Friday , April 19 2024

Soldiers Pissed

U.S. Army Spc. Joe Roche in Iraq sent a letter to blogger Amy Ridenour:

    about the abuse at the prison. I’m at a place right now where there are thousands of U.S. soldiers. I went to breakfast and dinner at the KBR dining hall here. It is huge, hundreds of soldiers gathered to eat. Around us are large-screen tvs, and yes, the news was mostly about the prison abuse.

    Everyone is so angry. I mean, angry! It is as if those soldiers hurt us more than the enemies here in Iraq have. I don’t think that if that RPG last week had hit and killed us in my hummwv, there would have been any of the damage done to our cause here that those soldiers have done. I remember when I worked for the University of Minnesota Police Department that when one police officer acted wrong and was captured on camera, anywhere in the U.S., it was as if all police everywhere were made the bad guys, blamed and hurt. Now I’m feeling that here.

    I can’t tell you of the outbursts by my fellow soldiers at those pictures. For one thing, it is mostly swear words and I don’t want to write that to you. Amy, this is a powerful blow to us.

    As you know, we have done raids and captured some of the top terrorists in Baghdad over the past months. My sister has some dramatic pictures of at least one raid. In all of those, we handled the enemy w/ respect. Our big bosses always pressed us on the Geneva Convention rules before raids, and we have taken many classes on ROEs (rules of engagement) and on the proper treatment of prisoners. There are rosters w/ all our names on them for these classes because dealing w/ prisoners is major concern of our leadership.

    ….Let me recount to you a story that [name and unit deleted] told Tom Ricks of the Washington Post when he visited last month. One day one of his best friends and another soldier were hit by an IED in a hummwv in front of him. They got the one soldier out who was badly injured, but the fire was so bad that they couldn’t get his friend out. They don’t know if he was alive as he burned, but they had to watch. Now, that street that this happened on was one where they had built schools, improved much infrastructure, many many projects to make it a better and safer place. …When the IED blew, across the street were some of those very same neighborhood people cheering. They cheered as our fellow American burned and the other one was dragged out. Now, these are tankers, and they have big BIG guns, and all were ready to fire. The soldiers, all of them seeing the tragedy of the attack, and seeing the sick group cheering across the street, they all held their composure. No one fired a shot, no one did anything inappropriate. They did exactly as they were trained. They acted more professional and disciplined in a manner that I don’t think many other people in the world could have. All because they cheered, those people were not to be engaged or harassed. That is what we live w/ out here. And Amy, our soldiers, your soldiers, they acted supremely better and more heroic for our country in that scene. Those scum will remember the restraint and composure of those Americans, even if today they are still infected w/ this sick hate of us. Contact Mr. Ricks if you can because [the soldier] gave him a powerful quote that he thought well accompanied that experience, and perhaps he can elaborate even more from [his] account.

    ….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.

    “We’ve already said that we’re sorry for what occurred and we’re deeply sorry to the families and what they must be feeling and going through as well,” White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan said. “The president is sorry for what occurred and the pain it has caused.”

    Asked why Bush himself had not apologized, McClellan said: “I’m saying it now for him.” [AP]

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.

About Eric Olsen

Career media professional and serial entrepreneur Eric Olsen flung himself into the paranormal world in 2012, creating the America's Most Haunted brand and co-authoring the award-winning America's Most Haunted book, published by Berkley/Penguin in Sept, 2014. Olsen is co-host of the nationally syndicated broadcast and Internet radio talk show After Hours AM; his entertaining and informative America's Most Haunted website and social media outlets are must-reads: Twitter@amhaunted, Facebook.com/amhaunted, Pinterest America's Most Haunted. Olsen is also guitarist/singer for popular and wildly eclectic Cleveland cover band The Props.

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