Author: Operator Dan

  • What else were we supposed to do?

    Some of you know that I am an Arizona resident and have been attending Arizona State since I left the Marine Corps last year. Over the last week, my state has been at the top of the news because of SB 1070, which as most of you probably know is a new law designed to combat illegal immigration by giving local law enforcement the ability to question somebody’s immigration status during “lawful contact” (i.e. traffic stop, arrests for crimes like drunken and disorderly, etc.).

    I’ll be honest: I don’t think this is a perfect bill and I think it is going to get voided in federal court (since it will probably be challenged in the 9th Circuit which is the most liberal court in the country).  However, this state is facing a mountain of problems as a result of illegal immigration and the federal government’s inability to formulate an effective immigration policy.

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  • Gates Says Pentagon Isn’t Hiding On Ft. Hood Shootings

    From the AP:

    BRIDGETOWN, BARBADOS – Defense Secretary Robert Gates says the Pentagon has “no interest in hiding anything” on last year’s mass shooting at Fort Hood.

    I think we have shown the opposite to be the case here at TAH.

  • Stephen Colbert Does What Nobody Else Has the Balls To Do

    We’ve been calling out WikiLeaks and their friends in the anti-military left over the “collateral murder video” pretty frequently here at TAH for the last week. We aren’t the only ones: most of the milblog community (including many left-leaning and anti-war veterans blogs) has been demolishing this blatantly editorialized video.

    Last night Stephen Colbert did what seems like nobody else in the media has the balls to do: call out WikiLeaks director Julian Assange and expose him as a fraud.

    Watch the whole thing, it is worth it:

    The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    Julian Assange
    www.colbertnation.com
    Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Fox News

    Beautiful. Finally, someone takes Assange and WikiLeaks off its high horse and exposes them as another anti-military propaganda outfit with an agenda. I bet this guy was expecting a softball interview too. Does anybody honestly believe they leak everything they get now? How much more footage or documentation are they sitting on in regards to this incident?

    It is a sad commentary on the state of big media in this country that a professional comedian with a fake news show exposes more about a major news story than an established REAL media outlet.

  • The Media’s Dirty Little Secret About The Iraq War

    The coverage of the WikiLeaks “collateral murder” video continues to send my blood pressure higher and higher. Here is a choice article from AlterNet, in which the author repeats the “This is a horrible war crime” nonsense. A choice quote:

    This is definitely not Academy Award winner The Hurt Locker – where American soldiers are selfless heroes and Iraqis are faceless ghosts. This is real life – with American soldiers as video game killers and Iraqis as corpses. These are the kind of heroes who mistake a telephoto lens for an rocket-propelled grenade.

    Of course, yet again, no mention in the article of the fact that the insurgents that these Reuters employees were prancing around Baghdad with had REAL RPGs or of the fact that after the grunts arrived on scene they started taking more fire from an abandoned building that had to be blown up. For the author of this article, those are simply inconvenient facts.

    The video confirmed a dirty little secret about how the media has covered the Iraq War. Many major news organizations (Reuters, the AP, Time magazine, the networks, etc.) outsourced their reporting responsibilities to Iraqi journalists, many of whom were sympathetic to or actively involved in the insurgency. Does anybody really believe that if those two Iraqi Reuters employees weren’t in bed with an insurgent group that they wouldn’t have been on Al Jazeera begging for their lives or getting their heads chopped off? After the invasion, very few Western journalists embedded for long periods of time with American or other coalition units. If they did, it was only for a couple of weeks at the most. Most of the time, after their first firefight they would pop smoke and head back to the states thinking that they knew everything there was to know about Iraq. We all hear about people like Michael Yon, Michael Ware, and Pat Dollard who stayed in the fight for long periods of time and kept going back but unfortunately they are few and far between.

    Most of the time your typical Western journalist would fly into BIAP and stay in the Greenzone or on some big FOB around Baghdad. They would get their stories mostly through Iraqi “fixers” who would bring them photographs, videos, and packaged stories. Probably the most famous example of this is the Time magazine article on the Haditha killings. Tim McGirk, the author of the article, was not in Haditha nor was he even in Anbar province at the time. Instead, he got the bulk of the info for the article from an Iraqi named Taher Thabet, who was part of a group called the Hammurabi Human Rights group. It would come out  later that Thabet was a known AQI propagandist who even was suspected by the Marines of helping to film IED attacks on Americans. Did McGirk mention any of this in his article? No, another inconvenient fact for another lazy and bias lamestream media reporter. Of course, Mr. McGirk declined to testify in the hearings on the killings after the Marine Corps revealed these facts.

    I believe strongly in a free and independent press and I believe the media has a right to cover American military operations without compromising the integrity of those operations. Sometimes the military makes mistakes and only bad press will make them correct those mistakes (i.e. the debacle with the SEALs in Fallujah). However, the way that many journalists have behaved in their reporting of the Iraq War has been borderline treasonous in my mind. Now before some people jump on me, let me explain what I mean. If you want to go to Iraq and come back and say the war is illegal, immoral or whatever, that is your right. But when you go to a warzone and actively abet an international terrorist group like Al Qaida by hiring its members to do YOUR JOB, that in my mind is treason.

    I wonder what Ernie Pyle would think of all this…..

  • Longer “Collateral Murder” Video Posted

    Wikileaks has posted a longer version of the “collateral murder” video without its own commentary yesterday. The longer video (which Wikileaks says is unedited) shows that shortly after 1-16 Infantry arrives on the scene they start taking fire from a nearby building and the Apache has to take that out too. That part starts around 3o:00 in this video:

    This longer video reinforces the fact there was pretty intense combat going on in that neighborhood where this Apache and 1-16 Infantry were operating. In what has become typical of the way the war in Iraq has been reported, the coverage of this story has been pretty shallow and leaves out important details. I have been scanning news articles from the AP, Reuters, CNN, MSNBC, and several others and most leave out important details. Almost none of the articles mention that there were RPGs among the insurgents smoked or even attempted to provide any background on how heavy the fighting was in that area. Not to mention there has been little mention of the new video that was posted yesterday. Fucking typical.

  • Fake Recon Marine ” Jamie St Clair de Janiero” In Jail

    A few weeks ago I made a post about a guy calling himself “Jamie St Clair de Janiero” (a gay porn screen name if there ever was one) who was going around various Marine Facebook groups and forums claiming he was a Recon/MARSOC Marine. He also stole pictures from Major Jason Grose’s blog and posted ridiculous pictures of himself wearing a Gortex jacket with CWO rank, a SCUBA badge, and combat parachutist wings. After I made the post, a lot of people started coming out of the woodwork with stories about how this guy had defrauded them. According to one person that emailed Jonn, he even was claiming to be a DEA agent as well. Well apparently some people who he had taken advantage of saw our post and other information posted about him on Facebook and contacted law enforcement up in Michigan about this clown. In response, he was arrested on charges of fraud and booked in jail in Ottawa County, Michigan.

    I hope those Recon skills work out for ya in the showers….

  • The Westboro Baptist Church: Show me the money

    First of all, let me apologize for my lack of posts lately. My good friend James was on R&R from Afghanistan and we both determined that the supply of PBR and Coors Lite in the Phoenix area was unacceptably high so we have been doing our part to reduce it.

    The story of Albert Synder and his legal battles with the Westboro Baptist Church have been well documented on this blog and many others. I’m not going to go into that travesty of justice in this post.

    Sometime ago I watched a documentary about the WBC called The Most Hated Family in America. It was made by this British documentarian named Louie Theroux, who lived with the Phelps family for a few months. For that, he is obviously just as crazy as the Phelps or he is one tough SOB. If you got the time, it is posted on YouTube, and it is at least worth watching a few minutes of.

    The one thing that struck me the most about the Phelps is how comfortably they live. They live on a compound with several large houses in Topeka, Kansas with a couple of other families who are supportive of the church. They all drive vehicles that look new and it is widely reported that the family spends several hundred thousand dollars a year on travel (plane tickets, rental cars, hotels, etc.). Not to mention that they have a lot of  high quality computer, video, and printing equipment to maintain their website, church, and protest activities.

    So the next question for me was: Where does all the money come from to pay for these activities and their lifestyle? Well it would appears that the SPLC and the WBC have shared an income source in the past.

    Fred Phelps was a lawyer until he was disbarred and in the past had participated in civil rights cases in Kanasas. However, his family still runs a chartered law firm and most of the family go to law school or become paralegals once they graduate from high school (which adds to the list of expensive activities that they need to pay for). According to the WBC’s Wiki and links provided in its endnotes, the WBC has been able to collect money under a law called the Civil Right’s Attorney Fees Award Act of 1976. This act basically allows a court to award certain parties legal fees and other monies in “Civil Rights cases”. I am pretty sure that this is the law that allowed that federal court in the Synder case to force Albert Synder to pay the WBC’s filing fees. Ironically, this law was designed to help groups like the Southern Poverty Law Center fund their “Civil Rights” court cases.

    That doesn’t account for all their money though. A good friend of mine is convinced that the SPLC, Human Rights Campaign, and other progressive groups are giving the WBC cash so they can use them to attack the Christian right. The evidence for this is that Fred Phelps was a Civil Rights attorney that had some links to groups like the NAACP (apparently Fred even got some awards from them).  I wouldn’t put it past a piece of crap like Morris Dees or Mark Potok to try a stunt like that but in the end I don’t think they are that stupid. Something like that, were it to come out, would destroy them. I think that they do some non-religious/non-civil rights business through their law firm and that is able to generate some cash for them. Or they are all FBI informants like Hal Turner.

    I still have to wonder if they really believe in the stuff they preach. I think it is obvious that they have found a pretty good racket going by being complete and utter assholes. Plenty of other people do it, just look at Hollywood. And just like with the freaks in Hollywood, you know every single one of them is getting off on the publicity.

  • New Policies Regarding DADT

    Robert Gates announced changes today to Don’t Ask Don’t Tell which are intended to make it more difficult to discharge service members for violating DADT. From what I can tell, there are two real modifications being made to DADT that are effective today. The first modification mandates that only general officers (brigadier or higher) can initiate an inquiry into whether or not someone violated DADT. Also, general officers are now the only ones that can start discharge proceedings for violating DADT. I don’t know how big of a change this really is however. In my experience in 1st Marine Division, general officers usually had to sign off on any type of discharge that wasn’t related to EAS or EOS. This included med boards, early outs for college, bad conduct discharges, and I would assume discharges related to DADT. They already had at least some involvement in the discharge process. This just seems to be a clarification on who is ultimately responsible for discharging someone who has violated DADT and limits a general officer’s ability to pawn off that responsibility on a lower-ranking officer. Without a doubt, it is going to make it harder to discharge someone under DADT, since a general isn’t going to want to devote a signficant amount of time to investigating someone’s sex life.

    The second modification attempts to prevent someone from being discharged under DADT for being outed by a third-party (i.e. a pissed off ex-boyfriend/girlfriend, law enforcement, etc.). I personally support this change 100 percent. It is not fair for someone who is following DADT to the letter to be outed by a party outside of the military or by a scorned lover and then be subsequently discharged. Granted, in a lot of these stories you hear in the media  about gays getting discharged for being outed by a third party, I think there is often more to the story on why they are getting kicked out. But in the instances where someone was doing the right thing and obeying the rules, it is not right to discharge them over another person’s word.

    As I have stated before, I don’t think there is going to be an outright appeal of DADT anytime soon. The Obama administration has other more important priorities and any attempted repeal is going to be another bloody fight in Congress in an election year. I don’t think he has the political capital (or will) to completely repeal the policy this year.