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Giving Thanks To Those Who Serve

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Nov 20 2008, 06:42 PM




Chairman Notes Military Family Appreciation Week


American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, Nov. 20, 2008 – Military Family Appreciation Week begins tomorrow, and Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, issued a message today noting the observance.

Here is the text of the chairman’s message:

“This month, as we celebrate our blessings, and give thanks for our freedom to enjoy them, we take great pride in honoring November 21-28, 2008 as Military Family Appreciation Week.

“Families serve just as their uniformed service members do. And the military family has rarely faced as many challenges as our families do today. After seven years of war, hundreds of thousands of families have served through multiple deployments in support of operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom, as well as many other locations throughout the globe.

Click to Continue


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Philadelphia Center Starts Early to Get Holiday Meals to Troops

By Beth Reece
Special to American Forces Press Service

FORT BELVOIR, Va., Nov. 20, 2008 – Army Spc. Christina Beerman favors her dad’s pies and mom’s stuffing, but the Christmas spread she ate at a dining facility in Iraq three years ago was enough to earn her praise for being “phenomenal.”

“They really went all-out, with turkey and dressing – all the traditional items, even lobster. I knew it took a lot of time and preparation for them to put something like that together,” said Beerman, who is assigned to Joint Task Force Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Most holiday meals begin with a plan, from what to serve and grocery lists to timelines for defrosting and baking. So extensive are the Thanksgiving and Christmas meals served at military dining facilities that the work starts in April.

   Click to Continue


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Want it delivered by December 25?

Find shipping and mailing deadlines for your military and international cards and packages here.


2008 Holiday Shipping Calendar for Mailing Packages to Those Who Serve


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DAILY ROUTINE
U.S. airmen group together for a prayer, Nov. 4, 2008, at Forward Operating Base Falcon, Iraq. The prayer is a tradition for the airmen, prior to heading out on their daily Police Transition Team missions in the Abu T'shir area of Baghdad where they partner with their Iraq police counterparts. The airmen are assigned to Detachment 3, 732nd Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron.
U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Todd Frantom





 



 

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A Veterans Day Proclamation by President George Bush

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Nov 11 2008, 06:30 AM








For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
October 31, 2008


Veterans Day, 2008

A Proclamation by the President of the United States of America

On Veterans Day, we pay tribute to the service and sacrifice of the men and women who in defense of our freedom have bravely worn the uniform of the United States.

From the fields and forests of war-torn Europe to the jungles of Southeast Asia, from the deserts of Iraq to the mountains of Afghanistan, brave patriots have protected our Nation's ideals, rescued millions from tyranny, and helped spread freedom around the globe. America's veterans answered the call when asked to protect our Nation from some of the most brutal and ruthless tyrants, terrorists, and militaries the world has ever known. They stood tall in the face of grave danger and enabled our Nation to become the greatest force for freedom in human history. Members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and Coast Guard have answered a high calling to serve and have helped secure America at every turn.

Our country is forever indebted to our veterans for their quiet courage and exemplary service. We also remember and honor those who laid down their lives in freedom's defense. These brave men and women made the ultimate sacrifice for our benefit. On Veterans Day, we remember these heroes for their valor, their loyalty, and their dedication. Their selfless sacrifices continue to inspire us today as we work to advance peace and extend freedom around the world.

With respect for and in recognition of the contributions our service members have made to the cause of peace and freedom around the world, the Congress has provided (5 U.S.C. 6103(a)) that November 11 of each year shall be set aside as a legal public holiday to honor America's veterans.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim November 11, 2008, as Veterans Day and urge all Americans to observe November 9 through November 15, 2008, as National Veterans Awareness Week. I encourage all Americans to recognize the bravery and sacrifice of our veterans through ceremonies and prayers. I call upon Federal, State, and local officials to display the flag of the United States and to support and participate in patriotic activities in their communities. I invite civic and fraternal organizations, places of worship, schools, businesses, unions, and the media to support this national observance with commemorative expressions and programs.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirty-first day of October, in the year of our Lord two thousand eight, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-third.

GEORGE W. BUSH



 

The Military Is Going Flexible

By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Nov 5 2008, 09:26 PM



Photo ASU                                               Flexible Display Technology




 I think we’re all on the same page when it comes to aiding our military as much as possible when they are out on the battlefield. 

Advancements in technology keep making that possible.   Smart bugs were introduced to help with entering buildings and other dangerous areas to scope them out ahead of time. 

Now Flexible Display Devices may be the next advancement in technology to aid the Army. 

The above photo is a large mock-up of what may turn out to be a wrist sized, flexible tool to guide our soldiers in a time of need in the field.

Click to see a smaller version and read the story  HERE   






 


 

Threat or Promise?

By Janet Evans
Sunday, Sep 21 2008, 10:11 AM



Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at Columbia University 2007


Are we to believe Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he makes bold statements such as this:




"If anyone allows himself to commit even a tiny offense against Iran's legitimate interests, borders and sacred land, our armed forces will break his hand before he pulls the trigger," Ahmadinejad said during the parade.



“Tiny offense?”  “Break his hand before he pulls the trigger?”
 



"Washington and its Western allies are pushing for quick passage of a fourth set of sanctions to underline the international community's resolve.

But Ahmadinejad said Sunday that sanctions only help Iran achieve self-sufficiency.

"Those who once imposed sanctions, today should open their eyes and see our nation's technical achievements," he said.

Both the United States and its ally Israel say they support a diplomatic solution to the nuclear standoff with Iran but cannot rule out the military option.

"Today, Iran is not in a position to show softness toward its enemies," said Ahmadinejad, but added that threats made against Iran's nuclear facilities amounted to only "psychological warfare."


So far "psychological warfare" has worked pretty well against Iran. 

Can Ahmadinejad succeed in using it back against the "enemies" he is speaking of? 

Or are these promises?



Read the entire article HERE

How will McCain or Obama’s administrations handle Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?




More interesting reading:


IRAN: US-RUSSIAN TENSION CREATES NEW DIPLOMATIC OPTIONS FOR TEHRAN






 

Oshkosh Based Company to Receive the Defense Department’s Top Award

By Janet Evans
Monday, Sep 1 2008, 07:05 AM



Oshkosh Corp. Earns Top Employer Support Award

By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug. 29, 2008 – Oshkosh Corp. is slated to receive the Defense Department’s top award next month for supporting its employees who volunteer to serve in the National Guard and reserves.

The Oshkosh, Wis.-based company will be among 15 employers nationwide to receive the 2008 Secretary of Defense Employer Support Freedom Award during a Sept. 18 ceremony here.

The Freedom Award is the highest recognition the U.S. government gives to employers for outstanding support of their employees who serve in the National Guard and reserves.

Company employees nominated Oshkosh, which designs and builds military vehicles and vehicle bodies, for the award for creating an environment they said made its employees who serve in the military feel not just accepted, but also applauded and rewarded.

Marine Corps Maj. Dion Angling, a company employee, reported that the company hosted a special going-away dinner before he deployed to Iraq in 2006, sent him care packages while he was gone, and hosted a welcoming lunch on his return. His co-workers surprised him by decorating his office for the occasion.

Army Capt. Nguyen Trinh, another company employee, praised Oshkosh for giving him the time he needed to prepare for his upcoming deployment, and keeping up its support when he was deployed.

“My company was very proactive in ensuring that I understood all the benefits I would continue to receive during my deployment, and what I could expect upon my return. The company has reached out to my wife by taking an interest in her well-being,” he said. “I am very fortunate to work for such a great organization.”

Oshkosh demonstrates its support for its citizen-soldiers in other ways, too. A “Wall of Honor” appears at each plant, displaying reserve-component members’ photos and profiles. The company contributes to deployed employees’ unit family support groups and has coordinated transportation for their Guard and reserve employees to visit their families.

The company also contributes to the Marine Corps Reserves’ Toys for Tots program, regularly attends military hiring conferences seeking current and former servicemembers for its management positions, and pays the difference between its employees’ civilian and military pay while they’re on active duty.

Robert G. Bohn, Oshkosh chairman and chief executive officer, said the company is honored to receive recognition for the support it provides its employees serving on active duty.

“Our company continued to succeed, not only because of the strength of our product and services, but also because of the integrity of our people,” he said. “We are grateful for these employees who are essential in helping Oshkosh succeed while also serving the country in a separate capacity, and to support them is the right thing to do.”

Gordon Summer, executive director of Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, credits employers like Bohn with ensuring citizen-soldiers are able to carry out their important dual roles.

“In the military, the best leaders are those who always take care of their people – and it is no different in the civilian workplace,” he said. “Oshkosh Corp. has shown that it takes care of its people. Its employees who are also reserve and Guard members know the company is helping take care of their family while they are away serving this country.”




 

August 14, 1945 Surrender

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Aug 14 2008, 11:45 AM

1945: Japan Surrenders

Japan accepted terms for surrender to the Allied Forces today, though Washington officials had not received the official confirmation. "NBC Correspondent Max Jordan reported from Basle, Switzerland, today that a Japanese note will be at the White House in Washington 'within two hours.' Jordan broadcast the report at 4:20 p.m., eastern war time," informed The Sheboygan Press on August 14, 1945.

”A rising tide of joy is sweeping from the Pacific across the United States today,” reported the Sheboygan Journal on August 14, 1945. “Pearl Harbor – scene of the first Japanese attack – set the stage for the celebrations. The tension pent up since December 7, 1941, was let loose as soon as Tokyo broadcast the enemy surrender.”

NOTE: Four hours after President Truman addressed Americans, Emperor Hirohito said in the first broadcast he ever made over the Japanese Broadcasting Corporation network that the atomic bomb forced Japan to accept the first military defeat in the 2,605 years of its history.


Sheboygan Press Newspaper frontpage~ Japan Surrenders.pdf

(actual frontpage - may be offensive)


 

A Change In The Wind For Al Qaeda

By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Aug 13 2008, 11:50 AM



There has been a change noticed regarding the attitude of al Qaeda over the past year.

It is a subtle change.

They have been noticed to be in a more defensive mode in their communications.

The questions is, does this mean anything in the long run?

It does appear to be a positive sign.

But what next?

We will have to see what happens during the next presidency, also.

Will al Qaeda test the waters?

Only time will tell...

“A senior Bush administration counterterrorism official said Tuesday that an analysis of public statements by al Qaeda in the past year shows that nearly half the verbiage is devoted to justifying the group's legitimacy.


The terrorist group seems to be adopting a more defensive tone in its public pronouncements, indicating that its leaders may be concerned that criticism from former allies and the increasing civilian death toll from attacks are undermining support. Al Qaeda senior leaders this year "have devoted nearly half their airtime to defending the group's legitimacy," said senior U.S. intelligence official Ted Gistaro.

 "This defensive tone continues a trend observed since at least last summer and reflects concern over allegations by militant leaders and religious scholars that al Qaeda and its affiliates have violated the Islamic laws of war, particularly in Iraq and North Africa."
 

[...]

Sheik al-Oadah was one of the first religious leaders to preach against the presence of U.S. forces in the desert kingdom back in the early 1990s and was an early inspiration for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. In an open letter to bin Laden last September, the cleric accused him of having the blood on his hands of "at least hundreds of thousands of innocent people, if not millions."

"Are you happy to meet Allah with this heavy burden on your shoulders?" he said. In a lengthy treatise faxed to Arab media outlets from an Egyptian jail earlier last year, Dr. Fadl wrote: "We are prohibited from committing aggression, even if the enemies of Islam do that."

Al Qaeda leaders, and in particular the group's second in command, Ayman al-Zawahri, have addressed these criticisms in several ways, analysts said.

"Do they now have fax machines in Egyptian jail cells?" al-Zawahri asked in an al Qaeda video message after Dr. Fadl's fax appeared. "I wonder if they're connected to the same line as the electric-shock machines."

Lawrence Wright, author and longtime specialist on al Qaeda, speculated earlier this year that "this sarcastic dismissal was perhaps intended to dampen anxiety about Fadl's manifesto ... among al Qaeda insiders."

But, according to the Jamestown Foundation, al-Zawahri also sought to deal substantively with Dr. Fadl's detailed critique, publishing a 188-page rebuttal of his thesis in March this year.

The rebuttal was "comprehensive," wrote Jamestown analyst Abdul Hameed Bakier, "using religious arguments and logic to refute and highlight weaknesses in the document.

"On the other hand," he continued, "the lengthy response demonstrates that al Qaeda is seriously alarmed by the possible negative consequences the document might inflict on their ideology and the jihadi movement."  

Read the complete article from the Washington Times


HERE








 


 

Is The War In Iraq Over?

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Aug 12 2008, 09:40 PM


Yes, according to Bing West, former Assistant Secretary of Defense. 

In an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal, he describes his observations from Iraq, and why he believes this to be so…

“The war I witnessed for more than five years in Iraq is over. In July, there were five American fatalities in Iraq, the lowest since the war began in March 2003. In Mosul recently, I chatted with shopkeepers on the same corner where last January a Humvee was blown apart in front of me. In the Baghdad district of Ghazilia -- where last January snipers controlled streets awash in human waste -- I saw clean streets and soccer games. In Basra, the local British colonel was dining at a restaurant in the center of the bustling city.

For the first time in 15 trips across the country, I didn't hear one shot or a single blast from a roadside bomb. In Anbar Province, scene of the fiercest fighting during the war, the tribal sheiks insisted to Barack Obama on his recent visit that the U.S. Marines had to stay because they were the most trusted force.”

Continued
HERE


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Translation? $150,000

By Janet Evans
Monday, Aug 4 2008, 08:46 PM


The U.S. Army is in dire need of native Arabic translators and is willing to pay bonuses of $150,000 in hopes of keeping them.  And it isn’t just a matter of knowing the language…it’s a matter of knowing the culture of the region.  It’s a matter of knowing how the people think.  That’s why just learning the language and becoming a translator won’t cut it.


"This is a war not only against the US, but against our way of freedom," says Sergeant Madi, a native interpreter and US citizen who asked to be identified only by his surname due to security concerns for him and his family. "We have been fighting for over 16 years against Islamic extremism. It is also my war."

The matter of trust comes into play here also.  Can we totally trust the interpreter?  The U.S. is using interpreters who have been rushed through the Green Card process....pushed through just so they can be used for this purpose.  Can they be trusted?   Who is the ultimate judge here?

“The Army has also been quietly growing its own capability to recruit and train Arab-Americans and others as American soldiers to do high-level work overseas. The Army now has more than 600 such linguists, known by their military job designation as "09 Limas."
They come from places like Morocco, Egypt, and Sudan, but are recruited by the Army wherever there are large Arab-American populations, including Dearborn, Mich.; Miami; Dallas; Los Angeles; and Washington, D.C. The Defense Department is now authorized to put green-card holders on a fast track to US citizenship. The 09 Lima linguists are in so much demand that the Army is raising the number it will recruit next year, from 250 to 275. "
 

Then there are stories like this.  The ultimate judge?  Ask the commander…

"Yet when it comes to linguistic and cultural expertise, few can compare to a native speaker, defense officials say. "They hear things that are said around them, they are able to see things that others can't see," says Mr. Smith. Smith tells the story of a commander in Iraq who was using a civilian interpreter, or "terp" in the vernacular of the military, employed by a private contractor, as the American commander spoke to a local Iraqi. During the meeting, the civilian interpreted literally the words of the local Iraqi, who had told other Iraqis to feed the American commander parsley. But an 09 Lima standing nearby heard something different: feeding parsley to someone was a reference to an old expression in which parsley was fed to a bird to choke it to death. "He was pretty much giving an order to have the commander killed," says Smith. "Right there, a life was saved .... You can see just by knowing a bit of slang, being a native speaker, it can make a difference."

Read the entire article from the Christian Science Monitor

 HERE





 

The Secret Code is Zzz...Zzz...Zzz

By Janet Evans
Sunday, Aug 3 2008, 07:15 AM


Attention!  Wake up, for crying out loud!  I know it must be boring as hell, but there are many, many jobs that are that way.  Yours is life or death!

It’s a very good thing we did not have a nuclear threat while you were taking your little cat naps.

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

 Air force Missile Launch Crew Fell Asleep





 

DNA Forensics...Awesome

By Janet Evans
Saturday, Aug 2 2008, 10:30 PM


Truly a wonderful thing.  We really are fortunate to have DNA forensics.  What would we have done after September 11th if not for DNA forensics?  Tragically, many of the victims of the attack only had bone and tissue left.  For the families, this was the only way to identify their loved ones.

Criminals don’t like DNA forensics.  Although some criminals have been proven innocent due to this science.

The government has a mission.  It is to find and identify soldiers from past wars. 

MIAs…

Read the opening and then continue this interesting story from the Boston Globe

Army Major George Eyster didn't know - couldn't know - the two young men whose fighter planes disappeared into the jungle 64 years ago. But Eyster, a 32-year-old combat veteran of the Iraq war, feels like he does.

Gazing down over a sparkling harbor toward the caves where Japanese forces once hid from relentless American bombing, he thinks about the costs of war, then and now.

Eyster flew a helicopter gunship in Iraq, hovering only 50 feet above the charred battlegrounds of the Sunni Triangle and trying to take out enemy insurgents before they could kill American troops. Sometimes he succeeded. Sometimes he didn't.

Now, as a rumbling volcano spews ash in the distance, he stands on the killing fields of another war, where an earlier generation of young Americans sat in the terrifying loneliness of their cockpits, trying to take out enemy fighters defending the main Japanese base in the South Pacific.

Eyster, who traded in his military uniform for a polo shirt emblazoned with the signature black and white POW/MIA flag, came to Papua New Guinea to lead a group of soldiers - most of them Iraq and Afghanistan veterans - to try to find the remains of two World War II fliers who were just 19 and 25 when they were lost in 1944.

The expedition is part of the Pentagon's ambitious new initiative to locate tens of thousands of MIAs from World War II, many lost for decades in terrain that was considered unreachable, masked by unforgiving jungles or closed off by hostile regimes.

Armed with new technologies that can extract DNA from mere shards of tooth or bone, the searchers are trying to bring closure to a war that is starting to recede from living memory. For Eyster, the feeling of connection is palpable: The two men his team is endeavoring to find - Marion R. McCown and Allan S. Harrison III - might as well be the pilots he led into battle in Iraq.

"I think to myself, I have been in command of 18- and 19-year-old men - and women, in fact - flying helicopters across Iraq," Eyster says. "One of our aircraft was shot down over Baqubah, and we lost the two pilots in there.

"
Both of the World War II pilots, McCown and Harrison, now belong to military history. Neither has any known descendants. No one is waiting at home for the recovery of their remains. Eyster and his fellow soldiers are undertaking this mission for the pilots - and for themselves.

"In our own minds we are doing what we would want to be done for ourselves," Eyster says. "I have seen guys break their backs for the idea that we are going to bring this little shred of evidence back home because he is a comrade-in-arms, he is a buddy."

Continued...



 

Soldier Excels as Army Sniper

By Janet Evans
Friday, Jul 11 2008, 01:31 AM




Face of Defense: Canadian-Born Soldier Serves as Sniper in Iraq

By Army Staff Sgt. Matt Meadows
Special to American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, July 10, 2008 – Looking through a rifle sight into the eyes of an enemy -- no matter how evil that enemy is or how many innocent people he has killed -- and then pulling the trigger to end that enemy’s existence affects a soldier.

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Army Sgt. Murray Spence (left), an infantry scout sniper originally from Canada, reads the serial number of his M-24 sniper rifle as Army Staff Sgt. Tommy Peek, Spence’s platoon sergeant from Fort Polk, La., verifies the number during an inventory at Forward Operating Base Loyalty, Iraq, July 8, 2008. Both soldiers are assigned to Multinational Division Baghdad with Scout Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Matt Meadows, Multinational Division Baghdad
  

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.
It takes a certain type of person to perform the duties of a sniper.

Army Sgt. Murray Spence -- a 30-year-old sniper assigned to Multinational Division Baghdad with the 10th Mountain Division’s Scout Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team -- is a full-blooded Sioux who was raised by German Mennonites in Canada after he was put up for adoption at birth.

“They raised me as one of their own, and I consider them my family,” he said. “That’s the way it is. It really helped shape me to be who I am. They were really Christian, God-fearing people, and they instilled that in me. I am very thankful for that. Otherwise, I wouldn’t be here today.”

Whenever Spence is not on a mission, he likes to work out at the gymnasium and to go running. When Spence says he likes to run, he is not joking. He represented Fort Polk, La., in the Army 10-miler race in Washington in October 2007. His team placed first in the active-duty military mixed division, with a time of 1 hour, 4 minutes.

Nowadays, Spence spends most of his day cleaning his “kit” -- weapons and equipment -- and getting ready to go out on missions.

“Missions shift and change every day,” he explained. “It might be one thing for a day, or maybe one thing for a week or two weeks, and then again six hours before [we are scheduled to leave], we might get shifted to do something else.”

He spends his time getting ready, he said, “so if I have people relying on me, then they can rely on me.”

Spence said he is allowed to operate fairly independently, which took some getting used to. Although he coordinates movement with the battalion, he said, it’s good to have the freedom to choose his positions during missions to take advantage of his sniper-school training. “I definitely don’t just run around out there and do my own thing,” he said.

Being a sniper might seem to be a lonely existence. But even though Spence operates separately from other soldiers, he does not feel he is alone or unsupported.

“I don’t feel isolated at all,” he said. “The Wild Boar battalion treats me pretty well, and they make sure I’ve got what I need [and] all the support I need. As long as I’m doing the right things for the right people at the right time, everything just falls into place. It’s a pretty good system. I like it.”

The life of a sniper is challenging, to say the least. But Spence has been facing and overcoming challenges since the day he was born. He served as a reservist in the Canadian military for two years, assigned to a rifle company called the Royal Winnipeg Rifles. After leaving Canadian military service, Spence tried to return, he said, but the process was taking too long, so he enlisted in the U.S. Army. He decided to become an infantry scout and earned honor graduate honors in his sniper school class.

After I got out of the Canadian army, Spence said, he thought his military days were over. “But I got into construction,” he explained, “and just got bored. Somehow, I ended up here. Somehow I ended up a sniper in Iraq.”

Spence overcame the sweltering August summer heat of Georgia in 2007 and the challenge of mathematics to leave the sniper school with top honors. He was 28 years old when he attended the school, years removed from high school math classes. “Getting back to the math and how to figure out calculations … on the fly was pretty tough,” he admitted, “but it was worth it.”

If Spence had had a little money at the time, he might not have joined the Army. His life almost took a turn toward a much different military lifestyle.

“I toyed with the idea of joining the French Foreign Legion before I came here, actually,” he said. “I was about $200 short of buying a plane ticket to Marseilles, France, and that still interests me a little bit, just for the adventure. I might have enough of the Army lifestyle after this. We’ll see what happens.”

Spence is more than just a long-range shooter. Army Staff Sgt. Tommy Peek, Spence’s platoon sergeant from Fort Polk, said Spence has provided protection for their battalion commander while moving throughout the Wild Boar operating environment and also has helped many less-experienced soldiers.

“He is a very diverse soldier,” Peek said, explaining Spence was a crew-served-weapons expert with the M-240 and 50-caliber machine guns and the Mk-19 while assigned to Company D. “All his information and guidance to the younger soldiers we had actually helped a lot in their mentorship and their understanding of the crew-served weapons systems.

“He is a cut above the rest,” Peek continued. “He is not just the basic soldier. He has a lot more to offer than just long-range target acquisition.”

Working with Spence is a “delight” because of his consistent professionalism and guidance to younger soldiers, which makes Peek’s job much easier, he said.

Because of his Canadian birth, Spence could not be considered for Special Forces, and several attempts to go to Ranger school have not worked out for one reason or another. But whatever Spence does in his life after he leaves Iraq, it is a safe bet it will not be boring.

“So, I guess it’s time to move on and see what else is out there -- something interesting, something challenging,” he said. “Hopefully, [I’ll] try to become an underwater welder or something like that. It’s different. It’s challenging. It’s operating on your own a lot. It’s pretty dangerous, I think.”

Being on his own a lot and having to do what he does, Spence said, his religious faith is very important in sustaining him and the majority of his sniper comrades. “It helps me day to day, every day, all day,” he said.

Spence’s message is a simple one. He would like people to know he and other Army snipers are not heartless, hardened gunmen.

“We are not just stone-cold, steely-eyed killers without souls,” he said. “We are just regular people like everybody else.”

(Army Staff Sgt. Matt Meadows serves in Multinational Division Baghdad with the 10th Mountain Division’s 4th Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office.)

Related Sites:
Multinational Corps Iraq
Multinational Force Iraq
Click photo for screen-resolution image Army Sgt. Murray Spence, an infantry scout sniper originally from Canada, lays out his “kit” for inventory in front of his battalion’s headquarters at Forward Operating Base Loyalty, Iraq, July 8, 2008. Spence is assigned to Multinational Division Baghdad with Scout Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Matt Meadows, Multinational Division Baghdad  
Download screen-resolution   
Download high-resolution


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More On Why We Fight

By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Jul 2 2008, 07:11 AM




"U.S. Army Task Force Regulators 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment Staff Sgt. Fred Hampton, of Lexington, Ky., kneels on a knee to talk with a young Iraqi boy at the future site of Regular 6 Park in the Thawra 1 section of the Sadr City District of Baghdad on June 20. Photo: Tech Sgt. Cohen Young, Joint Combat Camera Center Iraq."






The children warm your heart…they’re the same no matter what country…no matter where in the world.




from Soldier's Angels





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I Guess Those MREs Aren't Any Good Anymore : (

By Janet Evans
Monday, Jun 30 2008, 07:35 PM


 

My nephew served during Operation Desert Storm and brought home left over MREs for some reason….along with other souvenirs.  He left a boxful of stuff from that time with me…some of it pretty interesting. 

At that time, I remember bringing a few MREs to my kid’s classes for them to see what they were like, and to taste them.  I recall that each one of them always had a mini bottle of Tabasco sauce in them.  They were pretty bland meals.

 

It looks like since Desert Storm, they are trying to improve those meals.  They’ve even dropped them for people in need during disasters.

The US Army has a taste tester who makes sure the meals are just right.


“Like any chef, Jeanette Kennedy's pallet has become so refined over the years that, given any dish, she can single out virtually every ingredient – the pinch of black pepper, the hint of oregano, or the vegetable oil subbing for olive oil.

On a recent morning she was testing a slab of pound cake, her face blank as she silenced her other senses and focused on taste and texture. After a good long chew, Ms. Kennedy spit the cake into a paper cup – an indelicacy that was not a comment on the cake (which she deemed pretty good), but the result of a high calorie occupational hazard. This pound cake is no tea party trifle; it's combat cuisine – part of an MRE, Meal Ready to Eat – designed to fuel soldiers lugging 100-pound packs all day.

A food technologist at the US Army Natick Soldier Systems Center (NSSC) west of Boston, Kennedy faces creative challenges unlike those before any other chef. Meals can't just taste good; they've got to last ... for three years stored at 80 degrees F., be capable of withstanding chemical or biological attacks, and survive a 10-story free fall.”

 Read the entire article from Christian Science Monitor      
 

Hmm…3-year shelf life.  Operation Desert Storm …1991….I guess I better go see if those MREs in the souvenir box have burst open! 

There might be some funky noodle casserole in there. With those sheets of toilet paper (yes, they have some of that in with the MREs).





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The reason they take that LEAP

By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Jun 25 2008, 11:50 AM



Don’t Quit!
 

Go For It!





 

Support Our Troops!



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"A Wily Enemy"

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Jun 19 2008, 07:07 AM








Terrorists Use Roadside Bombs as Strategic Weapon, General Says

By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON
, June 18, 2008 – Terrorists in Afghanistan and Iraq employ improvised explosive devices as a weapon of choice to sap the willpower of the American people, a senior U.S. officer said here today. Terrorists use IEDs “as a strategic weapon to wear our will down, because our soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines can whip this thing, tactically,” Army Lt. Gen. Thomas F. Metz, director of the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization, told attendees at the 2008 Joint Warfighting Conference.

Metz compared the enemy’s strategy today in Afghanistan and Iraq to what occurred more than 30 years ago in Southeast Asia, when North Vietnamese leaders also employed irregular warfare to grind down the U.S. public’s desire to continue the Vietnam War. The United States and its allies now are involved in a global, irregular war against terrorism that’s likely to last 20 to 30 years, Metz said.

“And the enemy in that warfare will use asymmetric weapons against us; he will try to figure out where we don’t want to fight,” he added.

Metz, a past commander of Multinational Corps Iraq, said his organization has scored many successes in its battle against roadside bombs. Various jamming devices, he said, have proved capable of thwarting many terrorist attempts to detonate IEDs by radio signal.

However, the terrorists are a wily enemy that change IED-detonation procedures in reaction to U.S. countermeasures, Metz said. For example, he said, the terrorists often alternate between using wireless and hard-wired detonation methods to set off their roadside bombs.

The enemy also employs mentally challenged people as suicide bombers, Metz said. In these instances, he noted, the charges often are detonated by a remote device when the bombers reach their targets.

“We’re fighting in an irregular way because the enemy doesn’t want to mess with us in a conventional way,” Metz said. The terrorists, he said, realize they can’t compete with the U.S. military on a conventional battlefield. However, al-Qaida, the Taliban and other terrorists are relentless foes who telegraph their plans in their writings and messages to the world, Metz pointed out.

“Make no mistake about it – these thugs write what they’re going to do, just as clearly as Adolf Hitler wrote “Mein Kampf,” Metz said. “Mein Kampf,” meaning “My Struggle” in English, was written a decade before Hitler came to power in Germany in 1933. The book clearly outlined Hitler’s plans for world domination and destruction of the Jewish people.

Terrorists use IEDs as a strategic tool to “get us to quit, so that the caliphate can rise up and the thugs can take over,” Metz said. It’s therefore paramount, Metz emphasized, that using the IED as a strategic weapon doesn’t lead terrorists to decide to use it to attack Americans in the homeland.

Meanwhile, U.S. forces “are absolutely confident they can win” in Afghanistan and Iraq, Metz said, adding that American servicemembers “are a super-quality bunch of men and women.” U.S. servicemembers can win the fight in Afghanistan and Iraq if they’re supported properly, Metz emphasized.

“And that is what I want to do with the Joint IED Defeat Organization,” he said.






 

Operation Homefront

By Janet Evans
Monday, Jun 9 2008, 11:39 AM




America Supports You: Distillery Raises Glass to Troops, Support Group

By Samantha L. Quigley
American Forces Press Service



WASHINGTON
, June 6, 2008 – With symbolic glasses raised on high, Jim Beam distillery offered a toast to U.S. servicemembers and their families with a $175,000 donation to Operation Homefront. Operation Homefront provides emergency assistance and morale to the nation’s troops, to the families they leave behind, and to wounded warriors when they return home.

In supporting the organization, Jim Beam honors it as part of the brand’s renewed top-down commitment to its own original values of true character, integrity and doing the right thing, Jim Beam officials said in a news release announcing the donation.

"Jim Beam is doing the right thing by helping us keep military families and wounded warriors from homelessness and to keep these families safe and secure," said Amy Palmer, executive vice president of operations and development for Operation Homefront. "We're so grateful for this donation, which will allow us to enhance our support of the brave men and women in uniform and their families who are experiencing hardships."

The admiration is mutual.

“We're so proud of Operation Homefront and all that they do, so we're putting it right on our bottle,” said Fred Noe, seventh-generation Beam distiller and self-described Beam family ambassador. “A special limited-edition Operation Homefront label is going on more than 500,000 bottles of Jim Beam bourbon."

In addition, Jim Beam has partnered with the ABC Fine Wine and Spirits chain in Florida to celebrate America and support the nation’s military families.

“Jim Beam has the heritage of the only distilled spirit indigenous to America,” said Andy Abernathy, senior vice president, ABC Fine Wine and Spirits. “As the largest bourbon retailer in the state, we are thrilled we can show respect for our country while providing our customers with an opportunity for them to support Operation Homefront.”

ABC Fine Wine and Spirits will donate $1 for every 750 milliliter bottle of Jim Beam White and Jim Beam Black sold between June 1 and July 6. Patrons also will have a chance to learn more about the military and Operation Homefront at ABC Fine Wine and Spirit stores throughout the Sunshine State.

Operation Homefront and military personnel will greet customers at various locations, which will have military vehicles, including Humvees and tanks, on display, through July 6.

Jim Beam also is inviting its customers of legal drinking age to support the troops by posting a toast on its “The Stuff Inside” Web site. Toasts will appear on the site until July 4. Of those submitted, best toast or toasts that capture the spirit of “the stuff inside” may be considered for use in Jim Beam advertising, officials said.

Bottles of Jim Beam featuring the limited edition Operation Homefront labels are on store shelves now and are estimated to be available until July 4.

Operation Homefront is a supporter of America Supports You, a Defense Department program connecting citizens and companies with servicemembers and their families serving at home and abroad.






 TheStuffInside.com.  


For more information, please visit www.operationhomefront.net.




 

 

Get Out of My Way....

By Janet Evans
Saturday, Jun 7 2008, 09:10 AM




….I’m Rambo, damn it!







Too bad there isn’t a way to make sure these weapons never get in the hands of the enemy.  But that’s impossible.
 

The close-up of the ammunition was pretty chilling.  

In the end, it's just like when the military used to throw a grenade into a building before they went in...now, they use this weapon instead.



Don't forget about military  Robobugs .


If you're interested, here's a link to  BLACKWATER  Ã






 

We Can’t Ignore Positive News

By Janet Evans
Monday, Jun 2 2008, 04:15 PM



I know…It’s a war.

There’s nothing positive about war.

Well, we have to mention when things are looking up, because the media tends to ignore that.

U.S. troop deaths in Iraq fell to their lowest level last month since the 2003 invasion and officials said on Sunday improved security also helped the country boost oil production in May to a post-war
high.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Iraq's oil minister credited better security for the two milestones, which illustrated a dramatic turnabout in the fortunes of a country on the brink of all-out sectarian civil war just 12 months ago.


Read the story from Reuters

Iraq hits milestones on U.S. troop deaths and oil  
   í
  here


Some photos of those who serve…


ACADEMY FLYOVER
U.S. Naval Academy graduates cheer as the Navy's Blue Angels fly over Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Md., during their commencement ceremony, May 23, 2008. U.S. Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was the ceremony's guest speaker.
Defense Dept. photo by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley