McCain’s Attacks on Rival Fall Flat with Vets Group

August 10, 2008 – Sen. John McCain, speaking to disabled veterans Saturday in Las Vegas, attacked his Democratic opponent, Sen. Barack Obama, for his foreign policy record, while also proposing a program that would allow veterans to acquire health care at private hospitals and not just through the Veterans Affairs Department.

The veterans, at Bally’s for their national convention, gave him a tepid reception, especially considering McCain’s life story. The Arizona senator was a Navy pilot shot down over Vietnam, tortured and held as a prisoner of war for 5 1/2 years.

Just one of 14 veterans interviewed by the Sun after his speech said he is a certain McCain voter, and the nonpartisan group’s legislative director expressed concerns about McCain’s proposed “Veterans’ Care Access Card.”

But as with most presidential campaign events, the intended audience was not the veterans in the hall but television viewers. McCain used the opportunity to hammer Obama on his opposition to the 2007 surge of U.S. troops in Iraq.

McCain said Obama “can’t quite bring himself to admit his own failure in judgment. Instead, he commits the greater error of insisting that even in hindsight, he would oppose the surge. Even in retrospect, he would choose the path of retreat and failure for America over the path of success and victory.

“Behind all of these claims and positions by Senator Obama lies the ambition to be president,” McCain said. “What’s missing is the judgment to be commander in chief.”

McCain said Obama had tried to “legislate failure” in Iraq.

Obama has said that he showed good judgment by opposing the war in the first place. The Iraqi government recently endorsed Obama’s proposal to withdraw troops.

In setting forth an agenda for veterans, McCain said he would make sure Congress approves the VA health care budget on schedule. “But I will say that every increase in funding must be matched by increases in accountability, both at the VA and in Congress.”

Legislation appropriating money for veterans is often tardy, bogged down in the legislative process and loaded with extra spending on unrelated matters.

McCain said he would veto veterans legislation that contains unrelated pork barrel spending. The money saved could be used for veterans benefits, he said.

To help veterans who live far from VA hospitals or need specialized care the VA can’t provide, McCain proposed giving low-income veterans and those who incurred injury during their service a card they could use at private hospitals. The proposal is not an attempt to privatize the VA, as critics have alleged, but rather, an effort to improve care and access to it, he said.

Joe Violanti, legislative director of the Disabled American Veterans, a nonpartisan organization, said the proposal would increase costs because private hospitals are more expensive. The increased cost could lead to further rationing of care, he said.

McCain closed with stirring words: “I have had the good fortune to know personally a great many brave and selfless patriots who sacrificed and shed blood to defend America. But I have known none braver or better than those who do so today. They are our inspiration, as I suspect all of you were once theirs. And I pray to a loving God that he bless and protect them.”

John Von Schlicher, 87, of Florida, said he will support McCain. Schlicher sharply criticized the Democratic-controlled Congress for not funding VA hospitals. (Spending on veterans benefits will increase 11 percent this year.)

Other veterans, such as James Jewett and Jay Johnson of Texas, expressed misgivings about McCain using the occasion to attack his opponent so fiercely.

Duke Hendershot, a double amputee retired Marine who served in Vietnam, supported McCain’s run for president in 2000 but is undecided this year.

“John just isn’t the same as he used to be. He’s not his own man,” said Hendershot, who lives in San Antonio, Texas. “A lot of that has to do with how he’s wanted this job so bad for so long that he’s tied himself to President Bush.”

He said McCain’s embrace of Bush, whom Hendershot called a “draft-dodging coward,” is even more perplexing because of the rivalry between the two candidates during the 2000 campaign.

Hendershot also criticized McCain for taking swipes at Obama in his speech. “He should have been talking about veterans issues, not his opponent,” he said.

By contrast, he praised Obama for keeping his remarks tightly focused on veterans. The Democrat gave taped remarks via video.

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Humboldt State University the Gold Standard for Vets

August 14, 2008 – On Aug. 28, Humboldt State University will make history with a new veteran’s program that is sure to become a national model for providing educational opportunities.

The opening ceremonies for Humboldt State University’s new Veterans Enrollment and Transitional Services (VETS) program will be from noon to 2 p.m. at the Kate Buchanan Room, and the community is invited to attend. We especially would like to see veterans and their families attending because the program offers them so much valuable assistance.

Some may remember the recently deceased veterans Upward Bound Program which was the only program in the CSU system that offered veterans help in making the transition from military to civilian life, and also helped them with their continued studies. The loss of that program was a real blow to the veteran community.

The good news is that Kim Hall, a longtime local veterans advocate and founder of our North Coast Stand Down for veterans, has worked closely with HSU officials since that loss and they have come up with a great program that will provide a comprehensive information system for all veterans.

To make matters even better, there are other plans in the works right now, like the Troops to College Initiative that was mandated by Governor Schwarzenegger recently. Chancellor Charles Reed, in partnership with the plan, has helped identify five areas to assist California’s State College systems in achieving a military-friendly status.

Hall, who has been working with veterans for years, sees the stand downs as a way to get new attendees for the VETS program by showing them how their lives can improve through education.

HSU President Richmond has been, and is, a big supporter of the program which is based upon the same concept as stand downs — a one-stop center offering services for all veterans. The new VETS program will also have the same philosophy of the stand downs which involves earlier generation veterans sharing their experiences of success through education and the support of fellow veterans.

Offerings will include an individualized admissions process, straight talk on whether veterans suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) would do well in a classroom environment and suggestions on seeking PTSD treatment programs, a veteran mentor program, assistance in their certification of the G. I. Bill; career advice, scheduling help, and a support network that will always be available.

The VETS Program will also provide a meeting space, computers, housing board, tutoring, and work study opportunities. Other services like the California Employment Development Department (EDD), Veterans Service Organizations (VSO), and the Vets Center will also be represented on site.

The whole idea is to make it easy for veterans to continue their education and to get the opportunities that it will provide to them and their families. The goal is to instill the veterans with a sense of confidence and optimism that will make their entry into the college world easy. The new VETS Program outreach/public relations mission is to be there for a veteran from day one to navigate them through the college experience. Some of the organizations that will assist the program are the Department of Veterans Affairs, VSO, EDD, California Community Colleges, the California Armed Forces Bases (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard), and the California One Stop Employment Centers.

The whole program has the opportunity to set the Gold Standard for providing the most vet-friendly college in the United States of America … I think that’s exciting and important. All of our veterans deserve this kind of help and opportunity. I’m proud to be a veteran in Humboldt County today and will look forward to seeing other veterans and members of the community who support veterans at the new VETS Program on Aug. 28.

There will be a free shuttle service from the Arcata Community Center to HSU from 11:15 a.m. to 3 p.m.

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Paralyzed Iraq War Veteran to Represent America

August 14, 2008, Augusta, GA – Scott Winkler is one of thousands who have fought for our country, but soon he’ll stand alone…representing America, as the first Iraq War veteran to be in the 2008 paralympics, a goal that even he thought he would never accomplish.

To some, he’s an inspiration…

Christopher Bryant, Scott Winkler’s friend: “Knowing that the disabled are able to compete and achieve goals, that they didn’t think they would be able to do, is a big inspiration.”

To others, he’s more…

Ceabron Yearwood, Scott Winkler’s friend: “I look up to him as a role model. I think most people should.”

Scott Winkler has been through more than many could even imagine. He was paralyzed in 2003, while serving in Iraq, and hit rock bottom, not knowing what his future would hold.

Scott Winkler, Paralympian: “You know ,I was once a soldier, now what am I going to do with my time? And you know, what’s out there? And it wasn’t easy. And the anger slowly went away, and then the depression kicked in worse.”

While recovering, Winkler beat the depression and discovered his hidden talent of shot put. That talent amounted to much more…a spot in the 2008 Paralympics, and a chance to represent America, again.

Scott Winkler: “Now there’s a lot of nerves, because I have the weight of the U.S. on my shoulders. And that’s…like a soldier, you never leave a soldier behind. And it’s like, now as an athlete, I don’t want to let my country down or leave them behind.”

In April, Winkler was recognized as in inspiration to the country, and was asked to have dinner with the President.

Scott Winkler: “While in the military, I served under him for 2 terms, and he was my Commander-in-Chief. And, to meet him personally, one on one, you know, shaking hands with him, having dinner with him, I mean that is one of the greatest honors.”

As Winkler’s friends send him off, hoping to see him become Augusta’s next ‘Golden Boy’…he says his purpose in life remains to be an inspiration to others, but that bringing home a gold medal can prove that any dream can come true.

Scott Winkler: “Winning that gold is more for the U.S., and everybody in it…for the soldiers and civilians. I mean, if I win it, I have achieved everything I can for my country, and my uncle.”

Winkler leaves for the Olympic Training Center, August 21st. Beijing’s opening ceremony is September 6th.

Winkler says he doesn’t know yet when he will throw.

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Why Soldiers Rape

August 13, 2008 – An alarming number of women soldiers are being sexually abused by their comrades-in-arms, both at war and at home. This fact has received a fair amount of attention lately from researchers and the press — and deservedly so.

But the attention always focuses on the women: where they were when assaulted, their relations with the assailant, the effects on their mental health and careers, whether they are being adequately helped, and so on. That discussion, as valuable as it is, misses a fundamental point. To understand military sexual assault, let alone know how to stop it, we must focus on the perpetrators. We need to ask: Why do soldiers rape?

Rape in civilian life is already unacceptably common. One in six women is raped or sexually assaulted in her lifetime, according to the National Institute of Justice, a number so high it should be considered an epidemic.

In the military, however, the situation is even worse. Rape is almost twice as frequent as it is among civilians, especially in wartime. Soldiers are taught to regard one another as family, so military rape resembles incest. And most of the soldiers who rape are older and of higher rank than their victims, so are taking advantage of their authority to attack the very people they are supposed to protect.

Department of Defense reports show that nearly 90 percent of rape victims in the Army are junior-ranking women, whose average age is 21, while most of the assailants are non-commissioned officers or junior men, whose average age is 28.

This sexual violence persists in spite of strict laws against rape in the military and a concerted Pentagon effort in 2005 to reform procedures for reporting the crime. Unfortunately, neither the press nor the many teams of psychologists and sociologists who study veterans ever seem to ask why.

The answer appears to lie in a confluence of military culture, the psychology of the assailants and the nature of war.

Two seminal studies have examined military culture and its attitudes toward women: one by Duke University Law Professor Madeline Morris in 1996, which was presented in the paper By Force of Arms: Rape, War, and Military Culture” and published in Duke Law Journal; and the other by University of California professor and folklorist Carol Burke in 2004 and explained in her book, Camp All-American, Hanoi Jane and the High-And-Tight: Gender, Folklore and Changing Military Culture (Beacon Press). Both authors found that military culture is more misogynistic than even many critics of the military would suspect. Sometimes this misogyny stems from competition and sometimes from resentment, but it lies at the root of why soldiers rape.

One recent Iraq War veteran reflected this misogyny when he described his Marine Corp training for a collection of soldiers’ works called Warrior Writers, published by Iraq Veterans Against the War in 2008:

    The [Drill Instructor’s] nightly homiletic speeches, full of an unabashed hatred of women, were part of the second phase of boot camp: the process of rebuilding recruits into Marines.

Morris and Burke both show that military language reveals this “unabashed hatred of women” all the time. Even with a force that is now 14 percent female, and with rules that prohibit drill instructors from using racial epithets and curses, those same instructors still routinely denigrate recruits by calling them “pussy,” “girl,” “bitch,” “lady” and “dyke.” The everyday speech of soldiers is still riddled with sexist insults.

Soldiers still openly peruse pornography that humiliates women. (Pornography is officially banned in the military, but is easily available to soldiers through the mail and from civilian sources, and there is a significant correlation between pornography circulation and rape rates, according to Duke’s Morris. And military men still sing the misogynist rhymes that have been around for decades. For example, Burke’s book cites this Naval Academy chant:

    Who can take a chainsaw
    Cut the bitch in two
    Fuck the bottom half
    And give the upper half to you…

The message in all these insults is that women have no business trying to be soldiers. In 2007, Sgt. Sarah Scully of the Army’s 8th Military Police Brigade wrote to me in an e-mail from Kuwait, where she was serving: “In the Army, any sign that you are a woman means you are automatically ridiculed and treated as inferior.”

Army Spc. Mickiela Montoya, who was in Iraq for 11 months from 2005-2006, put it another way: “There are only three things the guys let you be if you’re a girl in the military: a bitch, a ho or a dyke. One guy told me he thinks the military sends women over to give the guys eye candy to keep them sane. He told me in Vietnam they had prostitutes, but they don’t have those in Iraq, so they have women soldiers instead.”

The view of women as sexual prey has always been present in military culture. Indeed, civilian women have been seen as sexual booty for conquering soldiers since the beginning of human history. So, it should come as no surprise that the sexual persecution of female soldiers has been going on in the armed forces for decades.

• A 2004 study of veterans from Vietnam and all wars since, conducted by psychotherapist Maureen Murdoch and published in the journal Military Medicine, found that 71 percent of the women said they were sexually assaulted or raped while serving.

• In 2003, a survey of female veterans from Vietnam through the first Gulf War by psychologist Anne Sadler and her colleagues, published in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine, found that 30 percent said they were raped in the military.

• And a 1995 study of female veterans of the Gulf and earlier wars, also conducted by Murdoch and published in Archives of Family Medicine, reported that 90 percent had been sexually harassed, which means anything from being pressured for sex to being relentlessly teased and stared at.

• A 2007 survey by the Department of Veterans Affairs found that homelessness among female veterans is rapidly increasing as women soldiers come back from Iraq and Afghanistan. Forty percent of these homeless female veterans say they were sexually abused while in the service.

Defense Department numbers are much lower. In Fiscal Year 2007, the Pentagon reported 2,085 sexual assaults among military women, which given that there are about 200,000 active-duty women in the armed forces, is a mere fraction of what the veterans studies indicate. The discrepancy can be explained by the fact that the Pentagon counts only those rapes that soldiers have officially reported.

Having the courage to report a rape is hard enough for civilians, where unsympathetic police, victim-blaming myths, and the fear of reprisal prevent some 60 percent of rapes from being brought to light, according to a 2005 Department of Justice study.

But within the military, reporting is much riskier. Platoons are enclosed, hierarchical societies, riddled with gossip, so any woman who reports a sexual assault has little chance of remaining anonymous. She will probably have to face her assailant day after day and put up with resentment and blame from other soldiers who see her as a snitch. She risks being persecuted by her assailant if he is her superior, and punished by any commanders who consider her a troublemaker. And because military culture demands that all soldiers keep their pain and distress to themselves, reporting an assault will make her look weak and cowardly.

For all these reasons, some 80 percent of military rapes are never reported, as the Pentagon itself acknowledges.

This widespread misogyny in the military actively encourages a rape culture. It sends the message to men that, no matter how they feel about women, they won’t fit in as soldiers unless they prove themselves a “brother” by demeaning and persecuting women at every opportunity. So even though most soldiers are not rapists, and most men do not hate women, in the military even the nicest guys succumb to the pressure to act as if they do.

Of the 40 or so female veterans I have interviewed over the past two years, all but two said they were constantly sexually harassed by their comrades while they were serving in Iraq or Afghanistan, and many told me that the men were worse in groups than they were individually. Air Force Sgt. Marti Ribeiro, for example, told me that she was relentlessly harassed for all eight years of her service, both in training and during her deployments in 2003 and 2006:

    I ended up waging my own war against an enemy dressed in the same uniform as mine. I had a senior non-commissioned officer harass me on a regular basis. He would constantly quiz me about my sex life, show up at the barracks at odd hours of the night and ask personal questions that no supervisor has a right to ask. I had a colonel sexually harass me in ways I’m too embarrassed to explain. Once my sergeant sat with me at lunch in the chow hall, and he said, ‘I feel like I’m in a fish bowl, the way all the men’s eyes are boring into your back.’ I told him, ‘That’s what my life is like.’

Misogyny has always been at the root of sexual violence in the military, but two other factors contribute to it, as well: the type of man who chooses to enter the all-volunteer force and the nature of the Iraq War.

The economic reasons behind enlistment are well understood. The military is the primary path out of poverty and dead-end jobs for many of the poor in America. What is less discussed is that many soldiers enlist as teenagers to escape troubled or violent homes.

Two studies of Army and Marine recruits, one conducted in 1996 by psychologists L.N. Rosen and L. Martin, and the other in 2005 by Jessica Wolfe and her colleagues of the Boston Veterans Affairs Health Center, both of which were published in the journal Military Medicine, found that half the male enlistees had been physically abused in childhood, one-sixth had been sexually abused, and 11 percent had experienced both. This is significant because, as psychologists have long known, childhood abuse often turns men into abusers.

In the ’70s, when the women’s movement brought general awareness of rape to a peak, three men — criminologist Menachim Amir and psychologists Nicholas Groth and Gene Abel — conducted separate but groundbreaking studies of imprisoned rapists. They found that rapists are not motivated by out-of-control lust, as is widely thought, but by a mix of anger, sexual sadism and the need to dominate — urges that are usually formed in childhood. Therefore, the best way to understand a rapist is to think of him as a torturer who uses sex as a weapon to degrade and destroy his victims. This is just as true of a soldier rapist as it is of a civilian who rapes.

Nobody has yet proven that abusive men like this seek out the military — attracted by its violent culture — but several scholars suspect that this is so, including the aforementioned Morris and Rutgers University law professor Elizabeth L. Hillman, author of a forthcoming paper on sexual violence in the military. Hillman writes, “There is … the possibility that the demographics of the all-volunteer force draw more rape-prone men into uniform as compared to civil society.”

Worse, according to the Defense Department’s own reports, the military has been exacerbating the problem by granting an increasing number of “moral waivers” to its recruits since 9/11, which means enlisting men with records of domestic and sexual violence.

Furthermore, the military has an abysmal record when it comes to catching, prosecuting and punishing its rapists. The Pentagon’s 2007 Annual Report on Sexual Assault in the Military found that 47 percent of the reported sexual assaults in 2007 were dismissed as unworthy of investigation, and only about 8 percent of the cases went to court-martial, reflecting the difficulty female soldiers have in making themselves heard or believed when they report sexual assault within the military. The majority of assailants were given what the Pentagon calls “nonjudicial punishments, administrative actions and discharges.” By contrast, in civilian life, 40 percent of those accused of sex crimes are prosecuted.

Which brings us to the question: Do the reasons soldiers rape have anything to do with the nature of the wars we are waging today, particularly in Iraq?

Robert Jay Lifton, a professor of psychiatry who studies war crimes, theorizes that soldiers are particularly prone to commit atrocities in a war of brutal occupation, where the enemy is civilian resistance, the command sanctions torture, and the war is justified by distorted reasoning and obvious lies.

Thus, many American troops in Iraq have deliberately shot children, raped civilian women and teenagers, tortured prisoners of war, and abused their own comrades because they see no moral justification for the war, and are reduced to nothing but self-loathing, anger, fear and hatred.

Although these explanations for why soldiers rape are dispiriting, they do at least suggest that the military could institute the following reforms:

• Promote and honor more women soldiers. The more respect women are shown by the command, the less abuse they will get from their comrades.

• Teach officers and enlistees that rape is torture and a war crime.

• Expel men from the military who attack their female comrades.

• Ban the consumption of pornography.

• Prohibit the use of sexist language by drill instructors.

• Educate officers to insist that women be treated with respect.

• Train military counselors to help male and female soldiers not only with war trauma, but also with childhood abuse and sexual assault.

• Cease admitting soldiers with backgrounds of domestic or sexual violence.

And last — but far from least — end the war in Iraq.

[Editor’s note: This article is adapted from The Lonely Soldier: The Private War of Women Serving in Iraq, to be published by Beacon Press in April 2009.]

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Halvorson’s Stepson’s Injury Caused by Fall on Rocks

August 13, 2008 – Capt. Jay Bush was apparently being fired on in Afghanistan when he abandoned his vehicle in the dark and fell 25 feet off a bridge and onto some rocks, according to a congressman who met with the injured soldier last week in Germany.

Bush, a 31-year-old Army Special Forces soldier, is the stepson of state Senate Majority Leader Debbie Halvorson, the Democratic candidate for the 11th Congressional District.

Reports surfaced last week that Bush was injured, breaking his back, but few other details emerged at the time.

U.S. Rep. Phil Hare (D-17), of Rock Island, was on a trip last week to Iraq and Germany when he got the chance opportunity to meet with Bush at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany.

“He was moving his arms and feet,” Hare said. “I gave him a Congressional coin, and he was turning it around and looking at it with his hand. He had mobility.”

Bush was transferred from Germany to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., where Halvorson and her husband Jim Bush were expected to see him for the first time since his injury.

Hare said that after the chance encounter with Capt. Bush, he called Halvorson and her husband to let them know the soldier was in good spirits.

“We had a real good conversation. We talked politics,” Hare said. “He asked me if I thought his mom was going to win, and I said absolutely.”

Hare had previously planned a fundraiser for Halvorson and told Bush that such a fundraiser “was a good luck charm.”

Hare complimented the medics who airlifted Bush from Afghanistan to Germany within hours of his injury. He also said it was a good sign that Bush was sent to Walter Reed.

“You don’t leave Germany until they’re confident with the prognosis and that you’re stable,” Hare said. “You could tell he was in pain, (but) he was in good spirits. It did an awful lot for me to see him smile.”

Hare is a member of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee and traveled to Iraq with a Congressional Delegation with Veterans Affairs Secretary James Peake to see first-hand the medical care being provided to soldiers.

Halvorson faces Republican Marty Ozinga and Green Party candidate Jason Wallace in the 11th District race to replace Jerry Weller.

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It’s ‘Open War,’ Taliban Says After Deadly Pakistan Bombing

August 12, 2008, Peshawar, Pakistan – A bomb targeting a Pakistani Air Force bus carrying personnel from a military base killed at least 14 people, including a child, and wounded 11 others Tuesday on a major road near the center of Peshawar, the police said.

The bomb appeared to have been placed on top of a key bridge or near the bridge that links the city to Pakistan’s volatile tribal areas and triggered by remote control, the inspector general of police, Malik Naveed Khan, said.

Taliban forces reportedly took responsibility. The attack was seen as retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes in Bajaur, a militant stronghold near the border with Afghanistan, Khan said.

“It is an open war between us and them,” Pakistani Taliban spokesman Maulvi Umar told the Associated Press. “If these kinds of operations continue against us in Swat [Valley] and in the tribal areas, we will continue this.”

The bomb appeared to have been placed on top of a bridge or near the bridge and triggered by remote control, Khan said.

Pakistani officials could not be reached for comment or declined to react to the Taliban’s statement, but earlier in the day Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik said the country would not yield in its attempts to end militancy in its frontier areas.

“It is our firm resolve that we will root out terrorism from Pakistan, and all of our security agencies are working together to achieve this goal,” he said.

In the past several days, the government has unleashed an offensive against militants in Bajaur, an area of Pakistan’s tribal region adjacent to Peshawar where the Taliban and Al-Qaida have forged particularly close ties on the Pakistani side of the Afghan border.

Also Tuesday, Pakistani security forces said Al-Qaida’s reputed No. 3 commander, identified as Abu Saeed al-Masri, had been killed in fighting in Bajaur. It’s thought that his real name is Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, Al-Qaida’s commander in Afghanistan.

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Cast of Thousands Maintaining a War

August 13, 2008 – On the sprawling U.S. bases in Iraq, you can’t go far without stumbling across the private citizens who do the little things that keep the war machine humming.

Filipino workers are charged with laundering the troops’ uniforms; Indians and Pakistanis are often the ones ladling the chow at the mess halls; and Americans and other Westerners are paid handsomely to protect diplomats and perform other tasks.

So it’s little surprise that the Congressional Budget Office reported Tuesday that the U.S. government has relied more on private contractors during the war in Iraq than in any other war.

U.S. agencies awarded $85 billion in contracts in Iraq from 2003 to 2007 for logistic support, construction, fuel, food and other projects. As of early this year, at least 190,000 contractors and subcontractors were working on U.S.-funded projects in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East to support the war effort.

The contracting workforce essentially matches the number of U.S. and coalition troops in Iraq.

“The ratio of one contractor employee for every member of the U.S. armed forces in the Iraq theater is at least 2.5 times higher than the ratio during any other major U.S. conflict,” the report said, “although it is roughly comparable with the ratio during the operations in the Balkans in the 1990s.”

Nearly 40 percent of the contracted workers in the Iraq War are Iraqis or other Middle Eastern citizens, and about 20 percent are U.S. citizens. The other 40 percent are third-country nationals.

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McCain’s Michigan Melt-Down Madness

August 10, 2008 – Leave it to John McCain to pick the site of a horrific atomic meltdown to symbolize his push for nuke power.

McCain says he wants at least 45 more US reactors as part of his “do everything” campaign for American energy independence. Apparently that strategy does not include inflating car tires, long known as one of the easiest, cheapest and most reliable ways to significantly improve auto gas mileage. McCain had only ridicule for Barack Obama’s ideas to fight waste in our energy economy.

Indeed, the term “efficiency” has no apparent place in the McBush lexicon. The “drill drill drill” mantra speaks only of production, a “supply side” Reaganomic approach to a problem whose fastest solution is to cut back on demand. As if turning off lights in empty rooms or making cars run cleaner is somehow an affront to American manhood, more production is the one and only idea in McCain’s energy plan.

Thus it was fitting he chose Monroe, Michigan for a nuke-powered energy push. The town’s central square hosts a statue honoring General George Armstrong Custer, wiped out by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse at the Little Big Horn in the summer of 1876.

More important was the melt-down at Monroe’s Fermi Unit I on October 5, ninety years later.

Fermi I was a sodium-cooled fast-breeder. Its promise was not only electricity “too cheap to meter,” but a fuel system that would magically generate more than it used. This astonishing fantasy was part of a government sponsored “Peaceful Atom” push to paste a happy face on the nuclear weapons industry.

Fermi I was key in a number of ways. Detroit Edison’s legendary boss, Walker Sisler, told the feds he would be a prime nuke booster. But like the rest of the nation’s utility execs, he demanded protection against the monstrous liability that could come with a major melt-down.

So in 1957, before the “inherently safe” Fermi I was built, Congress passed the Price-Anderson Act, shielding reactor owners from the billions in lawsuits that would follow a catastrophe. Since they believed it would be a short time before private insurers stepped in, the bill was only good for 15 years. Since then, it has been constantly renewed. Today the prospective builders of new reactors demand this same federal insurance protection. So the “temporary” acknowledgement that private insurers won’t touch atomic reactors is now a permanent shield for this “safe” technology.

Fermi I was subjected to the first major legal challenge to reactor construction by the United Auto Workers legendary lawyer Leo Goodman. The UAW took Edison all the way to the Supreme Court, where it lost 7-2. In a benchmark minority decision, Justices William O. Douglas and Hugo Black warned that nuclear power involved “a lighthearted approach to the most awesome, the most deadly, the most dangerous process that man has ever conceived.”

In 1966 a blockage occurred in the $100 million plant’s cooling system. Because it carried highly volatile liquid sodium, which can explode when exposed to air, all of southeastern Michigan stood at the brink of an unthinkable catastrophe. Police officials seriously debated evacuating Detroit, just forty miles north.

But an explosion at Fermi would have permanently irradiated the Great Lakes and a gigantic area of land stretching hundreds of miles in all directions. Countless thousands of people would have died from both short-term and long-term radiation sickness. One actual victim from the releases that did occur may have been then-Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who spoke in Monroe the day after the accident, and later died of cancer.

The public was kept totally in the dark. That day I served as Editorial Director of the University of Michigan Daily, where we were tapped in to the core of the nation’s major news sources. Though I was the Time Magazine and United Press International correspondent for Ann Arbor, just forty miles west, I never heard a word about this accident until I stumbled upon John G. Fuller’s legendary WE ALMOST LOST DETROIT in 1974. Writing for the Readers Digest Press, Fuller’s astonishing tale still sends chills down the spines of a whole generation that lived in the neighborhood and never suspected the danger we were in.

So Monroe is indeed a fitting global symbol for nuclear power. In mere moments, a $100 million asset became a multi-billion-dollar liability, and millions of people and square miles were put at unconscionable – and uninsured – risk.

But for John McCain, none of this seems to matter. His fellow nuke backers argue that the Fermi-style fast breeder is no longer on the table.

In response, we suggest that the next time he’s overseas pumping his global creds, he can lead a “more nukes” rally at Chernobyl. And when he comes home, MCain can complete the trifecta at Three Mile Island.

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Back to Iraq for Alpha Co.

August 12, 2008 – When he arrived home from Iraq in 2005, Sgt. Neill Coulbourn was angry and obsessed with never having had the chance to avenge the deaths of the six men in his National Guard unit who were killed in bomb attacks.

One day, he vowed, he would return to Iraq – “to get payback.”

Now, three years later, Coulbourn is, in fact, headed back. But he says his attitude has changed.

It still hurts to think of the men who died – “It’s with me every day,” he said – but, with the help of VA counseling and the support of a new wife, he said he no longer feels a need for revenge.

“I got over that hump,” he said.

Coulbourn is one of 29 men who served with the hardest-hit state unit since World War II who will be activated next month for a second tour of Iraq duty, according to a guard count.

They were members of Alpha Company of the First Battalion of the 111th Infantry, based in Northeast Philadelphia. Two soldiers were killed on Aug. 6, 2005. Three days later, four men were lost in an ambush.

Most of those returning had opportunities to retire or quit as their enlistments expired, or to be transferred to non-infantry units less likely to be deployed.

They generally say they want to go back – for their country, yes; for the combat pay, sure; but, most of all, for one another and for the younger guardsmen who may benefit from their hard-earned experience.

The Inquirer, in a four-part series, reported in March that while some Alpha survivors had emerged stronger and more self-confident from Iraq, many others were still struggling with physical or psychological trauma. Of the 131 survivors, the newspaper interviewed 126. Almost half – 46 percent – said they had been treated for post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

On Sept. 19, Alpha again will be mobilized as part of a 4,000-member state Guard brigade. The members will undergo three months of advanced training in Mississippi and Louisiana, then depart in January for nine months in Iraq.

The question left in March was how many Alpha soldiers would go back when, as expected, the brigade was called up. The answer is fewer than one-quarter.

Those going are essentially Iraq volunteers, said Lt. Col. Mark K. O’Hanlon, the battalion commander.

“They performed their missions before,” he said, “and they are willing to do it again in support of their country.”

Motivation
Coulbourn, who was wounded in Iraq, tried to explain his motivation one day while seated with his wife, Kelly, behind a burger plate at an Applebee’s near the armory in Northeast Philadelphia.

He wore a patriotic flag T-shirt revealing a tattoo with the names of his six comrades who were killed. He is 40, with 20 years in the Guard, and could have retired.

Kelly Coulbourn, a staff sergeant in the Guard, is also being deployed. With both drawing hazardous-duty pay in Iraq, they expect to bank a bundle.

Another reason for going – that big reason – stems from what Coulbourn learned at painful cost the last time. It has to do with staying alert, staying safe. He wants to impart this knowledge to the new soldiers in his unit, which is now Bravo Company.

“I’m not going to lose any more guys.” That’s his vow, he said.

Most senior sergeants who served with Alpha in Iraq have left the Guard. Eighteen veterans were over 40. O’Hanlon said most guardsmen today are in their early 20s, as are most active-duty soldiers. Even the NCOs are in their late 20s or early 30s.

There is much he can teach as a squad leader, Coulbourn said.

“I’m going to be” strict, he said. “Everybody is going to make sure weapons are cleaned. Vehicles are going to be squared away. Everybody is going to know what to look for.”

Coulbourn conceded “I still have my issues” when it comes to dealing with the deaths. He still can’t watch certain movies or listen to songs that remind him of men who were lost. He doesn’t read news about Iraq.

In 2007, he underwent 10 weeks of in-patient therapy for PTSD at the Coatesville veterans hospital. But a bigger factor in his recovery has been his relationship with Kelly. “I am much, much, much happier,” he said.

The Coulbourns, who hold full-time Guard jobs at Fort Indiantown Gap, live in Lancaster County. Neill has two daughters, 12 and 10; Kelly has two sons, 10 and 7. The girls will stay with Neill’s ex-wife, they said, and the boys will live with their father.

Kelly said she is worried about how the children will cope when they go to Iraq.

“I think the reality of it is finally setting in for them,” she said.

Asking to go back
For Staff Sgt. Joshua Hedetniemi, there was never a question about returning to Iraq. He actually had to ask permission to go.

At 25, standing 6-foot-2, he won two medals for valor in Iraq. He is a recruiter at the battalion headquarters in Plymouth Meeting. He said higher-ups wanted him to stay, but he argued that there was a job more important than to fill the ranks. That was “to take care of soldiers and bring everybody back home.”

Like Coulbourn, he says he can help do that because of his combat experience.

The Guard says that 63 of 142 men now on the Alpha roster have been to Iraq or Afghanistan – most with Alpha but some also with regular military units or other Guard outfits.

Hedetniemi says he doesn’t see many of the old Alpha soldiers around anymore.

“You’re looking at a handful of us. Most of the guys got out or are broken and can’t go.”

Hedetniemi is the son of an Army intelligence officer. He was “a surfing hippy,” he said, who went to Francis Marion University in South Carolina for two years but “got bored” and dropped out.

He joined the Guard for something to do. He was 21 when he was called up.

This go-around, Alpha will be deployed with the 56th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, based in Philadelphia. Their armored, wheeled Stryker vehicles are a big improvement over the humvees they rode around in last time.

“We should be much safer,” Hedetniemi said, “and we are 100 times more prepared to meet the missions we’re assigned.”

“A lot of us accept it”
“There are some guys in my unit who I don’t think want to go,” said Spec. Brian Mandes, 35. “But a lot of us accept it.”

The red-haired Mandes repairs machines at Wawa stores. He got divorced after coming home from Iraq and now lives with his girlfriend in Clifton Heights.

His father, Joseph, died this year at age 65. He said that had made his mother even more anxious about his going.

He had a chance to leave the Guard in 2006 when his enlistment was up. But the Guard offered a $15,000 re-signing bonus. He committed himself for another six years – until Sept. 22, 2012.

“The money was part of it,” he said. “But, two, I do like the military. I don’t like the hurry-up-and-wait aspect, but it’s pretty good. Plus, a lot of my friends were going to be going back.”

Mandes said since the last deployment, “I’m a lot more mature than I was.”

The training has been more intense this time. Typically, Guard soldiers report for two days a month and for two weeks each summer. The Stryker brigade has had three days of duty each month and three weeks each summer.

The brigade is the only one of its kind in the National Guard. The Army’s six other Stryker brigades are all assigned to regular units. The Pennsylvania guardsmen will be under a microscope to see how they match up.

Mandes said everyone is certain that, wherever they go in Iraq, it will be a hot zone militarily.

“I don’t think anyone wants to kill,” he said. “But the insurgents are cowards. I just feel, ‘OK, I’m coming over; I don’t care what you do, I’m ready.’ “

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Rushing Toward War

August 12, 2008 – As the Bush Administration begins its final months in office, it has embarked upon two courses of action that will pre-empt the scope of the incoming Obama or McCain administration and will plague America for years to come.

The first of these is to solidify, literally in concrete, our occupation of Iraq. Despite frequent denials by senior officials and multiple prohibitions exacted by the Congress, we have constructed a string of permanent bases to house our military forces and apparently intend to keep them there.

That is wrong and against our national interests.

We were told some seven years ago that attacking Iraq was justified because Iraq had nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and was about to attack America. Iraq had none of these weapons and could not have attacked America. But our occupation of that little country has done us almost as much damage as though it actually had attacked us:

One and a half million of our soldiers have served in Iraq. Over 4,100 of them are dead and about 400,000 have been wounded. (The official figure of 20,000 wounded is ridiculous: for this year alone, more than 300,000 will need medical treatment.)

Our army is exhausted. To replenish it, we are scraping the bottom of our social barrel and bribing the disadvantaged, some even with criminal records, to enlist; meanwhile, our “best and brightest” middle grade officers, including West Pointers, are quitting in droves.

We have now been in occupation of Iraq longer than we fought in World War II. The occupation already has cost us, even adjusted for inflation, more than the Vietnam war. Every minute costs our country nearly half a million dollars.

To pay for the war, we have borrowed so heavily from abroad (about $3 trillion) and run up our national debt so greatly (about 70{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d}) that our standard of living has deteriorated – our cities have decayed; our transport system is ramshackled; our obsolescent factories are uncompetitive; the airlines hover on the brink of bankruptcy — fourteen have fallen over the brink while others are cutting back the services on which we have come to depend; with gasoline at more than $4 a gallon, the automobile industry is in serious trouble — for General Motors to go bankrupt is no longer unthinkable; even giant banks have suffered huge losses and one, Bear Stearns, collapsed.

Everywhere businesses are “downsizing” and so ditching tens of thousands of American workers; new housing starts are down so that the construction industry lost 35,000 jobs in the one month of May this year; 8.5 million workers are unemployed; 5 million have given up looking for work; another 5 million have found only part-time employment; and as prices rise our money is worth less every day.

Our economy is hurting. So is our society.

As property values have declined (some as much as 30{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d}), hundreds of thousands have defaulted on mortgages and, potentially, perhaps 2 million face foreclosure; 37 million Americans have fallen below the poverty line; health care is failing to reach 47 million Americans; and our educational standards have fallen relative even to many “Third World” countries.

The head of our Federal Reserve Board tells us that, bad as it now is, the situation will grow worse — unemployment will rise and payrolls will shrink.

Why has all this happened? There are several causes but a principal cause is the war in Iraq. It cost about a quarter of our yearly income .

Now we are being told that we must get into a new war — that Iran is about to attack us and/or Israel with nuclear weapons. That is just what we were told about Iraq. But all our 16 intelligence agencies informed us last November that Iran not only has no nuclear weapons but has no current program to develop them.

President Bush asked for and got a Congressional allocation, a “Presidential Finding,” of $400 million to support political and armed efforts to overthrow the Iranian government. According to reliable sources Amerian special forces are already operating inside Iran. The administration is now advocating a blockade which, in international law, is an act of war. A massive collection of warships, aircraft and missiles is already in place and more are on the way. Can war be far away?

Iran cannot attack us, but if we attack Iran, we will replay the Iraq war — on a far greater scale. Iran is about three times the size of Iraq and has been preparing to defend itself for years. Whatever they may feel about their government, Iranians are a proud and nationalistic people. They have bitter memories of generations of British, Russian and American espionage, invasion and dominance. If we invade their country, they will fight.

How would war with Iran affect us?

First, while we could probably destroy their factories, their army and even their cities with air strikes, air strikes alone would not destroy all their nuclear installations so we would almost certainly invade with ground troops. Then the real war – the guerrilla war — would begin. Unlike Iraq in 2003, Iran is ready to resist. It has about 150,000 dedicated and well equipped national guardsmen. Predictably, the wounded and killed Americans would amount to several times what we suffered in Iraq.

Second, an attack would almost certainly halt the 8{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} of the world’s energy produced by Iran. Moreover, responding to our attack, the Iranians would counterattack shipping on the Gulf with their fleet of rocket- and bomb-equipped speedboats and submarines. These attacks might be suicidal but they would almost certainly be able to stop or substantially diminish the 40{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} of the world’s energy that flows down the Gulf. The price of energy would soar. As a result of the Iraq war, it climbed from c. $25/bbl to c. $150/bbl; experts predict that the price would double or even triple. Some believe it would go out of sight. That would destroy the good life we have struggled for generations to achieve and plunge us into a depression from which even our grandchildren would struggle to escape.

Third, an attack on Iran would be regarded as aggression and would severely damage what remains of the favorable image of America throughout the world and would further encourage anti-American jihadi movements throughout the Islamic world. Americans could expect counter-attacks here at home.

Fourth, while an American or Israeli attack might temporarily slow down or even stop the development of nuclear technology in Iran and perhaps overthrow its government, it would make any future Iranian government determined to acquire nuclear weapons to protect their country from us. In repeated public statements from the President, the Vice President and their neoconservative advisers and in the official 2005 “United States National Security Doctrine,” we have told Iran that we would attack it. Can we be so blind as not to see that an attack on Iran would be self-defeating, ensuring precisely what we seek to avoid, the acquisition of nuclear weapons by Iran? We must not allow this catastrophe to happen.

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