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Friday, December 23, 2005

 

Military Exchange Global Prepaid Phone Cards Keep Families Connected

AAFES Corporate Communications
NEWS RELEASE: 05-123 Dec. 21, 2005

DALLAS - Petty Officer 2nd Class Miller Shield and his family got lucky this year. His R&R occurred in late November, just in time for Thanksgiving. "We had a great time," said his mother Deborah Carmon-Coleman. Just before he boarded a plane back to the Middle East earlier this month, Carmon-Coleman gave her son two Military Exchange Prepaid Phone cards for him to call home.

"Thanksgiving was great, but I knew Christmas would be tough," said Carmon-Coleman. "With both my son and my daughter-in-law deployed, we needed the most cost effective way for us to stay in touch."

As an employee of the Army & Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES), Petty Officer 2nd Class Shield's mother is 'authorized' to shop in the same military exchanges he shops. The "PX/BX" is where Carmon-Coleman purchased the phone cards that will provide her son with more than four hours of phone calls between Bahrain and the United States.

Until the Department of Defense authorized exchanges to sell Military Exchange Global Prepaid Phone cards to 'non-authorized' exchange customers in April 2004, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents and neighbors were often forced to purchase phone cards designed for calls within the "Continental United States" because family members who do not work for the military (like Carmon-Coleman) or aren't married to an active-duty or retired military member are considered 'non-dependent' family members that do not qualify as 'authorized' exchange customers.

Now any American can "Help Our Troops Call Home" by sending Military Exchange Global Prepaid Phone cards to deployed servicemembers through www.aafes.org or 800-527-2345.

These phone cards deliver an instant morale boost with up to four and a half hours of talk time for calls placed from any overseas military installation worldwide to include 70 AAFES call centers in Iraq, Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan or Kuwait.

"I just worry about parents who are unaware of their ability to purchase these cards," said Carmon-Coleman. "Most phone cards are designed for calls between Boston and Philadelphia, not Baghdad to Poughkeepsie. Fortunately, when it comes to sending military exchange phone cards we are now all considered 'authorized.'"

Designed on a "global platform" for the specific needs of deployed troops, Military Exchange Global Prepaid Phone cards minutes never expire and no additional charges or connection fees are ever added to rates as low as .19 cents a minute to call home from Operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom.

Carmon-Coleman and her son won't be the only ones on the phone before the New Year. In fact, troops deployed to Operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom logged more than fifteen million minutes in calls last December. This year AAFES estimates troops in contingency locations will spend more than 20 million minutes on the phone in December alone.

Military Exchange Global Prepaid Phone cards purchased through www.aafes.org or 800-527-2345 can be sent to individual Soldiers, Airmen, Sailors or Marines (designated by the purchaser) or distributed to "any service member" through the American Red Cross, Air Force Aid Society, Fisher House, USO, Coalition to Salute America's Heroes, Operation Homefront or Operation Interdependence®.

The Army & Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES) is a joint command of the U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force, and is directed by a Board of Directors who is responsible to the Secretaries of the Army and the Air Force through the Service Chiefs of Staff. AAFES has the dual mission of providing authorized patrons with articles of merchandise and services and of generating non-appropriated fund earnings as a supplemental source of funding for military Morale, Welfare and Recreation (MWR) programs. To find out more about AAFES' history and mission or to view recent press releases please visit our Web site at http://www.aafes.com/pa/default.asp.

~G: Fantastic - Now ANYONE can purchase and send our troops Telephone Calling Cards. If you have a few dollars to spare, this is a good way to spend them. Go to https://thor.aafes.com/scs/default.aspx or call 800-527-2345 right now! It will improve their morale, as well as yours.



Wednesday, December 21, 2005

 

All the President's Spies (From The American Spectator)

All the President's Spies
By Jed Babbin
Published 12/19/2005 12:09:32 AM

There are politically motivated criminals in our government who should be unmasked and punished to the fullest extent of the law. These people have leaked some of our most sensitive secrets and damaged our national security for no reason other than to discredit President Bush. Forget the Plame nonsense. That -- according to a CIA assessment -- caused no damage at all. No, I'm talking about the leaks of the secret CIA detention facilities in Europe and elsewhere where terrorist detainees are kept. I'm talking about the leak of a top-secret satellite program, apparently by three U.S. senators. And I'm talking about last week's New York Times report about the NSA's domestic intelligence gathering effort that's paying off handsomely. Or was, until the leakers told the Times.

Friday, in a report that the White House asked not be published because it could jeopardize ongoing anti-terrorist operations, the Times revealed that in 2001 the president authorized the National Security Agency to collect intelligence from conversations routed through the United States and possibly including people within the United States. And the media feeding frenzy aimed at declaring George W. Bush a criminal started all over again.

It's pretty clear that NSA's domestic intelligence gathering was -- and is -- legal. But before we get to that, we have to set the context for this debate correctly, which is more than the Times, the Washington Post, or any of the other politico-media will do. We need only two data points to accomplish that.

First, the last time a war was fought on American soil, the president then didn't merely authorize intelligence gathering within our borders, he suspended the writ of habeas corpus for anyone held in military custody (even though we didn't yet have a base at Gitmo), and declared that anyone opposing the war would be tried and punished under martial law in military courts. Thank heaven that George Bush isn't as radical as Abraham Lincoln was when he signed that proclamation in September 1862. Or as radical as FDR was in interning Japanese citizens in World War II.

Second, the price of inaction in the war against terrorists is too high. We know, from Mansour Ijaz's accounts and from the admissions Clinton national security adviser Sandy Berger has made in several interviews, that the Clinton administration turned down Sudan's repeated 1996 offers of bin Laden on a silver platter because its lawyers didn't believe we had enough evidence to indict him in a U.S. court. Instead of telling the lawyers to find a way to put OBL out of business, the Clintons took the easy way out their lawyers had provided and let bin Laden get away. Now, we have a president who apparently tells his lawyers what Andrew Carnegie once told his.

In what may be an apocryphal story, 19th century industrial baron Carnegie, in a long meeting with his planning staff, endured a few "you can't do that" objections from a new lawyer. Carnegie took the young man into the hall and fed him a dose of reality: "Young man, I don't pay you to tell me what I can't do. I pay you to tell me how I can do what I want to do." And that sums up President Bush's approach to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

FISA requires that intelligence gathering regarding conversations to which "U.S. persons" are a party can only be done pursuant to a search warrant issued (usually in secret) by the special FISA court, made up of sitting U.S. district court judges and located in the Department of Justice building in Washington.

Second, the FISA court issues warrants based on findings of probable cause, like other U.S. courts issuing criminal search warrants. There are too many situations -- like the one we were in before 9-11 -- in which too many possible terrorists are talking to each other and their helpers to sort them out one by one and get individual warrants. Which is why the law, and the regulations that implement it, allow the Attorney General to bypass the FISA court.

The regulations implementing FISA clarify the law's exceptions to the requirements for a FISA court warrant. U.S. Signals Intelligence Directive, dated July 27, 1993, is the primary regulation governing NSA's operations. It is a secret document. (We at TAS, unlike the NYT, never, ever, disclose government secrets that may damage national security. What follows is taken from a declassified version obtained from an open source.)

Under Section 4 of USSID 18, communications which are known to be to or from U.S. persons can't be intentionally intercepted without: (a) the approval of the FISA court is obtained; OR (b) the approval of the Attorney General of the United States with respect to "communications to or from U.S. PERSONS outside the United States...international communications" and other categories of communications including for the purpose of collecting "significant foreign intelligence information."

USSID 18 goes on to allow NSA to gather intelligence about a U.S. person outside the United States even without Attorney General sanction in emergencies "when securing the approval of the Attorney General is not practical because...the time required to obtain such approval would result in the loss of significant foreign intelligence and would cause substantial harm to national security."

So FISA itself and USSID 18 provide a lot of swinging room for what the president ordered. If the people subjected to the intelligence gathering weren't "U.S. persons," if Attorney General Gonzales made certain findings (which he did, according to several accounts) and if the NSA went ahead because it reasonably believed it would lose significant foreign intelligence if it held its hand, the operation is legal. Period. Everyone who is ranting and raving about illegality has neither the facts (most of which we don't know) or the law and regulations (which weigh heavily in favor of legality) on their side.

In his Saturday radio address, the president said that the NSA program he authorized has been reviewed over and over, and reauthorized by him more than three dozen times:

The activities I authorized are reviewed approximately every 45 days. Each review is based on a fresh intelligence assessment of terrorist threats to the continuity of our government and the threat of catastrophic damage to our homeland. During each assessment, previous activities under the authorization are reviewed. The review includes approval by our nation's top legal officials, including the Attorney General and the Counsel to the President. I have reauthorized this program more than 30 times since the September the 11th attacks, and I intend to do so for as long as our nation faces a continuing threat from al Qaeda and related groups.


Illegal? I don't think so. A good idea? No, a great idea. Many of the congressional Dems whining the loudest about the president breaking the law (such as Sen. Carl Levin, ranking Dem on the Armed Services Committee) were almost certainly among those who were briefed repeatedly on the program since it began in 2001. In short, the Dems' objections are as hollow as the people shouting them to the television cameras. Let Congress ask its questions, and answer some as well. (Such as why weren't they concerned about this when they were briefed on it four years ago?) But let the intelligence be gathered.

America has lived in the shadow of 9-11 for more than four years. Everyone expects more terrorist attacks on our shores, but none has yet occurred. One reason for that is probably the NSA domestic intelligence gathering program.

We can do a lot, and must do it all. Spying on aliens and some "U.S. persons" here in accordance with the law, asking our allies to spy on Americans overseas, sharing intelligence gathered abroad with law enforcement authorities here, and much more. Our Constitution and laws set broad bounds for intelligence gathering. We should do everything within those bounds. Everything.


Wednesday, December 14, 2005

 

LEGISLATORS JOIN CONGRESSMAN JONES TO UNVEIL 150,000 SIGNATURES

LEGISLATORS JOIN JONES TO UNVEIL 150,000 SIGNATURES URGING PRESIDENT TO PROTECT MILITARY CHAPLAINS' FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS


"We're going to keep banging this drum until First Amendment rights are returned to our military chaplains."

Washington, D.C. --
In a press conference today on Capitol Hill, Third District Representative Walter B. Jones (R-NC) was joined by Reps. Trent Franks (R-AZ), Mike McIntyre (D-NC), and Mike Conaway (R-TX) to unveil nearly 160,000 signatures of American citizens calling on the President to protect the First Amendment rights of military chaplains.

Colby May, Senior Counsel and Director of the Washington Office of the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), presented seven hundred pages of signatures at the event. The ACLJ collected the signatures from American citizens from across the nation who expressed their support for an October 25th letter to the President, sent by Congressman Jones and more than seventy other Members of Congress, calling for the protection of the constitutional right of military chaplains to pray according to their faith.

Rev. Dr. Billy Baugham, Executive Director of the International Conference of Evangelical Chaplain Endorsers, was also present at the press conference and described the "pandemic problem" of the suppression of the religious rights of military chaplains throughout the Armed Service. "This is going to destroy the chaplaincy," Dr. Baugham said.

"We're going to keep banging this drum until First Amendment rights are returned to our military chaplains," Congressman Jones said. "This is about protecting the right of all military chaplains of all religions to pray as they see fit."

"This is all about supporting freedom of speech and religious expression," Congressman McIntyre said. "Chaplains should be free to express the tenets of their faith. Prayer is the ultimate expression of free speech."


"True tolerance is not in pretending we have no differences," said Congressman Franks, who expressed the disservice it would be not only to chaplains, but to men and women serving in harms way who look to chaplains for comfort, if the speech of military chaplains is not protected.

For additional information please contact Kathleen Joyce in Rep. Jones' office at (202) 225-3415.


 

The media's war

By Thomas Sowell

Dec 13, 2005

The media seem to have come up with a formula that would make any war in history unwinnable and unbearable: They simply emphasize the enemy's victories and our losses.

Losses suffered by the enemy are not news, no matter how large, how persistent, or how clearly they indicate the enemy's declining strength.

What are the enemy's victories in Iraq? The killing of Americans and the killing of Iraqi civilians. Both are big news in the mainstream media, day in and day out, around the clock.

Has anyone ever believed that any war could be fought without deaths on both sides? Every death is a tragedy to the individual killed and to his loved ones. But is there anything about American casualty rates in Iraq that makes them more severe than casualty rates in any other war we have fought?

On the contrary, the American deaths in Iraqi are a fraction of what they have been in other wars in our history. The media have made a big production about the cumulative fatalities in Iraq, hyping the thousandth death with multiple full-page features in the New York Times and comparable coverage on TV.

The two-thousandth death was similarly anticipated almost impatiently in the media and then made another big splash. But does media hype make 2,000 wartime fatalities in more than two years unusual?

The Marines lost more than 5,000 men taking one island in the Pacific during a three-month period in World War II. In the Civil War, the Confederates lost 5,000 men in one battle in one day.

Yet there was Jim Lehrer on the "News Hour" last week earnestly asking Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld about the ten Americans killed that day. It is hard to imagine anybody in any previous war asking any such question of anyone responsible for fighting a war.

We have lost more men than that in our most overwhelming and one-sided victories in previous wars. During an aerial battle over the Mariannas islands in World War II, Americans shot down hundreds of Japanese planes while losing about 30 of their own.

If the media of that era had been reporting the way the media report today, all we would have heard about would have been that more than two dozen Americans were killed that day.

Neither our troops nor the terrorists are in Iraq just to be killed. Both have objectives. But any objectives we achieve get short shrift in the mainstream media, if they are mentioned at all.

Our troops can kill ten times as many of the enemy as they kill and it just isn't news worth featuring, if it is mentioned at all, in much of the media. No matter how many towns are wrested from the control of the terrorists by American or Iraqi troops, it just isn't front-page news like the casualty reports or even the doom-saying of some politicians.

The fact that these doom-saying politicians have been proved wrong, again and again, does not keep their latest outcries from overshadowing the hard-won victories of American troops on the ground in Iraq.

The doom-sayers claimed that terrorist attacks would make it impossible to hold the elections last January because so many Iraqis would be afraid to go vote. The doom-sayers urged that the elections be postponed.

But a higher percentage of Iraqis voted in that election -- and in a subsequent election -- than the percentage of Americans who voted in last year's Presidential elections.

Utter ignorance of history enables any war with any casualties to be depicted in the media as an unmitigated disaster.

Even after Nazi Germany surrendered at the end of World War II, die-hard Nazi guerrilla units terrorized and assassinated both German officials and German civilians who cooperated with Allied occupation authorities.

But nobody suggested that we abandon the country. Nobody was foolish enough to think that you could say in advance when you would pull out or that you should encourage your enemies by announcing a timetable.

There has never been the slightest doubt that we would begin pulling troops out of Iraq when it was feasible. Only time and circumstances can tell when that will be. And only irresponsible politicians and the media think otherwise.

~G: Hear! Hear! For a comparison, consider that in the calendar year of 2004, there were 42,636 traffic fatalities on our nations highways. Source - National Highway Traffic Safety Administration:

http://www-fars.nhtsa.dot.gov/

I am pretty confident that our troops are safer in Iraq than they would be here in the US. I made a remark to this effect at a cocktail party recently, and someone said "But I would rather that they were killed here in the US." What a stupid remark - I don't want them to die either place, but, if it has to be, I would rather that their death be "for something" rather than as an "accident". I am like General Patton who said a warrior should be killed by the last bullet of the last battle (or words to that effect). After all, our troops are now volunteers, and professional warriors.




Monday, December 12, 2005

 

The band is back (2nd MarDiv Band, Camp Lejeune, NC)

The band is back
December 10,2005

DAILY NEWS STAFF

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Michael Smith brought silence with a wave of his baton.

The music halted in an instant. The eyes of members of the 2nd Marine Division Band were on their conductor and band officer, listening to direction on how to eek harmonious perfection out of an already good-sounding rendition of "Here Comes Santa Claus."

"Tubas, you got 'bump, bump, bump,' right?" Smith asked them, inflecting his voice with the beat.

"Yes, sir," came the response.

The band, known across eastern North Carolina and much of the country as a musical tour-de-force, has been working extra hard for the 2005 Holiday Concert, scheduled for 2 p.m. Sunday in the Camp Lejeune theater. It will be the band's first performance since August 2004.

That's because the band has since been performing its other function as a cadre of combat-ready Marines. From February to September, they have been a security force at Camp Blue Diamond in Ramadi, Iraq.

It was a tour that was exhausting and challenging, Smith said.

"They got no time off," he said. "They were literally working 8 days a week, 24 hours a day. For these Marines, it was probably the busiest, most challenging thing they've done - and the most rewarding."

The band did bring their instruments to Iraq, but only played a few somber memorial services. What they saw more of was the hard-fought struggle in Iraq's volatile Al Anbar Province. Not only did the band act as the camp's perimeter security, but they guarded the camp's entrances.

During their deployment, the band's members earned 12 Combat Action Ribbons and one Purple Heart, Smith said.

"They were tired, but they were well trained and motivated," Smith said. "Of course, while we were there they were eager to go home. But now that they're rested up, some say 'we are ready to go back.' I don't think a day goes by those Marines don't think about the Marines back there at camp."

The reason for this is easy: the Marines saw progress and felt rewarded to be a part of it, Smith said.

"They were over there and they saw through first-hand experience all the good things going on," he said. "We saw a lot of change for the good. It's like putting in a full day's work and feeling, 'I did this, I accomplished it.' "

The band - especially those who were in Iraq for the first time - has a better appreciation for what the Marine Corps means.

"From the day you go to boot camp, you are told every Marine is a basic rifleman," Smith said. "Now there's a little more heart. Now it's understood."

Connected by discipline

Music has always enjoyed a close relationship with the martial life. The armies of ancient China pounded drums to issue orders before battle. Trumpets, among the most famous of wartime instruments, were used for giving signals during battle and used by cultures as diverse as the Egyptians, Celts and Romans. In Ancient Greece, trumpet competitions were held during the Olympic games as a martial competition.

Bands were used throughout the 18th and 19th centuries not just as means of communication and intimidation, but also inspiration. Union troops in the Civil War marched to battle to "The Battle Cry of Freedom."

While today's military music is more about ritual and tradition than command and control on the battlefield, music and military life is still very connected.

"It's connected by the discipline that both functions demand," said Master Gunnery Sgt. Mark Michielsen, the band's chief enlisted member. "You're serving your country in a manner that uses your skills. We could do this on the outside, but it's about being a Marine."

Smith agreed.

"To be successful with a weapon, you can't just point and pull a trigger," said Smith. "To be successful with a musical instrument, you can't just blow and push buttons. One is directed to the enemy and one's the audience."

And while bands may not march to battle with the grunts, the band members often become grunts during times of war. During World War II, the 2nd Marine Division Band fought in the Pacific on bloody islands like Tarawa and Guadalcanal. It did not see combat in Korea or Vietnam, but did fight in the first Gulf War.

Cpl. Jesse Ilderton, 20, a drummer from of Summerville, S.C., said it was a privilege to go into the field in Iraq.

"There are only a select few in the band field who have been deployed," he said. "It's a big privilege to be able to do it as a band member. It was very rewarding."

'More Emotion'

The band began preparations for the holiday concert in June while still in Iraq. Originally, they were expected to stay until February, but the Marine Corps made the decision to bring them home earlier. When they returned in September, they had lots of musical work to do - especially the last few weeks.

"These guys are putting in some hours: morning, afternoon and night," Michielsen said. "Most of the guys are still here at 2100 and 2200 hours. They are putting everything they got into it."

But while the deployment may have cut down on practice time, Smith said he feels the Marines are better musicians because of it.

"There's a little bit more emotion now," he said. "When they need to convey the feeling of exhaustion and the dark colors of misery, and even elation - because there was elation (in Iraq) - they can do that better now."

And because the deployment played such a prominent role in the band's life for the last year, Smith said concert goers can expect some new wrinkles in the band's stage performance. The Daily News won't spoil the surprise, but the audience will definitely be left wondering how they got home so quickly.

~G: Mike is a personal friend, as is his father - a retired CWO4, who is currently in IRAQ with a DoD contractor.

Link to 2nd Marine Division Band




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