Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Fallen Marine Reads To Son He Left Behind

Fallen veteran reads to son he never met
11Alive
November 4, 2015
On Nov. 15, 2004, a sniper's bullet killed Cpl. Shane Kielion in Fallujah, Iraq. Thirty minutes later, in Omaha, his wife April gave birth to their son, Shane Jr.

(WOWT) Every so often, Shane Kielion, Jr. finds himself flipping through a scrapbook about his father.

The 11-year-old Papillion, Nebraska resident loves the football pictures, especially since he just started playing football himself this year.

His dad had been quarterback at Omaha South.
read more here

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Family Searching for Veteran Army Ranger and Wisconsin Police Officer

UPDATE

Missing Army Veteran Bruce Windorski Found Alive



from NBC News

Wisconsin man who battled Islamic State in Syria missing
Journal Sentinel
Karen Herzog
October 24, 2015

A former Army Ranger and police officer from Wisconsin who joined the war against Islamic State in Syria for several months earlier this year has been missing for the past week, according to his wife.
Jerrit Okimosh Courtney Windorski of Gillett and her husband, Bruce, are shown on their wedding anniversary in May. Bruce Windorski, who had joined the fight against the Islamic State in Syria earlier this year, has been missing for a week, according to his wife.
"He never talked about going back overseas, but he probably wouldn't have talked to me about it because he wanted to protect me," said Courtney Windorski of Gillett, who reported her husband, Bruce, missing last Sunday when he failed to return from what he told her would be an overnight with other veterans who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Bruce Windorski, 40, was featured in a Sept. 5 Wall Street Journal article about American veterans who have voluntarily gone on their own to fight Islamic State.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation estimates that fewer than 100 Americans have done what Bruce Windorski did in January, when he left his home north of Green Bay without telling his wife and two children what he was doing.

After arriving in Syria, he kept in touch with them whenever possible. He returned home Easter weekend in April.

Bruce Windorski had fantasized for years about visiting Kirkuk, Iraq, where his older brother, Phil, died in 2009 when his Army helicopter was shot down, according to The Wall Street Journal article.
In January, he caught a flight to Iraq with plans to visit the area where his brother died, which didn't work out. He instead took up arms as a westerner alongside the People's Defense Units, or YPG, battling the Islamic State in Syria.
read more here
Americans Volunteer to Fight ISIS in Syria
9/4/2015
Two American military veterans decided to fight with a Kurdish militia against ISIS in Syria. They captured their harrowing journey on video, and say the Kurds need more support from the U.S. to succeed. Photo: Bruce Windorski

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Yochi Dreazen War Correspondents Battle With PTSD

The path not taken: A war correspondent’s struggle with PTSD
Boston Globe
By Yochi Dreazen
OCTOBER 02, 2015
I had full-blown PTSD, but I couldn’t bring myself to admit it. I was a war correspondent; I was a tough guy. Tough guys, I believed, didn’t need help.
SCOTT NELSON/GETTY IMAGES
Journalists scrambled behind US Marines practicing squad rushes in northern Kuwait in 2003.
Yochi Dreazen is the managing editor of Foreign Policy. His book “The Invisible Front: Love and Loss in an Era of Endless War,” from which this essay is adapted, will be reissued in paperback on Oct. 6.

I WANTED TO be a war correspondent from the day I entered journalism. In 2003, with American troops massing in the Middle East, I got my chance. I left for Iraq that spring, drawn, like so many of my colleagues, by the excitement and danger of covering a war. I wrote about the invasion, flew back to the United States for a couple of months, and then went back to Baghdad in August to help open The Wall Street Journal’s bureau there. I lived in Iraq in 2003 and 2004 and, after that, went back every few months to do combat embeds with the troops fighting what had by that point become a full-on civil war.

I saw dead and dying Americans; I saw dead and dying Iraqis. I was interviewing a tribal sheikh in southern Iraq once when my translator stepped away to take a phone call, sat back down, and told me that there had just been a major suicide bombing in the nearby city of Karbalah that had killed dozens of Iranian pilgrims, including a large number of children. In Karbalah, I watched a chador-clad woman slowly make her way up and down each row of corpses, pulling back every sheet, until she found the shattered body of her son. At the sight, she let out a scream and then collapsed to the ground. I will never forget the sound of that mother’s grief.
I returned from that trip, and from all of my others to the war zones, far different than when I had left. The war was changing me, hardening me. I felt flashes of pure rage when someone ran into me on the basketball court or cut me off on the road. I chose tables at restaurants that were as far from the front doors and windows as possible, in case a bomb went off outside. I would wake up whenever there was a sound in my bedroom and then be unable to fall back asleep. In some of my dreams, loved ones died. In some, I did. I had full-blown PTSD, but I couldn’t bring myself to admit it. I was a war correspondent; I was a tough guy. Tough guys, I believed, didn’t need help.
read more here

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Marine Commandant Gen. Robert Neller "I buried three women in Iraq"

New Marine commandant: ‘Personally insulting’ to talk about women in combat
Washington Post
Thomas Gibbons
October 2, 2015
“The Marines who were a part of the GCITF did a great a job…they worked their tails off,” said Neller. “The people that made it to the end deserve our gratitude for their discipline and strength and fortitude to make it to the end.”
Newly instated Marine Commandant Gen. Robert Neller made some pointed comments regarding women in combat Thursday, following a public back and forth between the Marine Corps and the Secretary of the Navy over whether the Marine Corps would allow women into previously closed ground combat roles.

“This has nothing to do about women in combat,” Neller said to a theater full of Marines at Marine Base Quantico in Virginia.“I buried three women in Iraq in 2006 and they died alongside 311 men.”

“To me its personally insulting to talk about women in combat. Women have been in combat,” he added.

Neller was dismissing the idea that including women in combat was anything new, and he made sure to point out that the debate was about women being directly assigned to positions in ground combat units such as the infantry.
read more here

Monday, August 3, 2015

Lima Marines Not Forgotten 10 Years Later

Families struggle 10 years after Ohio Marines killed in Iraq 
The Associated Press
By Dan Sewell
August 1, 2015
Two memorial events are scheduled for this month for the 23 people Lima Company lost over a 5-month period of 2005.

In this July 28, 2015 photo Pat Murray, left, and Ken Kreuter sit beneath a portrait of their son Marine Sgt. David Kreuter, top right, at the traveling Eyes of Freedom Lima Company Memorial currently displayed at the Cincinnati Masonic Center. (Photo: John Minchillo/AP)

CINCINNATI — Some people look surprised and tell him they just can't believe it's been 10 years already. For Keith Wightman, time hasn't passed quickly at all.

It ticks by slowly as he thinks every day of the loss of his only son — gazing at the spruce tree planted a decade ago in his yard and now marked with a cross, plaque and spotlight. He's seen his son's high school friends and former teammates start careers and families while he daydreams about what might have been for Lance Corporal Brett Wightman, whose future was blown away with those of 10 other members of Columbus-based Lima Company on Aug. 3, 2005.

Wightman promised that his dead son wouldn't be forgotten, a pledge that other families of the lost members of Lima Company have also taken to heart, establishing scholarship programs, foundations and other benefits to help others in the names of the young men — sons, brothers, husbands, fathers — lost that summer. Two memorial events are scheduled for this month for the 23 people Lima Company lost over a 5-month period of 2005.

Aug. 3 was the company's darkest day.

Wightman remembers vividly, "like yesterday," the early morning hours he spent looking at a moonlit sky wondering what his son was up to. Lance Cpl. Wightman had gone on a mission to flush out enemy combatants who had attacked six Marines two days earlier when his amphibious assault vehicle rumbled onto explosives. Eleven members of Lima Company and three other Marines were killed along with an Iraqi interpreter.
read more here

Friday, July 31, 2015

Marine Corps Officers Not As Smart As Before?

Why Are Marine Corps Officers Less Smart Than Before?
Newsweek
BY DELANEY PARRISH
7/30/15

"Today's less qualified officer candidates 
will be tomorrow's senior military leaders"
The General Classification Test (GCT) from World War II to present day. BROOKINGS
When the United States ended the draft and transitioned to an all-volunteer military in 1973, there was concern about who would join and whether the transition would negatively impact the quality of the force, which many suspected it would.

As it turns out, the quality of the force as a whole actually increased over time. In 1977, 27.1 percent of new enlisted recruits met the military’s standard for being “high quality,” meaning that they possessed a high school diploma and above-average intelligence relative to the U.S. population as a whole. Decades later, at the height of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, 60 percent of new enlisted recruits met the high quality standard.

But what about military officers? Though commissioned officers comprise only about 16 percent of the force, they clearly have a major impact on the success of the military as a whole given their leadership role for their troops and responsibility for strategy and tactics.
read more here

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Warrior Woman Marine Runs To Honor Fallen Female Troops

Marine vet honors fallen female troops with 160-mile run 
Marine Corps Times
By Dean DeChiaro
Medill News Service
July 29, 2015
Marine Maj. Bridget Guerrero (ret.) ran 160 miles around the Puget Sound in Washington from Thursday through Sunday. Each mile represented a female service member who lost her life in Iraq or Afghanistan.
(Photo: Courtesy of Marine Maj. Bridget Guerrero (ret.))
When veteran Marine Maj. Bridget Guerrero set out to run a mile for each of the 160 female troops killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, she never thought that one of their moms would show up to support her along the way.

After training for months, Guerrero set out to run 160 miles around Washington's Puget Sound from Thursday through Sunday. When she noticed a stranger among the crowd that came out to support her along the four-day trek, Guerrero introduced herself — and quickly realized the woman was the most important person there.

Re McClung, the mother of Maj. Megan McClung, an accomplished triathlete and the first female Marine officer killed during the Iraq War, had come to wish Guerrero well. She gave Guerrero her daughter's service coin, which Guerrero kept duct-taped to her arm for the remainder of the race.

"To know she is running for my daughter … and to know that she is running with Meg's coin and to know that funds she raises will pay forward to the daughter of another Marine — it's overwhelming," Re McClung wrote on Facebook.
read more here

Saturday, July 18, 2015

The Price Paid For Your Freedom Is Still Being Paid, Over and Over Again

When Someone Else Pays The Price, It Isn't Free
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
July 18, 2015

It happened when troops were sent to Vietnam and war coverage was brought to every home in America. It happened to veterans of the Korean War the same way it did to veterans of WWII and WI. It happened to all those generation when troops were sent to Kuwait. Outsiders didn't know what it was doing to the veterans because they wouldn't talk about it. Not than anyone bothered to ask them. Folks didn't know so they just didn't care.

Then came that dreadful day in September of 2001 when advocates were screaming about what was to come after the attack on our own soil. Few listened, even less understood the warnings were very real.

Troops were sent into Afghanistan in October and the screams were louder because the evidence was presenting itself throughout the veteran community. Most families didn't understand what happened to shred their lives as they knew them.

In 2003, another war began in Iraq and President Bush gave a speech to announce it.
Million of Americans are praying with you for the safety of your loved ones and for the protection of the innocent.

For your sacrifice, you have the gratitude and respect of the American people and you can know that our forces will be coming home as soon as their work is done.

Our nation enters this conflict reluctantly, yet our purpose is sure. The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder.

We will meet that threat now with our Army, Air Force, Navy, Coast Guard and Marines, so that we do not have to meet it later with armies of firefighters and police and doctors on the streets of our cities.

While everyone in this country has the opportunity to enjoy freedom, few felt the price was worth paying to retain it. The others never really understood how valuable it was. They simply took it for granted someone would always show up and risk their lives for it. When someone else pays the price, it isn't free.

There was no mention of the price being paid in over 20 million homes with veterans of past wars fighting a renewed battle to live.

In 2009, the attack came in the disguise of one of their own. The terrorist attack came from not just a soldier, but an officer and psychologist in charge of caring for their mental health. It will forever be known as the Fort Hood Massacre but no one bothered to calculate the cost for the families at Fort Hood or on all the other bases around the world.

Army Ret. Command Sgt. Maj., James Rominger reaches down to touch one of the 13 crosses surrounded by American Flags in front of the Central Christian church, Sunday, Nov. 8, 2009, in Killeen, Texas. CREDIT: AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez


No one bothered to sum up the crisis for all the other veteran families yet again.

In a Tennessee town, another attack left 4 Marines dead. Americans were shocked for a few minutes and then got on with their lives. Community members near the recruiting office let the grief touch their hearts. For current military members, this will not be something they simply get over or move on from. They will take it with them wherever they go right along with every other veteran who paid the price so that others had the right to forget.
David Wyatt, killed in Chattanooga, was even-keeled mentor to Marines
Washington Post
By Dan Lamothe
July 17 2015
“He was a mentor and a leader to a lot of guys who are now like, ‘Wow,’ ” Bein said. “It’s going to bring back a lot of memories for guys, especially knowing that stuff like this is now on our own soil. Good Lord.”
Staff Sgt. David A. Wyatt was a veteran of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a pillar of support to his comrades in those conflicts who came home with physical or emotional scars.

After Matt Bein was wounded by an improvised explosive device in Afghanistan in 2009, he turned to Wyatt for help in wrestling through what he should do with the rest of his life — leave the Marine Corps, or find some way to continue to serve despite his injuries.

“He was a mentor and a leader to a lot of guys,” said Bein, a former joint terminal attack controller who ultimately decided to accept a medical retirement as a sergeant. read more here

part two Vietnam Requiem Revisisted

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Sister Honors Fallen Brother and So Did Buffalo Wild Wings

Woman Orders a Beer for a Fallen Soldier at Buffalo Wild Wings, Restaurant’s Response Is Perfect
The Blaze
Kaitlyn Schallhorn
Jul. 14, 2015

A Buffalo Wild Wings in Washington state has become the focus of a viral Internet post — all because of single beer.
Image source: KIRO-TV
Brian Avey, a server at the Buffalo Wild Wings in Tacoma, Washington, said a “military woman” came into the restaurant around lunchtime and attempted to order one Blue Moon and one Corona at the same time. But there was a problem: You can’t do that.
“After she left, I didn’t have the heart to dump the beer out and throw it away, so I put it on top of the cooler next the American Flag,” Avey wrote. “When I showed my boss his response was Amazing… He said ‘That’s Fine, just do me a favor, put a fresh Lime in it Every Morning.’”
read more here

Monday, June 29, 2015

Veterans Angry After Contractor Claimed To Be One Of Them

Veterans want apology from Sheriff's candidate 
The Advertiser
Claire Taylor
June 28, 2015
Mark Garber appears in military garb on campaign material used in his race for Lafayette Parish Sheriff.
(Photo: Claire Taylor, Daily Advertiser)

Mark Garber, a candidate for Lafayette Parish Sheriff who was awarded the Bronze Star for his work as a civilian interrogator with the Air Force in Iraq, has angered a couple of local military veterans who say he is pretending to be one of them.

The Southwest Louisiana Veterans Coalition board wants an apology, while one Lafayette veteran said Garber should withdraw from the Sheriff's race.

Garber is pictured in campaign material dressed in military gear with a gun; his Bronze Star medal also is shown. To make it worse, local veterans said, Garber stood up at a banquet recently when military veterans were recognized.

"He slapped the face of every veteran in Lafayette by portraying himself as a veteran," said Daniel J. Bentley, commander of American Legion Post 69 of Lafayette. "He is not a veteran."

Garber told The Daily Advertiser , "I have never, ever claimed to be a military veteran."

But the website for his private legal practice with attorney C. Ray Murry recently stated: "Mr. Garber and Mr. Murry are military veterans."

The statement was changed Thursday after The Daily Advertiser brought it to Garber's attention. He said the statement was written long ago and was worded improperly because his law partner is a veteran of the military.

While in Iraq, Garber wore a uniform and carried weapons like military personnel, and was deployed on missions with soldiers. He considers himself a veteran of Iraq, but not a military veteran, he said.
read more here

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Vandals Destroy Fallen Soldier's Home, Team Rubicon Restores Honor

Gold Star Mom's Mission to Remodel Vandalized Home
KKTV News
By: Katie Pelton
Jun 12, 2015
Now several groups and volunteers are stepping up to give back, including Team Rubicon, a non-profit that responds to disasters.

A Gold Star Mom who lost her son in Iraq is furious about what vandals did to his home. Now she's on a mission to fix it.

Vandals have repeatedly broken into the Fountain home over the last six years since he was killed. But soon the house will feel like a home again, thanks to one mother's love and determination.

Last time Becky Johnson was in the home was in 2008.

"When he left on his last deployment," said Johnson. "I flew out here to see him off."

That's when her son, SSgt. Gary Lee Woods Jr. was last deployed. The 24 year-old was killed by a suicide bomber in April 2009 in Iraq.

Becky is a Gold Star Mother, which is an organization for mothers who lost a son or daughter in service. She and her husband, Pat live in Indiana. They both came down to clean up the house.

"My goal is to get this house back into the shape that it was before he left when he lived here," said Johnson.

Spray paint litters the walls after vandals broke in over the past couple years and destroyed the home.

"They shouldn't have came in here and did this to his house," said Johnson. "He deserved better than that."
read more here

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Fort Lauderdale Man Admits Iraq Scam Included Veterans

Man admits scamming investors over fake businesses in Iraq 
The Associated Press
Published: June 9, 2015

BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — A former Connecticut man has pleaded guilty in a $175,000 fraud prosecutors say swindled a dozen investors, including military veterans, who thought he had business opportunities in Iraq.

Joseph T. Morris, 52, now of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., pleaded guilty Tuesday to one count of wire fraud. He faces up to 20 years in prison at sentencing Sept. 17. read more here

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Graduation Guest List Included Veteran Who Saved Her Life

Retired Army Officer Invited to Graduation of Girl he Saved 18 Years Ago
The Huffington Post
By Katie Sola
Posted: 06/05/2015
The family hadn't spoken to Pepin since that day. That changed when Lava decided to track him down as part of a language arts class.

A Kurdish-American teenager invited the soldier who saved her life to her high school graduation.

Lt. Col. Greg Pepin first met Lava Barwari 19 years ago, when she was just a month old, ABC6 reports. Lava's mother Awaz was fleeing political persecution in Iraq.

As a Kurd who had worked with an American NGO, Awaz was on Saddam Hussein's "kill list" and had a bounty on her head. In December 1996 she fled to the Turkey/Iraq border, where she could get out because of her persecuted status.

But when the 22-year-old Awaz arrived at the border with baby Lava, Iraqi soldiers refused to let Lava through because her name wasn't on the list of Iraqis permitted to leave.

“He actually pointed to the window and said, ‘You can toss her to somebody who can deliver her to your family,’” Barwari told the Gwinnett Daily Post. “She’s not a sack of potatoes. I’m not giving her to anybody. That’s my baby."

Pepin was stationed at the border crossing, and he came up with a novel solution. “I told them if the baby's name was ‘Greg,' she could come with me under my passport,” he told FOX 5. "They didn't understand what I was trying to do at first, but then they realized I was trying to help.”
read more here
From ABC News

Monday, March 9, 2015

Radio Talker Fired After Muslim Exchange With Caller

WGMD Fires Jake Smith
March 9, 2015


RESORT BROADCASTING News-Talk WGMD/REHOBOTH BEACH, DE morning co-host JAKE SMITH has exited the station after a comment during a FEBRUARY 20th listener call in which he said "as far as I'm concerned, not every Muslim is guilty, but every Muslim is suspect."

The NEWS-JOURNAL of WILMINGTON reports that SMITH argued with a caller about Muslims serving AMERICA, claiming, "Muslims do not stand up for AMERICA – and they don't, they didn't stand up for America during 9/11, they didn't stand up for AMERICA during FORT HOOD, they've never stood out and said, 'This has to stop' – I haven't heard one Muslim in this country do that." When the caller challenged him with an example of a Muslim soldier who enlisted in the U.S. Army after 9/11 and died in combat in IRAQ, SMITH said, "That's great, but not enough Muslims have done that, sir." And when the caller termed SMITH a "bigot," SMITH responded, "I'm a bigot? You know what, you're a bigot. Oh, you're a jackass. You know what? You're done. That jackass."
read more here

Gee maybe he was fired for not knowing what he was even talking about on top of everything else?
Enough Joe the Plumber; here's to Kareem the Soldier
McClatchy Newspapers
By NANCY A. YOUSSEF

Khan was a 20-year-old soldier from Manahawkin, N.J., who wanted to enlist in the Army from the time he was 10. He was an all-American boy who visited Disney World after he completed his training at Fort Benning, Ga., and made his comrades in Iraq watch "Saving Private Ryan" every week.
He was also a Muslim who joined the military, his father said, in part to show his countrymen that not all Muslims are terrorists.
About 3,700 of the U.S. military's 1.4 million troops are Muslims, according to Defense Department estimates.
read more here
Muslim life in Killeen, Texas one year after Fort Hood shooting
CNN
November 24, 2010

When Wagdi Mabrouk heard the news about the shootings on Ft. Hood he remembers thinking how close he was to the alleged shooter.

"Nidal Hassan, I knew him very well. I prayed right beside him."

Mabrouk, a retired command Sergeant Major was overseas for work on Nov. 5, 2009 when Major Nidal Hassan allegedly opened fire on this base of over 50,000 soldiers. Though so far away, the news hit very close to home.
read more here

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Brian Williams apologises for 'bungled' Iraq story

UPDATE
Brian Williams' apology leaves out key details of Iraq incident
Apologies by NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams Wednesday for his false claim of being on a helicopter forced down by Iraqi rocket fire in 2003 left out key details and made misleading claims about his proximity to the incident, according to soldiers who were there at the time.
NBC’s Brian Williams recants Iraq story after soldiers protest
read about it here

NBC's Brian Williams apologises for 'bungled' Iraq story - video
NBC News anchor Brian Williams apologises for a bungled tribute to an Iraq war veteran.

Williams retracts a story he told on air about coming under fire while traveling in a US army helicopter in Iraq in 2003.

Williams says he was not in the helicopter that took fire, but was travelling behind it. 'This was a bungled attempt to thank one special veteran and by extension our brave military,' he says

Oregon Veteran Died While Waiting

Advocates for local veteran say plea for VA help not answered
KATU News
By Bob Heye
Published: Feb 3, 2015

“Makes me feel - it's almost ashamed - that I have a congress that's representing me that doesn't care for veterans,” says McJunkin, “Veterans are sent into combat without much concern for when they come home and need physical and mental assistance.”
PORTLAND, Ore. - In a video made for his memorial on Sunday, Navy veteran Kevin Walters spoke to his family - his wife, their little boy.

“You know that I strongly love you through all this,” Walters said in the video, “I really love you, I miss you and want you to know that I always will.”

At 39 years old, Walters was having unexplained dizzy spells and other symptoms when he was diagnosed this past summer with a rare, aggressive kind of brain cancer. Doctors believe it was caused by radioactive equipment Kevin used in construction projects during the Iran-Iraq war.

Knowing he didn't have long to live, Kevin's family wanted the Veterans Affairs to speed up clearing his service-related condition so they could get help caring for him.

They even got help pleading their case through the McMinnville American Legion Post.

“From middle of October,” says Richard McJunkin, Commander, United Veterans Honor Guard in McMinnville, “initiated claims, until his death in the end of January, really no response from VA."

The VA did send one letter in mid-December saying, "we apologize for the delay."
read more here

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel Knows Military Power Has Limits

As He Exits, Hagel Warns of Limits to Military Power 
Stars and Stripes
by Jon Harper
Jan 23, 2015
"We're products of our experiences, and we all come at our jobs ... being shaped by those experiences," Hagel said. "The violence, the horrors, the suffering that I saw [in Vietnam] conditioned me ... I saw the suffering of our own troops; I saw the suffering of the Vietnamese people; I saw terrible things, which war always produces."
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel waits for junior enlisted military personnel assigned to the National Capital Region to arrive at his office in order to host a lunch and listen and discuss their concerns at the Pentagon, Jan. 20, 2015. Adrian Cadiz/DoD
WASHINGTON -- As he prepares to hand over the reins of the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel is warning that military power has its limits and Americans should avoid believing that force alone can transform conflict-riven societies in the Middle East and elsewhere.

"It is easy to drift into other missions, and I do believe that you always have to ask the tough questions, [such as] what happens next? Where do you want this to end up," Hagel said in an interview with Stars and Stripes and Military Times.

"Any secretary of defense has to always be on guard that we don't inadvertently sometimes drift into a more accelerated use than we thought of what our military was going to be [doing] ... I think the two long wars that we were in the last 13 years is pretty clear evidence of ... how things can get out of control, and drift and wander."
read more here

Monday, November 24, 2014

Vietnam Veteran Chuck Hagel Leaving Department of Defense

A Shifting Battleground: Why Chuck Hagel Resigned
NBC News
BY PERRY BACON JR.
November 24, 2014

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s resignation at the urging of the president is not a sign of a broader shift in the White House’s national security or defense policies, according to former and current administration officials.

Rather, Hagel’s departure reflects two new dynamics that have emerged since he took the helm at the Pentagon early last year. Hagel’s background as a Vietnam War veteran and former Nebraska senator was seen by administration officials as giving credibility and clout to implement one of President Obama’s major priorities back then: a broad overhaul of America’s military that would reduce defense spending and shrink the U.S. Army to its smallest force levels in decades.

But the rise of ISIS and other military challenges, like halting Russia’s incursions into the Ukraine and stopping the spread of Ebola, have emerged over the last two years, so the restructuring of the Pentagon is no longer at the top of Obama’s to-do list.

He had a crappy relationship with Susan Rice.

And those events abroad have focused attention on Hagel’s management skills. The Defense Secretary, according to administration sources, simply failed to convince leaders at the White House or the Pentagon that he is the right person to lead what is akin to a war against ISIS.

“They chose Hagel for a job that just turned out to be very different than what was expected with the rise of ISIS,” said one former Obama national security aide.
read more here

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Veterans' Broken Lifelines

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 23, 2014

I admit it. I am odd. God created an extreme curiosity within my soul that is never satisfied with the answers I find. There are always more questions to ask.

I started to study war and PTSD when I needed to know what made my Vietnam veteran husband so much different from my Dad (Korea) and uncles (WWII). That was in 1982.

After understanding enough about it, it became wondering why I didn't have it because of all the times in my own life linked to the long list of causes of PTSD in civilians. When I found the answer that it had more to do with the way my family talked everything out of me, I then wondered why it isn't being done with the troops in combat, or at least soon afterwards.

Actually it was being done. I was done during the Korean War to reduce the number of psychiatric evacuations from combat zones. Clinicians were deployed with the troops so as soon as they started to show signs of stress, they were removed from combat, treated until they could be returned to duty. They learned their lessons after WWII produced a 300% increase from WWI. The rate of troops being sent home from Korea was 3%.

Addressing trauma, especially combat trauma, as soon as possible was vital but they stopped doing it during Vietnam. The year long deployments ended too soon, so signs of traumatic stress began to show after they came home.

The rate of their suicides swiftly outpaced combat casualties to the point where if their deaths were fully acknowledged by the time the Vietnam Memorial Wall was dedicated, it would have to be twice the size. Had they been counted up to today, there wouldn't be enough room to cover all the losses associated with Vietnam. Suicides and Agent Orange claimed far more lives than the over 58,000 names on the Wall.

By the time the Gulf War started there was a publicized life lost to suicide.
Michael Creamer, a Casualty of Two Wars
By: Tom Brokaw
18 February 1991

All of us, in one way or another, have been living first with the prospect of war and then with the reality of it since the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. For many veterans of Vietnam, this has been an especially anxious time. Many of their worst memories have been reawakened. The Persian Gulf has become their second war as it plays out graphically and continuously on television, radio and in the press.

Michael Creamer was one of those veterans. He grew up in a South Boston working-class family and served as a medic with the Rangers in Vietnam, winning two Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star for his valor during long, dangerous patrols.

When he returned he had trouble leaving his terrible experiences behind. He dropped out of nursing school when an assignment to emergency-room surgeons provoked a nightmare of broken bodies and horrible wounds from his combat days. He returned to his mother’s home and the life of despair common to victims of post-traumatic stress disorder – depression, bouts of violence, and thoughts of suicide.

Friends, other veterans, suggested that he confront his past by attending the dedication of the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, and that trip was the beginning of a halting recovery. He met his future wife at the ceremony. She persuaded him to join a veteran’s outreach program.

As his confidence returned, he decided to reenlist in the Army. An injury during parachute training short-circuited his career plans, so he returned to New England and began to work with other troubled veterans, counseling them on their problems, helping them find work.

By now you must been seeing the similarities from what was happening back then to what is happening now.

SARASOTA -- Michael Robert Gehrz served two deployments in Iraq as a Navy corpsman, taking care of wounded Marines at Fallujah and in Anbar Province in some of the fiercest fighting of the war.

Severely wounded in combat, he returned home with traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder after his most recent deployment in 2005, and was medically retired from the Navy.
Michael Gehrz with fiancé, Bridget Bueckens, and little sister Alyssa. Photo used by permission of Jim Gehrz
He also returned home beset by unknowable torment.

On Oct. 10, he took his own life at age 33, leaving behind a wife and three children.

News coverage makes it seem as if all of this is new. The only thing that is new came because of Vietnam veterans asking why it was happening to them not knowing it happened to all other generations.

They did something with the answers they found and caused the mental health community to take action after forcing the government to invest funds for research to help them heal. Then, it wasn't about helping just them. It was about helping all generations of veterans. They started Vietnam Veterans of America because they were not welcomed into any of the established groups. They had no choice. Within their mission statement came the promise they would never leave another generation behind them. They kept their word.

They did it all without the Internet, Facebook and mass emails. They found each other and became the lifeline to healing what war caused inside of them.

The emotional walls trapping in the pain and blocking good feelings from getting it started to come down. One by one they realized the American public's apathy was not the only thing making them uncomfortable with them. It was the simple fact that the public did not go to Vietnam, physically, emotionally or financially. They didn't understand, not just because they didn't want to, they simply couldn't any more than civilians can understand the OEF and OIF veterans coming home.

For Vietnam veterans, the Gulf War increased the number of their suicides along with older veterans. All anagnodital evidence because there were simply no studies being done on the connection between another war and the private war being fought in the minds of warriors of the past.

By the time this nation was attacked, many had perished due to their service, yet their suicides increased and they are the largest percentage of the suicides tied to military service.

Wars don't end for those who come home simply because we stop counting them.

In homes all across America, the private battles are fought and lost in too many cases but in even more cases, they are won. They are won because the veteran is still connected to his lifeline. Much like in combat, he is not left alone. He is not fighting this fight by himself. His back is being watched and he is watching out for his brothers.

How does this work? Much like the way my family helped me. I had a safe place to talk. Even though they didn't go through the same things I did and couldn't really understand, they tried. I felt safe to talk, bringing the unsafe event into a safe time. They gave lousy advice most of the time but they did it with love.

Veterans understand veterans, not just in their own generation, but a Vietnam veteran can understand fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq because even though technology has changed, the men and women fighting those wars is still the same basic design.

They are all made of three parts. Their body, pushed to the limits, needs to be reprogrammed to calm down. Their minds fueled by training need to be retrained to think of things in different terms. Above all else, their souls, the thing that makes them who they are, gives them hope tomorrow can be better than this day is, need to be fed.

It is the part of them that caused them to want to serve in the first place. They don't risk their lives because of any other reason than to save the lives of those they serve with. That requires a unique ability to care far beyond what the rest of us capable of.

Among other veterans, they realize they are not alone even though they are only about 7% of the population. They begin to understand that it is impossible for civilians to fully understand them in return anymore than they can understand civilians. Ironic considering they once were one of them but when you think about it, there was always something different about them.

They cared more about others than themselves.

If you are still wondering why there are so many suicides and families suffering over a death that didn't have to happen, it is because their lifeline has been broken. They believed they had to fight this battle alone. They believe no one will understand. They are asking the wrong questions and settling for the wrong answers.

If you know a veteran feeling isolated, encourage them to seek out other veterans to reconnect to the lifeline they need to heal. Too many gone too soon when they were still needed to save the lives of their brothers.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Military Suicide: Son and Mom Used Same Gun 4 Years Apart

A mother struggles to move on from veteran's suicide
St. Cloud Times
Kirsti Marohn
November 16, 2014

Gavic was a decorated canine handler in the Air Force.
He killed himself in 2009.
Rory Gavic and Allan. (Photo: Connecticut Police Work Dog Association)
Debbie Larsen walks past the graves of her sister Linda Sawatzke and nephew Rory Gavic at the St. Francis Catholic Cemetery near Buffalo on Nov. 7.
His mother, Linda Sawatzke, killed herself almost exactly four years later with the same handgun.
(Photo: Dave Schwarz St. Cloud Times)
Rory Gavic was a young, decorated military member who served his country overseas twice, who had earned praise and the respect of his peers, who had volunteered as a Big Brother.

His suicide in 2009 devastated his family, especially his mother. His death was the beginning of hers.

Rory had joined the U.S. Air Force Reserve after graduating from Eagan High School in 2002. A few years later, he enlisted as active duty in the Air Force and rose to the rank of staff sergeant.

As a military canine handler, Rory served in Iraq in 2007 and Pakistan in 2009. He earned more than a dozen commendations, including Airman of the Year in 2008.

Rory earned a reputation as a skilled dog handler and a committed soldier who was well liked by his fellow troops. He loved animals, especially his military working dog, Allan. In photos, he's seen crouched down next to the burly tan and black German shepherd. Rory is lean and muscular, dark eyes gazing straight ahead.

But the deployments changed Rory. He struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Left behind were two brothers and a stepsister, his stepfather and his heartbroken mother. The program for the memorial service included a quote from Linda.

"Rory, I love you more with every beat of my heart. I miss you so much my son and you have only been gone for a short while. My life and my heart have a missing piece that will not fill until I see you again."
read more here