July 18, 2007
New Features
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man reading bookBook Reviews
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Scroll down this column to find list of most recent articles.
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Great newspaper article of the book, Gun Totin Chaplain and interview with author.

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July 16 Webzine
July 11 Webzine
July 1 Webzine
Father's Day 2007
Leonidas,Themistocles
Ruth Graham
AJ Soprano and Army
General Pace Fired?
Dirty Filthy Love
Home Guard?
What We Need Is A War
Iraq Another S. Korea?
Movie Reviews: Waitress
Movie Review: Georgia Rule
Movie Review: Venus
Memorial Day 2007
Dua Khali(Stoned Girl)
Green Dragon
Jerry Falwell
Volunteer Army and Cyberspace
Theresa Sparks
Iraq and Vietnam
Mother's Day
Partying and Getting Laid
Murphy Taylor Tribute
Horace Pope Tribute
Fort Dix
Virginia Tech
Mom on National Service
Blogger(Grandma age 64)fromIraq
Sense Of Senseless
Don Imus
Swiftboat Vets and VP
Easter 2007
Recent Webzine Articles
Book Review:Infidel
Lisa Nowak
Newsom(afterthefall)
Gavin Newsom
Art Buchwald
State of Union
IraqNam
Phil Woodall
Wesley Autry
Surge and Accelerate
Saddam's Execution
variation of gun-totin chaplain cover
Great newspaper article of the book, Gun Totin Chaplain and interview with author.

Order Gun-Totin' Chaplain

Past Commentaries
· Jan 14-18 Webzine
· Jan 7-8 Webzine
· Christmas Webzine
· Dec 19, 20, 21 Webzine
· The Scrooge Speech and Soldier Poem
· December 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 Webzine
· December 7, 8, 9 Webzine
· Chaplains and Streeters
· Charlie Rangel and Draft
New Features
movie projectorMovie Reviews
man reading bookBook Reviews
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Rescue Dawn Photos: Christian Bale, Steve Zahn, Jeremy Davies, Werner Herzog. © MGM Werner Herzog. © MGM

Movie Review: Rescue Dawn

Dieter Dengler's main goal in life was to be a fighter pilot. He goes to Vietnam and carries out this goal. He goes on a mission, gets shot down, and captured. Rescue Dawn is the story of his struggle to escape.

Great Quote from Rescue Dawn- Dengler: When I was uhh... five or somethin', I was looking out the window, with my brother... and we see this fighter plane was coming right at us. I was not scared. I was mesmerized! Because for me, this pilot was this all-mighty being from the clouds. From that moment on, I knew I wanted to be him. I wanted to be one of them. I wanted to be a pilot.

   UNBELIEVABLE........................

A U.S. soldier observes from the top of an armoured vehicle during a patrol in Baghdad July 12, 2007. The United States could begin withdrawing troops from northern Iraq in January, the commander of U.S. forces for the region said on Friday, as pressure mounts on the Bush administration to end the war. REUTERS/Nikola Solic
REUTERS/Nikola Solic
I wanted to say it's like some politicians are "living in a parallel universe" but I've already said that so many times.

When I hear the President speak or any Republican, I can hardly believe what I'm hearing. Although I am a registered Democrat, I am really an Independent.

Consequently, if I heard anything realistic coming out of the mouth of the President or anybody in the Administration, I would like to think I would give it credence.

Honestly, however, I simply am flummoxed. It is as though the real happenings in Iraq are, like I have said, in a parallel universe of which they are not aware.

Recently on the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, Senator Robert Casey, Jr. from Pennsylvania and Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson from Texas were discussing Iraq.

Senator Hutchinson said, stay the course, don't cut and run, and defeat is sending a message to the troops. I am thinking she has been hypnotized or something. Based on all we know see, and read, how can she think like this?

Senator Casey did not respond to her comments. (Who would have expected him too or even respond to the question from the moderator. The mantra is, "never answer the question you have been asked, but answer the question that you wished you'd been asked." I don't know if he used this tactic but it was almost like he didn't hear her.) He, instead, stated the numbers of American dead and wounded in Iraq- simply facts, no argument. His response was pretty powerful. (at least 3,613 members of the military have been killed and at least 26,695 wounded)

An undated photo received in 2004 shows US military personnel offloading coffins of US soldiers killed in Iraq at an airbase in Delaware. US President George W. Bush has insisted the Iraq war could still be won and dismissed mounting calls for a change in strategy as US lawmakers voted again for troop withdrawals.(AFP/HO/File)
(AFP/HO/File)
I am perplexed. How can we put any sort of good comment or spin on Iraq? Just today, I was emailing my best friend who has a son there. As I was about to begin to rail. like I am now, I suddenly stopped. No way could I do it, My friend doesn't deserve any more pain than he already has.

I don't know what these loved ones of soldiers think or how they cope with this impossible situation. To me, this makes Vietnam look like a much better war, if there is such a thing.

In Vietnam, we mostly were fighting in the country, but the combat soldier in Iraq is fighting an urban guerrilla war and there is nothing worse. I can only imagine how difficult it is not knowing who the enemy is and all of the cloudy issues, i. e., coping with and understanding the religious fanaticism, tribalism-you name it.

In my opinion, there is simply nothing positive coming out of Iraq, other than the way the troops have performed. An article in a local paper just recently pointed out how much the insurgents have infiltrated the Police and Army. I know this is San Francisco and the way newspapers even do their headlines often points to the way they tilt the news. However, we can't deny that the situation is about as bereft of good news as anyone could imagine. (Just today, Bombings kill more than 80 in Kirkuk Iraq)

Sometimes when I hear the President, I think, "I'd love to know who his speech writers are. How they can take a report like the Iraqi government's benchmarks and say it is positive that we have fulfilled eight of the eighteen? Well, I guess that's better than nothing.

I think that soldiers, career soldiers in particular, are doing the best they can-working under the cloud that their life and death struggle is unpopular with Americans who care and think. Thinking Americans will be dealing with Iraq for a long time once it is over and it will be at sometime.(Please, God.)

Just when you think you've heard it all about Iraq, something else pops up: a bank robbery in Iraq. Guess what was stolen? Millions of American dollars and no suspects. Nobody, especially the Americans, seem to know how or why the bank had all this American money anyway. If it wasn't so sad, it would be laughable.

Here's a good one. Supposedly, 250,000 Iraqis have been trained for the Army and Police. They are on the streets NOW or suppose to be. Here are the statistics: in Oct 2005, the military recorded 545 insurgent attacks, now it is 1,060 with the Iraqi Army and Police on the street. Well, they are suppose to be on the street, but they really aren't. Out of a 1000 man unit, only about 330 show up for duty every day. Whether or not they show up, they still get paid. As for the police, it is estimated that thousands of positions are thought to be phantom officers, invented by supervisors who pocket the salary.

I could go on, but I am really tired. Let me end with a direct comment from one of our fine young battalion commanders who is out there with his soldiers every day, "The 'month of fire' has begun and the weather is living up to its reputation. Temperatures rise to well over 110 degrees with great regularity and we have conducted operations in 125 degree heat on multiple occasions. When it’s this hot, simple patrolling tasks take on new levels of difficulty. The sweat soaks through our uniforms in minutes, drips into our eyes, and our concentration takes more than the usual effort. Despite the suffocating heat, we are adapting to the harsh climate and continue with our mission in a way that would make you proud."

For our fine young soldiers, we are indeed proud. jda




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Current Events Commentary/or Opinion written by Vietnam Veterans
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American Casualty Report in Iraq
Thanks to Keyvan Minoukadeh