Search posterous

Search all posts and users. Type a name, type a favorite song title, whatever! See what comes up.
  

More posterous blogs











More recommended blogs »

Here are posterous posts filed under war...

Jason says...

Laurie A. Lewkowski, center, the mother of Marine Lance Cpl. David R. Baker, is overcome with emotion during the playing of "Taps" at his burial services at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2009. According to military officials, Baker, 22, of Painesville, Ohio, died Oct. 20 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Filed under: war

Phillip Carter

This is far more devastating than I think people realize. Phillip Carter's resignation from the Obama Administration is a crucial loss on the road to applying the rule of law to the situation at Guantanamo and to the detainees in American custody. This is ten times more devastating than the resignation of Matthew Hoh and it is a troubling sign for the future of this Administration:

The Pentagon's top detainee affairs policy appointee has quit the Defense Department just seven months into the job, a Pentagon spokesman said Tuesday.

Phillip Carter, a former Army captain and Iraq War veteran, had been an outspoken critic of Bush-era war on terror detention policy as an attorney and blogging commentator.

He got the job of U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs in April, months after President Barack Obama pledged to empty the detention center at Guantánamo. He quit without explanation just days after Obama confirmed in aninterview with Fox News in Beijing that his administration would miss its Jan. 22 Guantánamo closure deadline.

The development apparently took the Department of Defense by surprise. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman declined to say precisely when Carter submitted the resignation, or where he last traveled in a job that took him frequently to Afghanistan, Iraq and the U.S. Navy base in southeast Cuba.

As of yet, I don't see where Carter has spoken out publicly. He could be entirely on board with the Obama Administration, and may have, indeed, resigned because of another issue.

Carter is a known blogger and writer on the issues at hand, leaving his Intel Dump blog at the Washington Post in 2008 after rising to prominence as one of the early voices opposing the Iraq War, where he served. He was not a contractor or a temporary employee, like Hoh. He was a fairly prominent political appointee with a sterling resume:

Phillip Carter was appointed as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Policy on April 27, 2009. In this capacity, he is responsible for developing policy recommendations and coordinating global policy guidance relating to detainees. Mr. Carter practiced government contracts and national security law with McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP.  His practice included work with major defense and aerospace firms, focused on government contracts compliance, export controls, security issues, and contractor support to overseas contingency operations. 

Mr. Carter wrote amicus curiae briefs in the landmark national security cases FAIR vs. Rumsfeld and Hamdan vs. Rumsfeld, and has participated in various working groups studying the issue of private military contractors on the battlefield.

Mr. Carter served nine years in the Army, in the active, reserve and National Guard components.  During his military career, he served in a number of military police, civil affairs and infantry units, including duty in the Republic of Korea, Iraq, and in the United States. From 2005-2006, he served as operations officer for an adviser team embedded with the police in Iraq’s Diyala province, where he worked closely with the Iraqi police, provincial courts, jails, and government, as well as the State Department-led Provincial Reconstruction Team, to establish and promote the rule of law.  Mr. Carter’s military awards include the Bronze Star Medal, Army Commendation (2 Oak Leaf Clusters), Army Achievement Medal (1 Oak Leaf Cluster), Iraq Campaign Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, and Combat Action Badge.

The Obama Administration has either lost a talented and dedicated member or it has gained a very eloquent and credible critic of a highly unpopular policy, and we will know soon enough what Mr. Carter thinks of what has been going on. So far, he has resisted appearing everywhere and anywhere with his breathless assessment.

Filed under: War

Rick says...

 

Filed under: War

arttusilvast says...

War games: no rules?
Are war games free of rules? Pro Juventute and TRIAL, the Swiss association for international criminal justice, have examined whether and to which extent international humanitarian law is respected in computer and video games. The result is as deflating as reality. The organisation calls upon game producers to consequently and creatively incorporate rules of international humanitarian law and human rights into their games.

via trial-ch.org

 

Filed under: war

domin8 says...

I love people who think that just because they have gone camping for a weekend, and lived without walls and electricity for that time, this makes them "survivalists". It's very much like those people who own a gun or take a self-defense class and think they can survive a fight. By "fight" I mean a real fight. What they don't understand is that all these things do is provide you with confidence, they don't actually help when the shit hits the fan and that's not their purpose. The real purpose is so that you can swagger and boast when there is nothing going on and your "skills" haven't been tested. No amount of survival training can get you ready for the moment when you are truly alone and lost and nobody knows where you are, where there is no rescue coming, no hope on the horizon and you will in fact die if you don't keep your wits and do the necessary. Like kill and eat your wife.

Not even basic training in the military can ready you for the moment when you get shot at with live ammunition by somebody who intends to hit you. Nothing in life but the actual thing can prepare you for that. All the familiarity you have with your weapon, all the physical fitness goes out the door in that moment and the world changes. The nature of your life in the world changes the first time your life is truly on the line, you change in that moment and everything in your life is different, looks different feels different, is handled differently after that point.

You cannot train for life, no course of preparation can ready you completely for a particular situation seeing as it has never happened exactly in that way before, the closest thing you can find is the man who has faced something like it and survived. Every young soldier facing his first battle is, in effect, unprepared. The training is merely to get them to the point where they will show up for the fight. The fight itself can only be learned in the school of bitter experience.

Left in the real wilderness with only your weekend camping skills to survive on, maybe a few barely-remembered episodes of Man vs Wild, you will die. You will die a slow, painful death all alone in the dark because you drank the wrong water, or because the only thing you could find to eat was a bad idea, or because you tripped and fell and hit your head. The only prepared man is the man who has faced it before and come out alive, the only soldier is the man who has faced death at the hands of the enemy and adjusted emotionally and mentally to its nearness.

Filed under: war

Aqui está um projecto que supera todas as espectativas e que deslumbra, simplesmente. Simples mas fantástica utilização de ferramentas e Skills de visualização, um trabalho de Pedro M Cruz (http://mondeguinho.com/master/visual-experiments/visualizing-empires).

Sendo Português, não pude deixar de registar que Portugal acabou sendo o país mais pequeno que alguma vez foi um império global. E apesar de o colonialismo não fazer qualquer sentido hoje em dia, acreditem que é algo que me faz orgulhoso. É a prova de que, se nos empenharmos a fundo em algo, é possível superar a lógica e as probabilidades.

Filed under: war

useddemocrat says...

How can Eric Holder hold his office without feeling like a total nimrod nincompoop for every waking minute of his day? I ask: does Eric Holder know the start date of the American Revolution? Does Eric Holder know anything about or understand Americas great judicial history and why it is the envy of the world? Does Eric Holder know the year the United States Constitution was enacted or why? When was the last time Eric Holder read the Constitution of the United States from beginning to end?

I argue that he knows very little of American history and even less about American judicial precedence. The Attorney General should brush up on this topic ASAP because of our nations current global circumstances and his apparent lack of knowledge on the topic. Watch Senator Lindsay Graham (R-SC) question him (11/18/09) and judge for yourself if Eric Holder has any knowledge about our judicial past.

He couldn’t answer a simple question: has America ever given full constitutional rights to enemy combatants caught on the battle field? While the foolish Holder grasped for an answer from his non existent knowledge of American judicial history, Lindsay Graham answered for him: “no”. How could Eric Holder not know this? Especially given that we were (and still are at the time of this writing) in 2 wars when he took office, and when his boss told him to close GITMO. It would have been a top 5 question for anyone, even without a law degree, were they to become the Attorney General of the United States of America. This is a cheap shot: it is because Eric Holder is the byproduct of our poor college and post graduate educational systems which teach American history less and less and about how crappy America more and more. He might be the first wave of public officials that doesn’t know enough about the past to effectively prosecute and achieve a more positive future. He might be an ignorant, arrogant, naval gazer who thinks that his ideas will be best for everyone, instead of the uncontrollable outcome of the ballot box or the clear cut historical precedence that he is utterly ignoring.

Never before has a combatant, caught on the field of battle, been accorded the rights being bestowing on Kallied Shake Mohammed. The Geneva Conventions allows for the immediate execution of non-uniformed enemy solders caught behind enemy lines who are up to no good. George Washington had Benedict Arnold tried and hung within a month under a military tribunal. KSM was a non-uniformed combatant, caught as a fugitive in Pakistan, and who wanted to kill more Americans, and ergo has zero rights, especially rights that are afforded too citizens of the United States by our civil judicial system. KSM boats that it was his hand that cut off the head of Daniel Pearl and that it was he who “master minded” the attacks of 9-11 which murdered 3000 in cold blood without any provocation. With these facts how can Mr. Holder believe that a civilian trial of KSM is in accordance with our nations previous history?

I believe the reason is simple: Eric Holder is myopic and a fool, trying to put on a “show trial” for all the world to witness Americas justly beloved judicial system. No one in the United States should care what the world thinks about our judicial system. Mr. Holder; don’t be so arrogant to believe that you personally know what’s best for our country and the wold to witness.

Another thing that makes Mr. Holder look like a total fool is this: what if KSM was still in the field and in the sites of a Predator drone armed with a Hellfire missile? Should we not shoot and kill him because he deserves miranda rights and access to the American judicial system to receive a trial? I believe that if given those circumstances President Obama would pull the trigger. So again: why would we kill him on the battle field, but if held captive, give him full rights and access to our judicial system as if he was an American citizen?

Filed under: war

From: http://thinkprogress.org/2009/11/20/missouri-gop-billboard/

NOVEMBER 20TH, 2009, 6:01 PM EST
A new billboard off of Interstate 70 in Missouri provides a short “citizens guide to REVOLUTION of a corrupt government” and issues a call to “PREPARE FOR WAR.”
(h/t ThinkProgress)


 This billboard replaces one that warned that the socialist “Obama-Nation” is “coming for you.” It’s unclear who the owner of the billboard is, but the first one was the work of a “Missouri businessman.”

While it’s unclear who owns it, the Lafayette County Republican Central Committee seems to endorse it.


Please join me on www.TWITTER.com/s3d1t0r

   
Click here to download:
Billboard_Warns_Prepare_For_Wa.zip (82 KB)

Filed under: War

Ivorymask says...

Movies are the window to my soul. I love watching movies. I love the unexpected. The unexpected good ones. They show up and engage us most intimately. Good movies educate and open up our narrow minds. It changes us.

Never liked Nicole Kidman. She seems cold and rigid. Almost frigid. Never liked Jude Law. Too much of a ladies man. (sleeps with his nanny) But I watched Cold Mountain this afternoon and loved it. I even feel like I love Mr Law.

It's such a loss with director Anthony Minghella (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005237/bio) having passed on last year. He has the same birthday as my husband. Wierd that I noticed. Such a brilliant storyteller. I'm going to get the book. It almost always is better reading the books.

Watching Cold Mountain made me colder about the warring world and yet, it gives me hope. The unexpected type of hope. Hope that life does get better. Hope that people are worth waiting for. Hope that when someone we love dies, we can still survive. No matter how cruel life can be, how cruel people can be, there will always be goodness.

I might sound very dramatic. But even though I don't experience half the extent of the drama in Cold Mountain, it helps to explore the dramatic side of life through books and movies. I guess it's a sort of mental preparation for the unexpected in my life.

Filed under: war

Cazmeister says...

All or nothing eh? isn't it always the way

Filed under: War