About Us
Mission Statement
Rules of Conduct
 
Name:
Pswd:
Remember Me
Register
 

Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 06/12/2012 10:16:21

Good Morning.

Today is our 3,901st day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do; with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing war, courtesy of Antiwar.com:

US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 2,003
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,037

We find this morning's Cost of War passing through:

$ 1, 341, 576, 800, 000 .00


I've got a number of disconnected stories today, but we'll start with the big news. Pentagon officials admitted this week that we're not that good at war anymore.


When President Obama announced in August 2010 the end of U.S. combat operations in Iraq, he complimented the soldiers who had served there for completing "every mission they were given." But some of military's most senior officers, in a little-noticed report this spring, rendered a harsher account of their work that highlights repeated missteps and failures over the past decade, in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

There was a "failure to recognize, acknowledge and accurately define" the environment in which the conflicts occurred, leading to a "mismatch between forces, capabilities, missions, and goals," says the assessment from the Pentagon's Joint Staff. The efforts were marked by a "failure to adequately plan and resource strategic and operational" shifts from one phase of the conflicts to the next.

From the outset, U.S. forces were poorly prepared for peacekeeping and had not adequately planned for the unexpected. In the first half of the decade, "strategic leadership repeatedly failed," and as a result, U.S. military training, policies, doctrine and equipment were ill-suited to the tasks that troops actually faced in Iraq and Afghanistan.

These self-critical conclusions appear in the first volume of a draft report titled "Decade of War" -- part of a multi-volume survey of "enduring lessons" from the past ten years of conflict. When completed, "it will be used by senior leaders" to develop U.S. military forces for the future, according to Navy Lt. Cmdr. Cindy Fields, a Joint Staff spokeswoman.

Fields said the 36-page May 2012 report remains an internal document and is not available to the public, but a copy was posted last Thursday on the website of a trade publication, Inside the Pentagon (accessible only to regular or trial subscribers).

Its criticisms are largely familiar to anyone who closely followed the two wars' fitful progress or who read author Thomas Ricks' seminal, bestselling 2006 account of the U.S. military's early failings in Iraq, bluntly titled "Fiasco." An internal Army War College assessment in 2005 cited in Ricks' book reaches similar conclusions.

But this new retrospective may be more significant because it was prepared by the Pentagon directorate responsible for developing military educational curricula, war-fighting doctrine, and training regimes for all the services. What the report makes clear is that senior officers have fully accepted the judgment by so many others that their prosecution of the wars -- at a direct cost to the federal budget of more than a trillion dollars -- was in some ways inept.

While it does not name those responsible, the assessment points fingers in unmistakable directions. It says that the early dismantling of Iraq's security forces and firing of mid-level government officials - decisions , made by Ambassador Paul Bremer with broad support in the Bush administration - crippled Iraq's ability to govern itself and fueled the insurgency, creating social chaos that lasted for years. The task of creating a new police and military force was a "severe burden" that neither U.S. troops nor civilian agencies were prepared to undertake.

The early signs of the insurgency, the report says, were ignored. Intelligence failures were rife, with early shortages of key analysts and interpreters, remotely-piloted aircraft, and electronic eavesdroppers. What intelligence was gathered was sometimes over-classified, with the result that it failed to reach those who needed it. And units were not taught in advance what local populations were really like; instead, they depended on what the military calls "discovery learning" - otherwise known as flying by the seat of one's pants - with lessons not systematically passed along to units rotated in as replacements.


But maybe there's hope; the mere fact that the Pentagon is taking notice and writing this stuff down means that there is a slight change we can actually learn from our mistakes instead of repeating them. Only time will tell.

Moving on to the home front, there's a recent report that the Army is raising its standards for recruits. During the peak war years, ol' Uncle Sam gave out bonuses and often looked the other way when 'substandard' volunteers signed up. It's not something we spent a lot of time on here at AAV, but there were some troubling trends with overweight or otherwise physically unfit volunteers, and more troubling, those with abusive or criminal backgrounds.

With Iraq over, and Afghanistan winding down....the Army isn't doing that anymore, and that's probably a good thing.


In sharp contrast to the peak years of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the Army last year took in no recruits with misconduct convictions or drug or alcohol issues, according to internal documents obtained by The Associated Press. And soldiers already serving on active duty now must meet tougher standards to stay on for further tours in uniform.
The Army is also spending hundreds of thousands of dollars less in bonuses to attract recruits or entice soldiers to remain.
It's all part of an effort to slash the size of the active duty Army from about 570,000 at the height of the Iraq war to 490,000 by 2017. The cutbacks began last year, and as of the end of March the Army was down to less than 558,000 troops.
For a time during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army lowered its recruiting standards, raising the number of recruits who entered the Army with moral, medical and criminal — including felony — waivers.
Recruits with misdemeanors, which could range from petty theft and writing bad checks to assault, were allowed into the Army, as well as those with some medical problems or low aptitude scores that might otherwise have disqualified them.
A very small fraction of recruits had waivers for felonies, which included convictions for manslaughter, vehicular homicide, robbery and a handful of sex crimes. The sex crimes often involved consensual sex when one of the individuals was under 18.
In 2006, about 20 percent of new Army recruits came in under some type of waiver, and by the next year it had grown to nearly three in 10. After the Defense Department issued new guidelines, the percentage needing waivers started to come down in 2009.
Now, as the Army moves to reduce its force, some soldiers will have to leave.
Officials say they hope to make cuts largely through voluntary attrition. But Gen. Ray Odierno, the Army chief of staff, has warned that as much as 35 percent of the cuts will be "involuntary" ones that force soldiers to abandon what they had hoped would be long military careers.
"This is going to be hard," said Gen. David Rodriguez, head of U.S. Army Forces Command. "This is tough business. As we increase things like re-enlistment standards, some of the people who were able to re-enlist three years ago won't be able to re-enlist again."
The Army, in an internal slide presentation, is blunt: "Re-enlistment is a privilege, not a right; some 'fully qualified' soldiers will be denied re-enlistment due to force realignment requirements and reductions in end strength."


Finally this morning....in Iraq, there were multiple incidents of soldiers being electrocuted in their barracks or other 'safe' places because of the shoddy work of KBR and Halliburton. It was never satisfactorily addressed, and with our troops home from Iraq, the danger seems to have passed. A handful of Marines in Afghanistan have met an unfortunate end, but at least this time they appear to be combat-related. Electricity is nothing to mess around with, whether it's on the base or out on patrol.


At least four Marines have been electrocuted in Afghanistan since November, highlighting another hazard for ground forces fighting in Helmand province.

Cpls. Adam Buyes, Connor Lowry and Jon-Luke Bateman and Lance Cpl. Kenneth Cochran were killed in three separate incidents. Buyes died Nov. 26, Bateman and Cochran on Jan. 15, and Lowry on March 1.

Buyes was a radio operator with 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, out of Okinawa, Japan. He died in Sangin district after leaving a patrol base on foot with his unit, according to documents outlining a command investigation into his death. His three-foot radio antenna hit a power line hanging about eight feet high, causing “sparks/fire” beneath his feet.

The documents were released to Marine Corps Times through a Freedom of Information Act request.

“Initially, Cpl. Buyes was groaning, taking approximately one breath every five seconds, and had a weak pulse,” the documents say. “Shortly thereafter, Cpl. Buyes stopped groaning and his breathing and pulse diminished quickly, until the corpsman could not detect any pulse or breathing.”

Lowry was an ammunition technician with Golf Battery, 2nd Battalion, 11th Marines, out of Camp Pendleton, Calif. He died after a radio antenna touched a low-hanging power line in Kajaki district, Marines in his unit told Marine Corps Times during an April embed with their unit. His family, speaking with media in Lowry’s hometown, acknowledged electrocution caused his death.

Bateman and Cochran died in Musa Qala district in an accident involving an electric generator, according to a report in the Pahrump Valley Times, a newspaper in Bateman’s hometown area. Bateman was an infantryman with Camp Pendleton’s 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, and Cochran was a water support technician with 9th Engineer Support Battalion, out of Okinawa, Japan.

A March 12 incident involving Marines and power lines in Helmand also killed an Afghan civilian, according to the Naval Safety Center, out of Norfolk, Va. An antenna on a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle hit a power line, causing an electrical surge that resulted in a tire rim hurtling toward an unidentified person on the side of the road, military officials said.


I'll leave you with an observation; go back up and look at the casualty figures. We've gone over 2,000 this past week, and unlike when milestones like that were hit in Iraq, nobody seemed to notice.
 

50 comments (Latest Comment: 06/12/2012 22:08:10 by Mondobubba)
   Perma Link

Share This!

Furl it!
Spurl
NewsVine
Reddit
Technorati

Add a Comment

Please login to add a comment...


Comments:

Order comments Newest to Oldest  Refresh Comments

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 13:05:34
Le Sigh.

Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 13:07:52
Morning

why the melancholy this morning?

Comment by BobR on 06/12/2012 13:15:41
As always - thanks TriSec for the weekly AAV segment...

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 13:35:15
Quote by wickedpam:
Morning

why the melancholy this morning?



Because I have a mental illness. Depression dontcha know.

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 13:35:33
Sorry Mala, didn't mean to sound so snipey.

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 13:42:24
Even with the meds, it will still manifest itself stronger on some days than others.

Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 13:47:20
Quote by Mondobubba:
Sorry Mala, didn't mean to sound so snipey.


no worries - there are days when I get like that too.


Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 13:49:19
Quote by Mondobubba:
Even with the meds, it will still manifest itself stronger on some days than others.



its been raining for how many days down there now? that's probably not helping.

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 13:55:29
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Even with the meds, it will still manifest itself stronger on some days than others.



its been raining for how many days down there now? that's probably not helping.



Yeah that doesn't help much. Neither does not getting a decent amount of sleep, which is totally my fault. I blame Joss Weadon and "Firefly" for that.

Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 14:00:38
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Even with the meds, it will still manifest itself stronger on some days than others.



its been raining for how many days down there now? that's probably not helping.



Yeah that doesn't help much. Neither does not getting a decent amount of sleep, which is totally my fault. I blame Joss Weadon and "Firefly" for that.


that's much better then what I was watching last night - who said Inception was good? same goes for Bridesmaids - didn't find that funny, it was kinda sad really


Comment by Will in Chicago on 06/12/2012 14:11:58
Good morning, bloggers!!

TriSec, thanks for the blog today. My hope is that both the military and civilian leadership have learned from the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars. Politics should not trump planning to ensure that future conflicts do not have the mistakes we saw in these wars. (Ideally, we will avoid a lot of future conflicts.)




Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 14:28:17
Quote by wickedpam:
that's much better then what I was watching last night - who said Inception was good? same goes for Bridesmaids - didn't find that funny, it was kinda sad really

I was kinda disappointed in Bridesmaids.

good morning!

Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 14:35:32
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
that's much better then what I was watching last night - who said Inception was good? same goes for Bridesmaids - didn't find that funny, it was kinda sad really

I was kinda disappointed in Bridesmaids.

good morning!



it actually made me get weepy and sad - only funny scene was when the van full of puppies drove by

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 14:43:20
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
that's much better then what I was watching last night - who said Inception was good? same goes for Bridesmaids - didn't find that funny, it was kinda sad really

I was kinda disappointed in Bridesmaids.

good morning!



it actually made me get weepy and sad - only funny scene was when the van full of puppies drove by



There is a lot of "boy humor" in Bridesmaids. You can't go wrong with food poisoning and wedding dresses.

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 14:44:07
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Even with the meds, it will still manifest itself stronger on some days than others.



its been raining for how many days down there now? that's probably not helping.



Yeah that doesn't help much. Neither does not getting a decent amount of sleep, which is totally my fault. I blame Joss Weadon and "Firefly" for that.


that's much better then what I was watching last night - who said Inception was good? same goes for Bridesmaids - didn't find that funny, it was kinda sad really



Inception bored the crap outta me.

Comment by Will in Chicago on 06/12/2012 14:52:43
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Even with the meds, it will still manifest itself stronger on some days than others.



its been raining for how many days down there now? that's probably not helping.



Yeah that doesn't help much. Neither does not getting a decent amount of sleep, which is totally my fault. I blame Joss Weadon and "Firefly" for that.


that's much better then what I was watching last night - who said Inception was good? same goes for Bridesmaids - didn't find that funny, it was kinda sad really



Inception bored the crap outta me.


I saw it with a friend, who is a woman, and she found much of it funny -- if a bit gross at times. Note to self: Always look for the health department certificate at restaurants.



Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 14:55:22
Thing about Bridesmaids? It missed the jokes by that much thru-ought the entire film.

The cast was great, but it could have gone a little further in some areas and less in others.



Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 15:00:59
Quote by Raine:
Thing about Bridesmaids? It missed the jokes by that much thru-ought the entire film.

The cast was great, but it could have gone a little further in some areas and less in others.




I supposes its a problem that I don't really find sitcoms all that fun either. I'm not good with the "slap stick" physical humor

The dress shop scene - I didn't see the bathroom humor as funny, I saw that HOH felt like she was being shone up by the rich friend. Then at the end I was like - why don't they start their own business with cakes and party planning but it never took that step. And what was with the cop who was drinking on duty, among other things?

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 15:06:19
What really made me stay up past my bedtime was thing thing on Netflix from a series called "Classic Albums." The one I was watching was on Steely Dan's "Aja." It was really interesting seeing Becker and Fagen's process in the studio.

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 15:12:47
They are interviewing Rep Spier right now on the show. It is about this story.

This is an amazing story from every angle.

Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 15:29:38
Okay I was just looking at the shops on Obama for American and Romney - let me just say first that you don't need to use everything at cafepress OfA and second OfA's stuff much cooler

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 15:52:52
Quote by Raine:
They are interviewing Rep Spier right now on the show. It is about this story.

This is an amazing story from every angle.



Rock on Pete McClosky!

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 15:53:32
http://obamadiary.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/bettywhitebo-banner-wh.jpg


Comment by BobR on 06/12/2012 15:55:58
Quote by Raine:
They are interviewing Rep Spier right now on the show. It is about this story.

This is an amazing story from every angle.

*LIKE!*

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 15:57:30
Quote by Raine:
http://obamadiary.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/bettywhitebo-banner-wh.jpg



So, what's up with the noble beast?

Comment by livingonli on 06/12/2012 16:40:56
Good day, folks. Not much to say today.

Comment by BobR on 06/12/2012 17:03:53
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
http://obamadiary.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/bettywhitebo-banner-wh.jpg

So, what's up with the noble beast?

Which one? Bo or Betty White?

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 17:13:56
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”


Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 17:14:33
Quote by BobR:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
http://obamadiary.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/bettywhitebo-banner-wh.jpg

So, what's up with the noble beast?

Which one? Bo or Betty White?



Comment by Scoopster on 06/12/2012 17:27:25
Quote by Raine:
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”

DIDN'T BAIN CAPITAL OWN DUNKIN DONUTS FOR AT LEAST FIVE YEARS?!!?!!?!?!?

Comment by Scoopster on 06/12/2012 17:30:01
Oh yeah.. afternoon all! Busy busy busy at work work work!

Comment by livingonli on 06/12/2012 17:33:45
Quote by Scoopster:
Quote by Raine:
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”

DIDN'T BAIN CAPITAL OWN DUNKIN DONUTS FOR AT LEAST FIVE YEARS?!!?!!?!?!?

Obviously he never patronized his own businesses.

Comment by wickedpam on 06/12/2012 17:41:12
Quote by Raine:
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”



well he's lost Homer's vote

Comment by livingonli on 06/12/2012 18:07:17
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”



well he's lost Homer's vote

Especially being a Mormon he probably doesn't drink beer either so that's two strikes.

Comment by BobR on 06/12/2012 18:11:23
Quote by livingonli:
Quote by Scoopster:
Quote by Raine:
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”

DIDN'T BAIN CAPITAL OWN DUNKIN DONUTS FOR AT LEAST FIVE YEARS?!!?!!?!?!?

Obviously he never patronized his own businesses.

It looked like a filled donut in the video, so no hole = no donut in his book.

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 18:30:41
Quote by BobR:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
http://obamadiary.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/bettywhitebo-banner-wh.jpg

So, what's up with the noble beast?

Which one? Bo or Betty White?


Since there was soooo much context to help me ken that this picture was of Bo and Betty hanging together I was able to figure that out right off the bat, Skippy. I was just messing with you fine people

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 19:07:55
Snottiness killed the blog?

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 19:17:28
Quote by Scoopster:
Quote by Raine:
I'm just... Wow...
Mitt Romney Apparently Doesn’t Know What A Donut Is
“Garrett, can you see that one of those chocolate…uh…chocolate goodies finds its way to our ride?”

DIDN'T BAIN CAPITAL OWN DUNKIN DONUTS FOR AT LEAST FIVE YEARS?!!?!!?!?!?
They did, and may still... along with the Carlyle group.


Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 19:19:49
Dunkin and the IPO.

Carlyle and Bain still own a significant portion.

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 19:22:35
Quote by Mondobubba:
Snottiness killed the blog?

Has it ever before?

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 19:26:43
Quote by BobR:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Snottiness killed the blog?

I was trying to figure out what this means "... help me ken that this picture ... "



Ken=Scots for understand, figure out. Read yer Irvine Welsh.

Comment by BobR on 06/12/2012 19:37:14
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by BobR:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Snottiness killed the blog?

I was trying to figure out what this means "... help me ken that this picture ... "

Ken=Scots for understand, figure out. Read yer Irvine Welsh.

I got that - I still don't understand what that poorly structured sentence was trying to tell me.

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 20:44:10
At this point, it's not snottiness...

Can't we just like pretty things?

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 20:49:23
Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 20:54:52
I would think that a conspiracy charge will be filed in the future.


Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 21:20:26
Quote by Raine:
I would think that a conspiracy charge will be filed in the future.


Klassy Kouple, the Zimmermans!

Speaking of the Zimmernan case, Angela Corey didn't like being criticized be Alan Dershowitz, so she contacted Harvard Law School and demanded he be fired from the faculity and disbarred.

Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 21:46:40
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
I would think that a conspiracy charge will be filed in the future.


Klassy Kouple, the Zimmermans!

Speaking of the Zimmernan case, Angela Corey didn't like being criticized be Alan Dershowitz, so she contacted Harvard Law School and demanded he be fired from the faculity and disbarred.
Where did you read that?

I know that Dershowitz also critiqued Z's former defense team because they said they couldn't contact him and as this, Dershowitz thought they violated client confidentiality.


Comment by Raine on 06/12/2012 21:50:30
Oh Mondo... is this the drama?

Is he really trying to float this on Faux?

If that is the case, he should have offered his services to Z right from the start. This has all kinds of BS Sour grapes written all over it.



Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 22:05:24
Quote by Raine:
Oh Mondo... is this the drama?

Is he really trying to float this on Faux?

If that is the case, he should have offered his services to Z right from the start. This has all kinds of BS Sour grapes written all over it. So she's a bit thin skinned when she is critizied by the civil liberites community.




Yup. The Dersh was also on "First Coast Connect" on the local NPR mosheen talking about this. I think Angela Corey's reaction is a tad overblown. Before Trayvon Martin her claim to fame was charging the then 12-year old Christian Fernandez as an adult for felony murder.

Comment by Mondobubba on 06/12/2012 22:08:10
Quote by Raine:
Oh Mondo... is this the drama?

Is he really trying to float this on Faux?

If that is the case, he should have offered his services to Z right from the start. This has all kinds of BS Sour grapes written all over it.

He only does appelet work See Claus von Bulow.