Tag Archives: Iraq

Women soldiers

A good compilation of photos of military women, some former or current beauty queens (including one from Texas), others who could be, all serving, most in Iraq. Worth a look.

Knowing your enemy

Michael Yon, reporting on the latest US discoveries in Baqubah, where troops are bringing security to the populace:

"The official reported that on a couple of occasions in Baqubah, al Qaeda invited to lunch families they wanted to convert to their way of thinking. In each instance, the family had a boy, he said, who was about eleven years old. As Lt. David Wallach interpreted the man’s words, I saw Wallach go blank and silent. He stopped interpreting for a moment. I asked Wallach, ‘What did he say?’ Wallach said that at these luncheons, the families were sat down to eat. And then their boy was brought in with his mouth stuffed. The boy had been baked. Al Qaeda served the boy to his family."

I wonder why the retreaters in Congress think this sort of thing will stop if we withdraw. How can they not care? David Kilcullen, in the Small Wars Journal, reports on what we’re up to in the surge.

UPDATE  Some of Wretchard’s commenters think the official was telling an old lie, but W. brings out family stories of Japanese atrocities in the Phillipines in WW2. Meanwhile, the BBC finds Petraeus’s moves hopeful, if possibly too late. If so, I think we can blame the Pentagon.

Someone you should know

Badger Six presents an Army Commendation Medal, with V for valor, to a young medic, SGT Jesse Kelsch. I didn’t know you could get a V with an ARCOM. Shows how much I know, I guess.

Teflon Don’s leave

"It’s dusty, around 115-120 degrees, and generally not as nice as Idaho, Oregon, and Alaska. Now, of course, I’m back in Iraq, where we have all of that and bullets, too."

But he had fun on home leave in the aforementioned places, cooking, attending a wedding and doing a little target shooting. Pix and words here

Austin advises Iraq

“’They (the Iraqis) have their own system and we are working within that system with Austin leveraging their experience and processes. There are things inherent in government concepts that just work,’ he said, explaining that there are models in place within the realm of civics that are essential to the running of any government."

I’m not sure I’d call Austin’s a city government that works, much less a model, considering its perpetual problems: the police periodically shooting minorities to death, the uneven, pot-holed roads that never seem to be repaired, the two months it took us to get a replacement garbage can, despite repeated pleas, and the interminable council meetings due to all the protests of this or that. Doesn’t Iraq have enough problems already?

SSG Jimy Malone, R.I.P.

Staff Sergeant Malone, of Wills Point, Texas, a small town east of Dallas, "was G.I. from a very young age. His grandmother, Monah Malone, said he talked about joining the military after watching ‘Top Gun’ as a boy. He picked a specific branch – the army – in seventh grade and followed through on his dream after finishing high school."

Almost the whole town, a place known for its wild roses, turned out for his memorial service.

Combat lesson

Back in Iraq from home leave, Teflon Don counts the ways combat has changed him:

"I own the ground I walk on, and you’ll have to go through me if you want to take it. I’ve made it through nine months in what was once called the ‘triangle of death’; that area of Iraq that last year saw nearly thirty percent of those serving within it earn the Purple Heart. I’ve learned, as I think most combat soldiers do, to truly ‘not sweat the small stuff’. If a situation doesn’t threaten death or injury, I can’t trouble myself to care too much about it."