Archive for September, 2009

Sunday, September 27th, 2009
iraq
“We were among the first telecommunications operators in the satellite technology in the territory of Iraq and Afghanistan and as such we have enjoyed a successful cooperation with the US Army for several years now” – says Marcin Frackiewicz, CEO of the TS2 Satellite Technologies.

TS2 Satellite Technologies offer two-way high-speed internet access with no phone lines, no cable, no dial-up modem. It’s always on, available virtually anywhere, and affordable. The laptop, or WLAN network, can receive internet signal through a special satellite VSAT modem which is usually set up in a building or tent when deployed.

To the soldiers stationed in the war-torn countries, one VSAT access point provides broadband access to the internet; telephone connections including voice over internet protocol (VoIP), IP phone and video-conference connections. In addition, soldiers can also transfer data to many other users simultaneously and share connections with others stationed in the same base. TS2 additionally equips its customers with Thuraya, Iridium and Inmarsat satellite telephones, which are often the only means of communication in this region of the world.

TS2’s satellite military networks are located in Al Taqaddum Air Base, Bahgram AF, Balad Base, Baquba Airfield, Brassfield-Mora, Cob Adder, Cob Speicher, Camp Al Asad Airbase, Camp Bucca Basra City, Camp Buehring, Camp Charlie Basra, Camp Eggers, Camp Fallujah, Camp Grizzly, Camp Korean Village, Camp Liberty, Camp Mejid, Camp Ramadi, Camp Slayer, Camp Stryker, Camp Taji, Camp Victory, Fob Bagram, Fob Brassfield Mora, Fob Delta Al Kut, Fob Diamondback, Fob Falcon, Fob Garryowen, Fob Gardez, Fob Ghazni, Fob Kalagush, Fob Kandahar, Fob Lagman, Fob Mchenry, Fob Marez, Fob Normandy, Fob Rustamiyah, Fob Summerall, Fob Sykes, Fob Salerno, Fob Torkham, Fob Warhorse, Fob Warrior, Herat RTC, Jallahabad Air Base, Kabul Airport, Kabul Camp Eggers, Kandahar Air Base, Lsa Anaconda Balad, Q-West Base Complex and Tallil Ab Lsa Adder.

TS2 delivers satellite equipment specially for U.S. Military Personnel, Contracting Officers and DoD Contractors to many military addresses in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Middle East within a maximum of 5-7 days .

http://www.ts2.pl/en/Internet-in-Iraq-for-US-Army-Soldiers

http://www.ts2.pl/en/Internet-in-Afghanistan-for-US-Army-Soldiers



By: Ts2 Satellite Technologies

About the Author:

TS2 specializes in providing global satellite access services. Our core business is broadband access to the Internet in areas with poor telecommunications infrastructure and mobile satellite phones communication. The main medium of used transmission is a two-way satellite transfer system, which provides good access to the satellite network in even the least accessible areas. It not only provides a broadband connection but also a wide range of additional data and voice services.

Before end of 2007 year, the TS2 solutions have been implemented for e.g. US Marine Corps (USMC), US Army Corps of Engineers, Australian Defence Force (ADF), Command of Polish Navy, Special Military Formation GROM, 1st Special Commando Regiment, Polish National Police, Polish National Headquarters of the State Fire Services, Border Guard (Poland), World Bank Group, Lockheed Martin Information Technology, Halliburton Energy Services, KBR, General Dynamics Information Technology, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc., L-3 Communications Vertex Aerospace, US Naval Research Laboratory, ITT Corporation Aerospace / Communications Division, Technest Holdings / EOIR Technologies, North Eastern Aeronautical Company (Neany), EchoStorm Worldwide, Jorge Scientific Corporation, Erinys International, Aegis Iraq, American Heart of Poland and more others.



Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

is the iraqi dinar a good investment?

Sunday, September 27th, 2009
iraqi dinar
shoneika asked:


give me some information about this investment

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Saturday, September 26th, 2009
iraqi dinar
A duck’s quack does not echo. Foreign exchange not only encompasses mystique, intrigue, but an ideal, echoless shield to hide behind.

Just before the Saddam execution, before the first of the year, 2007, we purchased some Iraqi currency, 5-dinar (pronounced DEE-nar) notes to 250-dinar notes–all sporting portrait photos of a smiling Saddam on their face–for an average price of 38 cents each. Right after the execution–a matter of just one week–the price tripled, to about $1.10 each. We simply stashed these away in our safe deposit box and forgot them.

Quickly thereafter, it seems, con men–those who love to play their games in foreign exchange–found what they believed to be a bonanza. Just one month later, February, 2007, the Better Business Bureau was suddenly flooded with complaints from around the world. The scam involved originated from a Chicago area office-space-rental cubicle, found vacated when located. The con men were selling these obsolete bills for prices ranging from several hundred to thousands of dollars each. Strange twist is: these orders were never delivered. (Could it be that the price went even higher?) Many of the victims turned out to be our service men and women in Iraq. We’d say doing hard time in a Saudi prison would be fitting punishment for these scam artists, for this focus of the scam alone.

It should have been abundantly clear that, with the demise of the Iraqi dictator–actually well before that, when he was overthrown in 2003–these bills were strictly a memorabilia item for collectors. Investors were told that big value increases were in store for them–if the value of Iraqi money were to increase. This implies that a money market element could stimulate growth. Wrong. As “dead currency” this was not the case.

There seems to be some inherent wisdom in this con man joke, as it applies to this unconscionable scam: What’s the difference between a con man and a catfish? Answer: one is a scum-sucking bottom dweller, and the other is a fish.

Apparently, parties unknown and unfound raked in a huge amount of money with this scam. What further can be said on the subject? Only the summation: when in doubt subscribe to that sacrosanct legalism: caveat emptor, let the buyer (sucker) beware.



By: Jack Payne

About the Author:

The Con Man’s Blog, and first two chapters of Jack Payne’s legal thriller book, Six Hours Past Thursday, are now available online. Both readable for free. You are invited. www.sixhrs.com



Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Saturday, September 26th, 2009
iraq
Perhaps true freedom of the press in Iraq never existed. Certainly not before the beginning of Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003 and certainly not immediately after the conflict began. Between ******* bombings, kidnappings and beheadings, the mere survival of the press became more of a challenge than its freedom. Eleven journalists, all Iraqis, were killed in Iraq in 2008 simply for doing their jobs, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ. Believe it or not that means it is becoming less dangerous to be an Iraqi journalist. In the same report, the CPJ wrote, “Nevertheless, the figure was the lowest yearly toll since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003–and two-thirds lower than the annual figures for 2007 or 2006.”

Until very recently, journalists from all over the world were targets and casualties in the Iraq war. This is a nation where press freedom, even before the conflict began, was suppressed by the brutal regime of Saddam Hussein. Before the conflict, an Iraqi reporter’s words could get him maimed, if not killed.

“Before, no. They have limitation talking,” said Arabic media analyst Ubart Shaul. “Otherwise, their tongues were gone, will be cut.”

Right now it appears things have changed dramatically, especially in the once violent, Sunni-dominated Al Anbar Province in western Iraq. The media is flourishing here and covering major events. Take, for example, the Rule of Law conference this spring in Ramadi, the capital of Al Anbar.

As Brig. Gen. John Wissler, the deputy commanding general of Multi National Force – West, pointed out, the fact the conference was held at all reflected a measure of significant progress.

“We have overcome those violent times,” he told conference attendees as an interpretor translated his words to Arabic. “And the rule of law is finally coming to the forefront, once again, in Anbar.”

As the general spoke several microphones bearing the Arabic names of their media outlets lined the podium in front of him.

This type of open news coverage was unheard of until very recently.

“Basically what people knew was what bad guys were saying on the Internet or what the Iraqi or Arabic stations were saying,” explained Mahir “Mike” Isho, the Arabic spokesman who works for Multi National Force – West aboard Al Asad Air Base in western Iraq. “Unfortunately, those TV stations and those media outlets didn’t have representatives in Anbar. It was too dangerous for anybody to work in the journalism field.”

Security, however, is still a concern and it was a major topic at the Rule of Law conference held in Ramadi, the capital of Al Anbar.

“It’s big issue here, will always be big issue here because it will take time,” Shaul said. “That’s my opinion. It’s gonna take some time, but it’s much better than the way we are comparing, like in 2006. Now in 2009, it’s much, much, much better.”

If there is any doubt, however, as to the extent of progress made for the Iraqi media, all you have to do is turn on the television.

“Now journalists and reporters talk about any issue they can,” Shaul said. “I mean if they like any issue, it’s open.”

Shaul added it isn’t just television news that’s growing in Iraq. “I think Iraq now becomes the country that has too many newspapers,” he said. “The country is small to have a hundred, a hundred newspapers, maybe more.”

In a region filled with state-sponsored news, Iraq’s news media is evolving into an inspiring example of what could be in the Arab world.

“I like the freedom in the Iraqi media. I like it. I feel it. I’m very proud of it,.” Shaul said. “I believe most Arab media are very jealous of what level Iraqi media is.”

While Anbar appears safer for Iraqi reporters, the same isn’t necessarily true for other nationalities. Foreign media, like France and China, have set up bureaus in Al Anbar but use Iraqi stringers. Even American reporters who work out of Baghdad request to travel with the U.S. military before covering areas like Fallujah or Ramadi.

While there is more freedom for the press, and while there has been less violence against the media in 2009, Al Anbar Province, as well as the rest of Iraq, is still far from ideal. Perhaps in time, the power of the Iraqi press will pave the way for a safer environment for all journalists.



By: Randy L. Garsee

About the Author:

Randy L. Garsee is working throughout 2009 as a civilian journalist for the U.S. Marine Corps aboard Al Asad Air Base in Iraq’s Al Anbar Province. Photos are available upon request at randygarsee@gmail.com. For more information visit randygarsee.blogspot.com.



Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Battle on Haifa Street, Baghdad, Iraq

Friday, September 25th, 2009
MNFIRAQ asked:


American infantry and snipers from the US Army’s 3rd Stryker Brigade team up with Iraqi soldiers from the 6th Iraqi Army Division during a firefight on Baghdad’s notorious Haifa Street, January 2007.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Friday, September 25th, 2009
iraq
A great gulf exists between American military and civilian societies. But paradoxically, it can be hard to tell young veterans of our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan from their peers who haven’t served. As I wrote a book about West Point recently, I would visit with vets who had left the Army and were attending some of America’s most prestigious universities. I was struck that the veterans were often the ones walking around campus with the longest hair, and the most stylish clothes. Spot a guy with a high-and-tight haircut and a wardrobe looking straight out of the AAFES at Fort Bragg — odds are he’s a wannabe who reads too many Tom Clancy novels and never served a day in the military.

But soldiers and veterans want to be noticed. That’s not to say they want to be singled out, but I found over and over as I wrote my book that they want civilians to pay attention to their collective service. Soldiers talked with me for thousands of hours, and even gave me access to their diaries, their letters, the “sent mail” folders of their yahoo and gmail accounts. They know their stories are worth telling. And what’s more, they recognize that the rest of us need to know. We need to understand.

I did more than six hundred interviews for In a Time of War. I recorded most of them, and paid people to write transcripts. Here’s a sample of what I heard:

Joe DaSilva was assigned to lead a platoon of soldiers in Kuwait just days before the March 2003 invasion of Iraq.

“I pulled everyone in that night, and I told them, look . . . I’m not going to lie. I don’t know what awaits us on the other side of that berm. I have no idea but I’ll tell you this . . . [I]f I have to give my life for any of you I would do that in a heartbeat . . .

“And I had soldiers after that come up to me and telling me that they don’t know why but just hearing that from their lieutenant made them feel better. I knew they weren’t B.S.-ing me because months down the road we would talk about how they felt when I took over . . . They were brutal.  They were talking about tying [me] up in the back of a humvee . . . Some of the other platoons were joking with them, saying, You guys are going to die!  You guys are going to die!”

Drew Sloan was nearly killed when his humvee was hit with a rocket-propelled grenade in Afghanistan. He turned down a medical discharge, endured a year of surgeries, and recovered to go to Iraq. When an IED went off right in front of his humvee, he was surprised by his own reaction. He smiled broadly and reached out to bump fists with a sergeant in the front seat.

“Having a bomb go off close by to you can’t help but remind you about your own mortality,” he explained later. “And being reminded of that makes you feel really alive.”

Eric Huss served an intense Iraq tour, taking over for a lieutenant who had been killed in action. I interviewed Eric and his wife, Julie, in a brew pub in Denver, just after he got off active duty.

“I didn’t let him drive for a while when I was in the car,” Julie explained. “And his short term memory was non-existent.”

“I talked to a lot of different guys,” Eric said. “It’s about a year before your short term memory comes back.”

“I haven’t heard that,” I replied.

“I’ve been trying to, like, psychoanalyze it, and here’s what some friends and I have come up with. You’re doing a job.  It’s kind of a crappy job.  You go through a lot of stress on many different levels.  Regardless of the stress you face you still have to get up the next day and do the same missions over and over again, whether it be a different patrol, a different IED, a different guard shift — whatever the case may be. Regardless of who shot at you the day before, whether you got mortared the day before, you know, etc., etc. And as a defense mechanism in order to help you cope, we figure that over time you start to basically, automatically, kind of forget a lot of what just recently happened to you, so you can kind of cope and live in the present . . . [W]hatever happened to you that day or the day before, you still have to continue on that mission regardless. As a result, you act, react, and then dismiss it and try not to dwell on it. Because otherwise it’d be so hard to get out of bed the next day and do the same damn thing.”

War is a horrible thing, and not all of the real-life characters in my book survived Iraq. I interviewed Jen Bryant, the widow of Lieutenant Todd Bryant, about the day she learned his fate.

“I was in my classroom waiting for all my students to come back up from lunch, and the assistant principal came in and said to me there’s somebody in the office. We need you in the office. My whole chest caught . . . And so I walk in the office and for a split second I was relieved because I didn’t see any officers. And I thought it’s okay. And I just looked around for someone to tell me what was going on. And one of my students was in there, and she’s like, ‘Oh, they’re in there,’ pointing to the principal’s office in back . . . I saw my principal standing there, and I just looked to my right, and there’s four or five officers standing, wearing their class As. And one of them was one of the generals at Fort Riley.

“I just hit my knees and I started saying, No, no, no. Don’t tell me. Don’t tell me. And I remember General Kearney, like, kneeling down beside me. And he took my hand. He just kept holding my hand. And I screamed. I kept saying, No! No! No!”

About one and a half million Americans have served in Iraq or Afghanistan.  They want us to notice them. It’s disturbing, to say the least, to come home from a war only to find that nobody notices anymore. The opposite of love isn’t hate; it’s apathy.

We owe these veterans quite a bit.  But before all else, we owe them the duty to pay attention. And to listen.

©2008 Bill Murphy Jr.



By: Bill Murphy Jr.

About the Author:

Bill Murphy Jr. is the author of In a Time of War: The Proud & Perilous Journey of West Point’s Class of 2002. A lawyer and former Army Reserve officer, he lives in Washington, DC. He can be reached at billmurphyjr@gmail.com.



Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Marsh Arabs – Iraq

Thursday, September 24th, 2009
journeymanpictures asked:


April 2004 As waters begin to flow back into Iraq’s burnt-out marshlands, many hope that it will also revive a dying community. Life for the Marsh Arabs has been a question of survival since Saddam drained the wetlands in the 1990’s. Once seen as the ‘Garden of Eden’ the land is now a salt-encrusted wasteland. “Have you seen our houses — are they fit for human beings?” asks tribesman Abdul Bari. His village has no hospital and school and his people are locked in a bloody feud with those of …

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Thursday, September 24th, 2009
iraq
Accomplished? On May 1, President Bush triumphantly proclaimed the end of combat operations, and he did it with a theatrical flourish.  Attired in a Navy flight suit, the former Air National Guard trainee (Bush had actually cut short his flight training to participate in a political campaign) landed ceremoniously on the deck of the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln off San Diego.  Bush emerged from the plane under a banner stretched across the carrier’s super structure. “Mission Accomplished” the banner exulted. “We have difficult work to do in Iraq,” the president said. “Parts of that country remain dangerous…The War on Terror continues.” But, he went on, “In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”

But a growing opposition thought otherwise.  Rumsfeld had assured Bush that the war could be fought on the cheap.  Once the productive Iraqi oil fields were up and running, they would more defray the costs of the war and the occupation.  (As of spring 2008, Iraqi oil production was still below prewar output.)  A streamlined military force brandishing high-tech equipment would be all that was needed.  American forces could be reduced and hand off the job to Iraqis.

When Lieutenant General Eric Shinseki, the Army chief of staff, told Congress that “something in the order of several hundred thousand” military personnel would be needed, Rumsfeld was outraged.  The Army’s top officer was hounded into retirement.  The Pentagon leadership pointedly refused to attend the customary retirement ceremony.

And Americans were dying.  Bremer and the CPA, mostly made up of young and inexperienced recent college graduates but with impeccable political credentials, holed up in the heavily fortified and protected area of Baghdad, the Green Zone.

Beyond, chaos and danger reigned.  Snipers picked off individual soldiers.  Roads were sown with mines and improvised explosive devices (IEDs), which were designed to blow up and destroy the unprotected undercarriage of military vehicles when they passed over.  Personnel carriers were only lightly armored, another money-saving policy.  Besides, heavy armor was unnecessary, it was thought, with Iraq conquered and the population friendly.  Troops took to fashioning their own armor from scrap metal or persuaded families back home to provide it to them.

The Bombing of a Shrine. When Baghdad fell, Saddam Hussein was nowhere to be found.  As the coalition rounded up other former government leaders on their “Most Wanted” list, the supreme leader’s whereabouts remained a mystery.  Then, seven months after his statue fell in December 2003, a disheveled and filthy Hussein was discovered cowering in a tiny subterranean dugout — a “spider hole,” his captors called it — near his birthplace of Tikrit.  The all-powerful dictator who once had thirty-seven palaces was living in a few cubic feet underneath a mud hut.  Bush immediately went on television to trumpet his capture, “I say to the Iraqi people, ‘You will not have to live in fear of Saddam ever again.’”  But elsewhere, there was little to crow about.

Even the commander of U.S. ground forces acknowledged that a “low-key, guerrilla-type war” was underway.  Suicide bombers blew themselves up in marketplaces, city squares, offices, buses, and crowded streets, often taking as many as 100 fellow Iraqis with them.  In one horrifying instance, 140 Shiites enjoying a Shia festival were blown up.  Terrorist explosives reduced to rubble one of the most treasured shrines of Shia Islam, the Golden Mosque of Samarra with its gleaming dome, setting off a countrywide wave of violence between Sunnis and Shiites.  Trying to quell the rising insurgency that was morphing into a civil war.  U.S. troops fought pitched battles with Shiite militia in the teeming Sadr City district of Baghdad.  A month later, they were fighting Sunni insurgents for the city of Falluja.

Misled by the Iraq National Congress’s belief that Iraqis were united by their hatred of Hussein, American leaders had vastly underestimated the long standing enmity between the rival Muslim factions.  Meanwhile Bremer had undertaken to exterminate root and branch all vestiges of Hussein rule.  He outlawed Hussein’s Baath party and barred all members from the government payroll, even low-level clerks and drivers who had joined the party simply to protect their jobs.  “DeBaathification” eliminated much of the trained bureaucracy and brought normal government function to a standstill so that even mailing a letter became difficult.

Another Bremer edict disbanded the Iraqi army.  Four hundred thousand angry trained soldiers were suddenly turned onto the streets with no jobs or income, to demonstrate or bitterly join the insurgency-where, at least, they would be fed. 

The army was the only organization that could bring any kind of order to the country and perhaps stop the widespread looting, Bremer’s predecessor, an appalled General Garner noted.  ”You can get rid of an army in a day, Jerry,” he told Bremer.  ”It takes years to build one.”  (Bremer was to claim afterward that he didn’t disband the army; it had simply “dissolved.” And he said he took his action only after consulting the Pentagon.)

Despite these setbacks and growing antiwar sentiment, Bush was elected for a second term in 2004 and promised to prosecute the war until “victory.”  After the election, Powell went to the White House and submitted his resignation.  He had, he insisted, always intended to serve only one term.  Bush made no effort to keep him.

“We had a good and fulsome discussion,” Powell said in a press briefing afterward.  ”We came to the mutual agreement that it would be appropriate for me to leave at this time.”  Washington interpreted that as diplomatic double speak for “We aired our disagreements in loud and angry voices.”

Where are those WMDs? The bits of broken crockery that the “Pottery Barn Rule” had predicted continued to accumulate.  David Kay, named to head a diligent search to find those hidden weapons of mass destruction, failed to turn up a single specimen after two years of looking.  Nor could he uncover any evidence of any advanced plans to develop them.  The best he could document were a few vials of anthrax powder kept in scientists’ home refrigerators as souvenirs after the first Gulf War.

The aluminum tubes said to be designed for enriching and weaponizing uranium were actually for use in unforbidden short-range missiles.  The deal to buy yellow-cake uranium from the African nation of Niger, mentioned by Bush in his State of the Union address, was a hoax.  No evidence could be found of supposed meetings in Prague between Al Qaeda operatives and Iraqi diplomats.

Then came the revelation — with graphic, almost stomach-turning photos — that American soldiers had mistreated and tortured prisoners in the notorious Abu Ghraib prison.  The Congressional cry to take the troops out grew to a roar.  Democratic candidates swept the House and Senate in the 2006 elections.  With Bush’s popularity sinking to the low 20s in the polls, other Republicans stumbled over each other in haste to distance themselves from the president.  Rumsfeld was finally fired, and the Iraq Study Group, an elite panel of Washington wisemen co-chaired by former Secretary of State James Baker, normally a Bush acolyte, deemed the Iraq situation “grave and deteriorating.”

Instead of withdrawing troops, however, a defiant Bush increased them.  The “surge” of 30,000 reinforcements announced in 2007 was supposedly to allow the shaky, Shiite-controlled Iraqi government time and cover to solve contentious issues–such as sharing oil revenue and regional autonomy–and to train a viable army.

“As they stand up, we will stand down,” Bush repeated, almost like a mantra.  In the new army’s first test of standing up, Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki ordered an attack on Shiite militias in the port city of Basra.  More than 1,000 recruits deserted or fled the battlefield and had to be rescued by U.S. troops and airpower, with a ceasefire brokered by Iran.

Meanwhile, the country that Bush still insisted was the front fine in the “war on terror” lay in shambles, along with the lives of twenty-five million citizens.  Except for the Kurdish-held north and the “Green Zone” headquarters of the coalition, no part of the embattled nation could be considered secure.  (Later, in the spring of 2008, incessant rocket attacks shattered the supposed safety of the Green Zone.)  Cities cleared of resistance by coalition offensives frequently fen back into chaos when the troops moved on.  Historic Baghdad, the fabled city of flying carpets and Arabian Nights, was a nightmare of ******* bombing, IEDS, and ruins, with one million impoverished residents in ‘Sadr City,’ a Shiite enclave and a law unto itself.

More than one and a half million Iraqis, by official estimate, had fled, most of them huddled in squalid quarters in the unwelcoming cities of neighboring Jordan and Syria.  Another estimated two million were displaced within the country, fleeing wrecked homes to crowd in with relatives or live in makeshift tent villages.  Much of the educated population of what had once been the most developed country in the Middle East had decamped, including 12,000 of the country’s 34,000 physicians.  Living conditions for those remaining were abysmal. Whole neighborhoods were without adequate sewage or water.

In July 2007, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker told Congress that most Iraqi cities had electricity only one to two hours a day.  On the fifth anniversary of the war, the nation’s electric grid was still producing less than 5,000 daily megawatts of power, less than when the war started.  Iraqis faced a scorching summer when  11,000 megawatts would be the daily minimum.  In oil-rich Iraq, oil to power generating plants was in short supply.  The bulk of it was being shipped abroad, the Iraqi government’s only source of revenue.  And an estimated 35 percent of the population was unemployed.  

The repeatedly fought-over city of Falluja, west of Baghdad, was a classic example of the war’s devastation.  Once a thriving city of 450,000, its surviving population was estimated in 2007 at fewer than 50,000.  Eighty percent of the buildings had been damaged in the fighting; half of them were completely destroyed.  Half of the homes were gone.  Those that remained were largely without water, electricity, or sewage.  There were no operating schools.  Buildings had been stripped by looters, including floor tiles and window frames.  Once Falluja had been known as “the city of mosques,” with more than 200 glittering temples of worship.  Only 60 remained intact.

The estimates of “collateral damage”-the Pentagon euphemism for civilian and noncombatant casualties-varied wildly.  In 2007, the Iraqi Ministry of Health gave a low figure of 151,000 Iraqis killed from war-related causes between February 2003 and June 2006.  A survey published in the British medical journal Lancet estimated 600,000 “excess” deaths-those above the normal attrition of population-for the period 2003-2006.  An Opinion Research Bureau report estimated the war had caused 946,000 to 1,033,000 violent deaths.  In one survey, researchers asked individual Iraqis if they had a civilian relative or friend who had been a war casualty.  Eighty percent of those interviewed said yes.

One unlamented casualty was Hussein.  After a tumultuous trial marked by raucous shouting at the judges of the special tribunal, the onetime strong man was unceremoniously hanged for ‘crimes against humanity’ on December 30, 2006.  Reactions predictably ranged from cheering to anger.  And yet the fighting went on.  And on.

In December 2005, Bush at last admitted that some intelligence on which the war had been fought was “wrong.”  But so what?  Bush insisted that the war was worthwhile and the decision to bring down Hussein was “the right thing to do.”  He would have made the same decision even if he had known more.  Powell, the obedient soldier, kept silent while writing his memoirs and giving motivational speeches.  But in 2007, he finally apologized for the United Nations speech.  “The intelligence I was given turned out to be inaccurate,” he told Barbara Walters.  ”That will always remain a blot on my record.”

The Historic Record. In 1971, Henry Kissinger asked Chinese foreign minister Zhou En-lai the historical impact of the French Revolution of 1789.  “Too soon to tell,” En-lai responded.

In the lame duck months of Bush’s presidency, in the midst of an election campaign, and with his popularity ratings cratering, by En-lai’s reckoning, it is at least 200 years too soon to assess Bush’s impact on history, and especially the Iraq invasion.

But writers, historians, politicians, office-seekers, and the world are trying already to size up the eight Bush years.  Some contend that Bush is simply “an amiable dunce” (as Clark Clifford dubbed Ronald Reagan), readily manipulated by Vice President Cheney, former Secretary Rumsfeld, and his political Svengali Karl Rove.  They say Bush is a president out of the loop, whose priorities were cutting brush on his ranch in Crawford, Texas, and getting a good night’s sleep.  Many Europeans share that view and believe Bush has destroyed the world’s trust in the United States–trust that will take decades to rebuild.  Others regard the Bush administration as visionary-the first to recognize an impending “clash of civilizations,” and begin to prepare America for it.  And meanwhile, to fight a preemptive war before the terrorist enemy got stronger.

How will the decision to invade Iraq be judged 50, 100, 200 years from now?  How will Bush’s record be written in the twenty-third century?  Where is Zhou En-lai when we need him?

The above is an excerpt from the book Failures Of The Presidents: From The Whiskey Rebellion And War Of 1812 To The Bay Of Pigs And War In Iraq

by Thomas J. Craughwell with M. William Phelps

Published by Publisher;  September 2008;$19.95US/$21.95CAN; 978-1-59233-299-1

Copyright © 2008 Author

Author Bio

Thomas J. Craughwell is the author of several books, most recently How the Barbarian Invasions Shaped the Modern World (Fair Winds Press, 2008) and Stealing Lincoln’s Body (Harvard University Press, 2007). He has written articles on history, religion, politics, and popular culture for the Wall Street Journal, American Spectator, and U.S. News & World Report. He lives in Bethel, Connecticut.

Journalist, lecturer, and  historian M. William Phelps is the author of eleven books, including his most recent, Nathan Hale: The Life and Death of America’s First Spy (Thomas Dunne Books, 2008). He lives in Vernon, Connecticut.



By: Thomas J. Craughwell With M. William Phelps

About the Author:

Please visit http://writtenvoices.com/titlepage.asp?ISBN=1592332994 for more information about Failures of the Presidents.



Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

A BURIED 60 Minutes INTERVIEW / INDICTMENT

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
goldenequity asked:


and the other contending Presidential Candidates just grow silent when Ron Paul Speaks. Why? It’s time to Stop Being a good Democrat. Stop Being a good Republican. And Start Being a good American. Do Your Own Homework NOBODY explains Ron Paul BETTER than Ron Paul himself! Here is an interactive audio archive of Ron Paul speeches and interviews as a resource in chronological order. www.ronpaulaudio.com … Ron Paul O’Neil 60 Minutes Neo-Con candidate election 2008 politics foreign policy Iraq war …

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Street Battle in Iraq

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
MyEarbot asked:


US Marines on foot and in tanks from Camp Corregidore, Iraq battle insurgents in broad daylight.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • Blogosphere News
  • DZone
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Buzz