Soldiers Pissed

Written by Eric Olsen
Published May 05, 2004
page 1 | 2 | 3

....Frankly, I'm just shocked and angry. I hope people don't lose faith in us over this. Those soldiers are idiots, and have attacked our country in a manner perhaps more painful than our enemies have. No one committed and dedicated to this mission should feel that abuse is reflective of what we are doing. It is completely the opposite The Bush administration is clearly taking this seriously:

    Acknowledging mistakes but stopping short of an apology, President Bush told the Arab world on Wednesday that Americans are appalled by the abuse and deaths of Iraqi prisoners at the hands of U.S. soldiers. He promised that "justice will be delivered."

    "The people in the Middle East must understand that this was horrible," Bush said, trying to calm international outrage. He went on two Arabic-language television stations to take control of the administration's damage-control efforts.

    ....Bush said the abuses were "terrible" for America's image abroad. "I think people in the Middle East who want to dislike America will use this as an excuse to remind people about their dislike," he told Al-Arabiya television, a satellite channel based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, that is popular around the Arab world.

    ....Bush said that what happened at Abu Ghraib was "more than an allegation, in this case, actual abuse - we saw the pictures. There will be a full investigation."

    Interviewed on the U.S.-sponsored Al-Hurrah television network, Bush said that Iraqis "must understand that I view those practices as abhorrent. They must also understand that what took place in that prison does not represent the America that I know." Most U.S. soldiers are "good, honorable citizens that are helping the Iraqis every day," Bush said.

    "It's also important for the people of Iraq to know that in a democracy, everything is not perfect, that mistakes are made," the president said.

    Drawing a distinction with Saddam's government, he told Al-Arabiya, "A dictator wouldn't be answering questions about this."

    While Bush did not offer an apology, Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites), his national security adviser, had said Tuesday that "we are deeply sorry for what has happened," and the commander of U.S.-run prisons in Iraq, Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, apologized Wednesday for the "illegal or unauthorized acts" of U.S. soldiers.

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Soldiers Pissed
Published: May 05, 2004
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Section: Politics
Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments

#1 — May 5, 2004 @ 19:58PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

Bush can't apologize himself, because Jebus told him that ain't grammatacular, and if Shrub don't present a better image for right wing fuck wits, all the chits from his daddy ain't gonna get him in heaven.

Never mind how he's gotta get his slut daughters into heaven, Jebus, that is a problem.

#2 — May 5, 2004 @ 20:07PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

The way I see it is that we'll have Shrub in the Lake of Fire, meanwhile the missus is waving at him from heaven. She's in an eternal library. What she doesn't know is that she is in charge of the Noam Chomsky Memorial Library.

#3 — May 5, 2004 @ 20:16PM — boomcrashbaby

In an eternal library, how long before a book is overdue?

#4 — May 5, 2004 @ 20:20PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

As Father Jack would say, "That would be an ecumenical question".

#5 — May 5, 2004 @ 20:27PM — mike
#6 — May 5, 2004 @ 21:04PM — Shark

"...President Bush told the Arab world on Wednesday that Americans are appalled by the abuse and deaths of Iraqi prisoners at the hands of U.S. soldiers..."

Unfortunately, you left out the part of the story, which I quote below:

"After the televised speech, two hundred million Arabs turned to each other and said, "Did you hear how he mangled the English language?!"

#7 — May 5, 2004 @ 23:57PM — RJ Elliott [URL]

Shark wrote:

"After the televised speech, two hundred million Arabs turned to each other and said, "Did you hear how he mangled the English language?!"

Funny! :-]

Just curious, ya'll: Does anyone else find it peculiar that the media is going into berserker-mode over some photos that show situations that are, if anything, tamer than what a typical fraternity pledge can expect to endure?

And yet this same media almost never goes into detail about the 400,000 or so mass-graves that have been found from Saddam-era Iraq?

Just wondering...

#8 — May 6, 2004 @ 00:11AM — boomcrashbaby

The media is always going to give more coverage to that which more directly affects us here at home. Not that it's right, just that it's the way it is.

#9 — May 6, 2004 @ 00:38AM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

Hey, RJ, there's a genocide going on right now in Sudan. What are you doing about it?

Or are you just an ass-hat?

#10 — May 6, 2004 @ 00:38AM — Natalie Davis [URL]

You're right, BCB. Also, the media don't want to get into asking the leftovers from the Reagan Junta who are now working under the Bush Brothers Banana Republic difficult questions about their past alliances. For all their reputed leftist leanings, the media largely are loath to piss off the leaders of the Axis of Evil.

#11 — May 6, 2004 @ 00:50AM — RJ Elliott [URL]

ND:

How in the hell was the Reagan administration a "junta"?

Or is "junta" just easier to type than "elected in a landslide, in both elections, in a democratic manner"?

#12 — May 6, 2004 @ 00:56AM — Natalie Davis [URL]

Nah, just sounds fun.

#13 — May 6, 2004 @ 00:59AM — RJ Elliott [URL]

Okay, fair enough. ;-]

#14 — May 6, 2004 @ 02:38AM — Natalie Davis [URL]

How about coven? Yeah, fundamentalist coven, that's the ticket.

#15 — May 6, 2004 @ 08:28AM — Shark

RJ, media rule #1:

"It isn't news unless there's a picture."

Given a choice between:

1) Photo of mass grave: expanse of desert with bulldozer in foreground.

2) Torture pic: christ figure in a black klan outfit testing out a new form of muscle stimulation made by Westinghouse.

Which would you choose?

(um... assuming you weren't the news editor at FOX)

#16 — May 6, 2004 @ 11:16AM — CPL Dilmore-Iraq

Amazing how many of you decided to post childish jabs at President Bush than to comment on the article. Anyway, I agree whole-heartedly with the soldier quoted in the article: when news reached us in Baghdad about the abuse and, even worse, some tired-ass excuses about not knowing the rules of the Geneva Convention, I was enraged. These idiots have tarnished the honor of the U.S. Military, and Americans everywhere. And trying cop a plea of ignorance- COME ON! I think any numbskull with half a functioning brain would realize making people stand on a box, naked except for a sheet, blindfolded, and told they were wired with electrical cables was not kosher, in any way, shape or form.

#17 — May 6, 2004 @ 12:00PM — Truth-Minister

[Admin: Comment from Roger Ely of Asheville, NC, deleted.]

#18 — May 6, 2004 @ 12:07PM — boomcrashbaby

no, Truth-Minister. I don't do it as a way of life. I don't put panties on my head, only a jockstrap and only when I go grocery shopping. Panties we reserve for formal occasions.

#19 — May 6, 2004 @ 15:51PM — Debbie

"This is ridiculous - Bush should unequivocally apologize himself, period. He should say exactly what our man Joe Roche said, that the soldiers themselves are pissed, that this makes their job that much harder and more dangerous, and he should apologize."

What is the hang up with meaningless apologies? If Bush didn't order it, didn't partake in it, didn't cover it up and allow it - what is there for HIM to apologize for? I can't apologize for something that somebody else did and have it mean anything, it's worthless unless the person responsible apologizes.

#20 — May 6, 2004 @ 15:54PM — Debbie

The only thing I want Bush to do is to order the investigation, see that these idiots are court marshalled and brought up on charges in the Military Code of Justice.

That to me is much more important than an apology from someone that didn't take part in it to begin with.

#21 — May 6, 2004 @ 15:57PM — sheri

Hmmmm...apology does imply guilt. Wow, what an interesting observation, Debbie.I shall chew on that awhile.

#22 — May 6, 2004 @ 16:01PM — Ms. Tek [URL]

My thing is this:

Considering how everything else has been fucked up thus far, as IF this is going to be handled correctly.

Whatever. Heads will roll, la-dee-da.

#23 — May 6, 2004 @ 16:09PM — Chris

Actually, there has been a UMCJ case underway since late January.

Which seems to get lost in all of the grandstanding going on.

#24 — May 6, 2004 @ 22:24PM — Natalie Davis [URL]

The only thing I want the Shrub to do is to go away. Far, far away. Any apology from him is meaningless anyway: It certainly won't bring back all those killed by his say-so.

#25 — May 6, 2004 @ 23:35PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

What really pisses me off about this whole mess (let's not get into the mass murder and torture of prisoners in Afghanistan) is that it was engineered and carried out by mercenaries, sorry, "contractors", y'know, the guys who deal in death drywall and torture roofing, but US troops are taking the fall.

It gives the term "plausible deniability" a whole new perspective.

And Bush and his junta are not responsible, how?

#26 — May 6, 2004 @ 23:45PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

At least we now know why the Bush junta refused to sign onto the International Criminal Court, not because they didn't trust it to fairly provide justice, but because they really intended to commit war crimes.

As Mark Slackmeyer said about another Prez:

"Guilty, Guilty, Guilty".

#27 — May 7, 2004 @ 00:37AM — RJ Elliott [URL]

RJ, media rule #1:

"It isn't news unless there's a picture."

Very true, Shark. Good point.

#28 — May 7, 2004 @ 06:16AM — CPL Dilmore-Iraq

"At least we now know why the Bush junta refused to sign onto the International Criminal Court, not because they didn't trust it to fairly provide justice, but because they really intended to commit war crimes."

That's right, Einstein, a few brain dead dildos decide to fuck with some EPWs and are bright enough to take pictures, y'know, to make into Christmas cards, and that qualifies as an Executive level conspiracy to commit war crimes. Do you even think before shooting off at the mouth?

#29 — May 7, 2004 @ 06:45AM — Shark

Don't worry, "Cpl. Dilmore" of Iraq, me and a few million other American Einsteins will have you out of there in no time.

We don't want to see you or any more of your contemporaries become "brain-dead dildo" cannon-fodder sacrificed so Bush, Cheney, Rummy, and a bunch of flaccid Neo-cons can go to bed with hard-ons every night over their fake war for fake weapons of mass destruction.

"YANKEE COME HOME!"

[heh]

#30 — May 7, 2004 @ 08:47AM — Eric Olsen

Hmm, but what about the people who support the war who aren't "a bunch of flaccid Neo-cons can go to bed with hard-ons every night over their fake war for fake weapons of mass destruction."? Or maybe those people don't exist.

#31 — May 7, 2004 @ 08:58AM — Shark

"...what about the people who support the war who aren't "a bunch of flaccid Neo-cons can go to bed with hard-ons every night over their fake war for fake weapons of mass destruction."? Or maybe those people don't exist."

Just give it a few months; they're quickly becoming a minority.

YANKEE COME HOME!


#32 — May 7, 2004 @ 12:58PM — Natalie Davis [URL]

"what about the people who support the war who aren't 'a bunch of flaccid Neo-cons can go to bed with hard-ons every night over their fake war for fake weapons of mass destruction.'"

I pray for their souls too.

#33 — May 7, 2004 @ 16:12PM — mike

"Or maybe those people don't exist."

They exist, they've just become so incoherent in their rationale for the war that they are impossible to take seriously.



#34 — May 7, 2004 @ 17:28PM — Ms. Tek [URL]
#35 — May 8, 2004 @ 01:35AM — CPL Dilmore-Iraq

"Don't worry, "Cpl. Dilmore" of Iraq, me and a few million other American Einsteins will have you out of there in no time."

That's good news- so that becouse some of you lack the will to finish what we started- right or wrong, it's now our responsibility- we can abondon Iraq to implode in the brutal civil war that will inevitably follow if we don't stabilize it from Ba'athist Sunnis, looking to go back to the good ol days of Saddam so they can feed of the corpse of a nation, and the fundamentalist Shiites, who long to see Iraq a theocracy in the vein of Iran or Taliban Afghanistan, and feed off the coprse of a nation. That way, all of my brothers and sisters in arms who sacrificed life and limb will have done so completely in vain, all for the sake of those who feel war must be avoided at all costs, even if that cost is freedom- ours or someone elses. Good luck with that.


#36 — May 8, 2004 @ 10:29AM — Shark

"...we can abondon Iraq to implode in the brutal civil war that will inevitably follow if we don't stabilize it from Ba'athist Sunnis... and the fundamentalist Shiites, who long to see Iraq a theocracy in the vein of Iran or Taliban Afghanistan."

Oh, never mind then. I retract all of my previously stated doubts.

This place sounds like it's ripe for a western-style democracy.

#37 — July 3, 2004 @ 05:03AM — barticus

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