On Thursday four French soldiers were killed and sixteen were wounded when an Afghan soldier they were training blew himself up. Following the incident, the French President suspended combat operations and all training of Afghan soldiers by the 2000+ French troops serving in Afghanistan.
Earlier in the week I had a moment of sympathy for Mitt Romney when he was criticized by his Republican rivals for speaking French. The same people who criticized Jon Huntsman for speaking Mandarin. The same people who are too self-satisfied and stupid to learn another language themselves--not they have a particular talent for English.
There will certainly be criticism by the chubby commentariat on the Right of the French decision. But since none of the loud-mouths on right-wing radio ever served in the military, they will be talking out of their XXL asses.
France was our first ally and without them we would have lost the Revolutionary War. France remained our ally after their own revolution and it pisses me off every time I hear criticism of France by the Chicken Hawks who are in favor of war as long as they are fought by someone else.
I don't know if or when French troops will return to risking their lives training Afghan soldiers, but in this ten-year-long war, French troops have been on the ground and in the fight since the beginning. French critics in the US have been on their fat asses just as long.
Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Col. Scott Perry Announces Run for US Congress
My battalion commander in Iraq, Col. Scott Perry said he will run for a US Congressional seat in Central PA. Perry is currently the representative of the 92nd PA state congressional district.
I was hoping he would run sooner rather than later and with the current congressman stepping down, he should have a good shot at getting elected. Perry is a Republican in a very Republican area of the state.
If I lived in the 4th district, I would vote for him. He commanded a big task force with soldiers from a dozen states, aircraft flying around the clock and the worst flying conditions Iraq had to offer. He worked hard all the time. Pennsylvania and our nation will be a better place with Perry in the US Congress.
Col. Perry is a Blackhawk pilot and is currently commanding the 166th training brigade at Fort Indiantown Gap PA.
I was hoping he would run sooner rather than later and with the current congressman stepping down, he should have a good shot at getting elected. Perry is a Republican in a very Republican area of the state.
If I lived in the 4th district, I would vote for him. He commanded a big task force with soldiers from a dozen states, aircraft flying around the clock and the worst flying conditions Iraq had to offer. He worked hard all the time. Pennsylvania and our nation will be a better place with Perry in the US Congress.
Col. Perry is a Blackhawk pilot and is currently commanding the 166th training brigade at Fort Indiantown Gap PA.
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Training a Blackhawk Crew Chief in Afghanistan
Great Article about Training a Blackhawk Crew Chief in Afghanistan.
It really gets at the huge responsibility and complex job every crew chief takes on.
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=48746
It really gets at the huge responsibility and complex job every crew chief takes on.
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=48746
Next Adventure--Rwanda
During the January drill weekend I got a lot of help from getting together the paperwork I need to extend my enlistment for another year or maybe two. At the end of the weekend the sergeant in charge of admin for our battalion had most of the papers so in February we should be able to get them signed on on the way up the chain of command to the Adjutant General of the state.
If it goes through I serve until May of 2014 or maybe 2015. If not, I am out in May of 2013. Either way my long term plan includes most of a year in Rwanda. That would be the academic year 2015-16. That year my wife would be eligible for a sabbatical. She is a math professor so her research is very portable. The plan is to take the whole family to Rwanda for a year.
Our three (maybe four) sons will have the opportunity to live in a black-majority culture. Of course, Xavier has spent his entire life in a black-majority culture, but he will experience it partly through the eyes of his brothers.
So why Rwanda? Bicycle racing. There are dozens of terribly poor countries to choose from in the world, but not many where I have something valuable to contribute. In Rwanda, a former Belgian colony, the country is recovering from the 1994 genocide. Part of that recovery is a shared love of bicycle racing. An American, Jonathan Boyer, who raced in the Tour de France in the 80s went to Rwanda after the genocide and organized a national team and a national race--The Tour of Rwanda. The story was in the New Yorker this summer.
In Rwanda I can teach English to French-speaking kids who need to be literate to be bike racers. I can teach English with a full bike vocabulary--and then go riding with my students. My sons can help with the English also. They will be 16 and 17 and able to teach very current English.
Once the boys are in college, I want to spend more of my time in Haiti, Rwanda, and other poor countries. A lot of people my age and older talk about traveling. Some actually do it. The Army reminded me that travel without a purpose can be dreary. I loved going to Haiti. I can't wait to go to Rwanda. I know I would love going to Paris and Perth again, but I want to go places where it matters that I went. Even if I can't much directly to help while I am there, I can write back home to tell other people what it's like to live in Rwanda.
If it goes through I serve until May of 2014 or maybe 2015. If not, I am out in May of 2013. Either way my long term plan includes most of a year in Rwanda. That would be the academic year 2015-16. That year my wife would be eligible for a sabbatical. She is a math professor so her research is very portable. The plan is to take the whole family to Rwanda for a year.
Our three (maybe four) sons will have the opportunity to live in a black-majority culture. Of course, Xavier has spent his entire life in a black-majority culture, but he will experience it partly through the eyes of his brothers.
So why Rwanda? Bicycle racing. There are dozens of terribly poor countries to choose from in the world, but not many where I have something valuable to contribute. In Rwanda, a former Belgian colony, the country is recovering from the 1994 genocide. Part of that recovery is a shared love of bicycle racing. An American, Jonathan Boyer, who raced in the Tour de France in the 80s went to Rwanda after the genocide and organized a national team and a national race--The Tour of Rwanda. The story was in the New Yorker this summer.
In Rwanda I can teach English to French-speaking kids who need to be literate to be bike racers. I can teach English with a full bike vocabulary--and then go riding with my students. My sons can help with the English also. They will be 16 and 17 and able to teach very current English.
Once the boys are in college, I want to spend more of my time in Haiti, Rwanda, and other poor countries. A lot of people my age and older talk about traveling. Some actually do it. The Army reminded me that travel without a purpose can be dreary. I loved going to Haiti. I can't wait to go to Rwanda. I know I would love going to Paris and Perth again, but I want to go places where it matters that I went. Even if I can't much directly to help while I am there, I can write back home to tell other people what it's like to live in Rwanda.
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Numbers Update
This week Site Meter says my blog passed 100,000 visits and 130,000 page views since June of 2008. Blogger also tracks page views and says I have had 90,000 since June of 2009. The webmaster at my day job says every method of tracking traffic gets a different result. But the fact that the two are close makes me think they are pretty accurate.
Blogger also tells me which posts are the most popular. By far the top of the list is "Home Sweet Trailer Home" with more than 2,100 page views followed by "Flying to Camp Garry Owen" with just over 500.
I know that my all time visits equal about one Lady Gaga minute, but a soldier stopped me in the hallway to say he reads my blog. So I will keep posting till I get out. Today's post is # 1,037. Writing over 1,000 posts is like gaining weight--it doesn't happen all at once, but if you eat a little too much every day for a few years, suddenly you can't see your feet standing up!
And on a different note, the paperwork is coming together for my request to stay in another year or two. So I may get to 1,500 posts if I stay in long enough!
Looks like a Happy New Year!
Blogger also tells me which posts are the most popular. By far the top of the list is "Home Sweet Trailer Home" with more than 2,100 page views followed by "Flying to Camp Garry Owen" with just over 500.
I know that my all time visits equal about one Lady Gaga minute, but a soldier stopped me in the hallway to say he reads my blog. So I will keep posting till I get out. Today's post is # 1,037. Writing over 1,000 posts is like gaining weight--it doesn't happen all at once, but if you eat a little too much every day for a few years, suddenly you can't see your feet standing up!
And on a different note, the paperwork is coming together for my request to stay in another year or two. So I may get to 1,500 posts if I stay in long enough!
Looks like a Happy New Year!
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Hearing Test--Army Style
Today we had the annual cattle call for medical evaluations. Medical teams come in and set up in the armory to check our teeth. Others set up in the parking lot to check our hearing. Today at Noon I got in line for the hearing check. The line moves at the rate of two people every ten minutes. I joined the line with eight people in front of me.
And for the next 40 minutes I listened to the diesel generator that ran all the equipment in the hearing test truck.
Huh?
Exactly. Everyone in the line listened to a diesel at high idle for for the best part of an hour before the hearing test.
We all passed anyway, but sometimes the Army is too funny!
And for the next 40 minutes I listened to the diesel generator that ran all the equipment in the hearing test truck.
Huh?
Exactly. Everyone in the line listened to a diesel at high idle for for the best part of an hour before the hearing test.
We all passed anyway, but sometimes the Army is too funny!
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Another Old Soldier
Another good friend who I served with in Germany in the 70s was Sgt. Abel Lopez. He and I were assigned to Bravo Company 1-70th Armor in Fort Carson Colorado in late 1975. In September of the following year, Abe and I and 4,000 other soldiers flew to Germany becoming Brigade 76. We were supposed to reinforce the East-West German border. Our alert area was Fulda, right where Tom Clancy said World War III would begin.
At one point Abe and I were tank commanders of tanks parked next to each other in our motor pool in Wiesbaden.
The picture above was taken in that motor pool during the two hours each week we had to work in our gas masks. Abel is in the middle flanked by Gene Pierce and Don Spears.
After the Army, Abe went back to San Diego and became a fire fighter--retiring a few years ago as a Captain. For most of the years since he left Germany in 1979 we have talked a half-dozen times each year. Most of those conversations are about our faith mixed with the Army, family work and bad jokes.
Once in 2008 I called Abe and said I read that Gen. Petraeus went to West Point about ten months before I enlisted which meant we were the same age. Abe said, "The only difference between you is he is a big success and you aren't."
Which is just the kind of jokes we have been making since Gen. Petraeus was a Lieutenant.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Back in Panama: Finding Better Roads
Today is the seventh day since I arrived in Panama. After some very difficult rides back in August, I have found better roads and hope to...
-
Tasks, Conditions and Standards is how we learn to do everything in the Army. If you are assigned to be the machine gunner in a rifle squad...
-
C.S. Lewis , best known for The Chronicles of Narnia served in World War I in the British Army. He was a citizen of Northern Ireland an...
-
On 10 November 2003 the crew of Chinook helicopter Yankee 2-6 made this landing on a cliff in Afghanistan. Artist Larry Selman i...