NYT misfires on veterans story

Photo: NYT / Strasburg familySunday's New York Times features a lengthy front-page article titled "Across America, Deadly Echoes of Foreign Battles" — what it bills as Part I of a "series of articles and multimedia about veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who have committed killings, or been charged with them, after coming home."

Right..... Because we all know that all veterans are coming home crazy, shell-shocked, and ready to kill their friends and loved ones. Here's how the NY Times staff produced this sensational story:
The New York Times found 121 cases in which veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan committed a killing in this country, or were charged with one, after their return from war. In many of those cases, combat trauma and the stress of deployment — along with alcohol abuse, family discord and other attendant problems — appear to have set the stage for a tragedy that was part destruction, part self-destruction.

Three-quarters of these veterans were still in the military at the time of the killing. More than half the killings involved guns, and the rest were stabbings, beatings, strangulations and bathtub drownings. Twenty-five offenders faced murder, manslaughter or homicide charges for fatal car crashes resulting from drunken, reckless or suicidal driving.

* * *
The Pentagon does not keep track of such killings, most of which are prosecuted not by the military justice system but by civilian courts in state after state. Neither does the Justice Department.

To compile and analyze its list, The Times conducted a search of local news reports, examined police, court and military records and interviewed the defendants, their lawyers and families, the victims’ families and military and law enforcement officials.

This reporting most likely uncovered only the minimum number of such cases, given that not all killings, especially in big cities and on military bases, are reported publicly or in detail. Also, it was often not possible to determine the deployment history of other service members arrested on homicide charges.

The Times used the same methods to research homicides involving all active-duty military personnel and new veterans for the six years before and after the present wartime period began with the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001.

This showed an 89 percent increase during the present wartime period, to 349 cases from 184, about three-quarters of which involved Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans. The increase occurred even though there have been fewer troops stationed in the United States in the last six years and the American homicide rate has been, on average, lower.

The Pentagon was given The Times’s roster of homicides. It declined to comment because, a spokesman, Lt. Col. Les Melnyk, said, the Department of Defense could not duplicate the newspaper’s research. Further, Colonel Melnyk questioned the validity of comparing prewar and wartime numbers based on news media reports, saying that the current increase might be explained by “an increase in awareness of military service by reporters since 9/11.” He also questioned the value of “lumping together different crimes such as involuntary manslaughter with first-degree homicide.”
So, basically, the reporters went trolling on Lexis-Nexis and other databases to find "murder" within the same paragraph as "veteran" or "soldier," and built a front-page story around that research. They compared the pre-war numbers to the post-war numbers and found that, voila!, there's a difference. And then it looks like they cherry-picked the best anecdotes out of that research (including the ones where they could get interviews and photos) to craft a narrative which fit the data.

The article makes no attempt to produce a statistically valid comparison of homicide rates among vets to rates among the general population. Nor does it rely at all on Pentagon data about post-deployment incidents of violence among veterans. It basically just generalizes from this small sample (121 out of 1.7 million Iraq and Afghanistan vets, not including civilians and contractors) to conclude that today's generation of veterans are coming home full of rage and ready to kill.

I've got a one-word verdict on this article and its research: bullshit.

To be sure, the article contains many truths about the struggles veterans face when they come home. Combat sears the mind and body in ways we can only begin to understand. An increased propensity to violence has been noted among veterans of previous wars, and by commanders supervising troops coming home from this one. However, there's a long road from those observations to the conclusions in this article, and the evidence simply doesn't add up in this story.

More broadly though, I worry about the larger narrative of this story. It seems like we've been down this road before — casting veterans in the role of crazed, violent, disturbed young men who come home from war to become homeless or criminal (or both). America needs to wrap its arms around its sons and daughters who go to war, not alienate them and push them away with this kind of narrative. We sent these men and women to fight; we have a sacred trust to ensure they're taken care of when they come home. Irresponsible journalism like this impedes that effort by giving people the wrong impression about combat veterans. I'm disappointed in the New York Times for running this story, and for giving it such prominence.

Update I: Abu Muquwama — himself an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran — notices the Rambo connection too, and also notices the ironic placement of a Style piece in today's paper about Rambo and tough guys. Hmmm...

Update II: Marc Danziger at Winds of Change also criticizes the article, and notes the lack of any statistical comparison between veterans and the base population. Using some publicly available stats and a little back-of-the-envelope math, he concludes that these homicide rates actually look lower than that among the general population. Marc thinks the Times left this point out because "it's not part of the narrative of how our soldiers are either depraved or damaged." Perhaps. But whether this omission of statistical analysis was intentional, irresponsible or simply amateurish, it's still wrong.

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. One veteran's story
  2. NYT misfires on veterans story

0 Trackbacks /
fnord (mail):
This is good work, mr. Carter. Keep it up, and spread.
1.13.2008 11:43am
Buck (mail):
The NYT is so lame. This is shoddy journalism from the newspaper that give us "fake but accurate." Kudos to Marc Danziger for making the effort the NYT is too lazy or too biased to do.
1.13.2008 12:45pm
Henry Isham (mail):
IOW, the experience of combat is so beneficial for psychological health and so encouraging of respect for social norms that it prevents murders that would otherwise have occurred.

Hello?
1.13.2008 1:30pm
fabius.maximus.cunctator:
Mr. Carter

I read the article earlier today and wondered what the basic statistical data really were. As I suspected, none too sound. Of course the basis for the comparison would have to be a similar non-veteran group, same age and income structure, education, ratio of males and females and so on.

Rather what I expected from the NYT.Many thanks for looking at it more closely in your excellent blog. I am sure I ll look in more often in the future.
1.13.2008 4:59pm
sheerahkahn:
This reminds me of Berke Breathed "Bloom County" cartoon where Vietnam vet, Cutter John, wheelchair bound, is staring out at the meadow, when a war-porn groupie comes up and says, "oh man, I bet you want to go out and just machine gun down everyone to release the anger you got built up in you at everyone who betrayed you here in the US."
To which Cutter John says, "actually, I'd just like to walk again."

I very much would like Hollywood to retroactively take all the pseudo-pop-psych movies like Rambo and burn them.

As for statistics of vets going postal...give me those same data points and I can lay the blame squarely on their mothers forcing them to eat vegetables they didn't want to eat.
1.13.2008 6:23pm
Seventy2002 (mail):
This is nothing new. In "Back Home" (1947) Bill Mauldin decried the media's "odious practice of saying "CRAZED VET RUNS AMOK" when some character with a load of gin under his belt breaks a bar mirror." Veterans, he noted, "committed no more and no fewer crimes in proportion to their numbers than the rest of the citizenry."
1.13.2008 6:31pm
BobVDV2 (mail):
Sounds like the NYT should be MUCH more worried about rapaging lawyer-veterans returning from Iraq!
1.13.2008 8:18pm
mockmook:
Ah, Henry, very clever trolling.

Perhaps Veterans who volunteer are highly motivated individuals, with high levels of self sufficiency, and such people don't do a lot of random killing.

Just a thought.
1.13.2008 8:35pm
Ray Robison (mail) (www):
A new book shows Saddam did support al Qaeda and the Taliban:

'Both In One Trench: Saddam's Secret Terror Documents'

Book Website
1.13.2008 8:48pm
IRRsoldier (mail):
Phil,

Good post, but I think you overstate your "beef" with the Times. The fact is, you can't make a clean comparison with the "general" population because the veteran population (more so pre-2003) was a self-selecting group that ostensibly did not include those with criminal history, below 31% intelligence, mental illness etc.

A clean comparison is impossible. That said, the raw numbers alone are shocking and worrisome --- most especially that 75% of these criminals were on ACTIVE DUTY WHEN THEY COMMITTED THEIR CRIMES!!!

The Times did a comparison with murders committed by active duty personnel for the 6 years pre-9/11 and the 6 years post 9/11. If I recall, there was something like an 89% INCREASE in the number of murders/homicides/manslaughter committed by active duty personnel seen from '01-'07 vs. '95 to '01 despite the fact that LESS personnel were stationed stateside during that time.

The fact is, that we have no clear study on the impact of repeated deployments on an increasingly lower quality (mentally, physically, morally) junior enlisted force. The Army has not been forthright in conducting this analyisis because they are afraid of the answer. I have a friend (USAR CPT w/ PhD in Epidemiology) who just finished a tour at WRAIR and he confirmed that the Army study underway to compare the # of deployments v. adverse mental health effects is seriously flawed and fails to factor in the effects on the population that for medical, criminal or administrative reasons fails to complete tours or has an adverse incident and is not redeployed. In other words, the Army study is biased towards the MOST resillient individuals who successfully complete the most tours.

In closing, I have questions that I'd like answered, namely the effect (if any) of the misguided 24-7-365 "warrior posture" in effect in the stateside Army. Unlike past wars, or even the pre-2005 BDU era, there is no "normal" provided by leadership in CONUS. Everyone is in ACUs and desert boots both in theater and at home as well as recruiting, the Pentagon and Walter Reed. There is no "normal" and Army leadership is unknowingly creating a feeling of misplaced guilt in those currently nondeployed. This is a problem. There is no normal. Home station for the RA junior enlisted is 12 months between Iraq deployments. Look at the most recent "Army strong" TV ads or the National Guard ad campaign - soldiers are now 1-dimensional ACU clad "warriors" at home and abroad. This contributes to a misguided sense of moral agency in the servicemember and creates a rift between the military and civil-society ... this "pitch" appeals to very few.

This is a problem that needs to be addressed. We need to create a psychic break between "war" and "home." A two-season field uniform like the USMC has would be a good start as would increased use of Class Bs for CONUS personnel. Better would be if senior Army leaders toned down the phony and incessant "warrior" talk. Best would be a MINIMUM 36 month break between combat tours.
1.13.2008 8:49pm
Henry Isham (mail):
"Perhaps Veterans who volunteer are highly motivated individuals, with high levels of self sufficiency, and such people don't do a lot of random killing. "

Then the appropriate control group is highly motivated individuals, with high levels of self sufficiency who don't volunteer. If they have more homicides it would certainly confirm Danziger's thesis. The obvious policy conclusion would be that the combat experience protects those at least those people against impulsive killing and we should make sure that they all have rotations through Iraq and Afghanistan.

IIRC, the Times article didn't claim that their series was comprehensive. They simply said that in some cases PTSD, in addition to several other factors, appears to have played a part in the killings. And they weren't particularly hard on the military. In the stories, some subjects were offered help for PTSD and didn't take advantage of the opportunity.

The net effect of the article may be positive if it leads some vets to get help. It might even save some lives.
1.13.2008 9:17pm
Bob K (mail) (www):
Phil,
Good work!
1.13.2008 9:23pm
DaSarge (mail):
IRRsoldier, ... sigh ... this is so old hat. The quality of personnel now, even after ketteing standards "slip," is vastly better than in the late 60's &early 70's. DoD studied all this after WW II, after Korea, and yet again after Vietnam. In all cases, there was no disparity attributable to military service. The facts never bothered the press, of course, as the same sort of patent nonsense was all over the press in the 70's. I suspect one could look at the NYT's morgue & see similar nonsense after Vietnam.

If selection bias applies, it is that military service matures men rapidly and teaches them discipline and self-control.

a feeling of misplaced guilt in those currently nondeployed.

Oh dear. I hate to break it to you, but grown-ups deal with their own feelings, especially narcissistic ones like this. Chaplains help, too.


"... this "pitch" appeals to very few." "... the phony and incessant 'warrior' talk."

And just what is the Army FOR, then? The big problem with the "old" Army of the 70's was that most of the soldiers did not have any real sense of mission or what soldiering is about. If "normal" does not mean that one is either fighting or preparing to fight, then y'all are just wasting your time.
1.13.2008 9:28pm
Jay Livingston (mail) (www):
True, the Times method is shoddy. But as the reporters note, "The Pentagon does not keep track of such killings, most of which are prosecuted not by the military justice system but by civilian courts in state after state. Neither does the Justice Department."

Why do they not track such information?
1.13.2008 9:34pm
red (mail):
——The fact is, that we have no clear study on the impact of repeated deployments on an increasingly lower quality (mentally, physically, morally) junior enlisted force.

Frankly, I am getting tired of increasingly lower quality posts from morally and sexually inadequate elites who learn everything about the Army from the NY Times.
- - - - - - -
AWOL: The Unexcused Absence of America's Upper Classes from Military Service—and How It Hurts Our Country.
http://www.heritage.org/Press/Commentary/ed080207c.cfm
- - - - - - -

— The Army has not been forthright in conducting this analyisis because they are afraid of the answer. I have a friend (USAR CPT w/ PhD in Epidemiology) who just finished a tour at WRAIR and he confirmed that the Army study underway to compare the # of deployments v. adverse mental health effects is seriously flawed and fails to factor in the effects on the population that for medical, criminal or administrative reasons fails to complete tours or has an adverse incident and is not redeployed.

Yes, a data point without data. (and for the record, I had a classmate at WRAIR too... studying rats)

Here is an indicator of the mental health of today's military.... better educated and more financially secure than their "peers"

- - - - - - - - - -

Post-9/11 Military Recruits Wealthier, Better Educated, Study Shows

Washington, October 31, 2006—Wartime recruits who joined the United States military in 2004 and 2005 tended to be better educated and wealthier than their civilian peers, according to a new report from The Heritage Foundation.

Economist Timothy Kane studied recruiting information to determine where service members are from, how much their families earn and what their education level is. His research follows up on a similar paper he wrote last year and shows that the trend toward better-quality recruits has actually accelerated in the years since 9/11.

This disproves the idea, expressed on Oct. 30 by Sen. John Kerry, that only those who fail in school end up in the military. “If you study hard, do your homework and you make an effort to be smart, you can do well. If you don’t, you get stuck in Iraq,” the former presidential candidate told college students.

http://www.heritage.org/Press/NewsReleases/nr103106a.cfm

- - - - - - -- - -
Getting ready to spit on those who defend your freedom and who are superior to you.
1.13.2008 9:37pm
DADvocate (mail) (www):
Looking at the Bureau of Justice Statistics, there were 6.1 murders per 100,000 persons in 2002. Multiply that by 17 to get the 1.7 million rate and you get 103.7. In 1991 the rate was 10.5 or 178.5 per 1.7 million.

Those figures are for the general population. If you adjusted for gender and age, you would easily find that the veterans have a lower murder rate than the group of the same gender/age in the general population.
1.13.2008 9:49pm
red (mail):
Why do they not track such information?

- - - - - - - -
Military - D'uh --- because its not their jurisdiction

Justice Department --- D'uh. Because the crime rate of those in the military is in actuality lower than that of the general population.

You may not be aware of this but a criminal record is a disqualifier from VOLUNTEERING into the military requiring a waiver.
1.13.2008 9:50pm
E Mastro (mail):
Well I guess someone will get their Phd proving this wrong- just like the Vietnam vet nut stories were proven wrong. Of course that was after a whole generation was labeled as crazies.
1.13.2008 10:16pm
bigTom:
red:
Kerry did not mean that quote to mean you'll end up in the military if you don't study, he meant if you don't study and end up as president you will make a bonehead decision like invading Iraq. Because it was politically expedient to misunderstand the (poorly thought out) quote, it was immediately misundetstood.

I think what Phil would like is that journalists act more like researchers, and try to find out if the meme they are promoting corresponds to the real world. That is far above the competence level of our current press corps.
1.13.2008 10:22pm
red:
Because it was politically expedient to misunderstand the (poorly thought out) quote, it was immediately
misundetstood.

Apparently so. I misundestood it myself.

Perhaps I was confuing him with CONGRESSMAN Charles Rangel...."If a young fella has an option of having a decent career or joining the army to fight in Iraq, you can bet your life that he would not be in Iraq."

How a political elite like John F Kerry, who had lectured us about "Jenjis" Khan since the '70's could fail to make himself understood is unfathomable. Perhaps its because he really wasn't that bright. Yet another reason for him to avoid denigrating military members ---AGAIN (Winter Soldier).

"Kerry's weak grades came despite years of education at some of the world's most elite prep schools, ranging from Fessenden School in Massachusetts to St. Paul's School in New Hampshire."


That is far above the competence level of our current press corps.

Agreed. Damaging to our Republic it is.
1.13.2008 10:39pm
TmjUtah (mail) (www):
Three years between deployments?

Get away from that "warrior" stuff unless you are like, REALLY being shot at?


The sad thing is, these kinds of tardvations are starkly representative of the surrender party's best and brightest (wait - where have we heard that before?) thinkers on what our military should be about.

The same school that rejects military force EVER being used if it benefits U.S. interests.


There's only so many tsunamis, hurricanes, and floods any given year... which are what the surrender party truly believes are the real reasons why anyone should have to wear an icky uniform.
1.13.2008 10:48pm
Dr. Fox (mail):
If one was interested in the impact of deployments on the rate of homicide or violence among soldiers, why would you be interested in the murder rate in the general population? That would be comparing apples (soldiers) to oranges (general population), and not statistically valid. It might be nice to include that statistic for context, but I think everyone would agree that the military should be screening to keep out potentially violent criminals, and therefore, the murder rate ought to be lower than the general population. The point of the article is that there are veterans suffering from PTSD who need help.
1.13.2008 10:57pm
Dale (mail):
Keep in mind the NYT is a dying newspaper doing anything to try to remain relevent. Assuming 2 people read every paper sold they reach about 6 tenths of one percent of the US population.

Their stock price looks like a sustained ski slope down. We will not have to put up with their inept efforts much longer.

Fortunately most of their editorial stuff will have to go into some other line of work.
1.13.2008 11:09pm
Val Halla (mail):
How do these numbers compare with the same amount of time during Bill Clinton's 'peaceful' administration?

The point of the article is not that soldiers need help IMO. The point is to make people think the war is making our soldiers into murderers. Look at this article in the context of all the other coverage of returning soldiers. Never will you come away from a NY Times piece feeling like you've just read about a hero. He or she is always a victim/criminal.
1.13.2008 11:11pm
david Hardy (mail):
"121 out of 1.7 million" vets.

Hmm... FBI reports crime in terms of incidents per 100,000 population per year.

So that'd be 121 per 1700 vets, or 14. That is indeed higher than the national figures, which are about half that.

But the national figures include EVERYONE. Toddlers and people on Social Security. Women (who have a much lower rate of criminality) as well as men. Homcide rates peak among the same social groups that reflect vet status (males of 18-25). So perhaps the paper could compare vets' status to that of non-vets of the same status? I'd be sure the vets come in much lower. But of course that wouldn't fit the story...
1.13.2008 11:36pm
Michael J. Totten (mail) (www):
Dr. Fox: "It might be nice to include that statistic for context"

Yes, that is precisely the point. Had the Times included that, this post and this criticism would, in all likelihood, never have been written.
1.14.2008 12:05am
PA NCO (mail):
You heard the rightwingers... move on.. nothing to see hear... being in combat makes people LESS likely to commit murders... another stab in the back... no problem at all.. just forget about it and stay the course... none of these murders actually happened... forget about it and go shopping.
1.14.2008 12:08am
PA NCO (mail):
Because.... to admit there there might be a problem may require spending money to get soldiers sufferring from PTSD some serious help and we sure wouldn't want that! Spenfin money helping people is against the conservative way.. unless maybe if they're foreigners.

Also might want to consider vet suicides... but that would imply giving a shit about people and we couldn't have that in Jesus name, amen. My cousin killed himself after he got back from Vietnam and yes, it still freaking bothers me.

No.. far better to just look at all this as an attack on our glorious honor and get all defensive and whitewash the whole thing.
1.14.2008 12:13am
Val Halla (mail):
This is not a story where all the information is included, which is what the 'right-wingers' are saying. This is manipulated news. I'm sorry about your cousin PA NCO, but isn't it simplistic to assume that it was the war that caused his distress and not perhaps the treatment of his service by the leftists in the media at home? That perhaps his brave service was denigrated, and his victory in combat had been turned into a defeat and everyone, EVERYONE, basically said 'let's move on'? Could it have been something other than combat? And were his problems the exact same ones that all the other vets faced? Is it really wise to create a strict template for mental disability when everyone's history and experiences -- even in combat -- are different?

A friend of my killed himself his senior year at UVA and I blamed the school being too stressful. I realize now that was short-sighted and foolish. But it was a knee-jerk reaction that is natural. The NY Times manipulates this natural reaction again and again. To imagine they don't know what they're doing is to live in a dream world.

I also lost a cousin to suicide. Business and family difficulties. Without the ability to lash his pain to an anti-war/anti-America/anti-troop message, someone like him will never be thought of by the media elite. But he's dead just the same.

People kill themselves and people murder. You can study the causes and the links, but to write a story like this implying their service is the cause, is reprehensible.
1.14.2008 12:36am
Norm Spaulding (mail):
Jay wrote:

"True, the Times method is shoddy. But as the reporters note, "The Pentagon does not keep track of such killings, most of which are prosecuted not by the military justice system but by civilian courts in state after state. Neither does the Justice Department."

Why do they not track such information?"


For the same reason that the Pentagon does not track births in South Dakota.
1.14.2008 1:29am
spot_the_dog (www):
Bravo. Very well said, friend. The more people who post on this subject, the better. The media may have gotten away with vilifying veterans in the past, but now that more and more people have access to the Internet, is it any wonder that recent studies show only about 19% of Americans trust the MSM to report things in an unbiased truthful fashion?

I will add your post here to the list of blogs on this subject here.
1.14.2008 3:26am
Broadsword (mail) (www):
Just look at some of the language..."committed a killing in this country or were charged with one, after their return from war." Where are the words "alleged", "suspects"? "They did it!!! Or maybe not..." When have we ever heard of a murder or a manslaughter or a reckless homicide described as "committ(ing) a killing"? And the phrase, "after their return from war", as if no one in uniform escapes the "combat trauma and the stress of deployment...alcohol abuse, family discord and other attendant problems — ...tragedy ...part destruction, part self-destruction." Everything is bad, dark, evil. All this is the language of paint slopped onto the sides of barns. Big Rorschach blots, where anything can be seen, but nothing is really there. Bad smells, ugly noises, dirty colors, All the News that Shite, We Print.
1.14.2008 6:57am
Mark Poling (mail):
At a guess, the NYT story will appeal most to those who think joining the military is in itself a not-insignificant crime. That may explain why the editors saw no need to include comparative statistics.
1.14.2008 6:59am
Connecticut Lawyer (mail):
This story illustrates well why I hate the NYT. It's a totally bogus story, created to fit a pre-determined storyline ("Vets are crazed killers"), that in turn is promoted solely for the purpose of undermining public support for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Is there any wonder that the NYT readership has been dropping like a stone for the last several years?
1.14.2008 7:30am
Alan Tomlinson (mail):
"America needs to wrap its arms around its sons and daughters who go to war, not alienate them and push them away . . . ."

Or perhaps it could send its sons and daughters somewhere else instead of to war.

Incidentally, a commenter has decided to equate grades with intelligence. That's pretty pathetic logic.

Cheers,

Alan Tomlinson
1.14.2008 9:20am
Henry Isham (mail):
I'm sure Mr. Carter is thrilled by the thoughtful, informed new posters attracted by his turning over this rock.

The antipathy towards the NYT seems churlishly ungrateful. When I click on their site every morning, I remember that they systematically lied in the run-up to the Iraq invasion. They are proud that they suppressed news of Federal invasions of privacy in order not to affect the outcome of the 2004 election. Without any consideration of the direction in which it would have affected it, of course. They just installed as a columnist the neoconservative most supportive of the Cause. Now people want to put them out of business for undermining the Volkskrieg.

If the article really encourages the idea that all returning vets are ticking time bombs, that is bad journalism. It's written in the vague, corporate press release prose they've descended to over the years, so the sensational interpretation is possible. OTOH, if it calls attention to the problem of PTSD and promotes efforts to deal with it, how is that a bad thing?
1.14.2008 9:22am
Andrew (mail) (www):
OTOH, if it calls attention to the problem of PTSD and promotes efforts to deal with it, how is that a bad thing?


The problem with this story is context and balance - is that really so difficult to understand?

It's a 6300 word story and what do we get from it? Vets aren't getting proper screening and treatment after deployment - well Duh!

I think PC got it just right:

More broadly though, I worry about the larger narrative of this story. It seems like we've been down this road before — casting veterans in the role of crazed, violent, disturbed young men who come home from war to become homeless or criminal (or both). America needs to wrap its arms around its sons and daughters who go to war, not alienate them and push them away with this kind of narrative. We sent these men and women to fight; we have a sacred trust to ensure they're taken care of when they come home. Irresponsible journalism like this impedes that effort by giving people the wrong impression about combat veterans.
1.14.2008 10:40am
The Contemptliber (mail):

This reporting most likely uncovered only the minimum number of such cases, given that not all killings, especially in big cities and on military bases, are reported publicly or in detail. Also, it was often not possible to determine the deployment history of other service members arrested on homicide charges.



Yeah. Newspapers and TV stations are so reluctant to print information about homicides. Are they serious?

Deployment history is easy to check, too. The NYT obviously wasn't interested in heavy lifting.

And one would need, apparently, to lop off a quarter of the "murders" because they're actually negligent homicide, due to drunk or reckless driving. And is "involuntary manslaughter" really tantamount to Rambo-styled killing?

Stripping it done to, you know, crimes that might fit the opening paragraphs, we're perhaps dealing with all of 50 murders over a six year span.

What would be interesting to me would be to see how many of these men (all but one were men, which isn't unusual, since 91 percent of the military is male) had seen actual combat. The GySgt the reporters discuss sounds like he was part of FSSG's body scrapers.

While I have no doubt it's traumatic to sweep bodies off the MSR, it's probably not nearly so traumatic as getting to be the body. So perhaps it's a bit idiotic to look for "causation" from a service job in OIF when another motive -- known quite well over the ages -- apparely was at hand:


On the eve of his second deployment to Iraq in 2004, Sergeant O’Neil fatally shot his mistress, Kimberly O’Neal, after she threatened to kill his family while he was gone.


I should blame OIF for the man cheating on his wife with an alleged nutjob he decided to kill? The jury of his peers seems to have shared this no duh perspective, which is why he's serving life without the chance for parole.


Today the focus is on PTSD, but military health care officials are seeing a spectrum of psychological issues, with an estimated half of the returning National Guard members, 38 percent of soldiers and 31 percent of marines reporting mental health problems, according to a Pentagon task force.



We know from our own studies that half this many Soldiers and Marines actually see combat, which is to say that they experience someone shooting at them and they shoot back; they withstand mortar shelling, a mine, and IED, hand to hand fighting or any of the other forms of what we term "combat."

The vast majority of people deployed to OIF won't even hear a shot fired in anger. While some of this changes with CS and CSS units move outside the wire, our own research continues to show that the target group for looking at combat stress isn't nearly this large.

This isn't to say that deployments aren't stressful. SFC Halftrack is shacking up with Rucksack Rhonda, and the wife finds out about it. Wifey is spending too much and you're going to be bankrupt when you get back. Son is lashing out. Blah, blah, blah. We hear all of it, even on non-combat unescorted (and escorted) tours.


Assigned on his return to a maintenance battalion at Camp Lejeune, N.C., Private Borges developed a taste for the ether used to start large internal combustion engines in winter.


So. A pogue bored in his shop huffing ether while other men are getting shot at is a "combat casualty" when he gets back?

OK. Every year we send several thousand men and women under the age of 21 to Japan (Okinawa and mainland) and other destinations where they can legally consume alcoholic beverages. Some drink too much. Some become addicted to the substances, requiring at great expense to the taxpayer longterm treatment in military hospitals. Some will dry out and go on deployments to OIF.

Some -- get this -- leave the military after OIF and keep drinking! They even plow into people while drunk on the highway.

Blame it on OIF!


Asked if he pulled the trigger, Mr. Strasburg said, “I don’t know,” adding that he took responsibility: “It was my gun and I was drunk. But what the hell was I thinking?”


So drunk that he doesn't even know he has a gun? Blame OIF!

This is in no way an effort to discount the real suffering brought on by combat in many men. Our military medicine has proven inadequate at the task of diagnosing and treating PTSD, and small unit leaders up to battalion commanders have become much more skilled at detecing mental illness in our Soldiers and Marines, removing them from combat, and getting them the necessary treatment.

I, personally, believe that we've done a real piss-poor job overall, especially in theater, but it's getting better. Certainly, it's the best mental health care we've ever afforded any combatant in our nation, but that's not good enough.

That said, I don't know what sort of barometer 50 or so homicides in a six-year period should be. The article doesn't competently compare it to previous peacetime years using the same metrics, and



A Navajo Indian who saw his hometown of Winslow, Ariz., as a dead end, Mr. Sepi joined the Army at 16, with a permission slip from his mother.


Dear NYT, no one can join the Army at the age of 16 years old. Not even with a note from your mommy. Mommy can't change 10 U.S.C., 505 (Title X).

I read a story wherein everyone was a victim, and the cause of all their troubles -- regardless of whether they saw any combat or not -- was mental illness stemming from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

I'm now going to strap on my SAPI, borrow an M203 and reenact a scenario I've done since returning home in my previous five combat tours: I'm going to blow up the mini-mart, take some hostages, call a NYT reporter and then off a couple of cops, because we get all crazy like that and there were no parades for us!
1.14.2008 11:35am
sheerahkahn:
"I'm now going to strap on my SAPI, borrow an M203 and reenact a scenario I've done since returning home in my previous five combat tours: I'm going to blow up the mini-mart, take some hostages, call a NYT reporter and then off a couple of cops, because we get all crazy like that and there were no parades for us!"

Don't forget to huff ether, and down a lot of scotch before you go postal.

Overall, I think MSR has the gist of it.
1.14.2008 12:45pm
linked reader:
If you actually read the article it repeatedly states that these numbers represent a tiny percentage of the overall deployed forces, and that overall there is no explicit correlation between the current wars and murder. In fact what I took from it is that even with the stepped up efforts by the military to mitigate PTSD and other mental health issues, the deep sense of pride among the military is a tough shell to crack, no pun intended.

This was expressed best by the tragic story of the Marine from Nebraska who killed a 21 year old during a moment of drunken rage.
1.14.2008 1:54pm
linked reader (mail):
If you actually read the article it repeatedly states that these numbers represent a tiny percentage of the overall deployed forces, and that overall there is no explicit correlation between the current wars and murder. In fact what I took from it is that even with the stepped up efforts by the military to mitigate PTSD and other mental health issues, the deep sense of pride among the military is a tough shell to crack, no pun intended.

This was expressed best by the tragic story of the Marine from Nebraska who killed a 21 year old during a moment of drunken rage.
1.14.2008 1:54pm
PA NCO (mail):
Wow, what a dumbass I am... here I was so naive to think that being in combat was stressful, when really, as our new crop of posters straight over from Blackfive can attest, it's really a wonderful thing to face death day after day killing people shouldn't bother any but the most limp wristed.

Just for the record, my cousin Eddie was just freaking fine before he went to Vietnam, never even had time to get fucked up in the head because he was just out of high school where he had no major problems. So if you want to dwell in your Military worshipping fantasy world with the rest of the Odinists just have a great time but leave my family the fuck out of it.

I guess I'd better tell the next patient I have who is just now developing nightmares and massive guilt from his WWII or Korean service (Yup - I've taken care of them) that you think he's a pussy and it's all probably about something else because you've decided that you can't handle the threat to your cozy belief system that PTSD from combat is real.
1.14.2008 2:05pm
Dave In Texas (mail):
If you actually read the article it repeatedly states that these numbers represent a tiny percentage of the overall deployed forces, and that overall there is no explicit correlation between the current wars and murder.

Right. So why write and publish a story, headlined, "Across America, Deadly Echoes of Foreign Battles" billed as Part 1 of a series "about veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who have committed killings, or been charged with them, after coming home."?

If you're taking that approach, you can't easily say, "Oh, no, you misunderstand. What I'm really talking about is PTSD."

If you want to report on PTSD, then report on those soldiers being with PTSD symptoms discharged with a 'pre-existing condition.' Or the paucity of treatment modes for PTSD patients after they leave the service. Or the difficult in obtaining psych counseling in small towns and rural areas that are far from big city VA medical centers.

Excuse me. I had a really bad day at Ft. Sill 38 years ago, so think I'll pop some pills and kill someone.
1.14.2008 2:23pm
Dr. Kenneth Noisewater (mail):
http://paulgraham.com/submarine.html

It would not surprise me in the least if this were just some sort of stealth campaign for the new _Rambo_ film. Sort of like how the History/Discovery channels went all Templars/Da Vinci when that movie came out.
1.14.2008 2:38pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
And now for the value added portion of the blog, wherein I bring to you, the huddled masses yearning to be free, the daily headlines from the Arab presses:

The top story on al Jazeera is the visit of France's Sarkozy to the Middle East (what's it with world leaders going to Arabia in January? Duty free shopping in UAE?). Al Jazeera actually doesn't mention his pregnant mega-hot lover, but rather his second stop (KSA) where he pledged to help with "peaceful nuclear energy" production and asked for help in resolving the Lebanese crisis.

I hereby suggest that in the future we consider "Lebanese crisis" as redundant.

In its Iraq coverage, al J reported that the American-led Coalition had killed 60 armed insurgents and detained another 193 in the north (Diyalah). A suicide bomber blew up his house in Baghdad, taking seven cops (and wounding seven innocents) along with him.

The significance of the sevens probably means something when broadcasted.

At rival al Arabiya the top stories -- Bush meets with KSA leaders in Riyadh (pictured with King Abdullah), Sarkozy speaks to Shura Council in KSA (where he sucked up to the Saudis and yet managed to suggest that "truth" wills itself out, and that KSA needs to be a force for both moderation and modernity), and another story about KSA's Ministry of the Interior reaching out to start community police agencies.

The idea is to foster security in every residential community in the Kingdom by putting cops there. They'll be there to solve crimes, but also to combat "harmful habits" (which I take to mean women wanting to vote or drive, kids smooching and adult men asking for democracy). There is some question in the story whether this latter "legitimate" role -- served for years by the Virtue and Vice guys -- is going to be usurped by the new community oriented policing.

To change things up I thought I'd give everyone a sense of the news in some of the smallish countries in the region.

First, Yemen. The top story in al-Motamar (I'm doing this phonetically), is this fascinating blurb about the fact that the Secretary General of the People's Conference will host a meeting today to discuss all that might happen in the provinces in Yemen this year (issues, proposed regulations), and this will lead to consultations with local leaders in all the governing districts...

Sorry, I dozed off there.

Not to be outdone by KSA's announcement of a new COPs program, Yemen's Dr. Tahir determined to eradicate all crime in the nation!

He's the leader of an international penal reform group for the Middle East and North Africa. He gabbed with several members of the Yemeni bureaucracy, including the chairperson of the Motherhood and Childhood Supreme Council (quite a title).

This makes sense because his best ideas involve reforming the (non-existent) juvenile criminal justice system in the region. A pilot program is considered for two provinces.

Seems like a decent bloke.

What went unsaid was the huge riot in Aden that everyone else in the region is talking about. Four dead (including a policeman), 16 wounded, sparked when separatists, democracy advocates, socialists, et al, took to the streets.

Meanwhile, in Oman the big news is King Sayyid (al Said) meeting with the foreign secretary of India (jealous of France and the US but couldn't get an appointment like everyone else in Riyadh?). The foreign secretary said that the Sultanate and the Sultan and the Sultan's family had been blessed by Allah and that relations were going quite well and...

Sorry, dozed off again.

Meanwhile, in Bahrain, the airline announced the purchase of $6 billion worth of Boeing aircraft (there's the goofy picture of two stewardesses, one in a veil, acting like bookmarks to the men signing the deal); updates some European soccer news ; and the PM handed over the keys to a new housing development (51 houses have been built or rebuilt since 2005 and the PM gave the owners their keys).

Friendly Hashemites.

Bahrain, which is eyed covetously by Iran (just as it was during the days of the Shah, and before him), is very interested in US promises to protect the Gulf kingdoms, including KSA, Qatar and UAE. The Arabic-language press in Bahrain, however, tends to play this down, except when it doesn't.

Apparently, Bush addressed the Iranian people and told them to await the day when the government in Tehran believes in freedom, justice and the "family" of nations. Sounds better in Arabic.

Bush ALWAYS sounds better in Arabic. I don't know why. I suspect his handlers hand out translations of his comments in very fine Arabic. My theory is that he's going to be known as a great orator in the Arab world by the time he leaves office.

In UAE, the lead story is Bush in, well, UAE. The story has a who's who of whom Bush discussed whatever he discussed (I gave up on the story after the third leaders was named because UAE is a tribal joint and everyone must be noted).

There's also some grumbling about Bush's peace deal with the Israelis/Palestinians -- UAE believes that it puts Israel's security over the rights of Palestinians. Like most Arab-language newspapers, al-Khaleej puts the Israeli government in Tel Aviv ("Tel Aviv said...") when it's quite obvious that the decree came from Jerusalem.

According to the article, the Israeli government ("in Tel Aviv") said that 1,000 Palestinians had been killed in Gaza over the past two years. The newspaper didn't disclose how many Israelis had died, or that the nation had actually vacated Gaza to the Gazans.

There is some Palestinian Authority concern that Bush is trying to prod Israel and the Palestinians to accept a "three state solution" that includes "Tel Aviv" (Jerusalem), the West Bank and Gaza as separate entities (which is pretty much what they are now).
1.14.2008 2:47pm
US Navy - retired (mail):
"PA NCO - Wow, what a dumbass I am"

I'll agree to that!
1.14.2008 4:49pm
US Navy - retired (mail):
Lets compare the murder rates of returning military personal to ANY other group...might I suggest inner city youth or law enforcement or acedemia for that matter...you will probably see that the rate will be SIGNIFICANTLY lower for out returning veterans.
1.14.2008 4:54pm
PA NCO (mail):
Hey Squidboy retired,

If you ever had an original thought it would give you PTSD.
1.14.2008 4:54pm
PA NCO (mail):
I'm thinking that one of the major difference between me and all you stalwart He-Men is that I moved from the military to health care and I see first hand the other side of the equation. You ought to give compassion a try sometime, tough guys, it might have a positive impact on your souls, but I must admit that I find the possibility of any of you being capable of change to be mighty far-fetched.
1.14.2008 4:57pm
fnord:
whoa, this one must have buzzed across the wires somewhat. I do not understand the positions.

How does a NYT possibly wrong use of statistics when it comes to crimes within the veteran community equal that there is no problem with the healthcare given to PTSD victims? Do veterans have to kill their quota first, before the problem is handled properly? Im inclined to agree with the gist of PA NCOs point that the macho-attitude of the US military might be your greatest enemy in the long run. By poohpoohing the problems , you do youself a huge disfavour.

Anyway, the interesting statistical facts are the curves. Are there significantly more crime now among veterns than it used to be? And why doesnt someone keep count and analyse that data? Saying that PTSD is a real problem does not equate to calling veterans psycho-killers.
1.14.2008 5:14pm
Andrew (mail) (www):
PA NCO,

ISTM one can, at the same time, condemn this particular article and acknowledge that PTSD is a huge issue. The point I would (charitably) make is that the NYT did not do a very good job addressing that issue. Again, 6300 word article with perhaps a couple hundred of them actually on PTSD!
1.14.2008 5:17pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
PA NCO, you're beginning to show signs of aggression. Don't go Rambo on us.

I, for one, wouldn't doubt that there is some causation in some of the cases mentioned in the NYT. But is it a pattern of conduct, even for this small sampling?

I don't see it in the story, and I think I'm on record as saying that military medicine has done a piss poor job at diagnosing and treating mental health issues during and after combat deployments.

It's been more than six years since 9/11 (have we tracked the murderers victims of the jet explosion who left the Pentagon that day and started holding up every liquor store in Arlington?). After six years and several hundred thousand deployment years (in manpower terms) for OIF and OEF and we have, what, maybe 10 (probably less) Rambo-type slayings every year?

Is that indicative of anything? I don't know. The article certainly didn't sell that.

And as a medical profession, you know that researchers continue to have a hard time linking wartime trauma to PTSD and later criminal involvement. In general, it's been determined that premilitary experiences and behavior exert the largest effects on postmilitary antisocial behavior and that PTSD acts as a mediational, transitional condition but not necessarily the cause of antisocial behavior.

This, so far, is what the longitudinal studies have reported, although there remains a great deal of work to be done.

The NYT anecdote about a young man who experienced brain trauma is NOT the same thing as PTSD. As you know, this form of direct brain trauma can have a profound effect on the victim's capacity to restrain from violent acts (or any other act).

This has been well documented -- especially studies about injury to the pre-frontal lobe -- in ways that less intrusive forms of mental (not physical) trauma have not.

Antisocials as a whole tend to have LOWER arousal and responsivity than other populations, there is a small cohort that reacts quite differently. Typically, this research has focused on victims of childhood abuse who turn to delinquency, but other scientists have looked at spousal abusers. $$

The problem continues to be that those with assaultive behavior show high scores for antisocial personality to begin with, and PTSD is really just tacked on (and the PTSD cohort tend to show more emotional abuse, not physical misconduct such as homicide).

This isn't to say that some studies haven't shown some correlation between experiencing mental trauma and then becoming antisocial $$, but rather that it's far from settled because the longitudinal studies haven't replicated these findings, and often come to different conclusions.

I think what you're groping at is simple: There have been studies (Steiner, et al) that point to a very small number of individuals diagnosed with PTSD doing bad things when exposed to mental trauma. What has NOT been settled is whether there are certain people predisposed to antisocial behavior when triggered by this sort of trauma. While we know that there is a strong correlation between the amount of combat one sees and incidences of PTSD, there isn't a corresponding match between PTSD and antisocial behavior.

Had the NYT taken a look at increased suicide rates and PTSD diagnoses, they would have been on firmer ground (but I guess CBS already did that one, and not exactly all that well).

Typically, we have to deal with comorbidity when sussing out causation for violent offenders. $$

You know that. I think what you're trying to tell everyone is that they shouldn't disregard combat traumata and reacclimation stessors as comorbid causes of antisocial, violent behavior in some veterans.

But that's quite different from swallowing the NYT's story, which mixes all sorts of physical and mental trauma (including what appears to be frontal lobe injury), PTSD, some quite different conditions from the DSM and violent misconduct.

Since the actual count of homicidal behavior is likely less than 50 active duty military personnel (with unverified combat histories) over a six-year span. I'd bet it's probably even less than that, and that co-morbidity would suggest that these transgressors themselves probably had anti-social characteristics and childhood trauma before they ever set foot in OIF or OEF, and that as the studies continue to tell us, these shared causes probably were more predictive of future violence than anything else.
1.14.2008 5:50pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

Im inclined to agree with the gist of PA NCOs point that the macho-attitude of the US military might be your greatest enemy in the long run.


The "macho attitude" wins wars against real enemies of our democracy.

If you want an effete tea sipping circle, join the local book club. The job of combatants is to close with and destroy bad guys. This requires a certain temperament, one that we must fight human nature to create, typically by making sure the individual remembers that he is dutybound to his group.

If making sure that you do your job so that your buddy lives is "macho," then may we have the most "macho" military in the world.
1.14.2008 5:53pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
A better test of potential homicidal behavior.

I'm not sure how many marriages Rambo had, but he would've ranked high on the other Hare assessment criteria.
1.14.2008 6:09pm
Charles Gittings (mail) (www):
If macho attitudes won wars, Mr. Bush's idiot war on nothing and everything would have been over five years ago.
1.14.2008 6:26pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
And for Publius, Fast Eddie and all the Vietnam vets in here, aren't you a bit steamed that Sly Stallone managed to slur caricature personify an entire generation of men and yet when he was asked to be PVT John Rambo found a job teaching gym at at Swiss academy for girls?

Marion Morrison John Wayne didn't serve. Sly Stallone didn't serve. Cary Grant didn't serve.

I wonder what Clark Gable, Jimmy Stewart (DFC), Charles Bronson, George C. Scott, Lee Marvin, Tyrone Power and a generation of actors diverted to battle thought about 'em.

Hell, Henry Fonda ENLISTED and served on a destroyer, saying he didn't "want to be in a fake war in a studio." Got a PUC and a Bronze Star w/V.
1.14.2008 6:28pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
Charles, I would suggest that Fnord was meaning "macho attitude" about men who go to war, not those who land on aircraft carriers, his previous service being to defend the airspace of Texas from possible incursions by Oklahoma.
1.14.2008 6:29pm
DANEgerus (mail) (www):
As the murder rate for this demographic, young military men, is 1/6th that of the general population, clearly the NYTimes is advocating universal service and universal deployment to Iraq for all young men.

Based upon the NYTimes exhaustive study of their own bias, in which they proved that stories exaggerating the violent tendencies of American Servicement are increasing in number, the NYTimes has proven... their own bias.
1.14.2008 6:31pm
Frank Drackman (mail):
Hmm teach PE at a girls school in Switzerland where I can use mind expanding drugs with impunity and enjoy many sexual relationships with nubile openminded european chicks or go to boot camp, infantry training, 13 months in the vietnamese jungle, where if I'm lucky I only get the black VD and spit upon when I come home? I guess Sly's not so stupid after all.
1.14.2008 7:58pm
Mark Pyruz (mail) (www):
Conte:
Regarding your report from Bahraini new sources, Iran has historically claimed Bahrain for centuries, as part of its historical possession and claim for the entire Persian Gulf. A majority of Bahrainis are Shia and many are of actual Iranian descent, even Farsi speaking.
1.14.2008 9:24pm
Publius:
Must have been a slow news day. Let's try not not to get our panties in a bunch over such things; it is seemingly the American way of doing things. If you self-professed troop lovers posting here really want to help, you might try asking your favorite president to actually do something without being prodded about helping veterans readjust after being in the war zone. That would include items such as ungrudgingly provided medical care and some searching looks at what current policies are doing to our very small and very stretched ground forces. But please, don't view the current political leadership and its policies as being synonomous with the troops. It's not.

The press does what it does; it is also a handy whipping boy for various and sundry interests. I don't give a shit about the press. I've been called "baby killer" and worse. I got over it.
1.14.2008 10:29pm
Jimmy (mail):
Jay Livingstone,

I believe that the Army Staff does track crimes by soldiers. In the national military command center, the MP liason is supposed to brief the Army chief of staff every morning on soldiers arrested, etc, over the past day. So the Army Staff has the raw data.

Whether they compile that raw data into a database of use to the NYT, that's a different story.
1.15.2008 11:00am
Charles Gittings (mail) (www):
"I would suggest that Fnord was meaning "macho attitude" about men who go to war, not those who land on aircraft carriers, his previous service being to defend the airspace of Texas from possible incursions by Oklahoma."

Ya, well I'd suggest that the evidence of experienced commanders who were defeated by their own over-reaching aggression and / or wishful thinking and /or lack of caution and / or inattention to routine matters such as logistics, security, and reconnaissance (etc) probably applies with even greater force to amateurs like George Bush than it does to experienced commanders, not that his unfitness for his job changes the fact that it is his job.
1.15.2008 12:01pm
fnord (mail):
Hmm, contlib., One could argue that a "macho" attitude towards work doesnt necessarily have to include contempt for weakness/failure. One could also argue that the "macho" factor has been instrumental in keeping the learningcurve so f&%king long on the COIN-development of the OIF-op. I have worked in some pretty macho enviroments myself, and have seen both productive and counter-productive social scenes. When those who fail and fall are an embarassment to the leaders of such a culture, be it on the ground or in the brass, then it is usually counter-productive.
1.15.2008 12:06pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
Are you f*cking kidding me, Fnord? The US military basically rebooted decades of doctrine, retrained an entire Army and USMC to fight a COIN war in less than a year, prosecuting it to great effect in Baghdad and Anbar while continuing to refit, retrain and regroup an entire mission to Afghanistan.

This is a major accomplishment that has mystified our allies in the UK, who had long prided themselves on their "institutional" expertise at COIN and yet who now must concede that our efforts in very bad places have been more successful than theirs in Basra.

Laymen seem to misunderstand how difficult it is to move a very large institution to enact any changes, much less on-the-fly transformations during a war.

This couldn't have been accomplished if "macho" meant "stupid." As I've always told my troops, from the days when I was an enlisted team leader to today, "quiet pride," not arrogance.

If "quiet pride" is akin to "macho," then so be it. We stand convicted. I personally believe the US Army and USMC have a great deal to be proud about during a transformation to a COIN model since 2006.

It's not perfect. The wars in OIF and OEF are far from over. But no one with any experience with militaries could look at the US Army in Iraq today and the one in only, say, early 2006 and not see a huge difference in the ways they operate.

More than "macho," what you typically will find in servicemen and women is a pride in their small unit and their own contributions to a mission. If you notice CPT Carter's blog entries, he tends to have a great deal of concern about the mission, but no small amount of pride in the way his Soldiers performed in OIF.

That's not "macho." It's "quiet pride."
1.15.2008 12:16pm
IRRsoldier (mail):

If "quiet pride" is akin to "macho," then so be it. We stand convicted. I personally believe the US Army and USMC have a great deal to be proud about during a transformation to a COIN model since 2006.


MSR,

You're missing the point here. I know what you mean about "quiet pride" in tight, cohesive combat arms units. Got it. I experienced that during my time in a light infantry battalion in the 10th Mountain.

The problem is that what is much-needed "quiet pride" in the small unit context comes across as uncaring, ineffectual, "macho" nonsense at the macro level. I've addressed this time and again.

While our small units and combat leaders must project a certain ethos, the train jumps the track when folks in senior positions start swaggering around the Beltway, Walter Reed, NDU and Recruiting Command with the bravado of a "stud" infantry battalion Commander. It degrades the EARNED bravado of the battalion commander, heaps false and obsequious praise on the poseurs by civilians and makes the Army look like a bunch of dunderheads when it clumsily interacts with civil-society.

I served with a number of great light infantry leaders who effortlessly transitioned between the beltway (Congressional Fellow, IN COL Assignments officer, USMA professor, etc.) and tactical infantry battalion command. They understood that what "worked" to succeed/inspire downrange or in a TOE unit was different from the skills (social, political, intellectual) needed to "suceed" working with the civilians and the media.

The problem here which I decry and fnord observes, is the grafting of a "kick ass", "take no prisoners" persona by persons in statseide positions that require tact, nuance and constant 360 degree evaluation - different from tactical command (which also requires these traits but in a different way).

I could go on for hours about this stuff: The LT Whiteside fiasco at WRAMC, the ACU 24-7-365 nonsense, the ruthless effort of senior Army leaders to portray everyone in the Army as single-minded, pixel-clad "warriors."

When will you admit that when our stateside, 3 and 4 star Generals try to mimic genuinely "badass" Lt. Cols the Army "loses" something - not the least of which is clear-eyed analysis?
1.15.2008 12:39pm
Charles Gittings (mail) (www):
"That's not "macho." It's "quiet pride." "

Ya, well I'm not confused about the difference, but failure is failure, what is or isn't effective depends on what you are trying to do, and a pointless operation that's well-executed is still pointless.
1.15.2008 12:44pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
OK, IRR.

Then show me the causation that ties the so-called "macho attitude" of the US military -- even its leaders -- to an inability to articulate COIN tactics in OIF.

I don't see it. Quite the opposite, obviously, because TRADOC/1st Army, USLC, et al, all the way down to the team level somehow managed to reconceive battle doctrine, retrain hundreds of thousands of combatants, rework their logistics and redeploy them thousands of miles away to fight a very different kind of war in less than a year.

It took a few broken eggs to make the omelet, and many of the so-called "macho" commanders you have railed against are gone because they couldn't get the job done. In their places have come men like GEN Petraeus who might be one arrogant SOB but he sure knows how to fight a war, doesn't he?

What I'm suggesting is that we have a problem with causation here. Obviously what Fnord identifies as "macho" (and seemingly isn't based on any real experience with US combat units or their commanders but rather pop cultural TV or film caricatures of them) has NOT been a detriment to prosecuting the war in OIF.

A "macho" Army and USMC doesn't concede mistakes, institutes reforms and then returns to the fight better for it. A "macho" Army and USMC doesn't do after actions that expose failures. A "macho" Army and USMC doesn't have Yinglings and Batemans and others constantly harping about its inadequacies, even if there are "macho" blowhards at every rank in every bureaucracy in every part of the world.

I have argued elsewhere that while you might despise the "warrior culture" as it has been applied to AMEDD and other commands, it's saved the ass of our combat arms battalions consistently redeployed, shot up and strained by two wars on the other side of the world.

A lot of it might be pure hockum. But it's hockum that means something to the institutional culture that buttresses those small units in combat.
1.15.2008 12:52pm
jcrue:
PA NCO,
So if you want to dwell in your Military worshipping fantasy world with the rest of the Odinists just have a great time but leave my family the fuck out of it.


No one mentioned your family before you did - did they?
1.15.2008 1:07pm
James M (mail):
I think the NYT has outlined a problem that we, as a nation, are not addressing properly. You may fault their statistical method but they are not presenting a PHD thesis. They are pointing out the connection between the untreated PSD and murders. There is probably a lot more PSD related problems that do not end in murder. Murder is just the tip of the iceberg.

We do a lot to train our young men what to do, from how to salute to what to do in battle. We wind them up, but fail to unwind them on the other side. Part of the problem is we are not enlisting mature men but young immature teenagers.

There is a big difference between some one who has done several years at west point, is older, more mature and had classes in the morals of war and peace, and some young teenager who is still too young to even legally walked not a bar and had a beer with friends.

We wind them up and are suprized when a few of them go off.

I think most of the posts above are attacking the messenger and in a state of high hubris fail to get the message. We are failing to look after our men. Failing to re-integrate them into normal life with the skills they need.

We have failed before. Vietnam vets still make up a very large portion of our current homless population. Ask any person who works with homless services.

Maybe not all men who go to war will fire a gun, but every one of them gets basic rifle training. Maybe not all the boys who return from war need counseling and retraining but that does not mean we should not screen them, train them and follow up to see if they are ok.
1.15.2008 1:08pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

They are pointing out the connection between the untreated PSD and murders. There is probably a lot more PSD related problems that do not end in murder. Murder is just the tip of the iceberg.



And, again, unfortunately our peer-reviewed longitudinal studies have NOT buttressed this contention. Please see links to the appropriate non-military research above.

Had the article sought to tie PTSD to suicides, or PTSD to verbal abouse of spouses and girlfriends, the peer-reviewed literature might have helped out.

As it stands now, the baseline estimate of perhaps 10 non-negligent homicides per annum since 2001 can't be considered a significant indicator of the problems the NYT details, and especially so when we don't know the deployment/combat histories of the accused transgressors and without any conception of the co-morbidity involved in their individula antisocial behavior.

If we try to bring in a larger sample size that could indicate antisocial behavior manifested in the ranks -- such as the numbers of courts martial -- and peg that to the increase in the active duty force (by "growing" the ground forces and, more important, activating Reserve and National Guard troops), we actually find a LOWER rate of criminal charges.

This is partially -- but not completely -- due to the fact that about a tenth of the uniformed military is deployed globally at any given time, but even accounting for that crime statistics within our own records is NOT bearing out the thesis that there is increasing antisocial behavior caused by the combat deployments.

What I think no researcher denies is that for a very small number of the adult, male uniformed population, traumatic events can trigger future antisocial behavior. We know this to be true, but we have to be careful with causation because the longitudinal studies continue to show that the major factors typically are NOT due to PTSD diagnoses, et al, but rather to factors imported into a military career, such as childhood physical or emotion abuse.

And this becomes a question of balance: Does "part I" of the NYT's "study" unfairly caricature hundreds of thousands of returning veterans by failing to understand the relevant research?

I think it does. I say this as someone who nevertheless believes that AMEDD and the larger military and VA largely have failed the individual Soldiers returing from OIF and OEF in the diagnosis and treatment of mental health issues.
1.15.2008 1:20pm
IRRsoldier (mail):
MSR,

I don't know why you are inserting "COIN-speak" in this debate. That's not really the topic of this thread. The diversion to point out a hard earned success paid for in blood leaves me cold. Kind of like yesterday's revisionist op-ed by Bill Kristol. Sure we may be turning a corner, but it took a year with the highest # of KIAs in OIF to get there. The topic(s) as I see it are:

1) A spike in the number of stateside murders, homicides and voluntary/involuntary manslaughters committed by serving uniformed personnel - despite lower number of soldiers and marines stationed stateside during OIF/OEF.

2) The impact on mental health and personality (if any) that repeated deployments to a COIN/assymetric fight have on a junior enlisted force that is increasingly drawn from less-educated, less-physically fit and less resillient strata of society.

3) What is this the harbinger of (if anything) for the future of our ground forces as we see an 89% increase in these incidents in our active force with an entering cohort of progressively lower quality and no end in sight for OPTEMPO or PERSTEMPO?

My concerns, outlined above and drowned out by shills for Blackfive and Grayhawk, involve the following: WTF are our senior "warrior" leaders doing to reintegrate the real returning warriors at the squad, platoon and company level to civil-society, their families and an Army that must retain full spectrum capabilities?

Battlemind may be a great program, but it has to be followed up with actions - namely - that you are back home. Great. We tell soldiers in Battlemeind that there are "no enemies at home" while we parade them around in the same desert boots they wore in Iraq and do our damnest to portray them as a thin green line protecting Mom, Apple Pie and all that's good an holy from the hordes espousing Islamofascism.

This is where my incessant and, at times annoying broadsides against the "warrior" hokum come from. It is my belief that we are failing and possibly harming those young people asked to do repetitive tours without the lens of experience, maturity or conscience held by our 30-something NCOs and officers.

When do the returning EMs of today get to "downcycle" with this OPTEMPO and PERSTEMPO? They return to a 12 month frenxy to redeploy again to Iraq or A'stan. Everything is pixelated. There is no mental or psychic cues that stateside is "different." This is something that we even had in OIF 1 and 2 with the transition from DCU back to BDU at home station. A visual and sensory cue that we were home.

You act as if this is the first time the American Army ever engaged in a war. The problem is that we are failing to learn from the past and some senior leaders (e.g. LTG Jack Stultz of the Army Reserve) are trying their hardest to break from the past and redefine the American soldier as some type of nomadic, expeditionary "warrior" untethered to American society and not subject to societal norms of professional appearance, good groom and waiting in line with everybody else at the airport chenckpoint.

Open your eyes and recognize what we are doing and HOW our leadership is projecting an image of the American soldier to civil-society, our allies and the world. There is no "normal". The increasing use of soldiers for thinly veiled agit-prop in CONUS troubles me.

Quite honestly, the only time some of our KIA junior enlisted in 2008 ever get to put on their Class As and EARNED Blue Cord is in a box at the Dover morgue. They graduate BCT/OSUT/AIT in ACUs, come home that way on leave and have their official photos taken that way. This is a problem ... even if I'm the only one who sees it.
1.15.2008 1:26pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

I don't know why you are inserting "COIN-speak" in this debate.


I did not. Fnord suggested that the same "macho" attitude that makes DoD and VA such a-holes to brain addled veterans is the same temperament that kept us from "learning the lessons" of COIN in OIF.

This is BS. First, it's BS because we obviously rapidly reinstituted transformative doctrinal, logistical and training methods in a very short period of time and applied them on the COIN battlefield in OIF, so where was the "macho" blockage that kept us from doing that?

Second, it's BS because I don't believe there's much of a "macho" attitude in the US military, although I would agree that pop-cultural manifestations of this mood are evident in Rambo movies, et al.

But a movie doesn't mean reality. Quite the opposite, too often.

And to be fair, junior enlisted routinely are required to put out their Blue Cords for pointless inspections we force on them to make sure they haven't grown too fat, have all the ribbons and medals in their record books and want to change up the training cycle to get them out of the field, especially in winter.

If you're complaining about the sped up PERSTEMPO/OPTEMPO, the growing gap between civil and military cultures and anything else so complex that we have RAND on retainer to give us long and boring studies about the problems, I don't know what to tell you. Obviously, those issues go beyond perceptions by Norwegians of how "macho" American servicemen appear in the press and pop culture.

If you're further concerned about the lack of "normal" in CONUS, guess what? We are AT WAR. Maybe America isn't at war, but the ground components of the US Army and USMC most certainly are at war. This isn't "normal," although during times of conflict cultural notions you find disturbing become commonplace because, again, WE ARE AT WAR.
1.15.2008 1:52pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

despite lower number of soldiers and marines stationed stateside during OIF/OEF.


Actually, you kind of have to be careful with that. Due to widespread activations of ArNG and Reserve units, much of OIF and OEF have seen MORE people stationed stateside in active formations.

We've simply brought more people into the military by activating them, increasing modestly the size of the ground component and, in smaller numbers, by shifting those formally in USAF and USN sea-going or placed in escorted and unescorted longterm deployments abroad instead in the Middle East, particularly Kuwait and Iraq.

And, again, please remember that we need to be very careful with how we frame studies. As someone in the public health field, you would never accept a "study" that so haphazardly used facts in the NYT effort.

They seriously compared the tribulations of a combat Soldier with obvious brain trauma to men who likely were never in combat: An ether huffing USMC mechanic? A senior USMC NCO in FSSG who shot his mistress because she was going to tattle on him?

Come on. Sometimes comorbidity should mean something. In this case, the NYT blares that there is a direct connection from active duty (maybe in OIF or OEF, we don't know because they didn't check out their deployment histories) to homicides (and we still need to strip out the negligent drunk-driving homicides and a lot of the involuntary homicide convictions, something we can't do because we don't have the data).

Guess what? A kid who loads pallets in Qatar or never drives the MSR to Safwan out of Kuwait is still and OIF "veteran."

We've been down this road before. There's been a cottage industry since Vietnam searching for statistical proof that there's a pathological connection between traumatic violence in combat and future antisocial behavior.

I linked to many of those studies above. It's not the "slam dunk" some in here seem to believe it should be.
1.15.2008 2:03pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
1.15.2008 2:06pm
fnord:
MSR: The springing point, as we say over here, lies in the term "during a transformation to a COIN model since 2006. ", sir. Agreted. The General has delivered, and the troops seem to have adapted well to some real leadership for a f&%king change.

But I seem to remember that you invaded in 2003, sir? Three years reactiontime is a hell of a lot of blood. That was my point, because I am a historian by education. Theres a three year "Rummygap" that is still awaiting a full explanation. And I blame the brass, and I blame the macho-attitude that ruled pre-2006 on a lot of bad blood in especially Iraq.
1.15.2008 2:27pm
fnord:
IRR: It was me. Its partly because I am greatly fascinated by the masculine US male ego these days, how it manifests its humble pride. See above.

But hey, Im a anti-semitic theocratic closet nazi according to the contemptliber. ;-) And Publius?
1.15.2008 2:31pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
The war in 2003 was not the same war as the one in 2004, and certainly not the one in post-Samarrah Iraq in 2006. They were two different kinds of wars, fought by very different combatants on both sides for very different goals.

The "history" of how 2003 became 2004 is well documented. What seems not so well documented is how well the US radically changed its force structure, training, logistics and doctrine to address the challenge of many different enemies on a COIN battlefield by 2006.

The experiments in Anbar and Tal Afar in 2005-06 became the doctrine reinstitutionalized in 2006-07. This is an amazing transformation, one that will be studied by militaries around the world for decades.

Whether it's ultimately successful -- based on the foreign and domestic policy goals of the Coalition and Iraq -- is questionable. But that doesn't mean that some "macho" temperament somehow blocked the ability of the US military to radically reform its training, battle doctrine, force structure, logistics and leadership quickly and then continue to make changes to keep pace with shifting battlefield conditions.

If Donald "Snowflake" Rumsfeld and other members of OSD or OVP/POTUS or Congress were "arrogant" or "macho," that's quite different from suggesting that the US Army is "macho" and that somehow this emotional flaw kept it from transforming adequately for a COIN battlefield (apparently the earlier, probably now abandoned conjecture).

Bureaucracies as large and complex as DoD simply don't change well. That the US Army and USMC were able on such short notice to do what needed to be done in OIF actually is a good thing.
1.15.2008 2:39pm
fnord:
MSR: When I read mil-blogs like Blackfive and many many others, and listen to Rush Limbaugh and see all these images of iraqi casuals being posted on the net and see Abu Ghraib and the police beating up demonstrators and all this, I definetly get a serious violent macho sense of the military playing its part in a process of subeversion of civilian society. I see all the ra-ra milblogs, and many of them are disturbing. Sir.

I agree that most US soldiers have behaved honourably, at least these last 4 years as a caveat, but as earlier stated, being the best occupational nation in a hostile territory in history doesnt change the facts that you are a occupying nation in a basically hostile territory. Sir.
1.15.2008 3:23pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

I see all the ra-ra milblogs, and many of them are disturbing. Sir.




I agree. And it's always interesting to see how many of the so-called "milbloggers" actually have seen much combat, especially so in this war.

Very few, I might suggest.
1.15.2008 3:24pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
By the way, at the risk of calling out the most "macho" guy in here -- JD, who as a former Red Teamer at NTC AND a lawyer might exemplify a certain Alpha personality -- it would be interesting to see what he thinks as America's "machismo" problem.
1.15.2008 3:26pm
sheerahkahn:
"it would be interesting to see what he thinks as America's "machismo" problem."

Well, from my perspective, there are a lot of walter mitty types who like to feel "soldierly/brave/valiant/uhruh" vicariously through the efforts of others.
Hollywood provides the war-porn, the politicians provide the anal-sunshine, and the war-groupies lap it up.

Me, I prefer friendly dinner company, nice ale, a finely cooked porter house steak, and a smooth single malt scotch to finish the meal off.
But thats just me.

"War hath no fury like a noncombatant."
Charles Edward Montague, Disenchantment
1.15.2008 4:05pm
Jordan:

I agree. And it's always interesting to see how many of the so-called "milbloggers" actually have seen much combat, especially so in this war.

Very few, I might suggest.


Yeah, you might suggest that. Of course, you wouldn't present any evidence to back it up.
1.15.2008 4:12pm
pfm:
I read the article, and it did seem a little sloppy when it came to offering examples to fit the premise. For example, if I remember my old mythology readings correctly, Ajax went insane and committed suicide not because of battlefield stress, but because of a jealous rage because he wasn't given some armor. Seems like the gods struck him insane - those rascals.
1.15.2008 4:12pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
More value added content (I'm waiting on phone calls for a conference)...

We'll begin with al-Akhbar where the big story is continuing chaos in Lebanon, including the targeted car bombing of an American envoy. Sources tell the newspaper that the bombing (which killed three bystanders and wounded the driver but missed its intended victim) is tied to the diplomatic visits of the Arab League, which is trying to sort out the violence.

Lebanon currently is experiencing some of the coldest temperatures in memory, and rising flour, fuel and electricity prices have left everyone in a bad mood, especially in rural areas where poverty is worse than in the cities.

Meanwhile in al-Hayat, the big story continues to be the Bush visit to the region, especially the president's announcement that Congress will go along with arms sales to KSA. That's Bush with King Abdullah in the picture.

In a speech eerily similar to his Putin moment, the president said that he would use his close, personal ties to the King in order to forge strong strategic links to the region. This comes in the aftermath of his tough talk about Iran, his pledge to help create a Palestinian state and announcement of the $11.5 billion weapons deal that also involves Kuwait and UAE.

The second top story is Sarkozy's visit to the region, where he's saying many of the same things to many of the same people.

Most other regional media outlets follow the same story line. In this photo, POTUS receives a medal from King Abdullah, something KSA gives out to worldwide leaders.

Bush's staffers said that he would discuss human rights issues with KSA.

In Iraq, top stories include Bush's visit to the region.

The big local news involves various accounts of what recently set a refinery near Basra ablaze (some accuse either a British or American helicopter firing during a dawn attack, which makes zero sense, whereas others suggest an industrial accident or the will of Allah).

The British, who had control of the AO at the time of the fire, deny any involvement of their helicopters in the gas fire/explosion (saying they weren't even in the sky), and no one will say exactly how the blaze even started or how aircraft might combust the works.

And you can't escape her: Paris Hilton looms large.

Tariq al-Shaab reports that the UN wants to beef up its redevelopment effort in Iraq. The UN Secretary General says that security remains a serious issue. Dawa's Nouri al-Maliki told the UN that security had improved "significantly" and that UNSC resolution would boost (not shrink) overall American assistance to Baghdad.

What hasn't been well reported in the US media has been the UN's role in brokering talks in the region with all the neighbors. Next month, the rotating meeting will shift to Turkey. The confabs, which have brought Secretary of State Rice to the chatting circle meetings, typically include Iran, Turkey, Iraqi officials and other interested "stakeholders."

Speaking of Rice, az-Zaman (shortened to azzaman for marketing purposes) talks about her surprise visit to Iraq, where she met with PM Maliki and President Jalal Talabani (Kurd).

Rice said she saw progress on the long-delayed (and probably long dead) oil law. To punctuate her assessment of the political progress in the region, Turkish warplanes bombed (Turkish) Kurdish separatist enclaves putatively controlled by Talabani's fellow (Iraqi) Kurds.

KSA is opening an embassy in Baghdad.

The Turks haven't said if they will bomb that, too.
1.15.2008 4:15pm
fnord:


But to loop it back to the subject: I think that maybe some rotation through med-care for National Guard vets who still want to serve would be a good idea? There must be some sort of way to set up a proper military pension system without all this legal debris? The fact that you have to sue without free lawcare to get full support is just horrible, btw. Just horrible.
1.15.2008 4:19pm
fnord:
Its funny, never thought of it before, but officially I am a reserve combatant. Since norway is at war, and I am in the reserves (faaar behind), isnt that the official status?
1.15.2008 4:22pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

Yeah, you might suggest that. Of course, you wouldn't present any evidence to back it up.



I don't want to start any trouble, but linked to this article. That website has a list of 10 bloggers. I believe only two of them have direct military experience in OIF or OEF. I might be off on my count, but that's about the ratio.

Abu Muquwama is mentioned, and he definitely went on combat tours to OIF and OEF (and has pins in his leg).

I don't know about "Winds of Change" because I don't read it.

I've noticed that the most virulently rah-rah milblogs tend to be manned by those who either haven't been in much combat or who haven't been there for awhile. Just my opinion.

Part of the problem is that our milblogging policy -- Ray disagrees with me here (come to think of it, MAJ Ray has deployed to OIF) -- isn't kind to Soldiers with real experience webcasting from the war.
1.15.2008 4:33pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
Ooops. Blackfive LINKED to this article...
1.15.2008 4:34pm
Jordan:

Just my opinion.


Indeed.
1.15.2008 4:43pm
fnord:
"Ooops. Blackfive LINKED to this article..."

sigh, here goes the neighbourhood.
1.15.2008 5:05pm
Mark Pyruz (mail) (www):
Contemptliber:
Winds of Change doesn't appear to staff combat veterans from any world military. Most seem to be reasonably well read, well meaning Jewish Americans.

Regarding your focus on the Arab press, there have been some interesting pieces written recently relating to the President's call for a regional confrontation with Iran. Below are comments from a summary by M K Bhadrakumar:

The leading pro-government newspaper, al-Riyadh, which reflects the views of the Saudi authorities, said Saudi Arabia refused to be drawn into wars or tensions with Iran and the Iran nuclear issue should be solved through diplomatic means and dialogue. It advised Bush that he was "welcome as a man of peace, but not as a man of war" and that if he sought Arab solidarity, then "he must focus rationally on the most important issue which is the question of peace".

Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said on Wednesday Riyadh's national interests came first when dealing with Tehran. "We have relations with Iran and we talk with them, and if we felt any danger we have links ... that allow us to talk about. So we welcome any issue the president [Bush] raises and we will discuss them from our point of view," he said.

Similarly, influential Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said on Sunday, "Iran and Saudi Arabia can turn into a proper model for the rest of the Islamic world through mutual cooperation and with the help of other regional states." He said recent developments such as the Saudi invitation to the Iranian president to participate in the hajj were "clear indications of a deepening of Riyadh's relations with Tehran".
1.15.2008 5:30pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
I think part of the problem, Fnord, is who is a "milblogger." The term originally meant members of the military who blogged.

This has changed over the years, and now includes a pretty wide net. For example, Blackfive has 10 contributors, but how many have actually served in the military in OEF or OIF?

The largest accumulator sites feature "milblogs" by spouses, child dependents, veterans of other wars (but not serving in the GWoT), civilian contractors, military members who have never left CONUS, parents of present and former service members, hobbyists, historians, the loosely defined "military supporter," military science professors, even civilians who don't even live in the US.

If we accept that milblogging.com's accumulater of 1,888 (!) "milblogs" is representative of the medium, then we could count 45 percent as NOT being in any branch the military, using their own criteria.

In other words, if I randomly were to choose 100 sites designating THEMSELVES as "milblogs," I'd hit 45 of them that were owned and operated by people who are NOT in the US military in some capacity. Probably one out of every 10 I hit will be manned by a military veteran, although that doesn't mean the vet has any combat deployment under the belt.
1.15.2008 5:30pm
fnord:
contemptl: I agree. Legit mil-blogs tend to be much more adult.

My comment above about status was a joke, not a claim, btw. (Though Im still not quite sure about legal status...)
1.15.2008 5:35pm
sheerahkahn:
"Ooops. Blackfive LINKED to this article..."

So I went and looked over Blackfive...and tbh...I'm not sure what to make of it.
War info site?
War porn site?
War stuff site?
War news site?
A blog for readers of Soldier of Fortune?
Hmm, well, anyway, it's definitely a forum for like-minded individuals, I wish them well.
1.15.2008 5:38pm
The Contemptliber (mail):

He said recent developments such as the Saudi invitation to the Iranian president to participate in the hajj were "clear indications of a deepening of Riyadh's relations with Tehran".



Actually, the Saudi media usually have this turned around. They reported that the Iranian president requested KSA's leaders to come for the Hajj, and that they weren't opposed to it (in some accounts, Saudi officials are quoted as basically saying, "We can't keep anyone away who is truly a pilgrim.").

In a larger sense, the region is very confused about how to confront/embrace Tehran. Bahrain has been apprehensive (largely because Iran wants to gobble up Bahrain), but Qatar has been more friendly.

KSA, with its own large Shi'i minority, blows hot and cold. It doesn't want war, but it also wants Tehran to quit meddling in other places (Sarkozy asked for KSA's help in Lebanon. Now which goofy terrorist faction might Iran support there?).

The GCC is floundering, but members of the GCC sign on for billions of dollars in US arms (to confront potentially whom?) and continue signing longterm leasing agreements for US naval, air and ground basing.

Mixed messages for a turbulent time, if you ask me.

The single issue common to all these parties is Iraq. What is interesting to me is that Bush and his staffers talk tough about Iran, but at the same time engage Iran through ongoing regional talks brokered by the UN.

So perhaps we're just as mixed in our messages, eh?
1.15.2008 5:38pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
Upon commenting upon the increasingly murky nature of "milblogs" (kids can be "milbloggers?"), I also don't want to paint myself into the chickenhawk argument, or the reverse-chickenhawk alternative.

Obviously, veterans from other wars bring great experiences of their own to the discussion. A military contractor actually might have insights into the GWoT that are interesting. Spouses and parents of military members are A-1 (there you go, Mrs MSR, mom and pop). Uniformed members who have never deployed to OIF or OEF would comprise about a third of the total force, so I'm going to write them off?

Of course not!

At the same time, I think what gives this particular blog (and Abu M's) its sizzle is the fact that they walked some walk and should be allowed to talk some talk.

This been there/done that mentality is NOT "macho," Fnord, but encapsulates a pretty common meme in the military -- which is why we give ribbons, put deployment and combat experiences onto DD-214s and print up T-shirts for every platoon that comes and goes from the region.
1.15.2008 5:47pm
sheerahkahn:
I've never thought of Intel Dump as a Mil Blog...no, I've always viewed it as a forum of National Interests, and Mr. Carter has brought a great deal of focused, and sometimes interesting articles and information for our consideration.
I for one appreciate Phil's patience and willingness to host a diverse information blog.
I hope it goes big time, and rivals TPM.
1.15.2008 5:51pm
fnord:
MSR: I think we agree on that position. I have worked in heavy factory and on stages, and gone squad in the snow. Pride of work is good.

But at the same time, there seems to be an awful lot of shouting going on in the US forces. And I cant help but notice that this tendency to shout at each other a lot might be CounterProductive.(CP. My word of the week.) Especially if it is employed as a norm for treating psychologically damaged soldiers.
1.15.2008 5:54pm
Mark E. (mail) (www):
Phil,
I wish I shared your "benefit of the doubt" in terms of the NYTimes intentions with this articles but I can almost assure you this kind of garbage gets pumped out due to their inherent misunderstanding and, yes, loathing of the U.S. military. I've been a freelance writer for a number of years and talked to countless people from that newsroom and it's something most of them have all but admitted in their dicsusssions with me.

I certainly wish it weren't so and wish the rest of the press didn't hold the same hostility to our brave men and women but it's true and a recent poll on this
1.15.2008 6:06pm
Corner Stone (mail):

this kind of garbage gets pumped out due to their inherent misunderstanding and, yes, loathing of the U.S. military. I've been a freelance writer for a number of years and talked to countless people from that newsroom and it's something most of them have all but admitted in their dicsusssions with me.

Seriously? Your statement here is that countless men and women from prominent news rooms loathe the U.S. military? And further, these individuals openly discuss this loathing with you?
1.15.2008 6:10pm
sheerahkahn:
"I wish I shared your "benefit of the doubt" in terms of the NYTimes intentions with this articles but I can almost assure you this kind of garbage gets pumped out due to their inherent misunderstanding and, yes, loathing of the U.S. military."

Loathing?
Suffering from a basic misunderstanding of the military stemming from predisposition to fill in the blanks with uninformed conjecture, sure I can go with that...but...t'yeah...loathing?
Sorry bro, that's a little far fetched for me. Now if you had written evidence that you could cite...something like a reporters byline attached to a scathing denuciation of all things American military...that would be something else.
1.15.2008 7:00pm
Publius:
Interesting tangent Contemptliber has taken on the milblogs, which, from what I've seen, kind of tend to mirror his impressions. I'm also with Sheer in that I don't view Intel Dump as a milblog per se. The host is not a fire breather and most posters are not either. That fits my style. In fact, from what I've seen, Phil Carter is clearly in the top ten of all of them. FWIW, the only other "milblogs" I really check in with—and I have my own reasons for doing so—are Pat Lang's, Jim Hruska's (Ranger Against War) and Armchair Generalist. I've sampled some of the popular milblogs and haven't them to be my cup of tea. I get a little tired of seeing things from people who ain't been there and done that pontificating on just how wonderful everything is and on just how bad all of their Commie pinko raghead-loving fellow Americans are. One wonders at just how bloodthirsty so many Americans are. As I read what they post, I see them hunkered down, laying in the field rations, locking and loading, prepared to repulse the heathen invasion.

BTW, the NYT had an interesting article today about some medical evidence regarding the deleterious effects of chronic fear of terrorism on the heart. I think a lot of the milbloggers and their acolytes are at risk.

"I've been a freelance writer for a number of years and talked to countless people from that newsroom and it's something most of them have all but admitted in their dicsusssions with me."

I'm with Corner Stone in calling Mark E. out on this one. I'd like to see some credible evidence of this casual reference to the NYT "loathing" the military. I don't believe it. I do believe the NYT and other media sources don't understand the military, but then, IOTM the military is impossible to understand if you haven't actually been in it. The press does what it has to do—and they try hard—but never, ever think they truly understand what they're reporting on.

My wife has been around the military for a lot of years and she still doesn't get it. She doesn't understand why I still get saluted and am addressed as "sir." She says, thinking of retirees from other professions, "you're retired." I say, "you don't understand, we never retire, this baby is for life." Nobody but military people understands the military.
1.15.2008 7:37pm
FDChief (mail):
I just popped my head up for a recon and saw 104 replies to this post. 104! Seems like 4 would have pretty mch covered it:

1. The NYT is no more liberal than most big papers. It's owned by very wealthy people and employs people like Bill Kristol, not exactly your Dirty Fucking Hippie...

2. That said, the NYT is no smarter than 96% of the American public about military matters. This is a generational issue, not a political posture one.

3. Given the choice between running a story entitled: "Perfectly Sane Afghan/Iraq Vet Sits At Home, Knits Sweater" and "Crazed Vet Runs Amok", which one do you think they'll run? "If it bleeds, it leads", right?

4. It's a stupid story, but so was the Weekly Standard's big headline about how we were "winning" in Iraq back in spring 2006. WTF?

5. Let me know if you have any more questions, OK?
1.15.2008 8:36pm
Andrew (mail) (www):
5. Let me know if you have any more questions, OK?


Chief,

I went out partying this past weekend and now I have this strange itchy rash. Do you think it's serious and should I go to medical after formation tomorrow morning?
1.16.2008 1:21am
FDChief (mail):
Andrew: all I can tell you is what my old PA, Chief Schrum, told me when our battalion held what may well have been the last short-arm inspection in the Army after a particularly fun trip to JWTC, Ft. Sherman, Panama:

"If you can piss without screaming, you're 1000mg PCN/RTD."

But c'mon down to the aid station - we need the practice.

True story: had a kid come down to the TMC at Ft. Kobbe worried about possible drippy-dick. Gave him a specimen cup and sent him to the latrine. About an hour later, sick call is over, we realize that this private hasn't turned back up. Go into the latrine, sure enough, he's still in a stall. Knock on the stall: "Hey, Rambo, you filled that cup yet?"

Long silence. Kid says in a sort of strangled voice: "You want me to FILL it?"

Impatient me: "Goddam, troop, do you need some water or something? How long does it take you to piss in a cup, anyway?"

Private: "Wait...you mean I'm supposed to PISS in it...?"

To give him credit, we were proud to inform his fellow Motengators (the old A Co., 2/187th) that they had one seriously iron-wristed hero in their company.

It's that kind of resolve that will defeat Islamofascism, by God...
1.16.2008 8:39am
FDChief (mail):
Where are my wits: I mean JOTC.

I still have my old banana boat patch around somewhere. Panama was the last place you could still wear it, along with tuff like foreign jump wings, since we were wearing OG107s - the old OD jungles - well into the late 80's.
1.16.2008 8:42am
FDChief (mail):
The press does what it has to do—and they try hard—but never, ever think they truly understand what they're reporting on.

Publius, I think you're being too kind here. The press hasn't been doing it's job in this country for some time, particularly the political press, probably since the goddam "Drudge Report" became the fucking gold standard for political journalism. For example, I'll be you that 90 out of 100 Americans couldn't tell you the differences between Clinton's health care policy and Obama's, or between McCain's foreign policy promises and Huckabee's, but they sure could tell you about dward's haircut, Hillary's tears, McCain's manliness and Thompson's trophy wife (OK, I gotta admit knowing about Thompson's wife, but, day-um, she's teh hott...)

Our press has been letting our republic down since before the Reagan days, but it's been particularly noticible over the past ten years or so. Some particularly idiotic lie is burped out by some conveniently "unnamed" source and rather than finding out the truth, the press typically prints the lie and the truth side-by-side, as if it were some sort of "fairness".

I have nothing but contempt for much of what passes for "reporting" in 2008. Not worth a drop of Halberstam's or Ernie Pyle's piss.
1.16.2008 8:50am
Almost Drafted (mail):

FDChief has it right about the NYTimes (and most other media company) ownership leaning to the right. Krisol is just the latest indication of that -- and don't forget Judith Miller's WMD "coverage" on the run-up to the war.

Publius said:


The press does what it has to do—and they try hard—but never, ever think they truly understand what they're reporting on.


This is what I've referred to "the newspaper" affect and it surely applies to more than military coverage. Ever notice that as you read a paper, it all sounds pretty reasonable? That is, until they cover a subject you happen to know something about, at which time you realize they are full of crap.

So perhaps we should apply Hanlon's Razor: Do not attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.

I'd have posted sooner, but I happened to have a mouthful of coffee when I read this:


Rice said she saw progress on the long-delayed (and probably long dead) oil law. To punctuate her assessment of the political progress in the region, Turkish warplanes bombed (Turkish) Kurdish separatist enclaves putatively controlled by Talabani's fellow (Iraqi) Kurds.


Fortunately, after I cleaned off my monitor and keyboard, I smartened up and had put the coffee aside when the short-arm inspection discussion began.

Cheers,

JP
1.16.2008 9:38am
sheerahkahn:
"Hanlon's Razor: Do not attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity."

Oh my...I do like that one.
Big thank you to you JP for introducing me to Hanlon's truism...er, Razor. In fact, I think I'll start using that in my sig...easily understandable, simple to impart, and yet deeply profound...I love it!
1.16.2008 1:39pm
sheerahkahn:
Hah, found this when I looked up Hanlon's Razor on Wiki...thought you all might enjoy it.

"German General Kurt von Hammerstein-Equord in Truppenführung, 1933: "I divide my officers into four classes; the clever, the lazy, the industrious, and the stupid. Each officer possesses at least two of these qualities. Those who are clever and industrious are fitted for the highest staff appointments. Use can be made of those who are stupid and lazy. The man who is clever and lazy however is for the very highest command; he has the temperament and nerves to deal with all situations. But whoever is stupid and industrious is a menace and must be removed immediately!"[5]"
1.16.2008 1:45pm
fnord:
Interesting. Blackfive seems to have pedalled outta here in the face of superior firepower. Its fascinating for me, as a foreigner, to read the stuff they post over there. To them PTSD is just as much a part of the big liberal conspiracy as Darwinism and the UN. Can any of you US people explain these folks to me? Do they have their own reality?
1.16.2008 2:19pm
fnord:
"That is, until they cover a subject you happen to know something about, at which time you realize they are full of crap"

Truth. Having had the pleasure of being arrested by the police during a copule of anti-war demonstration (together with several norwegian veterans, I might add) it is amazing to see the news coverage of the events as opposed to real facts. Three plastic cokebottles and a couple of pieces of turf very easily transform into a "hail of bottles and rocks". Etc.

Publius: good to see another reader of rangeragainstwar. ;-) Abu Aaardvark and Abu muqawama are good too. As is zenhuber.blogspot.com, Jeff Huber.
1.16.2008 2:25pm
Publius:
"Publius, I think you're being too kind here. The press hasn't been doing it's job in this country for some time, particularly the political press, probably since the goddam "Drudge Report" became the fucking gold standard for political journalism."

FDChief: Think about what I posted. I didn't say the press was worth a shit; in fact, I did note they don't understand most of what they report on. All I said was they work very, very hard. I mean, hiding in those bushes to get celebrity shots is not easy. The American press is a truly misguided bunch, but, then, when one thinks about it, it seems they are merely catering to an increasingly shallow American public. The print boys are trying to stay alive in an era when people think they can get everything they need from electronic media. How would you like to be a well-educated serious individual and realize that your main competition consists of Geraldo, Oprah and the amazingly vapid The View?

In an era where a greater percentage of Americans has graduated college than ever before, people just don't seem to read any more. Unfortunately, broadcast journalism is dying out as well. The trend line of Cronkite, Rather, Couric says it all. To me, the print press taking the shallow, sensationalist route is entirely to be expected. Kind of Darwinian, if you think about it.
1.16.2008 5:25pm
The Contemptliber (mail):
My beef with the various media and their division from the military, Publius, is a bit different. I don't believe the media "loathe" the military, just as I really don't believe the military "loathe" all reporters (although I think we're actually as a class MORE close minded about them than they are about us).

Rather, I think journalism, like any other profession, suffers from not having any active members who have done any time in uniform.

But this could be said about most any other profession -- law, engineering, life guards, screen actors, prostitutes, dog catchers -- since the advent of the AVF.

This feeds into a larger problem about the gap between civil and military cultures. At the risk of sounding like IRR, I would say that when it comes to the "media," we're the ones who just don't get it.

We, as an institution (and especially the Army), have been slow to understand the transformative power of the electronic media on the modern battlefield, and to tailor our operations to address this salient point.

Especially in the Army, we've failed to develop a professional cadre of officers who are competent at understanding our domestic media, much less putting into context for a combat commander the realities of the foreign presses. Even if we have some outstanding PAOs, as a whole we haven't created a system that really works.

If I'm a commander and I'm going into battle, I want my PAO to be able to brief me about the likelihood of fallout in the various media around the world, based on my OPLAN. I want to know how many consumers of the news will "understand" the events I'm going to attempt to release through violence and other methods.

If he or she can't tell me that, than what's the freakin' point of them sitting in the TOC? Are we going to rely on Psyops for this? The 2? I hope not!

The reporter is NOT my enemy. He or she is a professional, just like me, who has a job to do. Sometimes I wish -- as in the case of the NYT reporters and editors -- that he didn't see me as a "victim" (most of the time) or a criminal (some of the time).

I think many of those who cover the military would be better at their jobs if they actually served a few years, but I think that about every profession in the republic.
1.16.2008 6:47pm
sheerahkahn:
MSR,
Reporters and Reporting in the media today deal with consumerism...which pretty much boils down to entertainment.
"Yeah, yeah, war in Iraq, got it, now...entertain me...oh, yeah, Big Brother!"
Your idea to know the fall out of your actions if you made XYZ decision is playing right into that viewpoint.
Why, because Americans want to see...
"Boo'yah, US F-16's screaming across the deck at supersonic speeds...wow, camera is having a hard time following these fearless American Knights of the air, oh wait...we got a couple of F117's coming our way....wowzaa's...lookey at that! OH MY G-D! How Awesome is that!"
Yet when the Arab media gets in the mix, they show the results of your decision...which is something the American public is carefully shield from by our caring media.
So..what I would say is that if you really want to know what to expect from the media...well, it's simple...if isn't Hollywood grade material, it'll more than likely end up at the tail end of the news show...the one where it's constantly interrupted by...
" In Iraq today, as US military commanders prepare to begin an offensive in...wait, this just in [music blaring] "Breaking News" Britney Spears confronted police Officers exposing her fleshy naughty bits in the hopes of distracting them long enough to sneak her children past them...Janet is on the scene...Janet what can you tell us?"

This is where our media is today...and I pity your media officer, MSR, I truly do. Please let him, or her know that at least one person in this world feels sorry for them that they got stuck with the "media duty."
1.17.2008 12:45pm
seanhw (mail):
I have followed this story from last Sunday. And to be truthful, I am glad that Phil took this up and said "Bullshit" because Phil has a reputation of non partisanship in this issue. I think that a think tank who agrees with Phil should take up a study on the actual statistics of murder, spousal abuse and homelessness compared to the actual population. This is coming from the left and specifically from the powerful baby boomer elite draft dodgers such as Pinch Suzlberger. They are never going to get over their shame from dodging a draft, letting their lessers go in their place...and then to push a drop of evil into the mix, call those that went in their place, baby killers. It is beyond time for a study to either confirm or deny these myths by the draft dodger elite.
1.17.2008 1:35pm
Jimmy (mail):
MSR,

We really should make the PAOs into warrant officers. for example, a BN can have a CW5 advising it on media effects.

One more area where a few warrants can do a ton of good :)
1.17.2008 2:31pm
IRRsoldier (mail):
Jimmy,

No way. We need PAO to be an accessioning officer career field for 2LTs like it is in the Navy, Marines and Air Force.

The Army gets its PAOs from the botton third of officers who have survived company command. By that point, many who would make great PAOs have already established themselves as "fast burners". Why would they kill their careers?

Ditto for the PAO naturals who left the Army out of frustration as soon as they could.

Why should we put propspective PAO through 7 years of service as Ordnance, Artillery or Signal officers and then be surprised with the results.

Bottom 1/3 CPTs = little creativity or appreciation of the media. That's why the USMC kicks our butt in the PAO realm.
1.18.2008 5:48pm

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