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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Threshold who wrote (15483)3/25/2003 10:17:55 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
IN THE FIELD: With the 3rd Infantry

A Test of 'Endurance and Discipline'

F R O M T H E F R O N T L I N E S



[William Branigin is a reporter on the Virginia desk of the Washington Post. He is embedded with the 3rd Infantry Division.]

By William Branigin
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, March 25, 2003; 9:38 AM

WITH U.S. FORCES IN CENTRAL IRAQ, March 25 - It seemed like the convoy to nowhere.

With the combination of a severe sandstorm, unfamiliar terrain, blackout conditions and driver fatigue working against them, about 40 vehicles of the Army's 3rd Infantry Division took 10 hours to travel 27 miles last night and early this morning.

After setting out at 6:30 p.m. yesterday from a stopping point where they were delayed by a mortar attack, a column of angry, frustrated and exhausted soldiers riding in tanks, Bradley Fighting Vehicles, fuel trucks, medical tracks, Humvees and various other support vehicles finally joined the rest of their units at a dusty encampment southwest of Baghdad at about 4:30 a.m. today.

"It was a test of endurance and discipline," said Capt. Steve Hommel, 41, of San Diego, the chaplain of the division's 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment.

Drained by an armored road march that U.S. commanders said was unprecedented in its size, speed and distance traveled, drivers kept falling asleep at the wheel and veering off their route or nodding off during pauses. When soldiers behind them would fight through a blinding sandstorm on foot to wake a sleeping driver and get him moving again, another driver elsewhere in the convoy would fall asleep, and the whole ordeal would start over.

Traveling part of the route off-road, drivers would also lose sight of the vehicle in front of them in the sandstorm and veer off in another direction.

Weighing on commanders' minds, amid the confusion, was the fate of a Sunday convoy whose drivers got lost in southern Iraq; seven were killed and five were captured. As last night's convoy moved in fits and starts, with long pauses while those in charge tried to get everyone moving at once, the frustration built to a boiling point. Angry exchanges, curses and threats of physical harm crackled across radio headsets in the darkness.

"This is not the way to project military power," one sergeant snapped as he tried to get his soldiers moving together.

"This is what you get when you go three days with catnaps and don't let soldiers get their rest," another complained.

The difficulties stood in sharp contrast to what commanders said was, overall, a highly successful road march from Kuwait north into central Iraq.

The U.S. task force consisting of the 3rd ID and elements of V Corps moved more than 7,000 vehicles 240 miles in two days, according to Capt. Anthony Butler, 32, of Helena, Montana, the commander of the 3rd Battalion's headquarters company.

"It's the largest armored convoy in history," said Hommel, a Gulf War combat veteran who has since given up arms to become a chaplain.

Driving with no headlights through the sandstorm over open desert, "you couldn't see anything," said Capt. William Marm, the 3rd Battalion maintenance officer in charge of the convoy. "When guys can't see anything, they stop." Making matters worse, some of the vehicles did not have radios, making it hard to tell who was awake and who was holding up the convoy.

"I can't keep my eyes open," a bleary-eyed Pfc. David Turner, driver of an M88 recovery vehicle, told his sergeant at one point on the radio. "I'm falling asleep while driving standing up," said Turner, 21, of Binghamton, N.Y.

The commander of an M1A1 Abrams tank radioed that he was lost, couldn't see anybody and was almost out of fuel. It turned out he was only a few hundred yards from the perimeter of the encampment at that point.

Upon arrival at the destination, officers called a meeting to ream out drivers who had delayed the convoy.

"We basically chewed some ass," Marm said. "We were pissed off because people were sleeping, getting stuck and not letting people know they weren't moving."

Given the sleep deprivation taking a toll on the troops, commanders decided today would be a day to "refit, refuel and rearm," Butler said.

But even as soldiers worked to get their equipment in order, there were continued efforts to, in the current military parlance, "shape the battlefield" for an upcoming offensive aimed at toppling President Saddam Hussein.

Through the early morning and into the afternoon, the booms of U.S. artillery could be heard echoing across the arid plains.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

washingtonpost.com



To: Threshold who wrote (15483)3/25/2003 10:42:16 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
Bush, You Are Disgracing America: Resign or Be
Impeached

By Bernard Weiner
25 March 2003

Dear George W. Bush: Congratulations! With your decision to bomb and invade Iraq, you have made yourself
both an enemy of the state and an international war criminal. Everyone has been telling you not to do it, that
attacking Iraq -absent an overt provocation, and without domestic and international consensus behind you- is
neither in America's best interests, nor in the best interests of world order and the global economy.

That everyone includes your father, the former President, along with his security advisors; your top military
brass; your longtime allies; the Security Council of the United Nations; the world's major religious leaders;
millions of ordinary citizens marching for peace across the world; leaders of Arab and other Muslim countries;
an increasing number of conservative and moderate Republicans; etc. etc.

The fact that even with your threat-and-bribe machine working overtime, you couldn't even round up a
majority on the Security Council to give some cover to your desire to "shock-and-awe" your way into war
should have told you something. Clearly, people are afraid of America's military power, but you wield
absolutely no moral authority -zilch, nada, none. Few wish to follow you into the maw of immorality; few wish
to wind up with you in the war-crimes dock at The Hague.

After the terrorist attack on 9/11, America owned the sympathy of the world; now the US is a pariah nation, a
rogue state. At the time of the terrorist attack of 9/11, America was solvent; now the American economy is in
tatters (and still you want to cut taxes again, plunging the country into further debt). In September of 2001,
America was a country devoted to the Constitutional protections of due process of law; now, using "national
security" as a cover, the US is lurching into a neo-fascist, Big Brother police state.

In short, Mr. Bush, you and your policies are destined to bring ruin not only to yourself but to our beloved
country as well, and to much of the world. It is time for you to resign the office into which you've been placed
-I was about to say resign "for the good of the country," but clearly that concept has little meaning for you. If
you choose not to resign, rest assured that you will be impeached.

All your policies seem designed with other agendas in mind: "For the good of" your financial backers and
corporate supporters; "for the good of" your ideological friends; "for the good" of your re-election campaign.
Even if we were to believe your professed motivations -that, in the end, we will come to see that your policies
were initiated for the good of the country- the way you're going about it demonstrates appalling ignorance,
gross incompetence, and an insulting manipulation of the American people.

You seem consumed by self-righteousness -believing that you, and you alone, are the servant of God in this
desperate march to violence (leading to the obvious question: How are you different from Osama bin Laden
and other such fundamentalist terrorists?)- and by your stubborn adherence to a worldview presented to you
by right-wing extremists.

For more than 10 years, these Project for the New American Century thinkers -whom you have appointed to
positions of great power in your Administration, who now are your Administration- have been urging
American leaders to grab-and-take in the world, since the US is the lone world Superpower.

Somehow, they think only of how easy it will be to conquer militarily, and thus to control the world's natural
resources and to keep any other competitor-states from arising. But these rightwing ideologues have no
sense of what is moral, or even what the consequences of their theories will be, once put into action.

Once before, in Vietnam, an arrogant United States thought itself unbeatable in a war with a smaller, weaker
nation. It possessed all the napalm, all the high-tech bombs, all the B-52s. But it lacked some essentials: a
sense of what was right, a deep understanding of the culture it was attacking, a supportive citizenry at home.
The US was humiliated and forced to withdraw, and, to this day, its brave soldiers never knew why they were
supposed to be there.

The US may well win the Iraqi battle you're unleashing. But, once again, America will lose the war. The world
will unite in its hatred and disdain for your policies. The already shaky US and global economies could well
dive into a deep Depression. Terrorism will flower. Friendly governments will be overthrown. Domestic
dissent will be tenacious. The United Nations may well falter as an institution.

In short, there is little good that will come of this, even if you are gone and Saddam Hussein and his
tyrannical, dangerous reign are ended and his weapons destroyed. The damage done to America's
reputation, and to the interwoven economies of the world, will be totally disproportionate to this "victory."
Pre-emptively, you will have unleashed the cruel gales of war, and you will be carried away by those same
winds into the dustbin of history, spat upon by ordinary citizens and leaders alike for your stubborn
adherence to nonsensical policies that are inimical to America's traditions and best interests.

The Third Reich that was supposed to last a thousand years was over in a dozen. The New American Century
in the world, the Pax Americana, will last less than that. And all for greed and gluttony -for power, for control,
for pre-eminence. What a waste of blood and treasure and good will.

The irony is that you probably could have accomplished virtually all your goals with traditional diplomacy and
politics. It might have taken a bit more work and creativity, but the world would no doubt have followed the
gentle, guiding lead of the world's sole remaining Superpower. But, no, with your incompetent arrogance and
bullying approach, and your impatient haste to grab what you could get quickly, you accomplished little more
than alienating your friends and animating your enemies. And thus began your slide into oblivion.

If it was just you, we could tolerate, even enjoy, your fast trip into history's dumpster. But you're going to
take a good share of the world with you, and you will never be forgiven for that -for all the bleeding and pain
and social dislocation you will engender- and for how you've besmirched the good name of the United States
of America. Shame on you, sir. You have disgraced yourself, your country, our Constitutional form of
government. Those sins against America and the world will be your legacy forever.

Copyright © 2003 by the News Insider and Bernard Weiner

Bernard Weiner is a poet and playwright, with a Ph.D. in government & international relations. He has
taught at various universities, been a writer/editor with the San Francisco Chronicle for nearly 20 years, and
now co-edits The Crisis Papers.