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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (65052)8/6/2005 9:46:53 PM
From: SkywatcherRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
HOW THESE OHIO PEOPLE CONTINUE TO EVEN THINK ABOUT VOTING FOR BUSH AND PUBLICANS IS BEYOND ME!
Ohio Families Fed up with Casualties in Battalion That Lost 21 in Six Days
By Joe Danborn
The Associated Press

Thursday 04 August 2005

Columbus, Ohio - Rosemary Palmer and her husband were making plans to attend memorial services for six Marine reservists killed earlier this week - five of them from the same battalion as her son, Lance Cpl. Edward Schroeder - when two uniformed servicemen came down her street.

It was her family's turn.

"We knew. They didn't even get a chance to knock," Palmer said.

For relatives of those in the 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, there has been a sudden spike in such grim visits from uniformed servicemen.

Schroeder, 23, of Cleveland, and 13 more Marines from the Ohio-based battalion were killed Wednesday along with a civilian interpreter in the deadliest roadside bombing in Iraq.

The Marines' deaths, along with two others slain July 28, brought the battalion's toll to 21 in a week. Eleven of those were part of the same Columbus-based unit, Lima Company, that lost four Marines in a single day in May.

Pat Wilsox, who manages a doughnut shop by the battalion's headquarters in the Cleveland suburb of Brook Park, threw her hand over her heart when she heard of the latest deaths.

"Oh my God," she said softly. "I'm all for protection but this is getting a little bit ridiculous."

Lance Cpl. Timothy Michael Bell Jr., 22, of West Chester in suburban Cincinnati, and Lance Cpl. Brett Wightman, 22, of Sabina near Dayton, also were among the Lima Company casualties, relatives said. Military officials said they would not release a list of the dead until they finished tracking down relatives.

Isolde Zierk, 59, coordinator of Lima Company's family support group, found an answering machine full of messages from worried families when she got to her Columbus home after work Wednesday evening. A neighbor stopped by to see if she'd heard anything about her own son, Sgt. Guy Zierk, 29, who serves in Lima Company. She hadn't.

"My stomach's in knots," she said, choking back tears.

Mohammed Modiur Rahman, 54, of Columbus, said he last heard from his son, Cpl. Mohammed N. Rahman, about three days earlier. The Marine sounded nervous, his father said.

The father said his son told him he lost his best friend in the unit, Cpl. Andre L. Williams, who was killed last Thursday when Lima Company came under attack near Cykla in western Iraq.

Jeff Mers, commander of a VFW post that has raised money and sent care packages to Lima Company, said that even before this week's attacks, he and other veterans were dazed from attending funerals of those killed in Iraq.

"I think I've been to nine of these just in central Ohio in the past few months," he said outside Lima Company's headquarters.

The front door of the Montgomery family home in Willoughby east of Cleveland is decorated with two blue stars, one for each of the sons who served with the Marines in Iraq.

Eric Montgomery, 21, will be coming home soon - but only to escort the body of his older brother, 26-year-old Lance Cpl. Brian Montgomery, among the six killed in Monday's attack.

Palmer said she and her husband, Paul Schroeder, last spoke with their son about a week ago. He said he was tired of flushing insurgents out of the same places, just to have them reappear with better weapons.

"He said the closer they got to the time to come home, the less it was worth it," she said.

The 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, was first activated on May 1, 1943, and fought in several battles in World War II. It helped capture a key airfield at the Battle of Iwo Jima in the Pacific. Members, based in this blue-collar Cleveland suburb of 21,000, were activated in January and went to Iraq in March.

Lt. Col. Kevin Rush, part of the family notification detail, said the volunteers were aware of the risks.

"Everyone who joins the battalion knows what they are getting into," he said. "It's infantry. They are at the front line."

Donald Morgan, 21, of Parma Heights, another Cleveland suburb, just finished a tour of duty and is planning to re-enlist. He had yet to serve in Iraq but said going was "not a problem."

"All Marines are brothers," he said, placing two flags amid flowers, crosses and stuffed animals at display outside battalion headquarters. "I only took a moment to reflect on it. We all have a job to do."



Go to Original

Three More Members of National Guard's 48th Killed in Iraq
The Associated Press

Thursday 04 August 2005

Atlanta - Three more soldiers from a Georgia National Guard unit that includes members of a Gainesville-based company have been killed in Iraq.

The three, who were members of the guard's 48th Brigade, were killed Wednesday in a car bomb attack, military officials said. Another was seriously wounded.

Identities of those killed and other information on them had not been released early Thursday.

Other details of the attack were not immediately available but 2nd Lt. Selena Owens, a spokeswoman for the unit, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the attack "was along one of those same routes we've been having problems with."

The incident marks the third time in 10 days that the 48th Brigade has suffered multiple fatalities from attacks in Iraq.



To: American Spirit who wrote (65052)8/6/2005 9:56:55 PM
From: SkywatcherRespond to of 81568
 
As Bush War Gets Personal, Nation Must find its Outrage
by Marilou Johanek

One of the great mysteries of the Bush War in Iraq has been the incredible acquiescence of the American people to the unfolding tragedy. There is a seemingly passive acceptance of the conflict-without-end. Some have called the unquestioning silent assent obscene.

It is surely that and more. Where, in God's name, is the outrage? Where are the protests in the streets against a government that has lied to its citizens and taken them for everything they hold dear?

Some say a massive public revolt is missing in action because the country as a whole doesn't feel the pain of war yet. While many may be unsettled about the regular litany of deaths and bombings coming from Iraq, it's simply not personal yet. Certainly it's tragic when a U.S. soldier dies over there but chances are it's nobody you knew.

So the mournful event passes with flags and tears until another and another and another brings the pain home somewhere else in America. Given time the pain of young men and women lost forever will reach into even more homes. Maybe, heaven forbid, it will eventually reach out and tap someone you know.

Then the loss will be personal - or personal enough. An uneasiness is already creeping into our collective comfort zone about the Bush War no matter how firmly one supports the troops with a zillion car magnets or flowing yellow ribbons. This isn't about supporting the troops.

It's about bringing them home alive in one piece. But when military funerals in your state or hometown begin to occur more frequently, either weekly, or bi-weekly, or tragically all at once, the cumulative effect of the senseless dying in Iraq may hit those in denial hard.

When five Marines from the same suburban Cleveland unit died Monday in two separate attacks, northeast Ohio lurched in disbelief. When many more died from the same Ohio-based battalion Wednesday, the area was numb. Any detachment to the war among those following the devastating news was gone.

Now it's personal. Now the pain of war has hit a community that never saw it coming. Trembling widows and heartsick families will clutch pictures of their lost soldiers and re-read yesterday's e-mail from Iraq. It can't be true. Can't be.

No one grieving over the fresh graves would dare suggest that the young souls died for nothing. But gradually the unspoken why of it all is sure to wrap itself around the wrenching agony and rising anger of those who weep. And when it does, the outrage kept in national check until now may stir.

The reason over 1,800 young Americans have died in Iraq and 12,000 plus have been grievously wounded is hard to pin down. The Bush Administration has changed it several times.

First it was about saving the world from deadly weapons of mass destruction.

Then it was about liberating people. Then it was about spreading democracy. Then it was about fighting terrorists over there so we wouldn't have to fight them over here.

Then it was about keeping the peace in a land of violent convulsions where friend and foe are indistinguishable, while we wait for a constitution to be written, approved, and rooted. But it's a horrible pipe dream floated by the administration that keeps springing leaks and taking American lives.

Maybe you've heard of the "Lucky Lima" Marine unit that drew reservists from across Ohio into the Iraqi conflict. It lived down to its nickname, losing 11 soldiers since the beginning of the war.

Lance Cpl. Christopher Lyons, with a wife and 3-month-old baby waiting for his return in Ashland, died a week ago when his Columbus-based company was attacked in western Iraq. He saw his newborn daughter through Web cameras on the Internet and choked up but never got to hold her before he was killed.

Why? What did he die for in some unpronounceable village thousands of miles from home? So the resilient, sophisticated insurgency can regroup to kill another day? So another Marine unit can mop up another sprung leak?

Is there any succinct strategy to end America's nightmare in a country torn asunder by power vacuums exacerbated by cultural and religious divides? Christopher Lyons, who was due home in late September, was only 24.

Feel enough pain yet to demand the truth about Iraq from the Bush White House? Give it time.

© 2005 Toledo Blade