SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (364731)2/28/2003 2:25:01 PM
From: Rock_nj  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
It sure didn't seem that way to me. Reading to schoolchildren while the country is experiencing an unprecedented attack is harldy acting like the Commander in Chief in my view. I'd be very concerned if Clinton had done the same. It would make me think something is very wrong with the picture I am seeing. And why no planes were scambled to defend DC? Even though it was known that a plane had been hijacked and was heading back towards DC and the Twin Towers had already been hit? I know they scrambled some planes from a base in Southern Virginia that didn't get there on time. But, isn't Andrews Air Force Base (just outside of DC) suppossed to be where the planes that defend DC are based?



To: jlallen who wrote (364731)2/28/2003 2:29:06 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Just another rockhead, a pinrockhead... LOL...
Iraqi soldiers defecting
Morale is low in the Iraqi army and many soldiers are preparing white flags of surrender, we are told by someone in northern Iraq who recently interviewed two defectors from Saddam Hussein's army.
One was a captain who defected from the 5th Mechanized Division of the 1st Corps, based near the northern city of Kirkuk. The captain told our informant that the heavy division was only 35 percent combat-effective. The captain said morale was so low that younger soldiers are speaking openly about surrendering - before the first shot has been fired.
A second soldier, a senior noncommissioned officer, defected from the same division's 34th Brigade, based south of the northern city of Mosul. This soldier said that of the 28 tanks in his care, only six were working. The others were broken down or otherwise in need of repair. "He said the whole division was at about 25 percent effectiveness and most soldiers were hiding their white flags," said our source, who spoke recently to both defectors. Intelligence sources in northern Iraq, where both CIA Special Operations Group officers and Army Special Forces are active, said there have been dozens of defectors in the past several weeks. There also are reports that Saddam's henchmen have issued orders to commanders to shoot any deserters they can catch.
The poor state of Saddam's regular army recalls that
of some units in the 1991 Persian Gulf war, when Iraqi
soldiers were so eager to surrender that some gave up to
an Italian film crew that was covering the war.

Special ops
We hear that Thomas W. O'Connell is the pick to
become the Pentagon's assistant secretary of defense for
special operations and low intensity conflict (SOIC). Now
an employee of defense contractor Raytheon Co., Mr.
O'Connell is a former special operations commando and
CIA analyst.
He declined to comment yesterday through a Raytheon
spokesman.
The Pentagon last year tried to get rid of the SOIC
post, but the move was rejected by lawmakers who want
special operations to have an advocate in the Pentagon.
Our sources say the Pentagon now plans to ask
Congress to give it more flexibility in deciding what duties
the assistant secretary performs.

Sink CINC
It's official. The law of the land. CINC is no more.
A message went out of the Pentagon on Feb. 20 from
Gen. Richard B. Myers, Joint Chiefs chairman, telling the
commands to stop using "commander in chief" or CINC, to
describe four-star regional military commanders.
From now on, commanders such as Gen. Tommy
Franks, head of U.S. Central Command, will be known as
"commander." They will appear in acronyms as CDR. The
deputy commander will appear as DCDR.
The message accomplishes Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld's goal of ending any confusion
between the president, who constitutionally is the
commander in chief, and regional commanders.
"The secretary of defense signed a memorandum
stating that the title 'commander in chief' shall be used
only to connote or indicate the president of the United
States of America," the Myers message states. "The
memorandum also discontinued use of the acronym
'CINC' for military commanders and provided a list of new
titles to be used."
Gen. Myers offers further instruction:
"The abbreviation 'CDR' will be used to replace the
acronym 'CINC' and DCDR will replace 'DCINC.' To avoid
confusion and associate 'CDR' with the appropriate
echelon, the following writing conventions will be adopted
in all joint publications, messages and general
correspondence. When referring to the commander of a
combatant command, 'CDR' will be used in conjunction
with the organizational name. Example, commander, U.S.
European Command, will be referred to as
CDRUSEUCOM. When referring to the collective group
formerly known as 'CINCS,' the term 'Combatant
Commanders' will be used ... All organizational messaging
addresses must be updated not later than 28 February
2003."

Secret fight
The pretrial hearing for Air Force Majs. Harry Schmidt
and William Umbach may be over, but that has not
stopped the defense attorneys and prosecutors from
continuing the fight.
Air Force Col. John Odom, the lead government
attorney, has accused Charles Gittins, Maj. Schmidt's
defense attorney, of submitting a final written argument to
the judge that contains classified information. The two
pilots are charged with manslaughter for mistakenly
bombing Canadians in Afghanistan in April, killing four
soldiers.
Mr. Gittins vehemently denies his brief contains any
secret data. He says Col. Odom went so far as to have
authorities search the laptops of attorneys for Air Force
defendants. He said one defense counsel is now under
investigation.
"It's intimidation because we were more effective in our
brief than they expected," Mr. Gittins tells us.
Col. Odom sent an e-mail to military lawyers that said,
in part, "If you have a printed-out version of the briefs,
they should be appropriately secured, since they contain
classified information (classified 'Secret') which has been
distributed in an inappropriate manner. Obviously, any
release of the briefs to news media for any purpose by
any counsel would constitute a federal offense."

Keeping command
Air Force headquarters at the Pentagon, in a daily
message report, told officers Monday that commanders
are the key to the military criminal-justice system.
"Taking the commander out of the system is a formula
for battlefield defeat," the "Aim Points" message says.
"Commanders have unique insight into their people
and what is needed to maintain high morale and
effectiveness; this unique insight makes the UCMJ
different from the civilian criminal-justice system by
vesting commanders with broad authority over
disciplinary matters."
washtimes.com