Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 --- Center for American Progress > Mon, 19 Jul 2004 09:18:02 -0700 > Progress Report: Looking Out For The > Citizen Soldiers > " Center for American Progress " > <progress > Center for American Progress - Progress Report by David Sirota, Christy Harvey, Judd Legum and Jonathan Baskin July 19, 2004 TROOPSLooking Out For The Citizen SoldiersIRAQHersh's New RevelationsIRAQOur Man in Baghdad UNDER THE RADAR TROOPS Looking Out For The Citizen Soldiers The war has stretched the American military paper thin #8211; stop-loss policies are in place to keep soldiers from leaving units that have received orders to deploy, 5,600 soldiers have been pulled out of post-active duty 'retirement' and casualties remain unbearably high after the turnover. Nowhere is the strain on the military more evident, however, than in the National Guard. The Bush administration has had to rely more and more heavily on National Guard and Reserve units to fight the ongoing war in Iraq. Nine months ago, a quarter of the soldiers in Iraq were from the National Guard and Reserve. Now it's 40 percent and rising. The latest edition of Harper's Magazine points out, in the past three years, " more National Guard and Reserve soldiers have been called to active duty than have cumulatively been mobilized since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962#8212;including for the Vietnam War, the Cuban refugee crisis, Haiti, Bosnia, Kosovo and Gulf War I. " The Army has mobilized and deployed 55,000 to Iraq and Afghanistan alone. (For a collection of figures highlighting the increasing strains placed on the military, American Progress gives you the National Guard and Reserve: By the Numbers.) RISING DEATH TOLL: Sadly, fatalities for Guardsmen and reserve troops are on the rise. According to a review of Defense Department records conducted by the Newark Star-Ledger, " nearly a quarter of the service members killed in action since February 1 in Iraq were from the Reserve or National Guard. " That proportion is six times higher than it was before President Bush famously announced the end of major combat in Iraq in May 2003. For the Army, that total is even higher; one out of every three deaths is National Guard or Reserves. THE AGING GUARD: There is a unique problem to the mass deployment of National Guardsmen: #160;older troops with more medical problems. #160;According to the New York Times, " about 5,570 of the 275,000 American troops in or about to leave for Iraq and Afghanistan are 50 and older, nearly all of them members of the Guard and Reserves. " Of these men, " 10 soldiers age 50 or older have died in the Iraq war, some of medical ailments that might have excluded them from earlier conflicts, others under fire in the heat of battle. That is a small percentage of the nearly 900 American service members who have died since the Iraq war began, but it is 10 times the percentage of men in that age group who died in Vietnam. It is nearly as many as those of that age who died in the entire Korean War. " These deaths " raise questions about why older men, many of them veterans and some in obviously questionable health, are deployed to a war zone. " They are also more frequently wounded: According to estimates, Guard and Reserve soldiers have a disease and non-battle injury rate (DNBI) nearly double that of active-duty personnel. CUTTING TRAINING: The Army Reserves is facing a serious funding gap. According to 7/12/04 Inside Defense, the Army Reserve " is facing a potential shortfall of more than $280 million in its budget next fiscal year that, if left unchecked, would halt all training drills for soldiers next spring. " (President Bush cut $280 million from the requested training budget.) This is a large concern within the Reserve and Guard; at a May 11 congressional hearing, four soldiers testified on the dangerous " lack of training reservists receive in urban environments " before being sent to fight in cities in Iraq. Our own Lawrence Korb has offered a plan to update our Reserves. UNDEREQUIPPED: The National Guard and Reserve troops often have lacked proper equipment. For example, it wasn't until fifteen months after the invasion of Iraq that all troops received Interceptor body armor. Harper's gives anecdotal evidence of equipment issues faced by the Reserves: One Oregon National Guard soldier relates how he " was told to man a .50-caliber machine gun that had been jury-rigged on top of a Vietnam-era truck, but wasn't given a single round of ammunition during a dangerous convoy. 'They told me just look mean,' the soldier said. " HEALTH INSURANCE: The White House fought to keep reservists from receiving TRICARE - the Pentagon health insurance plan. While active duty soldiers are covered under the program, National Guard and Reserves only have access to it for a limited time. According to estimates, 20 percent of Guardsmen lack outside health insurance. The Bush administration formally opposed giving National Guard and Reserve members access to TRICARE, saying it was too expensive. THE INDIANA EXAMPLE: As the war in Iraq continues to exact a toll on the country's citizen soldiers, many are opting not to reenlist. An example: One Indiana National Guard battalion spent a year in Iraq. Two-thirds chose not to reenlist. The usual reenlistment rate for this battalion? Eighty-five percent. SOMEONE IS LISTENING: A new study by the National Military Family Association (NMFA) shows the increasing frustrations military families are facing with the ongoing deployment of loved ones in Iraq. One problem - most existing support efforts " assumed predictable, limited deployments, not tours of a year or more for hundreds of thousands of troops, many of them mobilized National Guard members and reservists. " The report " took special note of problems for families in understanding TRICARE, accessing preventive mental health services and finding childcare. " #160;One of the innovative ways NMFA is easing the burden: Operation Purple, special summer camps for military children aimed at helping them deal with the stress of their parents being deployed. IRAQ Hersh's New Revelations In a speech to the ACLU last week, journalist Seymour Hersh, who first broke the Abu Ghraib story, said there was " a massive amount of criminal wrongdoing that was covered up at the highest command out there, and higher. " Hersh reports, " boys were sodomized with the cameras rolling " in the prison and said, " What happened at Abu Ghraib#8230;is not about an academic debate in long essays between the justice department and the White House, legal essays about where the Geneva convention ends and presidential prerogative begins. " NEW DOCUMENTS REVEALED: As Bush administration officials continue to blame the Abu Ghraib scandal on a " few American troops, " new documents obtained by U.S. News and World Report indicate the abuses took place " in a chaotic and dangerous environment made even more so by the constant pressure from Washington to squeeze intelligence from detainees. " And while Gen. Antonio Taguba's report " focused mostly on the MP s assigned to guard the inmates at Abu Ghraib#8230; the classified files in the annex to his report show that military intelligence officers-dispatched to Abu Ghraib by the top commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez--were intimately involved in some of the interrogation techniques widely viewed as abusive. " DOCUMENTS SHOW ABUSES AT CAMP BUCCA: The new documents also show the problems at Abu Ghraib may have been avoided if the Army had reacted more forcefully to abuses which took place " months earlier at another U.S.-run detention center in southern Iraq called Camp Bucca. Evidence showed that MPs viciously attacked prisoners there, including one who had his nose smashed in. " One Army official told Taguba that if the abuses at Camp Bucca had been effectively prosecuted, Abu Ghraib may have been avoided. Instead, four soldiers were given dishonorable discharges, and none were prosecuted. For more on the new documents obtained by U.S. News, read American Progress's memo on new evidence on Abu Ghraib. HEARINGS CRAWL FORWARD: Meanwhile, Bush administration officials continue to stick to their story that the scandal " represent[ed] the actions of a few people, " and keep public reminders as scarce as possible. The Kansas City Star reports, " New information about the abuse of prisoners in Iraq is emerging in private briefings to members of Congress, but there will be no public hearings until fall. " Sen. John Warner (R-VA), the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee who has battled criticism from his own party to make sure hearings on Abu Ghraib continue, said Thursday " that L. Paul Bremer, the former head of the American-led occupation in Iraq, may testify about prison abuse at a congressional hearing next week. " " I'm not trying to, you know, drop a little hint here, " said Warner. " I'm just saying . . . each day that comes along, new incidents that occurred in the past " are revealed and will need to be investigated. Warner is pushing for Bremer's testimony to be public. SANCHEZ'S BEST FRIENDS: One thing Warner may want to investigate is the role of dogs in interrogations at Abu Ghraib. USA Today reports, " U.S. military commanders in Iraq authorized the use of dogs for interrogations#8230;five months after Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld barred the practice for terrorism suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, according to classified military documents. " Beginning in November, 2003, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, then the U.S. commander in Iraq " allowed dogs to be used at the discretion of interrogators without his specific approval. " Sanchez has testified that he never approved a request for permission to use dogs in an interrogation, " but his rule said his permission was not required. " It was in the two months after Sanchez suspended his oversight on the use of dogs for interrogations " that abuses at Abu Ghraib were documented, including use of dogs to terrify naked prisoners. " IRAQ Our Man in Baghdad Explosive charges against new Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi have prompted a formal investigation by Iraq's new Human Rights Minister. According to this weekend's Sydney Morning Herald, two alleged witnesses say Allawi " pulled a pistol and executed as many as six suspected insurgents at a Baghdad police station, just days before Washington handed control of the country to his interim government. " They say Dr. Allawi told onlookers the victims " deserved worse than death. " Bush administration officials have joined Allawi in denouncing the allegations as " urban legend, " but an Australian journalist is defending the story, and says the two witnesses were interviewed separately and were unpaid. Newsweek notes that the fact that these allegations even exist #8211; whether true or not - highlights increasing concerns about Allawi's commitment to human rights: while the Bush administration has touted Allawi's respect for human rights, Newsweek notes that " only weeks after taking office, [Allawi] is already flirting with dictatorship. " ALLAWI'S ANTI-DEMOCRATIC ROOTS: President Bush has called Allawi " a patriot, " someone who " recognizes human liberty, human rights. " But as Newsweek points out, the former Baathist " has precious few democratic credentials. He was first groomed in exile by Britain's intelligence service, M.I.6, then by the CIA. His Iraqi National Accord, an exile grouping, had little support inside Iraq. " And his governing style has alerted some of a return to " the cold-blooded tactics of his predecessor. " He has " flooded the streets with cops, many of them from the old regime. He's started a new General Security Directorate, otherwise known as the secret police. Every few days his troops attack neighborhoods where criminals have gathered, rounding up men by the hundreds, cracking heads and sometimes fighting running gun battles. Iraqi TV shows footage of exultant policemen firing their guns into the air as they leave the scene of a roundup. " It's possible, writes Michael Hirsh, " that Iraqis may end up with a pro-American dictator " in Saddam's place. " Then one of the last good reasons to have invaded Iraq will have proved as illusory as those long-lost weapons of mass destruction. " MEDIA #8211; FOX CITED FOR ITS DISHONESTY: The British Government's Office of Communications (Ofcom) #8211; the official regulator of the UK's communications industries - recently chastised Fox News and found it in violation of various regulations in that country aimed at preventing the media from deliberately spreading misinformation. Ofcom found that Fox News anchor John Gibson made " false statements by undermining facts. " Its report stated, " Fox News was unable to provide any substantial evidence to support the overall allegation that the BBC management had lied and the BBC had an anti-American obsession#8230;Even taking into account that this was a 'personal view' item, the strength and number of allegations that John Gibson made against the BBC meant that Fox News should have offered the BBC an opportunity to respond. " Ofcom concluded, " Fox News was therefore in breach of Sections 2.1 (respect for truth), 2.7 (opportunity to take part), and 3.5(b) (personal view programmes - opinions expressed must not rest upon false evidence) of the [british] Programme Code. " CORRUPTION #8211; SPECIAL COUNSEL CALLS: Last week, evidence surfaced that#160; four of the five House ethics committee Republicans investigating Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-TX) have accepted money in the past from the fundraising operation involved in the complaint against him. That has now prompted calls for the appointment of an independent counsel from two non-partisan watchdogs, Common Cause and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW). And the Dallas Morning News editorial board concurred: it noted that because DeLay is the House member " with the greatest ability to reward friends and punish enemies, " an independent counsel should be appointed, just as it was during the investigations of former speakers Jim Wright and Newt Gingrich. THE WAGE PINCH: Still feeling an economic pinch? You're not alone. The NYT reports, " the amount of money workers receive in their paychecks is failing to keep up with inflation. " On Friday, " the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that hourly earnings of production workers - nonmanagement workers ranging from nurses and teachers to hamburger flippers and assembly-line workers - fell 1.1 percent in June, after accounting for inflation. The June drop, the steepest decline since the depths of recession in mid-1991, came after a 0.8 percent fall in real hourly earnings in May. " After accounting for inflation, workers are pocketing about $8 less than they were last January, the " lowest level of weekly pay since October 2001. " Why is this happening? High unemployment means #160;little pressure on businesses to raise wages. RELIGION #8211; ENVIRONMENTALISM AT CHURCH: The New York Times reports that a new phenomenon is building in churches throughout Maine: religiously-motivated environmental activity. Last fall, the Maine Council of Churches' Environmental Justice Program and Maine Interfaith Power & Light, Inc. asked local congregations to choose two or three new environmental tasks #8211; and about 36 congregations now have environmental groups called " EarthCare " teams, with many " introducing environmentalism into Sunday schools, undergoing energy audits of their churches, reducing cars idling and changing the very buildings in which they meet, with window replacements and added insulation. " Said one of Maine's environmental leaders, " What's exciting about our teams and similar movements around the country is that we're taking actions with people who see themselves as church-going people, not environmentalists. They're beginning to see saving the planet through new eyes, through a faith journey. " See more on American Progress's faith and progressive policy initiative. NATIONAL SECURITY #8211; REPORT URGES IRAN POLICY SHIFT: The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) today will publish a report analyzing the U.S. relationship with Iran and, according to Reuters, the report will state that " the lack of sustained engagement with Iran over the last 25 years is harming U.S. interests. " CFR warns that " overcoming the absence of any U.S.-Iranian contacts may be the only alternative to ... force " to assuage U.S. concerns about Iran's behavior. It recommends the Bush administration change its approach to a " selective " engagement with Iran that includes incentives, like the prospect of U.S. commercial ties, as well as penalties, in an effort to resolve a growing nuclear problem and stabilize the Middle East. The CFR panel that authored the report was chaired by Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, and Robert Gates, director of central intelligence under former president George Bush. The Financial Times reports that over the weekend " Iran's reformists have attempted to ease rising tensions with the US. " Specifically, Mohammed Ali Abtahi, one of Iran's vice-presidents, called for d#233;tente with Washington, while Ali Yunesi, the reformist intelligence minister, told state television that Iran had dismantled all al Qaeda branches in the country. #160;Don't Miss DAILY TALKING POINTS: Neglecting the National Guard and Reserves AMERICAN PROGRESS REPORT: Was the Bush 'Job Boom' Merely Hype? MEDIA: U.S. House members urged to sign letter calling for meeting with Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch to discuss how to make the network more objective. MEDIA: American Progress-sponsored movie " Outfoxed " premieres at 3,000 house parties nationwide. AFGHANISTAN: U.S. detains Taliban-linked Afghan commander just two months after praising him. Contact The Progress Report: pr. #160;Daily Grill " We should and must provide the best care for anybody who is willing to put their life in harm's way. " #8211; President Bush, 1/17/03 VERSUS " It wasn't until fifteen months after the invasion of Iraq that all troops received Interceptor body armor. " #8211; AP, 6/8/04 #160;Daily Outrage Tom Delay #160;Archives Progress Report Columns Cartoons Sign up for e-mail delivery of The Progress Report Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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