Blair.

    Blair confirmed Press reports that British police were pursuing a “shoot-to-kill-in- order-to-protect policy” and could not guarantee that a similar mistake would not happen again.

    “There’s no point in shooting at somebody’s chest because that’s where the bomb is likely to be,” Blair said. “There’s no point in shooting anywhere else because if they fall down they detonate it.

    “It is drawn on the experience from other countries, including Sri Lanka.”

    Quite right. War is ugly and mistakes happen but it must be realized that this is not a knee-jerk response. Rather, it is a reasonable course forced upon us by the tactics of our enemy.

  • “This changes the face of London”

    Is it possible the 7/7 bombings didn’t get through to some Londoners? Is it really possible that yesterday’s attack was insufficient to make clear the actuality of the war? Apparently so, as there are still some who refuse to face it today, even after a dramatic chase and shooting on the Underground.

    Police Shooting Startles and Worries Londoners

    It was around 10 a.m. on a sunny, summery Friday when London crossed a once-unthinkable line in its unfolding war on terror.

    In a city where most police officers do not carry guns, the shock from the shooting death of a man in a subway car was palpable. It raised questions about police firearms practices, kindled uncertainty among Muslims and deepened the anxiety of a city that looks, these days, under siege.

    The police said they had trailed a man, described as South Asian in appearance, from a house in Stockwell that they had under surveillance. He was clad in bulky clothes on a warm summer day, witnesses said.

    He vaulted over a turnstile and dashed onto a train, with plainclothes police officers right behind him. The police said the man did not obey orders to stop, so the officers shouted at the passengers to get down and take cover.

    The man stumbled onto a train, and a passenger, Mark Whitby, told the BBC: “I looked at his face. He looked sort of left and right, but he basically looked like a cornered rabbit, a cornered fox. He looked absolutely petrified, and then he sort of tripped, but they were hotly pursuing him.”

    The officers “couldn’t have been any more than two or three feet behind him at this time,” Mr. Whitby said, “and he half tripped and was half pushed to the floor, and the policeman nearest to me had the black automatic pistol in his left hand.”

    The officer with the gun “held it down to the guy and unloaded five shots into him,” Mr. Whitby said.

    The gunshots reverberated much further than the grimy confines of Stockwell station, in a hardscrabble neighborhood of south London. It was the first such shooting in memory. Between 1997 and September 2004, the police opened fire on 20 occasions, killing 7 people and wounding 11, according to the Metropolitan Police. The statistics do not specify where the shootings took place.

    Although most London police officers are unarmed, since 9/11 Londoners have grown used to seeing special armed units, who have been given antiterrorism training.

    Police rules require officers to give warning if they intend to open fire and to “ensure that their responses are proportionate and appropriate in the circumstances and consistent with the legitimate objective to be achieved.” Officers are supposed to aim for immobilizing body-shots, but television reports said Friday that shoot-to-kill shots had been authorized to prevent suicide bombings.

    Even as Londoners absorbed the news of the shooting, a debate unfolded whether it was justified.

    Justified? Check the circumstances, check the attire, check the weather. Then ask the Israelis if they have any experience with unusual attire and things going kaboom. Justified? Oh hell yes. Unfortunate? Yes, as well. I’d much rather have this piece of trash in custody spilling his guts than in the Tube spilling his blood. Still, I’ll settle for the blood.

    The article from this point on consists mainly of a back and forth as Londoners chimed in on the developments. I’d like to highlight a few and leave the rest of the article for y’all to peruse. I’ll then turn to a few other pieces of news.
    (more…)

  • 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?