Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

February 14, 2004

Off to War

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 6:23 pm

For those of you who have never seen a loved one depart for a combat zone, read what Sarah has to say.

I remember watching my father board a plane at Dallas Love Field enroute to Vietnam in 1966. I was a teenager, but lost control of my tear ducts once he was out of sight. Later in life I was the one leaving–several times. I now have two sons in the sandbox, and think of them and what they are doing. As an old commander, I understand the necessity. As a father, I am proud, yet still concerned.

This war needs to be finished, and not in the same way as Vietnam was finished. Won, as in how WWII and the Cold War were won, with new democracies replacing old autocracies.

SF Officer to Kerry

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 3:54 pm

One man’s opinion worth reading. Don Bendell served as an officer in four
Special Forces Groups:

The old hurts are surfacing and the feelings of betrayal by fellow
citizens, and their leader stirring them up, are breaking my heart again. I
am being cut in the same scar. How did we who served in Vietnam suddenly
become cold-blooded killers, torturers, and rapists, of the ilk of the Nazi
SS or the Taliban? Most of us were American soldiers who grew up idolizing
John Wayne, Roy Rogers, and all the other heroes. That was why I
volunteered. But for political expediency, John Kerry has rewritten
history, again. After spending only four months in the country of Vietnam,
John Kerry testified before Congress in 1971 with these exact words about
incidents he supposedly witnessed or heard about from other vets: “They
personally raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, taped wires from portable
telephones to human genitals and turned up the power, cut off limbs, blown
up bodies, randomly shot at civilians, razed villages, shot cattle and dogs
for fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally ravaged the countryside of
South Vietnam.”

I was a green beret officer who volunteered for duty in Vietnam
and fought in the thick of it in 1968 and 1969 on a Special Forces A-team
on the Ho Chi Minh Trail, just for starters. We were the elite. We saw the
most action. Everybody in the world knows that. But we did not just kill
people, we built a church, a school, treated illnesses, passed out soap,
food, and clothing, and had fun and loving interaction with the indigenous
people of Vietnam, just like our boys did in Normandy, Baghdad, Saigon, and
everywhere American soldiers ever served. We all gave away our candy bars
and rations to kids. Our hearts to oppressed people all over the globe.

My children and grandchildren could read your words, and think
those horrendous things about me, Mr. Kerry. You are a bold-faced,
unprincipled liar, and a disgrace, and you have dishonored me and all my
fellow Vietnam veterans. Sure, there were a couple bad-apples, but I saw
none, and I saw it all, and if I did, as an army officer, it was my
obligation to stop it, or at the very least report it. Why is there not a
single record anywhere of you ever reporting any incidents like this or
having the perpetrators arrested? The answer is simple. You are a liar.
Your medals and mine are not a free pass for lifetime, Senator Kerry, to
bypass character, integrity, and morality. I earn my green beret over and
over daily in all aspects of my life.

Eight National Guard green berets, and other National Guard
soldiers, have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, and you totally
dishonored their widows and families by lumping National Guard service in
with being a draft-dodger, conscientious objector, and deserter, just so
you can try to sabotage the patriotism of our President who proudly served
as an Air National Guard jet pilot. I have a son earning his green beret at
Fort Bragg right now, and his wife serves honorably in the Air National
Guard, just like President Bush did, and I am as proud of her as I am my
son. I volunteered for Vietnam and have no problem whatsoever with
President Bush being our Commander-In-Chief. In fact, I am proud of him as
our leader.

John Kerry, you personally derailed the Vietnam Human Rights
Bill, HR2883, in 2001, after it had passed the House by a 411 to 1 vote,
and thousands of pro-American Montagnard tribespeople in Vietnam died since
then who could have been saved, by you. Earlier, as Chair of the Senate
Select Committee on MIA/POW Affairs, you personally quashed the efforts of
any and all veterans to report sightings of living POW’s, when you held
those reins in Congress. You have fought tooth and nail to push for the US
to normalize relations with Vietnam for years. Why, Mr. Kerry? Simple, your
first cousin C. Stewart Forbes, CEO, of Colliers International, recently
signed a contract with Hanoi, worth BILLIONS of dollars for Collier’s
International to become the exclusive real estate representative for the
country of Vietnam.

“Hanoi John,” now that it works for you, you beat your chest
about your Vietnam service, but to me, you are a phony, opportunistic,
hypocrite. You are one of those politicians that is like a fertilizer
machine: all that comes out of you is horse manure, and you are spreading
it everywhere.

Medals do not make a man. Morals do.

Don Bendell
Canon City, Colorado

February 13, 2004

Spc. James Kiehl

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 7:09 pm

SOLDIER’S FUNERAL TEXAS STYLE just north of San Antonio.

February 12, 2004

You must be kidding

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 2:25 pm

DefendAmerica News – Article

Is this necessary in a war zone? These guys get this training every year at home.

February 11, 2004

Perhaps an explanation is in order

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 8:21 pm

For those of you who are not career military, I’d like to explain a bit of the military mentality, if there really is such a thing.

Military organizations thrive on problem-solving. All professional education in the military have some form of problem resolution aspect in the curriculum. It can be classroom discussion of an issue and procedures for resolving all aspects. It takes the form of “what-if” and encourages discussion.

Another type is wrapped in gaming, whether it be a war game, athletic activity such as Flickerball (where knowing the rules and using them to advantage can win the game), or scenario progression. Sometime this takes the form of analyzing a survival situation where the group debates relative utility of various objects and their potential uses.

One used at Air Force schools is the Leadership Reaction Course. A series of stations provide obstacles to be overcome using pieces of rope or boards. The team has to develop a plan and determine how the tools can be used. Often, props are provided which would be of no help at all. The group uses collective imagination to develop a solution.

The primary thing all these have in common is that nobody is to blame for the predicament. There is a problem, and it must be solved. Period.

This is something I had a difficult time with when I retired from the Air Force. As soon as I pointed out a problem, people began looking around wondering who I was blaming. The focus was on who caused the problem rather than defining the problem so it could be resolved. I was accused of “being negative.”

In the military, if someone says, “That’s not right,” the response is, “How do we fix it?”

Military personnel understand this. Journalists do not. Well, some do. Dr Bob Arnot is one who does.

Many journalists and their bosses back home want the “exciting story” or the “investigative angle.” This is contrary to what the military wants. We’re not interested in digging up more problems to solve, we already have plenty, thank you. The most frustrating thing is that if I find a problem, I fix it. Journalists don’t.

Neither do GIs want to be the object of false praise. Most are accustomed to a “good job” when they’ve done something pretty special. But they view most of what they do, including heroic things, as what they do for a living. No praise required.

This is something Arnot and the embedded journalists understood.

Maj. Clark Taylor e-mailed NYTV from Baghdad to state that Dr. Arnot “highlighted what is really happening over here ?. He generally reported positive things because, generally, that is what is happening. Of course there are occasional bad things ? and he reported those as well. The fact was, he reported what he saw?which generally was positive.”

That is all the military asks–report fairly, good and bad. We know there will be some of both. But if you see a problem, let us know so we can fix it.

February 9, 2004

Kerry the hero

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Military,Politics — Bunker @ 5:58 pm

PowerLine carries a story by a former member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War. His memory of Kerry is that of an opportunist.

This meshes with my opinion based only on what I’ve learned about his background prior to joining the Navy and going to Vietnam. I’ve done a few searches on the ‘net for any information on his actions, but haven’t yet found anything regarding who submitted him for his Silver Star.

After reading various versions of the action which got him his medal, I have to wonder, “Was that all?” I’ve known people who did far more for far less recognition. If anyone out there has better information, I’d love to hear it.

Update: AftermathofwarcopingwithPTSDtoo is a community bulletin board on MSN with an entry by Henry Mark Holzer, a lawyer who has set himself a mission of outing fake warriors. As I could only locate the article through a Google cache, I’ve copied it here in full, and added Mr. Holzer’s site as a link:

JFK (II): WAR HERO OR FAKE WARRIOR?

BY: Henry Mark Holzer

Senator John Forbes Kerry, Navy veteran and candidate for the democrat party nomination for President of the United States, has for years played the ?war hero? card. As the story goes, for his service in wartime Vietnam Kerry was awarded a Silver Star, a Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts.

However, for all those years, and especially now, questions have been raised and doubts have surfaced about the legitimacy of some of those awards. Few people know the truth, preeminently Senator Kerry?but he?s not talking. This is not to say?and I am certainly not saying!?that Kerry did not deserve his medals. I am saying that because of Kerry?s character, associations, conduct and silence, there is a legitimate question as to whether he is the Vietnam War hero he claims to be?a question only Kerry can answer. Thus far, it has gone unanswered.

A Silver Star is awarded for ?gallantry? for conduct not warranting the next highest award, a Navy Cross?nor the highest, the Medal of Honor. A Bronze Star, next on the list just under the Silver Star, can be awarded for either ?heroic or meritorious achievement or service.? (A Bronze Star with an accompanying ?V? [for valor] is awarded for heroism, while one without a ?V? can be for running a great mess hall). The Purple Heart requires ?a wound . . . which . . . must have required treatment by a medical officer.?

None of these awards are easy to come by?particularly the Silver Star?so let?s focus on that one.

Why have questions been raised about Senator Kerry?s Silver Star?

First, because he, himself, not only is a liar, but because one of his worst lies involved the Vietnam war. At pages 135-136 of Stolen Valor (Burkett and Whitley, Verity Press, 1998), the authors reveal that in April 1971, Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) held a demonstration in Washington, D.C. called Dewey Canyon III. Kerry was an organizer and leader. According to Burkett and Whitley, “Kerry flung a handful of medals–he had received the Silver Star, a Bronze Star Medal, and three purple hearts–over the fence [of the Capitol]. * * * But years later, after his election to the Senate, Kerry’s medals turned up on the wall of his Capitol Hill office. When a reporter noticed them, Kerry admitted that the medals he had thrown that day were not his.” (Burkett and Whitley source this statement with: “Phil Duncan, editor, “Congressional Quarterly’s Politics in America,” 102nd Congress, 1992, p. 678″). If Kerry lied, for political purposes, about eschewing his m! edals, it raises the distinct possibility that he (or someone on his behalf) lied either about his receiving them or about exactly what he received them for.

Second, Kerry was a founder of VVAW. His organization had its hand in at least two contrived events of consummately false anti-American, pro-Communist propaganda. The first, in early 1971, was known as the ?Winter Soldier Investigation.? Featuring the likes of Hanoi Jane Fonda, her lover Donald Sutherland, activist Dick Gregory, and other assorted luminaries of the Left, the ?investigation? paraded alleged Vietnam veterans who told atrocity stories that had been literally lifted from Hollywood movies and the screeds of Communist propagandists. Most of those who ?testified? were Fake Warriors, their ?testimony? consisting largely of lies about the war and about their role, if any, in it. The second event was Dewey Canyon III, referred to above. There, reflecting the contrary-to-fact movie stereotype of the physically and mentally damaged Vietnam vet, the demonstrators put on what Burkett and Whitley correctly characterized as ?political theater.? Again, many identified ! participants were Fake Warriors, whose sole purpose was to discredit the United States and elevate the Vietnamese Communist cause to indigenous ?nobility.? Kerry?s central role in founding the organization that engineered these two palpably phony events, and his participation in and association with those who had provably lied about the Vietnam war and their alleged service in it, casts doubt about any other claims he has made about his own military service.

Third, there is some dispute about the event which was the basis for Kerry?s Silver Star. One published account reports that his river patrol boat came under fire from the bank and retuned fire. As the craft approached the shore, a wounded Viet Cong was observed running away. Kerry is supposed to have chased him, and both disappeared from sight. Shots were heard. Kerry jumped aboard and claimed that there had been a firefight. Result: one Silver Star. If this published report is true, there were no witnesses to the action?yet two witnesses are required for a Silver Star recommendation. As Burkett and Whitley have written, ?Silver Stars are awarded only for actions in combat; most of those who receive a Silver Star suffer wounds in the process. Receiving a Silver Star requires witnesses and significant substantiation of valor.? The authors of Stolen Valor continue: ?How a soldier, sailor, or Marine receives a valorous medal essentially hasn?t changed since the Civi! l War. One way is from the bottom up. For example, a soldier is with a platoon in the field [or on a river boat]. The North Vietnamese [or Viet Cong] start pouring over his platoon?s perimeter [or firing from the shore]. He?s screaming orders, dragging wounded, saving people [chasing a wounded VC into the jungle]?being your basic hero. The next day an ?after-action? report by his commander will describe the soldier?s bravery. The other men who saw the events will be motivated to nominate the hero for recognition. The recommendation goes up the chain of command and is either approved or denied. The ?top-down? process occurs when higher-ups?the company or battalion commander?nominate him. Aware that something heroic has happened, his superiors interview witnesses and nominate the soldier, sailor, or airman for a medal. The system is open to a certain amount of back scratching. Say a platoon [or a river boat] fights a battle. People fight; some die. The platoon lea! der [or boat commander] wants a Silver Star, and he lets the platoon s ergeant [or seaman] know that the way the sergeant [or seaman] can earn his own Bronze Star Medal is to authenticate his superior?s heroism. Except for outright fabrication, this is usually not an official cause of concern. Whatever the medal, there has to be a recommendation by the command authority and supporting evidence. The higher the decoration [the Silver Star is the third highest], the more stringent thee requirements for supporting documentation. (Emphasis added).

When awards like the Silver Star are ordered (there is an actual ?order? issued), a ?citation? is also issued describing the conduct that is the basis for the medal. This completes the paper trail.

To sum up: As to Senator Kerry?s conduct, there should be reports of the engagement; there should be chain-of-command recommendations; there should be an order directing the award of the medal; and there should be a citation describing his ?gallantry.?

Where are these crucial, corroborating documents? Why has Kerry not released them? And while we?re asking questions in this, an election year, it would be interesting to know whether anyone else on that river boat was awarded a medal?and, if so, who recommended it.

Let me restate the obvious: He who would be president of the United States is morally required?in fealty to those who hold Medals of Honor, service Crosses, Silver Stars, Bronze Stars for valor, and Purple Hearts?to put on the table the documentation that supports his claim to be a war hero.

If he is one, no one will applaud louder than I. If he is not, all Americans?regardless of party?deserve to know the truth. One way to learn the truth is for every one of us with a conscience to demand that truth from Senator John Forbes Kerry?and right now!

Click Here

February 3, 2004

Birdie–From the Front

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 8:41 am

well i’m back. not much happening here. went out on patrol today, the locals in a certain area said that if they saw americans driving down their road today (it’s their christmas) they’d ambush them. you know me, i drove that 3 mile stretch of road 4 times, called their bluff and nothing happened. heck and i only had 2 humvee’s and my squad with me and they still did nothing. we’ll go back out there tonight and try and pick another fight. i even had my camera with me to video a firefight, but they were all talk and that’s about it. i’ll talk to y’all later.

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