Category Archives: Troops

Garry Owen

Michael Yon’s latest dispatch from Custer’s old 7th Cavalry patrolling in Mosul, Iraq, with photos:

"If Americans really wanted to know their Army, American kids would be swapping trading cards of the battalion commanders and command sergeant majors, company commanders and 1st sergeants, and those legions of unknown squad-leaders who earn three Purple Hearts and decorations for valor before they are old enough to rent cars back home."

And unlike Lurch, the braggart soldier, these 3-purple heart squad leaders don’t go home after 4 months. 

More on Karbala

Omar at Iraq the Model isn’t the only one who thinks the Karbala attack, which killed Army CPT Brian Freeman and abducted four others who were later murdered, was an Iranian operation. Freelance embed Bill Roggio lines up and knocks over the dominoes:

"This raid required specific intelligence, in depth training for the agents to pass as American troops, resources to provide for weapons, vehicles, uniforms, identification, radios and other items needed to successfully carry out the mission."

Jimbo at Black Five agrees: "The location of the target, the sophistication of the operation, the lack of beheading, all point to a precision raid by highly-trained regular military forces. Iran did this."

So, are we finally going to strike back at the principal supporters of terrorism in the world or are we going to continue to play pattycake with the toothless dictator’s club of the UN? If Bush doesn’t mind thumbing his nose at the anti-war Democrat Congress over Iraq, surely he won’t quail at finally doing what he should have done back in 2003–hitting Iran and its crony-in-evil Syria?

Senator, it’s nuts over here

Connecticut Democrat Sen. Chris Dodd is using Army reserve CPT Brian Freeman’s death as an argument for withdrawal from Iraq. Dodd says Freeman, killed last weekend in an assault some say was engineered by Iran, passionately complained to Dodd when the senator visited Iraq that Freeman was having to do State Department instead of Army work:

“’Senator, it’s nuts over here,’ Dodd quoted Freeman in the Senate on Friday. ‘Soldiers are being asked to do work we’re not trained to do.  I’m doing work that the State Department people are far more prepared to do in fostering democracy, but they’re not allowed to come off the bases because it’s too dangerous here.  It doesn’t make any sense.’”

This fits in with previous reporting that the State Department and other agencies are leaving the work in Iraq to the Pentagon. President Bush mentioned in his State of the Union speech that the rest of government needed to do more. Even Gen. Petraeus, the new coalition commander in Baghdad recently complained about it in his Senate confirmation hearings. Sometimes it looks like the whole American government has become unhinged and incompetent: place-holders and buck-passers with their own private political agendas. The Jihadis must be loving it.

Bullets instead of kisses

For more than a year, the Bush administration has been quietly playing kissy-face with the mad mullahs, doing a little overlooking of their high-explosive coming into Iraq to kill Americans and capturing-and-releasing (without harming) their agents. All to try and convince the mad mullahs that Americans are ever so nice, if the mullahs will just pick up and go home. No need to have a war, don’t you know. Now, supposedly, it’s going to be open season on Iranian soldiers in Iraq. It makes me want to scream. Do we have any American politicians who aren’t morons?

I am the true cost of freedom

More dispatches from Walter Reed by J.R. Salzman in his recovery from losing his right arm and ring finger of his left hand in an IED explosion in Iraq last fall. His wife is doing the typing in this amazing and poignant kind of blogging:

"I realize there are a lot of other people out there who are worse off than me. I am not asking for sympathy here. All I am trying to do is let you know what it is like to experience this. I have constant phantom pain in my arm where it feels like my hand is still there, and someone is sawing on it with a knife."

My Confederate great grandfather lost the lower part of one leg to a cannon ball in the Wilderness battle, May 6, 1864, went home and spent much of the rest of his life wearing a wooden peg while plowing behind a mule. I always wondered what that was like. J.R. brings that and many other things into clear focus.

Via Black Five 

The plan behind the “no plan”

Bush’s Democrat and Republican critics have repeated the same canard now over and over again for years: Bush has no plan, no coherent strategy for Iraq. It’s all hit or miss, etc.

Former Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan even quotes Nebraska Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel reiterating the notion and praises him for having the guts to speak out–even if a quick stroll through the Small Wars Journal could have shown her that his supposedly gutsy move was based on a false assumption.

Some of the journal’s counterinsurgeny strategists, at least, have done their homework and concluded that there not only is a plan, and a coherent strategy, in Bush’s "surge," with its focus on securing the population of Bahgdad and al-Anbar, but that it has a track record of success:

"The new strategy reflects counterinsurgency best practice as demonstrated over dozens of campaigns in the last several decades: enemy-centric approaches that focus on the enemy, assuming that killing insurgents is the key task, rarely succeed. Population-centric approaches, that center on protecting local people and gaining their support, succeed more often…in the new strategy what matters is providing security and order for the population, rather than directly targeting the enemy – though this strategy will effectively marginalize them."

It’s also significant that the Army’s guru of counterinsurgency, Gen. David Petreaus, will be the one to implement the new approach. Read it all here

CPT Sean Edward Lyerly, R.I.P.

"A graduate of Stratford High School in Houston and Texas A&M University, Lyerly, 31, of Pflugerville [northeast of Austin] is the first Texas Guard aviator killed in Iraq…A father of a 3-year-old boy, Zackary, Lyerly was a fly fishing and motorcycle enthusiast. In eight years as a couple, [his wife Csilla] said, they never argued: ‘Our marriage was a fairy tale. I woke up every day thinking my life was too good to be true.’"