First Pentagon War Dead Photos Made Public After 18 Year Ban »
Posted By epiphannyy 7 months, 1 week ago in NewsDOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. (April 6) — The Pentagon's 18-year ban on media coverage of fallen U.S. service members returning home ended quietly, with only an officer's sharp order to salute accompanying a single flag-covered casket being unloaded from a cargo plane.
After receiving permission from family members, the military opened Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to the media Sunday night for the return of the body of Air Force Staff Sgt. Phillip Myers of Hopewell, Va.
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"I will tell you, I am a liberal; I am a progressive. But, you know what I really am? I am a "bleeding-heart conservative." Yes ...
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epiphannyy7 months, 1 week ago
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It's about time. As long as the images are not exploited, they need to be seen. It's too easy for people to dismiss the loss as not that huge as long as the actual images are buried in secrecy. The cost of war is great. It's about time the American public who is so quick to send our soldiers into battle be exposed to the full magnitude of it.
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hyperbola7 months, 1 week ago
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Actually Americans should be told a lot more about the disasters the Pentagon is causing in other countries for our military imperialism. This hasn't changed with the Obama administration.
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The secrets of Obama's surge in Afghanistan
Is United States President Barack Obama telling it like it is as far as his new strategy for the Afghanistan and Pakistan war theater - AfPak, in Pentagonspeak - is concerned? There are reasons to believe otherwise. ...
The Afghanistan-Pakistan war has got to be 2009's prime theater of the absurd. It took the New York Times and the usual "American officials" something like 13 years to "discover" that the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) - a Central Intelligence Agency twin - helps the Taliban. And this while the CIA, alongside their ISI pals, is compiling a mega hit list in the Pashtun tribal areas inside Pakistan. Maybe this is what US Central Command supremo General David "I'm always positioning myself for 2012" Petraeus means by a "trilateral" love affair, as he told CNN's State of the Union. ...
Obama is selling the surge basically as nation building, based on trust. A hard sell if there ever was one - as Washington cannot trust the ISI or the Pakistani government, while the Pakistani masses don't trust Washington.
Insistent rumors in Washington point to a troika - Holbrooke-Petraeus-Clinton - finally being able to convince Obama that the surge should be just the first step towards long-range nation building. Anyone with minimal familiarity with Afghanistan knows this is an impossible strategic target. ...
Richard Holbrooke, Obama's special envoy to AfPak, finally let it slip on CNN: the "people we are fighting in Afghanistan" are essentially ... Pashtuns. This was followed by a stark admission: "In the informational side ... we don't have a strong enough counter-informational program to combat the Taliban and al-Qaeda."
So this amounts to the State Department admitting that the Pentagon/Petraeus "humint" (human intelligence) component of counter-insurgency in AfPak, hailed as a gift from the Messiah all across US corporate media, is essentially useless. This also means there's no way of winning local hearts and minds.-

hyperbola7 months, 1 week ago
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In the absence of "humint", what prevails is inevitably The Salvador option, performed by a Dick Cheney-supervised-style "executive assassination wing", as investigative icon Seymour Hersh first revealed in a talk at the University of Minnesota on March 10, "going into countries, not talking to the ambassador or to the CIA station chief, and finding people on a list and executing them and leaving"...
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...Did Obama's "strategic reviewers" read this Carnegie Endowment report (http://carnegieendowment.org/files/afghan_war-str... Apparently not. It states flatly "the mere presence of foreign soldiers fighting a war in Afghanistan is probably the single most important factor in the resurgence of the Taliban".
So the question Americans must ask themselves is this: Would you buy a used car - sorry - war from people like Mullen, Petraeus, McKiernan? Well, former CIA analyst Ray McGovern, who's seen them all since John F Kennedy, wouldn't. For him, "they resemble all too closely the gutless general officers who never looked down at what was really happening in Vietnam. The Joint Chiefs of Staff of the time have been called, not without reason, 'a sewer of deceit'." ...
.... So is AfPak the Pentagon's AIG - we gotta bail them out, can't let them fail? Is it a Predator drone war disguised as nation building? Will it become Obama’s Vietnam? Whatever it is, it's not about "terrorists". Not really. Follow the money. Follow the energy. Follow the map.
http://www.propeller.com/story/2009/04/05/the-secr...
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canadianrancher577 months, 1 week ago
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I believe that it is a good idea to show the returning of those who have been killed in military conflict and also agree that it should be at the families choice. What I hope does not happen is that some of those who oppose a conflict use the names and pictures of the fallen to promote their agenda. I know that you all believe in freedom of speach but there is a time for everything and if someone uses the name or image of a fallen member of the services without the permission of the family they should have their azzes tacked to the wall if not by the public then maybe by the legal system.
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Natureboy7 months, 1 week ago
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Der Bush said-
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"These brave men and women gave their lives for a cause that is just and necessary for the security of our country," he said. "And now we honor their sacrifice by completing their mission.""
I don't think it is any worse to use the fallen to oppose a conflict than it is to use the fallen to SUPPORT a conflict, which is far more common.
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