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Dec 07

Today is the 68th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor. May we have a moment of silence, please.

Arizona Memorial - Pearl Harbor

My friend David Wilson was there. He was a signal man on the U.S.S. Tennessee (BB-43). After a couple of years of visiting him at Hearthstone, David finally told us what he remembered of the day.

David passed away a few years back, but I have not forgotten his words or him.

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My dad went into the Navy in 1944. He served aboard an LCI (Landing Craft Infantry) in the Philippines and the Indo-China area.

He is still alive today at 82 years old and he still remembers World War II.

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The Korean War vets remember.

The Vietnam vets remember.

The Gulf War vets remember.

The Iraqi war vets remember.

Let us remember.

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And what should we remember?

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How about these for starters….

The world is a dangerous place. Not everyone is our friend.

Freedom is a gift and a treasure. It was purchased for us at a great price. Let us not squander our gift.

They gave so that we might have the lives we live today.

Let us live our lives in a manner which honors their sacrifice.

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If you get the opportunity, do something nice for a veteran today. At least tell him or her, “thank you”.

Clint Bridges

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Oct 16

obamaThis morning, President Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in a decision that has drawn a wide array of responses from people around the world, from surprise and joy from those who support him to outright anger from his detractors.  Even President Obama himself was stunned by the decision, saying, “I do not view it as a recognition of my own accomplishments but rather an affirmation of American leadership.  I will accept this award as a call to action.”

Perhaps that is exactly what the Nobel Committee intended when they chose him to be the recipient of the award.  President Obama has only been in office for nine months, and his accomplishments on the diplomatic front have been seen as significantly less than the profound deeds normally associated with what has traditionally been a very prestigious award.  So, why exactly would an international organization that is designed to award great deeds recognizing great effort instead?

They are betting on his future actions and great deeds to come.  When a person gambles, he or she can be expected to do everything they can (legally, of course) to improve their odds of winning.  That is what the Nobel Committee is likely doing now.  In providing President Obama with what has traditionally been considered to be a unique recognition of excellence, they are showing their support in a manner above that of a simple commendation or a public address praising him for his efforts thus far.

obama-the-cowboySuch a commendation, however, would have little influence on an international stage that is opposed to America at this point.  After eight years of, “cowboy diplomacy,” and an economy teetering on the edge of meltdown, America’s influence in the world is not what it was even ten years ago.  After eight years of what has been seen internationally as America’s arrogance and independence, as well as a diplomatic disregard for the rest of the world, President Obama’s efforts to rebuild relations and re-engage the United States on an international level make for a sharp turn in policy that has drawn much international attention.

In a way, it could be seen to be in part to be the Nobel Committee simply saying that they are grateful that George W. Bush is no longer president, and that could very possibly be part of their reasoning behind this award.  It has certainly given fire to the president’s critics, who have been very vocal regarding every decision he has made since taking office, some of them making valid points and others misleading with outright fabrications.

The question now is whether the Nobel Committee’s gamble will pay off.  In placing their bets on President Obama by giving him this award, they are likely hoping to boost his standing, at home and abroad, to give him the recognition and political clout necessary to accomplish the goals he set out when he became president.  Whether or not that bet pays out, we will only know after more time passes and we see if the efforts being made, internationally and at home, bear fruit.

obama-pineappleSeeing as how President Obama was born in Hawaii, I’m hoping that fruit is a pineapple.

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Oct 09

WASHINGTON — The request for troops sent to President Obama by the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan includes three different options, with the largest alternative including a request for more than 60,000 troops, according to a U.S. official familiar with the document.

Although the top option is more than the 40,000 soldiers previously understood to be the top troop total sought by Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. officer in Kabul, 40,000 remains the primary choice of senior military brass, including Gen. McChrystal, the official said.

Read the Article

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Oct 09

Congratulations to our President for winning the Nobel Peace Prize today.

President Barack Obama has won the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize for “his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee says. “Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world’s attention and given its people hope for a better future,” the committee said

But I thought you got a prize AFTER you accomplished or completed something…

But is anyone else confused about this award? I certainly am. Do “extraordinary efforts” equal getting it done?

I fully understand that our President traveled around the world talking to many world leaders, including several key players in the Islamic world. And I also understand that he said the world needs to lay down its nukes and other weapons and become a more friendly place. But has anyone actually listened to him and done it?

The North Koreans have not. The Iranians have not. The Russians have not. The Chinese have not. The Palestinians have not. The Israelis have not. The Afghanistan Taliban has not. The “Islamic-explode-yourself-in-public-places-people” have not. The English have not. The French have not. The Libyans have not. The Venezuelans have not. Have the Germans? Have we in America? I think not.

How about in America? What has happened in America since the beginning of the new year. Do you feel safer and more secure in your home and your job? Something must be going on because the sales of personal weapon in the United States have skyrocketed over the past ten months and for many months the ammunition dealers of our country have been having trouble keeping ammunition and reloading components on their shelves. American citizens have been steadily arming themselves over the past ten months at a greatly accelerated rate.

So what’s with the peace prize thing?

Who wouldn’t agree that peace is much better than war? War is a state of destruction. It is miserable and horrible and afterwards it leaves the survivors, if there are any, with a terrible mess to clean up. So what is the benefit of war? None that I can see. But occassionally one has to defend oneself because the world simply isn’t right. Some people have such a tough miserable time in life that they spill over in anger, hatred or envy and have to go create a mess in someone else’s life. You know what I mean. You meet lesser examples of world despots everyday, even right here in Moses Lake. The only difference between Hugo Chavez and the local ones is that the local ones have a smaller eco-political fishbowl to work within, otherwise they also would be on the six o’clock news.

But again, what is with the peace thing?

He talked about it and said it ought to be done, but nothing has happened, at least yet. My personal anxiety level is telling me that we, the world, are on the edge of another cataclysmic event. A giant make-over, if you will, that will once again change the landscape of the world and the way we think and live.

Prize for Losing

One of my sons once played on a Little League Baseball team which lost every one of its games throughout the entire season. At the end of the season, several of the parents went together and and bought every child a nice trophy and presented the trophies to the kids. It tipped my boat over. “Here kids, you get a winner’s trophy for losing every single game this season.” My son was a little puzzled by it.

We haven’t had World War III yet, but it would not surprise me to see it arrive, like a giant hurricane from hell.

Barak Obama’s overtures to the Islamic world hav not calmed or put out any fires. He has dissed our traditional allies. unraveled our sixty year relationship with the one true friend we had in the middle east, Israel, and kissed up to several of the thugs of the world in an effort to get them to listen to him. Neville Chamberlain thought he could do the same thing with Adolf Hitler. And seventy years ago, the world completely underestimated Uncle “Joe” Stalin, who smiled and tipped his pipe to Roosevelt and Churchill while he gobbled up millions of lives and fed them into his Gulag meat grinding machine.

At least there was a time or a season in the world where people believed there were bad guys and good guys. During the Cold War days, there was little doubt that the Big Three had no use for each other. It was clear that if any of them could have figured out a way to do in the other two and survive, it would have been taken. But that scary scenario was kept in check by the policy of the fear of mutual and world destruction.

(If you aren’t sure who the Big Three were, I will help you. They were the former Soviet Union, commonly called the Russians in those days, and Red China and us, the United States.)

Today, the world is being run by new generations of people who have no rememberance of World War and the cataclysmic horror of worldwide destruction, so I guess we are doomed to repeat acts one and two.

Truthfully, I hope that the world does listen to President Obama and we do come to a place where war has no place….but I am not seeing it happen yet…

The world is tipped over!

Scary Clowns

It’s time to send in the clowns. To me, clowns, with their painted faces and outrageous costumes and goofy antics are the only thing which can truly describe today’s world. Frankly, clowns scare me. You cannot see what they are thinking or who they really are, and you never really know what they are going to do next.

But I think that scary clowns are the best symbol of how I feel about what is currently happening. We have crashed our economy, times are very difficult for many folks, we are deeply buried in a war and about to take it to a whole new level over problems which I do not think we can in anyway imagine solving. We have the dissolution and disgreement in American society over policy, procedure and law. We have corrupted politicians busy emptying the nation of its national wealth and treasures and unraveling the very money system upon which we are so dependent.

What is going to become of us? I simply do not know.

So I am sending in the clowns…this is how I feel about the world situation today…

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And there went out another horse [that was] red: and [power] was given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earth, and that they should kill one another: and there was given unto him a great sword.

For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.

Other Folks Are Also Confused About This….

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Sep 21

Kabul in Winter

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By Ann Jones

The big Afghanistan debate in Washington is not over whether more troops are needed, but just who they should be: Americans or Afghans — Us or Them. Having just spent time in Afghanistan seeing how things stand, I wouldn’t bet on Them.

Frankly, I wouldn’t bet on Us either. In eight years, American troops have worn out their welcome. Their very presence now incites opposition, but that’s another story. It’s Them — the Afghans — I want to talk about.

Afghan Fighters

Afghans are Afghans. They have their own history, their own culture, their own habitual ways of thinking and behaving, all complicated by a modern experience of decades of war, displacement, abject poverty, and incessant meddling by foreign governments near and far — of which the United States has been the most powerful and persistent. Afghans do not think or act like Americans. Yet Americans in power refuse to grasp that inconvenient point.

In the heat of this summer, I went out to the training fields near Kabul where Afghan army recruits are put through their paces, and it was quickly evident just what’s getting lost in translation. Our trainers, soldiers from the Illinois National Guard, were masterful. Professional and highly skilled, they were dedicated to carrying out their mission — and doing the job well. They were also big, strong, camouflaged, combat-booted, supersized American men, their bodies swollen by flack jackets and lashed with knives, handguns, and god only knows what else. Any American could be proud of their commitment to tough duty.

Afghanistan

The Afghans were puny by comparison: Hundreds of little Davids to the overstuffed American Goliaths training them. Keep in mind: Afghan recruits come from a world of desperate poverty. They are almost uniformly malnourished and underweight. Many are no bigger than I am (5′4″ and thin) — and some probably not much stronger. Like me, many sag under the weight of a standard-issue flack jacket.

Their American trainers spoke of “upper body strength deficiency” and prescribed pushups because their trainees buckle under the backpacks filled with 50 pounds of equipment and ammo they are expected to carry. All this material must seem absurd to men whose fathers and brothers, wearing only the old cotton shirts and baggy pants of everyday life and carrying battered Russian Kalashnikov rifles, defeated the Red Army two decades ago. American trainers marvel that, freed from heavy equipment and uniforms, Afghan soldiers can run through the mountains all day — as the Taliban guerrillas in fact do with great effect — but the U.S. military is determined to train them for another style of war.

Still, the new recruits turn out for training in the blistering heat in this stony desert landscape wearing, beneath their heavy uniforms, the smart red, green, and black warm-up outfits intended to encourage them to engage in off-duty exercise. American trainers recognize that recruits regularly wear all their gear at once for fear somebody will steal anything left behind in the barracks, but they take this overdressing as a sign of how much Afghans love the military. My own reading, based on my observations of Afghan life during the years I’ve spent in that country, is this: It’s a sign of how little they trust one another, or the Americans who gave them the snazzy suits. I think it also indicates the obvious: that these impoverished men in a country without work have joined the Afghan National Army for what they can get out of it (and keep or sell) — and that doesn’t include democracy or glory.

The Other Guys

In the current policy debate about the Afghan War in Washington, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin wants the Afghans to defend their country. Senator John McCain, the top Republican on the committee, agrees but says they need even more help from even more Americans. The common ground — the sacred territory President Obama gropes for — is that, whatever else happens, the U.S. must speed up the training of “the Afghan security forces.”

American military planners and policymakers already proceed as if, with sufficient training, Afghans can be transformed into scale-model, wind-up American Marines. That is not going to happen. Not now. Not ever. No matter how many of our leaders concur that it must happen — and ever faster.

“Basic Warrior Training”

So who are these security forces? They include the Afghan National Army (ANA) and the Afghan National Police (ANP). International forces and private contractors have been training Afghan recruits for both of them since 2001. In fact, the determination of Western military planners to create a national army and police force has been so great that some seem to have suppressed for years the reports of Canadian soldiers who witnessed members of the Afghan security forces engaging in a fairly common pastime, sodomizing young boys.

Current training and mentoring is provided by the U.S., Great Britain, France, Canada, Romania, Poland, Mongolia, New Zealand, and Australia, as well as by the private for-profit contractors MPRI, KBR (formerly a division of Halliburton), Pulau, Paravant, and RONCO.

They're not like us....

Almost eight years and counting since the “mentoring” process began, officers at the Kabul Military Training Center report that the army now numbers between 88,000 and 92,000 soldiers, depending on who you talk to; and the basic training course financed and led by Americans, called “Basic Warrior Training,” is turning out 28,800 new soldiers every year, according to a Kabul Military Training Center “fact sheet.” The current projected “end strength” for the ANA, to be reached in December 2011, is 134,000 men; but Afghan officers told me they’re planning for a force of 200,000, while the Western press often cites 240,000 as the final figure.

The number 400,000 is often mentioned as the supposed end-strength quota for the combined security forces — an army of 240,000 soldiers and a police force with 160,000 men. Yet Afghan National Police officials also speak of a far more inflated figure, 250,000, and they claim that 149,000 men have already been trained. Police training has always proven problematic, however, in part because, from the start, the European allies fundamentally disagreed with the Bush administration about what the role of the Afghan police should be. Germany initiated the training of what it saw as an unarmed force that would direct traffic, deter crime, and keep civic order for the benefit of the civilian population. The U.S. took over in 2003, handed the task off to a private for-profit military contractor, DynCorp, and proceeded to produce a heavily armed, undisciplined, and thoroughly venal paramilitary force despised by Kabulis and feared by Afghan civilians in the countryside.

Contradicting that widespread public view, an Afghan commanding officer of the ANP assured me that today the police are trained as police, not as a paramilitary auxiliary of the ANA. “But policing is different in Afghanistan,” he said, because the police operate in active war zones.

Washington sends mixed messages on this subject. It farms out responsibility for the ANP to a private contractor that hires as mentors retired American law enforcement officers — a Kentucky state trooper, a Texas county lawman, a North Carolina cop, and so on. Yet Washington policymakers continue to couple the police with the army as “the Afghan security forces” — the most basic police rank is “soldier” — in a merger that must influence what DynCorp puts in its training syllabus. At the Afghan National Police training camp outside Kabul, I watched a squad of trainees learn (reluctantly) how to respond to a full-scale ambush. Though they were armed only with red rubber Kalashnikovs, the exercise looked to me much like the military maneuvers I’d witnessed at the army training camp.

Like army training, police training, too, was accelerated months ago to insure “security” during the run-up to the presidential election. With that goal in mind, DynCorp mentors shrunk the basic police training course from eight weeks to three, after which the police were dispatched to villages all across the country, including areas controlled by the Taliban. After the election, the surviving short-course police “soldiers” were to be brought back to Kabul for the rest of the basic training program. There’s no word yet on how many returned.

The Cash Crop: Opium Poppies

You have to wonder about the wisdom of rushing out this half-baked product. How would you feel if the police in your community were turned loose, heavily armed, after three weeks of training? And how would you feel if you were given a three-week training course with a rubber gun and then dispatched, with a real one, to defend your country?

Training security forces is not cheap. So far, the estimated cost of training and mentoring the police since 2001 is at least $10 billion. Any reliable figure on the cost of training and mentoring the Afghan army since 2001 is as invisible as the army itself. But the U.S. currently spends some $4 billion a month on military operations in Afghanistan.

The Invisible Men

What is there to show for all this remarkably expensive training? Although in Washington they may talk about the 90,000 soldiers in the Afghan National Army, no one has reported actually seeing such an army anywhere in Afghanistan. When 4,000 U.S. Marines were sent into Helmand Province in July to take on the Taliban in what is considered one of its strongholds, accompanying them were only about 600 Afghan security forces, some of whom were police. Why, you might ask, didn’t the ANA, 90,000 strong after eight years of training and mentoring, handle Helmand on its own? No explanation has been offered. American and NATO officers often complain that Afghan army units are simply not ready to “operate independently,” but no one ever speaks to the simple question: Where are they?

My educated guess is that such an army simply does not exist. It may well be true that Afghan men have gone through some version of “Basic Warrior Training” 90,000 times or more. When I was teaching in Afghanistan from 2002 to 2006, I knew men who repeatedly went through ANA training to get the promised Kalashnikov and the pay. Then they went home for a while and often returned some weeks later to enlist again under a different name.

In a country where 40% of men are unemployed, joining the ANA for 10 weeks is the best game in town. It relieves the poverty of many families every time the man of the family goes back to basic training, but it’s a needlessly complicated way to unintentionally deliver such minimal humanitarian aid. Some of these circulating soldiers are aging former mujahidin — the Islamist fundamentalists the U.S. once paid to fight the Soviets — and many are undoubtedly Taliban.

American trainers have taken careful note of the fact that, when ANA soldiers were given leave after basic training to return home with their pay, they generally didn’t come back. To foil paycheck scams and decrease soaring rates of desertion, they recently devised a money-transfer system that allows the soldiers to send pay home without ever leaving their base. That sounds like a good idea, but like many expensive American solutions to Afghan problems, it misses the point. It’s not just the money the soldier wants to transfer home, it’s himself as well.

Earlier this year, the U.S. training program became slightly more compelling with the introduction of a U.S.-made weapon, the M-16 rifle, which was phased in over four months as a replacement for the venerable Kalashnikov. Even U.S. trainers admit that, in Afghanistan, the Kalashnikov is actually the superior weapon. Light and accurate, it requires no cleaning even in the dust of the high desert, and every man and boy already knows it well. The strange and sensitive M-16, on the other hand, may be more accurate at slightly greater distances, but only if a soldier can keep it clean, while managing to adjust and readjust its notoriously sensitive sights. The struggling soldiers of the ANA may not ace that test, but now that the U.S. military has generously passed on its old M-16s to Afghans, it can buy new ones at taxpayer expense, a prospect certain to gladden the heart of any arms manufacturer. (Incidentally, thanks must go to the Illinois National Guard for risking their lives to make possible such handsome corporate profits.)

As for the police, U.S.-funded training offers a similar revolving door. In Afghanistan, however, it is far more dangerous to be a policeman than a soldier. While soldiers on patrol can slip away, policemen stuck at their posts are killed almost every day. Assigned in small numbers to staff small-town police stations or highway checkpoints, they are sitting ducks for Taliban fighters. As representatives of the now thoroughly discredited government of President Hamid Karzai, the hapless police make handy symbolic targets. British commanders in Helmand province estimated that 60% of Afghan police are on drugs — and little wonder why.

In the Pashtun provinces of southern Afghanistan, where the Taliban is strong, recruiting men for the Afghan National Police is a “problem,” as an ANP commander told me. Consequently, non-Pashtun police trainees of Hazara, Tajik, Uzbek, or other ethnic backgrounds are dispatched to maintain order in Pashtun territory. They might as well paint targets on their foreheads. The police who accompanied the U.S. Marines into Helmand Province reportedly refused to leave their heavily armed mentors to take up suicidal posts in provincial villages. Some police and army soldiers, when asked by reporters, claimed to be “visiting” Helmand province only for “vacation.”

Training Day

In many districts, the police recently supplemented their low pay and demonstrated allegiance to local warlords by stuffing ballot boxes for President Karzai in the presidential election. Consider that but one more indication — like the defection of those great Islamist fundamentalist mujahidin allies the U.S. sponsored in the anti-Soviet jihad of the 1980s who are now fighting with the Taliban — that no amount of American training, mentoring, or cash will determine who or what Afghans will fight for, if indeed they fight at all.

Afghans are world famous fighters, in part because they have a knack for gravitating to the winning side, and they’re ready to change sides with alacrity until they get it right. Recognizing that Afghans back a winner, U.S. military strategists are now banking on a counterinsurgency strategy that seeks to “clear, hold, and build” — that is, to stick around long enough to win the Afghans over. But it’s way too late for that to work. These days, U.S. troops sticking around look ever more like a foreign occupying army and, to the Taliban, like targets.

Recently Karen DeYoung noted in the Washington Post that the Taliban now regularly use very sophisticated military techniques — “as if the insurgents had attended something akin to the U.S. Army’s Ranger school, which teaches soldiers how to fight in small groups in austere environments.” Of course, some of them have attended training sessions which teach them to fight in “austere environments,” probably time and time again. If you were a Talib, wouldn’t you scout the training being offered to Afghans on the other side? And wouldn’t you do it more than once if you could get well paid every time?

Such training is bound to come in handy — as it may have for the Talib policeman who, just last week, bumped off eight other comrades at his police post in Kunduz Province in northern Afghanistan and turned it over to the Taliban. On the other hand, such training can be deadly to American trainers. Take the case of the American trainer who was shot and wounded that same week by one of his trainees. Reportedly, a dispute arose because the trainer was drinking water “in front of locals,” while the trainees were fasting for the Muslim holy month of Ramazan.

There is, by the way, plenty of evidence that Taliban fighters get along just fine, fighting fiercely and well without the training lavished on the ANA and the ANP. Why is it that Afghan Taliban fighters seem so bold and effective, while the Afghan National Police are so dismally corrupt and the Afghan National Army a washout?

When I visited bases and training grounds in July, I heard some American trainers describe their Afghan trainees in the same racist terms once applied to African slaves in the U.S.: lazy, irresponsible, stupid, childish, and so on. That’s how Afghan resistance, avoidance, and sabotage look to American eyes. The Taliban fight for something they believe — that their country should be freed from foreign occupation. “Our” Afghans try to get by.

Yet one amazing thing happens to ANA trainees who stick it out for the whole 10 weeks of basic training. Their slight bodies begin to fill out a little. They gain more energy and better spirits — all because for the first time in their lives they have enough nutritious food to eat.

Better nutrition notwithstanding — Senator Levin, Senator McCain — “our” Afghans are never going to fight for an American cause, with or without American troops, the way we imagine they should. They’re never going to fight with the energy of the Taliban for a national government that we installed against Afghan wishes, then more recently set up to steal another election, and now seem about to ratify in office, despite incontrovertible evidence of flagrant fraud. Why should they? Even if the U.S. could win their minds, their hearts are not in it.

One small warning: Don’t take the insecurity of the Afghan security forces as an argument for sending yet more American troops to Afghanistan. Aggressive Americans (now numbering 68,000) are likely to be even less successful than reluctant Afghan forces. Afghans want peace, but the kharaji (foreign) troops (100,000, if you include U.S. allies in NATO) bring death and destruction wherever they go. Think instead about what you might have won — and could still win — had you spent all those military billions on food. Or maybe agriculture. Or health care. Or a civilian job corps. Is it too late for that now?

Ann Jones is the author of Kabul in Winter (Metropolitan, 2006) and writes often about Afghanistan for TomDispatch and the Nation. War Is Not Over When It’s Over, her new book about the impact of war on women, will be published next year.

Copyright 2009 Ann Jones

My own opinion: Entering Afghanistan is a mistake - History bears it out! - Clint Bridges

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