Wednesday, January 31, 2007

US vs. Mahdi

This is night time footage of a U.S. air assault against Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Militia. Podcast










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http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2007/02.01/99-vets.html

Terror war could strain veterans'
health, benefit systems

U.S. unprepared for impact of returning soldiers, KSG
researcher says

By Alvin Powell
Harvard News Office

The cost of caring for veterans of the war on terror could reach $662 billion over the next 40 years, while demand from returning soldiers is already clogging the two major veterans' assistance programs, according to recent research from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Linda J. Bilmes, a lecturer in public policy and former chief financial officer and assistant secretary
of the U.S. Commerce Department, said the ongoing cost of providing medical care and disability benefits for returning Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans is a cost of the war on terror that the Bush administration hasn't adequately prepared for.

Even in a best-case scenario, the long-term costs of providing disability benefits and medical care for returning veterans of the war on terror will reach $350 billion over 40 years, Bilmes' research shows.

Bilmes presented her study, "Soldiers Returning from Iraq and Afghanistan: The Long-Term Costs of Providing Veterans Medical Care and Disability Benefits," Jan. 5 at the annual meeting of the Allied Social Sciences Association in Chicago.

One of the driving factors in the high postwar costs is that far more soldiers are surviving injuries that would have killed them in earlier conflicts. According to the data from the Department of Veterans Affairs, there are 16 "nonmortally wounded" soldiers for every battlefield death, a number that dwarfs the 2.6 wounded per death in Vietnam, and the fewer than two wounded per death in World War I and II. Other factors driving costs include the large numbers of solders who do not fall into the "wounded" category, but who will be eligible for disability payments because of other medical problems, such as mental health conditions.

While the larger numbers of survivors - reflecting improvements in medical care and protective gear - is good news, it also leaves a larger legacy of the war to contend with after the fighting stops.

The costs come from two major programs available to returning soldiers. The first is a cash disability payment administered by the Veterans Benefits Administration. Payment varies according to the level of disability of the veteran, from $1,304 per year for those with a 10 percent disability, up to $44,000 annually for those fully disabled. Bilmes projects disability payments at between $67.63 billion and $126.76 billion over the next 40 years, depending on how long the war lasts and how many additional military personnel are called to action. The estimates are based on a key assumption, that 44 percent of veterans - the same percentage as in the first Gulf War - eventually claim disability.

More expensive will be the cost of providing medical care to returning veterans, her research shows. The second major benefit for veterans is care at the nation's system of veterans' hospitals and clinics run by the Veterans Health Administration.

Veterans are entitled to free medical care for two years after returning from duty and then can continue to obtain care by paying a co-payment prorated according to the veteran's level of disability.

Depending on the number of troops that wind up serving in the war on terror, Bilmes calculated the cost of providing ongoing care for returning veterans suffering physical or mental disabilities at between $282 billion and $536 billion. Again, she assumed Iraq and Afghanistan veterans would utilize the medical care system at the same rate as in the first Gulf War, or 50 percent.

"It's another entitlement. It's like a mini-Medicare," Bilmes said.

Compounding the projected high cost of caring for returned veterans, Bilmes said, is the fact that their sheer numbers are already overwhelming the system.

The backlog of applications for disability payments has risen from 69,000 in 2000 to 400,000 today, while the time it takes to process an initial claim averages six months. Appeals can take up to two years. That delay leaves some veterans without financial support during the critical first months after returning to civilian life.

"It's a very critical time for active duty people who've been in hellish conditions, particularly for
reservists and guardsmen who [have returned to civilian life] and are not in the military family
anymore," Bilmes said.

In addition, the demand for medical treatment at VA medical facilities has grown, creating waiting lists long enough, according to one VA official Bilmes cites, to effectively deny treatment to some veterans.

Compared with the cost of waging the Iraq war, Bilmes said, fixing the backlog would be inexpensive.

Bilmes suggested looking to private industry for solutions. Private health insurance companies process claims in an average of 89.5 days. She also suggested either a "fast track" system set up specifically for Iraqi and Afghan war veterans to ensure their benefits aren't delayed, or doing away with a the initial processing entirely. This could be accomplished by adopting the IRS's model for tax returns, accepting all disability benefits applications and then conducting audits to ensure compliance and root out fraud.

More money will be needed to improve performance on the medical care side, reduce waiting lists, and provide the services needed by returning veterans, Bilmes said. She suggested funding additional social workers at the 207 smaller, walk-in Vet Centers to handle some of the mental health-related needs and ease the pressure on larger VA hospitals.

"People are sobered by the scale of it, but compared with other things going on it is more fixable," Bilmes said.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/30/us/30wound.html

January 30, 2007

Agency Says Higher Casualty Total Was


Posted in Error

For the last few months, anyone who consulted the Veterans Affairs Department's Web site to learn how many American troops had been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan would have found this number: 50,508.

But on Jan. 10, without explanation, the figure plummeted to 21,649.

Which number is correct? The answer depends on a larger question, the definition of wounded. If the term includes combat or “hostile” injuries inflicted by the enemy, the definition the Pentagon uses, the smaller number would be right.

But if it also applies to injuries from accidents like vehicle crashes and to mental and physical illnesses that developed in the war zone, the meaning that veterans’ groups favor, 50,508 would be accurate.

A spokesman for the veterans’ department, Matt Burns, said the change in the count was made simply to correct an error. Mr. Burns said the department posted the higher figure by mistake in November, when an employee who was updating the site inadvertently added noncombat injuries listed by the Defense Department. The Pentagon Web site had the correct total all along.

The previous total on the Web site was 18,586, strictly for combat injuries. Apparently, no one noticed the sudden leap.

The 50,508 figure caught the attention of the Pentagon when Prof. Linda Bilmes of Harvard mentioned it in an opinion article on Jan. 5 in The Los Angeles Times. A few days later, said Professor Bilmes, who teaches public finance, she had a call from Dr. William Winkenwerder Jr., assistant secretary of defense for health affairs, challenging the number.

Professor Bilmes explained that she had used the government tally, the one on the “America’s Wars” page of the veterans’ department Web site. She faxed him a copy.

A few days later, the number on the Web site was changed.

A spokeswoman for Dr. Winkenwerder confirmed that he had called the veterans’ department to have the figure corrected and that the worker had misunderstood the Defense Department figures.

For her purposes, Professor Bilmes said, the higher figure was the relevant one because she was writing about the future demands that wounded veterans would place on the veterans’ health care system. Many of the veterans would be treated in the system regardless of whether they had been injured in combat or in vehicle crashes.

About 1.4 million troops have served in Iraq or Afghanistan, and more than 205,000 have sought care from the veterans’ agency, according to the government. Of those, more than 73,000 sought treatment for mental problems like post-traumatic stress disorder.

No one disputes that more 50,000 troops have been injured in Iraq and Afghanistan or that nonhostile injuries can be serious. Of the more than 3,000 deaths that have occurred, 600 have been listed as nonhostile.

The Pentagon generally directs reporters to www.defenselink.mil, which lists counts of the wounded and dead. The deaths are divided into hostile and nonhostile, but the injuries include just those “wounded in action.”

Another site on the Web, http://siadapp.dior.whs.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/castop.htm, shows diseases and nonhostile injuries. It is the source of the higher counts.

“The government keeps two sets of books,” said Paul Sullivan, director of research and analysis for Veterans of America. Until last March, Mr. Sullivan was a project manager in the Veterans Affairs Department who monitored the use of disability benefits by Afghanistan, gulf war and Iraq veterans.

He suggested that the differing numbers might be cleared up by a bill that has been introduced in the Senate to improve the collection of health information on Afghanistan and Iraq veterans.

Long-term Costs of VA rwp_07_001_bilmes.pdf

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

British Troops No Man left Behind
Daring Rescue


Podcast

This BBC News report tells the story of how British Royal Marines planned a daring rescue by strapping themselves to the wings of an Apache helicopter, to rescue their fallen comrade. To learn more about the Apache go here.


Saturday, January 27, 2007

BLOOMBERG LEAVES NEW YORK CITY’S 400,000 VETERANS OUT IN THE COLD

IGNORES VETS’ $5 MILLION REQUEST FOR SERVICES IN PRELIMINARY BUDGET PROPOSAL

CITY HALL -- Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg failed to include city veterans’ only budget request in today’s announcement of his preliminary budget for Fiscal Year 2008. The Coalition of Veterans Organizations, or COVO, a coalition of veterans organizations unified in making a $5 million request of the Mayor to fund Veterans Resource Centers across the city, made the following statement regarding the proposal’s omission from the budget proposal:

“Since 9/11, this city has watched its men and women answer the call to duty over and over again, with some losing there lives. Yet today, veterans are still faced with an under-funded Veterans' Administration and a city administration that has not done a correct and proper job in providing much-needed services. Specifically, the administration has historically under-funded the Mayor’s Office of Veterans Affairs, delayed making selections to the city’s Veterans Advisory Board, and provided a delayed and confusing fix to the City Employee Extended Benefits Package.

Despite a $3.9 billion budget surplus, our city’s veterans today received yet another “NO” from the Administration.

It is long overdue to honor our troops' sacrifices and our returning veterans with more than just bureaucratic hassles, runarounds and token gestures. The Mayor and his administration fail to understand that veterans, and more importantly our newest veterans, are looking for help with housing, education, jobs, healthcare and a host of other issues. They need knowledge of the array of programs that are available to them here in the city. They need some place where they can find all this information. Funding to create resource centers in each of the five boroughs would have been an important step towards showing a real commitment to veterans.

Supporting our troops and veterans is not only a national obligation, it is a local obligation as well. Poor treatment of veterans during a time of war is a disservice to all who have served. It is long overdue for our local elected officials to renew there commitment to its veteran’s and it starts with the Mayor.”

Friday, January 26, 2007

A killer Aeriel photo of the USS Iowa firing its big guns.

You've got to see this, it's pretty amazing. And I don't use that word lightly on Digg. Just check out the shockwave over that water, too cool.




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Air Force Develops Ray Gun for Combat

Posted: 25 Jan 2007 09:52 PM CST

Military Ray Gun












By ELLIOTT MINOR, Associated Press Writer
Thu Jan 25, 5:43 AM ET

The military calls its new weapon an “active denial system,” but that’s an understatement. It’s a ray gun that shoots a beam that makes people feel as if they are about to catch fire.


Apart from causing that terrifying sensation, the technology is supposed to be harmless _ a non-lethal way to get enemies to drop their weapons.


Military officials say it could save the lives of innocent civilians and service members in places like Iraq and Afghanistan.


The weapon is not expected to go into production until at least 2010, but all branches of the military have expressed interest in it, officials said.


During the first media demonstration of the weapon Wednesday, airmen fired beams from a large dish antenna mounted atop a Humvee at people pretending to be rioters and acting out other scenarios that U.S. troops might encounter in war zones.


The device’s two-man crew located their targets through powerful lenses and fired beams from more than 500 yards away. That is nearly 17 times the range of existing non-lethal weapons, such as rubber bullets.


Anyone hit by the beam immediately jumped out of its path because of the sudden blast of heat throughout the body. While the 130-degree heat was not painful, it was intense enough to make the participants think their clothes were about to ignite.


“This is one of the key technologies for the future,” said Marine Col. Kirk Hymes, director of the non-lethal weapons program at Quantico, Va., which helped develop the new weapon. “Non-lethal weapons are important for the escalation of force, especially in the environments our forces are operating in.”


The system uses electromagnetic millimeter waves, which can penetrate only 1/64th of an inch of skin, just enough to cause discomfort. By comparison, microwaves used in the common kitchen appliance penetrate several inches of flesh.


The millimeter waves cannot go through walls, but they can penetrate most clothing, officials said. They refused to comment on whether the waves can go through glass.


The weapon could be mounted aboard ships, airplanes and helicopters, and routinely used for security or anti-terrorism operations.


“There should be no collateral damage to this,” said Senior Airman Adam Navin, 22, of Green Bay, Wis., who has served several tours in Iraq.


Navin and two other airmen were role players in Wednesday’s demonstration. They and 10 reporters who volunteered were shot with the beams. The beams easily penetrated various layers of winter clothing.


The system was developed by the military, but the two devices currently being evaluated were built by defense contractor Raytheon.


Airman Blaine Pernell, 22, of suburban New Orleans, said he could have used the system during his four tours in Iraq, where he manned watchtowers around a base near Kirkuk. He said Iraqis constantly pulled up and faked car problems so they could scout out U.S. forces.


“All we could do is watch them,” he said. But if they had the ray gun, troops “could have dispersed them.”

Link to Source

Wednesday, January 24, 2007


http://cold-war-veterans-blog.blogspot.com/2006/12/sign-cold-war-medal-petition-here-view.html







Join Cold War Veterans Association Today


ELIGIBILITY: The Cold War Veterans Association (CWVA) is a tax-exempt, federally-recognized 501(c)(19) veterans service organization open to honorably discharged veterans and active-duty personnel who served at any time during the Cold War period .. September 2, 1945 to December 26, 1991. (NOTE: RESERVISTS and National Guardsmen who engaged in basic training, advanced training, and/or annual training during this period ARE ELIGIBLE.)


Apply Here Join Us

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CWVA NY 716-708-0505
Fax 248-708-6410
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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

CWVA Press Release






Hometown News - Sean Eagan

Point of Contact: Hector Autry Jan 22, 2007
Phone: 1-816-268-8201
E-mail: CWVA.KC@gmail.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



SLUG: "COLD WAR VETERAN SELECTED FOR CWVA LEADERSHIP"

Cold War veteran Sean Eagan has been selected as Northeast Zone Director for the Cold War Veterans Association.

The selection was made replacing outgoing zone director David Clevenger, who had served in the position for three years. Egan, had served as the CWVA New York State Director for the last year. As Northeast Zone Director Eagan's responsibilities expand to include Maine, New York, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Vermont, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Delaware, Connecticut, Maryland, Rhode Island.

"I'm honored to be selected to serve the Cold War Veterans Association in this capacity," Eagan said. "About 20 million military members served during the Cold War years, and I intend to do my part to see they finally receive the respect and recognition they deserve."

The mission of the Cold War Veterans Association is to, "Fight for rights and benefits that Cold War Veterans deserve; Educate people as to why the Cold War was fought and why vigilance must be maintained; and Provide a fraternal community for men and women who served during the Cold War Era (September 2, 1945 to December 26, 1991). According to Eagan, the Cold War Veterans Association is currently engaged in 'Operation Ice Blue', which a push to start local chapters throughout the nation.

Sean served in Southwest Asia with the 528th U.S. Army Artillery Group during the Gulf War. He is a resident of Jamestown NY, a member of VFW Post 53, and a National member of the American Legion.

For more information about the Cold War Veterans Association, contact Sean Eagan at Sean.Eagan@Gmail.com, or visit their website at www.ColdWarVeterans.com .



- 30 -


=====


Hector Ed Autry
CWVA Operations Director
Cold War Veterans Association
www.ColdWarVeterans.com

Thursday, January 18, 2007

The Korea Defense Veterans of America Support Cold War Victory Medal
AWARD A COLD WAR VICTORY MEDAL




BE IT RESOLVED, that the Korea Defense Veterans of America joins with other veteran service organizations and petitions The U.S. Department of Defense for award of a Cold War Victory Medal to all members of the U.S. Military that served between 2 September 1945 and 26 December 1991; and

WHEREAS, immediately after World War II we witnessed a polarization in relationship between the Soviet Union and the U.S. and its allies in that the Soviet Union, by physical force and other means, expanded its influence and control over Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Eastern Germany, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Manchuria, Outer Mongolia, North Korea, Romania, and Yugoslavia, annexed the Kurile Islands and the southern half of Sakhalin Island, and instigated problems in Cuba, Greece, Iran, Lebanon, and Turkey. The Soviet Union continued its expansionist movement and dominated Eastern Europe until 1991; and

WHEREAS, the Cold War initiated the largest arms race in history that included nuclear, chemical and biological weapons as well as fomenting low-intensity conflicts, proxy wars, assassinations and various forms of intimidation; and

WHEREAS, the Cold War Era time period was fraught with conflicts and wars stressing U.S. Armed Forces and their allies that included:
.
- Soviets blockade of Berlin - 1948, leading to the Berlin Airlift
- NATO created to deal with Soviet aggression and expansion - 1949
- Atomic Bomb in Soviet hands - 1949
- Korean War - 1950 to 1953 (UN intervention including U.S. Armed Services members)
- Iran military coup - 1953 (U.S. backed)
- Guatemala military coup - 1954 (U.S. backed)
- Warsaw Pact – 1955 established as counter weight to NATO
- Hungarian Revolution - 1956 (Soviet intervention 4 Nov 56)
- Cuban Bay of Pigs Invasion - 1961
- Cuban Missile Crisis - 1962
- Taiwan Straights and Quemoy and Matsu Islands
- Grenada - 1983
- Angola Civil War (U.S. armed and funded surrogates)
- El Salvador Civil War (U.S. armed and funded surrogates)
- Nicaragua Civil War (U.S. armed and funded surrogates)
- Afghanistan War; and

WHEREAS, the Cold War is officially considered ended; however, its fallout continues to surface and create tensions today in Africa, the Caribbean, Central and South America, and the Pacific Rim as a testament to its longevity and global impact; and

WHEREAS, the Cold War Medal has already been designed by Nadine Russell, former Chief of Creative Heraldry at the U.S. Army's Institute of Heraldry, to directly complement the non-acceptable Cold War Certificate, and it meets all criteria for a U.S. Military medal; now, therefore

BE IT RESOLVED, by the Korea Defense Veterans of America, that we petition for award of a Cold War Victory Medal.
Russia to Sell Advanced SAM Missles to Iran

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The TOR-M1 (aka SA-15 Gauntlet platform) is one of the most advanced of the worlds self-propelled point-defense SAM systems. Certain Russian sources would have you know that the SA-15 can take out anti-radiation missiles (ie HARM, ALARM) at ranges between 3-5 km, and aircraft out 12km. Interfax said the Tor-M1 system could identify up to 48 targets and fire at two targets simultaneously at a height of up to 20,000 feet.


The TOR-M1(or at least one version of it) has substantial passive detection capabilities (thermal IR), thus stacking up its defensive capabilities against modern anti-radiation missiles. "

The phased array tracking radar is a major improvement over standard radars regarding LPI. It emits much less often and is harder to detect and jam... (it is also expensive).

Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov didn't give details. But Russian media have said that Moscow agreed in November to sell $1 billion worth of weapons to Iran, including up to 30 Tor-M1 missile systems over the next two years.

The report is a major concern from the U.S administration and Israel, which considers Iran to be its biggest threat. Israeli concerns recently were heightened after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad urged that Israel be "wiped off the map."

This Sale can do nothing but complicate any military solutions to the Iranian nuclear threat.

It should be no surprise though as Russia sold Iran major components and expertise for its reactors why wouldn't they sell them SAM missiles to defend them. The Russian Foreign Ministry, without commenting on the reported missile sale, also said Saturday that all Russian weaponry supplied to Iran is purely for defensive purposes.

Russia's continued sale of arms to Iran seems to contradict efforts Russia and the US have made supporting the EU in its effort to get Iran to halt development of nuclear weapons in exchange for economic incentives, such as trade opportunities.

A unnamed senior Bush administration official, who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak publicly on the subject, said last week that any arms sale to Iran is a source of concern. The official would not say whether Russia had advised the United States of any negotiations with Iran.

On Saturday, an influential Iranian official played down the deal, telling the official Islamic Republic News Agency that Tehran has been trading arms with many countries and would continue to do so.











Wednesday, January 17, 2007

VFW Passes Resolution to Support War in Iraq


Resolution PDF


Washington, Jan. 4, 2006 – The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S. passed a national resolution yesterday to support the president and the war in Iraq as part of the larger global war on terrorism. VFW Resolution 440 also stipulates that American forces should remain in Iraq in sufficient numbers until Iraqi forces can provide security for their own nation.

The out of session move by America’s largest organization of combat veterans to support the war is meant to get the nation refocused on supporting the troops instead of armchair quarterbacking the how and why the war in Iraq began.

“You can’t support the troops without supporting their mission and the president as they work to bring security and stability to a region of the world that is the centerpiece of the war on terrorism,” said VFW Commander-in-Chief Jim Mueller, a Vietnam veteran from O’Fallon, Mo.

“Once the decision is made to commit our forces, our nation’s number one priority must be to support the troops so that they can accomplish their mission and return home to their families with their heads held high,” he said.

“Our servicemen and women recognize the importance of their mission because they are witnessing positive changes every day in the lives of the Iraqi people and the future of the Iraqi nation. They ask for nothing less than America’s unwavering support so that they can remain focused on accomplishing that mission,” he said. “To withdraw our forces prematurely would be a win for the enemy and a real threat to the rest of the Middle East and to the American homeland.”

Monday, January 15, 2007

Jerry Calow wrote this song to pay tribute to All Veterans


Thank you and God Bless!



A Tribute To Veterans



In Vietnam, Korea and World Wars Past


Our Men Fought Bravely so Freedom Would Last Conditions Where Not Always Best They Could Be Fighting a Foe You Could Not Always See:



From Mountain Highs to Valley Lows


From Jungle Drops to Desert Patrols



Our Sinewy Sons Were Sent Over Seas


Far From Their Families And Far From Their Dreams They Never Wrote Letters Of Hardships Despair Only Of Love, Yearning That One Day Soon:



They Would Come Home, They Would Resume


And Carry On With The Rest of Their Lives



The P.O.W.¹S Stood Steadfast


Against the Indignities And Cruelties Of War They Could Not Have Lasted as Long as They Did If They Had Relinquished Their Hope That Some Day:



They Would Come Home, They Would Resume


And Carry On the Rest Of Their Lives



Medics, Nurses, and Chaplains Alike


Did What They Needed To Bring Back Life


They Served Our Forces From Day Into Night Not Questioning If They Would Survive:



They Mended Bones And Bodies Too,


They Soothed the Spirits of Dying Souls



And for Those M.I.A¹S, Who Were Left Behind We Echo This Message Across the Seas We Will search For as Long As It Takes You¹re Not Forgotten And Will Always Be:



In Our Hearts, In Our Prayers,


In Our Minds For All Time



A Moment of Silence, a Moment of Summons Is Their Deliverance of Body And Soul To a Sacred Place That We All Know Deep In the Shrines of Our Soul:



In Our Hearts, In Our Prayers


In Our Minds For All Time



INTERLUDE:


GOLD STAR MOTHERS GRIEVE: ENDLESSLY,


ENDLESSLY, ENDLESSLY.......



These Immortalized Soldiers Whose Bravery Abounds They¹re Our Husbands, Fathers, and Sons They Enlisted For the Duty at Hand To Serve the Cause of Country and Land:



They Had Honor, They Had Valor,


They Found Glory That Change Them Forever



Men Standing Tall and Proud They be


A Country Behind Them in a Solemn Sea


So Let the Flags of Freedom Fly


Unfurled in Their Majesty High:



In the Sun, In the Rain


In the Winds Across This Land



Years of Tears Has Brought Us Here


Gathering Around to Hear This Sound


So Let the Flags of Freedom Fly


Unfurled in Their Majesty High:



In the Sun, In the Rain,


In the Winds Across This Land



REPEAT:



In the Sun, In the Rain,


In the Winds For All Time



Jerry Calow (copyright 2003 )

listen

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Swofford Interview Podcast

Audio Book Excerpt













Like Jarhead before it, Anthony Swofford's Exit A is darkly irreverent, frankly erotic, and more than a little wicked, a tale told in a brooding, pained voice filled with the simple human fury of being alive.







Publisher Comments:




Anthony Swofford follows his international bestseller, Jarhead, with an unforgettable first novel — a powerful story about a youth spent on a U.S. air base in Japan and the gritty neon streets just outside it, where the Japanese underworld lurks and a rebellious young girl finds herself in great danger.




Anthony Swofford took the literary world by storm with Jarhead, his electrifying memoir of serving as a U.S. marine in the Gulf War. Celebrated for its visceral candor and profane lyricism, Jarhead stands today as a landmark contribution to the literature of war.




Now, in his bold fiction debut, Swofford demonstrates the same audacious vision as he plumbs the legacies of war, the wish for redemption, and the danger of love.




Seventeen-year-old Severin Boxx lives on Yokota, an enormous American air force base on the outskirts of Tokyo that is home to fourteen thousand U.S. soldiers and a large contingent of long-range nuclear bombers. Just outside the base lies the busy Haijima rail station. Exit A is one of the many doorways into this place of movement, anonymity, and sudden disappearance. Much of the novel's action transpires in the netherworld around Exit A, a mad neon landscape of noodle shops, strip clubs, sushi joints, pawnshops, whorehouses, sake fountains, military surplus stores, tattoo parlors, hash bars, comic book stores, pachinko parlors, fish shops, and alleys — the alleys that all lead somewhere, usually down.




It's here, not long before the Gulf War begins, that we first meet Severin, an earnest, muscular high-school-football star and son of a base colonel. Like most of the other young American men on the air base, Severin is mad for Virginia Kindwall, the base general's daughter, who is a hafu — half American and half Japanese. Beautiful, smart, and utterly defiant of a father who wields godlike military power, Virginia has become a petty criminal in the Japanese underground.




Severin is soon caught up in Virginia's world. But theirs is not a typical high school romance; they fall into trouble way over their heads and are quickly subjected to the enormous, unforgiving tensions between America and Japan — a relationship still informed by the long shadows of World War II and America's use of the atomic bomb.




Years later, Severin and Virginia remain lost to each other — until an emotionally frayed, thirtysomething Severin embarks on a quest to find Virginia and, in so doing, the part of himself taken from him when his boyhood abruptly ended.




Like Jarhead before it, Anthony Swofford's Exit A is darkly irreverent, frankly erotic, and more than a little wicked, a tale told in a brooding, pained voice filled with the simple human fury of being alive. It is, in sum, a first novel in full. Building inexorably toward a climax that is at once suspenseful and emotionally overwhelming, Anthony Swofford's fiction debut is a triumph.



Review:




"Bestseller Swofford explores teenage love in his uneven first novel, which opens in 1989 at Yokata Air Base outside Tokyo (the title comes from the name of a nearby train stop). Severin Boxx, a 17-year-old military brat, plays football and pines for Virginia Sachiko Kindwall, the half-Japanese daughter of the American base commander, who's also his coach. Virginia's involvement in some not-so-petty crime (her heroine is Faye Dunaway of Bonnie and Clyde) leads her into serious trouble, which separates the young lovers seemingly forever. Swofford, as one might expect from the author of the acclaimed Jarhead (2003), his memoir of being a Marine sniper in the first Gulf War, clearly knows the U.S. military culture, though some readers may find his view of it overly harsh. He also does a good job of depicting the strange mélange where Japanese and American cultures coexist, but he's less convincing in his portrayal of Boxx's adult life (and doomed marriage) in San Francisco, while the ending is much too neat to be truly compelling." Publihsers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)



Review:


"A well-rounded tale, even if it ends on a sentimental note that will surprise readers of Swofford's tough-as-nails memoir." Kirkus Reviews



Review:


"The book starts off strongly....Ultimately, Swofford is much better at rendering unfamiliar worlds (military bases, criminal life) than familiar ones (college campuses, relationships)." Booklist



Synopsis:


Swofford follows up his bestselling Jarhead with an unforgettable first novel — a compelling story about the legacy of a youth spent inside the stark confines of a U.S. Military base in Japan — and the profane, neon netherworld just outside it, where the Japanese underworld lurks.

Friday, January 12, 2007

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Cold War Service Medal
Sign Petition Here


Join Cold War Veterans Association Today


ELIGIBILITY: The Cold War Veterans Association (CWVA) is a tax-exempt, federally-recognized 501(c)(19) veterans service organization open to honorably discharged veterans and active-duty personnel who served at any time during the Cold War period .. September 2, 1945 to December 26, 1991. (NOTE: RESERVISTS and National Guardsmen who engaged in basic training, advanced training, and/or annual training during this period ARE ELIGIBLE.)


Apply Here Join Us


CWVA NY 716-708-0505
Fax 248-708-6410
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Wednesday, January 10, 2007

WWII Vets wallet returned after 62 years




Ray Heilwagen slide show and story

MEXICO, Mo. (AP) — Ray Heilwagen has his wallet back, 62 years after he lost it in France during World War II. Late last year, Heilwagen received a call from Stephen Breitenstein of Palatine, Ill.

"He said, 'Did you lose a billfold?' and I remembered I did," Heilwagen told the Hannibal Courier-Post. "Then he said, 'I found it and will send it to you.'

"I could hardly believe it."

Breitenstein's father, who also served in France during World War II, recently died. Digging through his father's possessions — ironically on Veteran's Day — Stephen Breitenstein found the old wallet. He figured his dad found it during the war and brought it home, hoping to find the owner. Not knowing how to do so, he left it in a drawer for more than six decades.

Apache vs. Taliban

This video is of an Apache returning fire on a Taliban position in mountainous Korengal, Afghanistan.

Podcast Download wmv, 1.9 MB

Submitted By: Anonymous



Hadji hates Apaches and the video once again proves this as when Hadji gets stupid and takes one on, he ends up in his version of Paradise.

Wing
8/229 Avn USAR "Flying Tigers"

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Cold War Art

The Cold War veterans
By Pavel Zotow



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These rusting hulks are lonley vestages of the U.S.S.R. Cold War machine.
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Sean P. Eagan
New York State Director
Cold War Veterans Association
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CWVA NY 716-708-0505
Fax 248-708-6410
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Saturday, January 06, 2007


Las Vegas Atomic Museum Atoms For Peace Exhibition

http://whatshappeningvegas.blogspot.com


The Nevada Test Site has employed thousands of "Cold War Veterans" - military and civilian personnel alike, whose work, it can be argued, contributed greatly to the ending of the Cold War.

The Cold War is over now, but one could also argue that the world is still in great danger from the misuse of atomic weaponry. With every tool mankind has invented, often there comes the two-edged sword - a hatchet can chop wood for a fire, or it can be a very effective weapon of human destruction. Let us pray that in the future the power of the atom will only be used for peaceful purposes.

An exhibit at the Atomic Testing Museum in Las Vegas accentuating the peaceful uses of the atom is worth seeing:


"The 'Atoms For Peace' art exhibit was created by Erik Nitsche in the 1950's and 1960's. to depict his interpretation of nuclear energy uses. A historical perspective was added by four present-day humanities scholars. The views on the slogan, the artwork, and context are posted to engage you, the visitor, in a thought-provoking look at our nuclear past and present."



The artwork exhibition runs through January 21st (Mon - Sat , 9-5, Sun 1-5) at the Atomic Testing Museum, 755 East Flamingo, Las Vegas (702-744-5155).




Related: "Fight against terrorism similar to anti-communist Cold War" from Cold War Veterans Blog

2 comments:

Cold War Veterans Association said...

If the Nevada Test Site has employed thousands of Cold War Veterans, perhaps at least a few of them will read this comment.

I personally lift a salute of honor to all the Cold War Veterans and believe the time has come in our history that the Cold War will become more clearly understood as a war with casualties and now some stories which were hidden will now be made know to the public. During the Cold War a newspaper article may say that an aircraft with pilot and crew went down in a 'weather related' accident, when the truth was the aircraft was on a classified reconnaissance
mission off the coast of China, Russia, or elsewhere.

New legislation will soon be introduced in Congress seeking authorization of the Cold War Victory Medal for all those who gave their lives... and all those who stood on the edge of freedom, always 'at the ready' to defend our nation.

To these great Cold War Veterans we extend respect, and honor, and help. Just as the time has come that the general public are discovering the Cold War for what it really was, the time has come that our Cold War Veterans are discovering... the Cold War Veterans Association, at:
www.ColdWarVeterans.com

Hector Ed Autry
Heartland Region
Cold War Veterans Association

Submitted by Mercurial Mike


If Iraq fragments, what's Plan B?

A partitioned Iraq, which could preempt violent ethnic cleansing, looks ever more likely to many experts.

Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

As President Bush readies a new strategy for Iraq, some experts in Washington are looking beyond the question of US troop levels to what might happen if worst-case scenarios come true. Call it Plan B: How the United States might handle Iraq's partition.

It may still be possible to hold Iraq together, many of these critics believe. A surge in American military strength might help. But the hour is late - and a lack of contingency planning on the part of US officials may be one reason the situation has become so dire.

"If I was working for George Bush, I would want somebody to be thinking hard about this, sort of preparing the groundwork," says Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow in foreign-policy studies at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

The US might need actively to aid Iraqis in relocating to parts of the country where they feel safer, says Mr. O'Hanlon. This sort of resettlement assistance wouldn't be unprecedented, he notes. The US did it in Bosnia.

Such a policy would perhaps preempt the violent Balkans-style ethnic cleansing that is already occurring in Iraq, O'Hanlon says. Sectarian strife is displacing 100,000 Iraqis a month.

"One-third to one-quarter of the ethnic cleansing that might occur [in Iraq] has occurred," says O'Hanlon.

Of course, to many US officials such a policy would be anathema. Mr. Bush has long insisted that a unified, democratic Iraq is one of his goals - not an Iraq separated into sectarian regions.

It has been widely reported that the new "way forward" Bush is expected to announce next week will include a substantial surge in US forces, designed to bring stability to violence-torn parts of the country.

Such an increase might allow reconstruction aid to begin to have a real effect in Baghdad and elsewhere, improving the daily life of Iraqis and strengthening the shaky central government, according to an influential report on the subject co-authored by Frederick Kagan, a military historian at American Enterprise Institute in Washington. .......rest of the article


Thursday, January 04, 2007

Bush Salute



The United States Army Field Manual does forbid saluting "with a noticeable object in your mouth or right hand"? but it's mum on "dogs under the left arm," so we think POTUS is in the clear. Check out this great Carrier footage Podcast :Catapult Shots


Watch as these Navy Pilots are catapulted off the flight deck, accelerating from 0 to 180mph in 200 feet. SpeedandAngels.com wmv, 2.5 MB

Military.com

Submitted By: AP

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

BRITISH SCIENTISTS TO STUDY RISKS FROM DEPLETED URANIUM WEAPONS --

The effects of toxic metal used for armor-piercing weapons in both Gulf wars to be studied.
Scientists to study risks from uranium weapons


The effects of a toxic metal used for armour-piercing weapons in both Gulf wars is to be studied by British scientists.

Depleted uranium (DU) is nearly twice as dense as lead and highly valued for its ability to punch through armoured vehicles.

But concerns have been raised about the lasting health risks it poses.

When a weapon made with a DU tip hits armour it goes straight through it and then erupts in a burning cloud of vapour.

The vapour settles as dust, which is chemically poisonous and also radioactive.

Because of the difficulties of carrying out research in war zones, little is known about DU's effects, but veterans from the Gulf and Kosovan wars claim it has made them seriously ill.

A team of geologists from the University of Leicester will travel to the United States in the new year to examine a site heavily polluted by the substance.

Several tonnes of fine DU oxide dust have settled near the plant in Albany, New York.

The project will use various scientific techniques, including geochemical methods, isotope measurements and scanning electron microscopy, to evaluate the environmental effects.

Leicester geologist Dr Tim Brewer said little was known regarding DU's degradation, mobility, and solubility within the environment – largely due to the difficulty of studying it in conflict zones and the limited period of time that DU has been in use.

The information will be critical to evaluating the potential risk to both humans and the environment in areas where DU has been extensively used.
CPTnet
30 December 2006

CHICAGO/TORONTO:

Christian Peacemaker Teams announces delegations that will
investigate and challenge use and manufacture of Depleted Uranium munitions.

DEPLETED URANIUM DELEGATION ( U.S.) 16-25 March and 18-27 May 2007.

Eighty-nine percent (518,000) of the US military personnel who fought in the
First Gulf War are receiving disability payments, even though the military
operations there caused only 1000 U.S. casualties. Depleted uranium weapons
(DU) are implicated in these veterans' disabilities. Some scientists have
discovered evidence of their use in the current Iraq war as well. The
European Union has banned DU weapons.

The CPT delegation is part of a campaign to halt the production of DU
munitions. Starting in Jonesborough, Tennessee--location of one of the main
DU weapons production facilities in the U.S.--delegates will meet with
people impacted by these weapons, including veterans, hospital
administrators and plant employees. They will also organize and carry out a
nonviolent public witness challenging the production of DU munitions. The
March delegation may also travel to Washington, DC.

Delegates arrange their own transportation to Knoxville, Tennessee and raise
$300 for on-ground expenses

*** CPT is a faith-based group that seeks participants for all delegations
who are interested in human rights work, committed to nonviolence, and
willing to participate in team worship and reflection. Delegates should
have plans to share about the trip upon return to their home communities and
congregations.

All on-ground travel, two meals a day, simple accommodations, and all
honorariums and delegation fees are covered. For more information or to
apply, contact CPT, (PO Box 6508, Chicago, IL 60680; phone 773-277-0253; fax
773-277-0291; e mail delegations@cpt.org < mailto:delegations@cpt.org>) or
see CPT's website at: http://www.cpt.org/.