Tag Archives: Afghanistan

Meet the first man in Army history who returned to combat after an amputation

Determined...

Determined…

Living Leg-end

NY Post: Army Ranger Joe Kapacziewski had volunteered to “take care” of the Taliban snipers who had ambushed his platoon in the pitch darkness on a Hindu Kush mountain ridge in Afghanistan in 2009.

But as he raced down the mountainside, aiming to cut the enemy off at the pass below, he was caught in an avalanche of loose shale and tumbled down. To stop his fall and save himself, he grabbed a tree — and came face-to-face with one of the Taliban snipers who had been hiding behind it.

With his free hand, the staff sergeant aimed his M4 rifle and shot the sniper dead. “Kap,” as he was fondly nicknamed, then dashed back up the steep slope to his men under fire.

It was a Herculean feat even the fittest soldier would have been hard-pressed to pull off. For Kapacziewski, it was something miraculous.

The 30-year-old Dunham, Conn., native is the only amputee in Army Rangers history ever to return to combat. He has served in five tours while wearing a prosthesis that replaced his right leg below the knee.

In his gripping new memoir, “Back in the Fight” (St. Martin’s Press), he describes hunting Taliban targets, leading a squad and even saving a wounded soldier — all without a leg.

All told, Kapacziewski has served 10 tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and has received three purple hearts, an Army Commendation Medal with a V for valor and a bronze star.

Kap was wounded in Iraq in 2005 after a grenade was tossed into his Stryker vehicle. It ripped apart his arm, which eventually healed — though his leg did not. He resisted losing the limb, despite the excruciating pain. Two years later, he finally made the decision to allow doctors to amputate.

“When I first got hurt it was my goal all along to go back to the squad to lead the Rangers in combat,” he told The Post. But when his leg wouldn’t heal, a superior told him he couldn’t stay in Alpha Company anymore, that he was out of the fight.

“This was the most devastating day of my life,” he recalls. “I felt the ground fall out from underneath my feet.”

Signing up straight out of high school, he says, the Rangers were “all I had ever known. “Just because I am missing a leg I do not see this as an excuse not to serve my country. As corny as it sounds, I had signed on the dotted line before 9/11 and it was all I had ever known and wanted to do.”

There were darker days when he could only confide to his wife, Kimberly, that he too had doubts.

The long road to be reinstated as a combat-ready Ranger — with the help of a high-tech shock-absorbing Pathfinder II prosthetic leg — was the hardest fight he had ever waged. “No Ranger in my condition had ever qualified to return to direct combat operations,” he says.

He had to prove to Army brass that he was up to the task of jumping out of planes, fast roping from helicopters, running five miles in under 40 minutes, marching 12 miles with a 45-pound pack in under three hours and all in the 80th percentile or higher.

“Even within a Ranger Regiment, seeing me as an amputee, the question was whether I am capable of doing the job,” Kap says. “There was a little apprehension. I felt, ‘I am under the gun to prove myself.’ I had to show that I could kick in doors.”

Within 10 months of his amputation he completed the full Army physical test. Even after exceeding the standards, Kap could sense some resistance at his return to fighting. “It wasn’t until the chain of command switched out that I was allowed to go back into combat,” he says.

He then faced life-threatening attacks all over again. When an enemy grenade went off on a 2010 mission in eastern Afghanistan, Kap took shrapnel in his left leg — but his carbon-fiber limb withstood the blast. That earned him his third purple heart.

“It worked out really well for me,” says Kapacziewski, who will be on his 11th rotation next year and has since run two New York City Marathons and three triathlons.

The father of two boys, Kap currently works at Fort Benning, Ga., where he is part of a Ranger training and assessment program. One Ranger was so impressed after a grueling training run he asked how Kap got a leg like that. “Made in Iraq,” the platoon squad leader quipped.

Kapacziewski recalls that night, four years ago, when he and his troops came under Taliban fire. As he was quick marching back up to the ridge, his prosthetic leg came loose from his stump and plummeted down the rock face. This was one time Kap hadn’t brought along a spare. He had no other choice but to slide down and retrieve it. “I just put it back on and was back in the fight,” he says.

Hoorah!

DCG

Where was DCG?

My soldier Matthew is home from the sandbox for his mid-deployment leave! We visited my dad this past week to do some shooting, hangout, and just relax. Thought I’d share some pictures of our trip with you.

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Dad’s gun range – no lane fees!

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Matthew got to shoot the new shotgun he got me for Christmas.

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I needed a bit of an assist with the .30-06 – that sucker weighs around 8 lbs!

We had a great time, even if I did have an accident. I was four-wheeling, going pretty fast, and missed a hard right turn. I wasn’t able to stop until I hit a big rock! Got a nice cut under my eye, some scrapes on my face, a “strawberry” on my leg, and a bruise on my palm (from the handle bar), but it was still fun :)

Matthew is home for one more week, then back to the sandbox for 6 more months :( Going to enjoy the time I have left with him.

Have a good week!

DCG

And In Sports Today…..

The coach put together the perfect team for the Chicago Bears. The only thing missing was a good quarterback. He scouted all the colleges and even the Canadian and European Leagues, but he couldn’t find a ringer who could ensure a Super Bowl win.

One night, while watching CNN, he saw a war-zone scene in Afghanistan . In one corner of the background he spotted a young Afghan Muslim soldier with a truly incredible arm. He threw a hand grenade straight into a 15th story window 100 yds away.
He threw another grenade 75 yds away, right into a chimney.
Then he threw another one at a passing car – going 90 mph.
BULLSEYES. Every one of them.

“I’ve got to get this guy,” Coach said to himself. “He has the perfect arm.”
So, he brings him to the states and teaches him the great game of football, and, the Bears go on to win the Super Bowl.
The young Afghan is hailed as the great hero of football, and when the coach asks him what he wants, he only wants to call his mother.

“Mom,” he says into the phone, “I just won the Super Bowl!”

“I don’t want to talk to you,” the old Muslim woman says. “You are not my son.”

“I don’t think you understand, Mother,” the young man pleads. “I’ve won the greatest sporting event in the world. I’m here among thousands of adoring fans.”

“No, let me tell you!” his mother retorts. “At this very moment, there are gunshots all around us. The neighborhood is a pile of rubble. Your two brothers were beaten within an inch of their lives last week, and I have to keep your sister in the house so she doesn’t get raped.” The old lady pauses, and then tearfully says, “I will never forgive you for making us move to Chicago .”

~Steve~                                     H/T Reader Ken L.

Paging Code Pink

hope

12K troops may stay in Afghanistan

Detroit News: The U.S. and its NATO allies revealed Friday they may keep as many as 12,000 troops in Afghanistan after the combat mission ends next year, largely American forces tasked with hunting down remnants of al-Qaida and helping Afghan forces  with their own security.

Patience with the 11-year-old war has grown thin in the U.S. and Europe, yet  Washington and its allies feel they cannot pick up and leave without risking a  repeat of what happened in Afghanistan after Soviet troops withdrew in 1989:  Attention turned elsewhere, the Taliban grabbed power and al-Qaida found  refuge.

In disclosing that he and his NATO counterparts were discussing a residual  force of between 8,000 and 12,000 troops in Afghanistan beyond 2014, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said most allied defense ministers assured him they are  committed to remaining part of a U.S.-led coalition.

“I feel very confident that we are going to get a number of nations to make that contribution for the enduring presence,” Panetta told a news conference at  NATO headquarters in Brussels.

The U.S. and its allies have managed to stick together throughout the war,  despite differing views. The Europeans have seen the military mission as mainly  aimed at promoting stable governance; the Americans have viewed it as mainly  combat. Some allies, including France, have already pulled out their combat  troops.

The Obama administration has not said how many troops or diplomats it intends to keep in Afghanistan after 2014; it is in the early stages of negotiating a bilateral security agreement with Kabul that would set the legal parameters.  There currently are 66,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, down from a 2010 peak of  100,000.

In addition to targeting terrorists, the post-2014 missions are expected to be defined as training and advising a still-developing Afghan army and police force and providing security for the U.S. and allied civilian and military presence, officials said.

The largely unspoken assumption on which the post-2014 plan is built is that  Afghanistan’s own forces will be strong enough to hold off the Taliban on their  own starting in 2015 and to prevent the country’s relapse into civil war. The  worry is that if the Taliban regained power they would allow al-Qaida to return  in large numbers, defeating the original purpose of the U.S. military action in  2001.

It’s a touchy topic at this stage of a still-unfolding war, with Afghans fearful of being abandoned by their foreign partners and Washington and its NATO  allies wary of committing too heavily to a corrupt Kabul government facing an  uncertain future.

Panetta is expected to retire as soon as his successor is confirmed. The  Senate could vote on the confirmation of former Sen. Chuck Hagel as the next  Pentagon chief as early as Wednesday.

deaths

Where’s the outrage from Code Pink? They never let up on Bush and the Afghanistan War. So far the U.S. has lost 2,177 troops in Afghanistan – 1,547 (71%) of those during Obama’s presidency. Course he ommitted the fact that troops may stay after 2014 when he stated in his SOTU address, “Tonight, I can announce that over the next year, another 34,000 American troops will come home from Afghanistan,” Obama said. “This drawdown will continue.  And by the end of next year, our war in Afghanistan will be over.

Don’t expect the SRM to hold him to any accountability for what he says/does. I say enough, bring all our troops home by 2014.

DCG

President to award Medal of Honor for heroism in Afghanistan

soldier

US Army: President Barack Obama announced today that former Army Staff Sgt. Clinton L. Romesha will receive the Medal of Honor Feb. 11 for his actions in Afghanistan.

Romesha will be the fourth living recipient to be awarded the Medal of Honor for actions in Iraq or Afghanistan. He and his family will join the president at the White House for the award.

The staff sergeant helped repel an enemy attack of some 300 fighters who outnumbered the defenders of Combat Outpost Keating in Nuristan Province, Afghanistan. The Soldiers awoke Oct. 3, 2009 to find the enemy occupying the high ground surrounding their COP.

Romesha braved intense enemy fire to mobilize a five-man team, according to sources who were there. He reportedly took out an enemy machine-gun team and while engaging a second, the generator he was using for cover was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade, inflicting him with shrapnel wounds. Yet he continued to fight.

He directed air support that destroyed more than 30 Taliban fighters and personally took out several other enemy positions, according to reports. He provided covering fire and helped three of his wounded comrades to reach the aid station. He also braved fire to recover several fallen comrades.

Romesha’s efforts enabled Bravo Troop, 3d Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment to regroup and fight off a force that greatly outnumbered them, according to reports. At the time he was a section leader with Bravo Troop, which was part of the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division in Afghanistan.

Romesha separated from the Army on April 4, 2011. He and his family currently live in Minot, N.D. He is married to Tamara Romesha and they have three children; Dessi, Gwen, and Colin.

Romesha enlisted in the Army in September 1999 as an M1 armor crewman. After completion of training at Fort Knox, Ky., he was assigned as a tank gunner with B Company, 1-63rd Armor, Camp Vilseck, Germany. His tour there included an operational deployment to Kosovo.

After Germany, he was assigned as a gunner/assistant tank commander with A Company, 2-72nd Armor, Camp Casey, Korea. Following Korea, which included a combat tour to Iraq, he was assigned as a section leader with 3-61st Cavalry, Fort Carson, Colo. There he completed the Long Range Reconnaissance Course, Advanced Leader Course, and Air Assault Training.

His military decorations include: the Afghanistan Campaign Medal w/ Campaign Star, Iraq Campaign Medal w/three Campaign Stars, Bronze Star Medal, three Army Commendation Medals, Purple Heart, five Army Achievement Medals, Valorous Unit Award, Army Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Kosovo Campaign Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, Non Commissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon w/ Numeral 2, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon w/ Numeral 5, NATO Medal w/ Bronze Service Star, and the Combat Action Badge.

Hooah!

DCG

Update on my soldier Matthew

He’s been in the sandbox for almost two months now. So far, so good. Despite the Taliban sending them some rockets on Christmas Day, everything is going good for him and our fellow soldiers over there.

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They’ve got about six inches of snow now.

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Their Christmas tree – looks like a “Charlie Brown” tree to me!

If you’d like to support a soldier currently serving, go to Soldiers’ Angels or anysoldier.com.

Pray for all our soldiers serving the in sand box!

DCG

How are you spending Christmas Eve day?

You are most likely spending time with family and friends, or maybe doing some last-minute shopping.

Our soldiers serving in the sand box do not get a day off. They are under constant danger in fighting the Taliban. The video below shows U.S. Soldiers coming under fire from Taliban fighters and reacting with an immediate hail of suppressing fire to keep the enemies’ heads down. Once the firefight is won and the enemy breaks contact, the team does a break down of remaining ammo and supplies.

This footage is part of an ongoing documentary of the war in Afghanistan through raw combat footage.

Prayers for all our soldiers serving abroad during Christmas.

h/t The Blaze

DCG

Neither rain, nor sleet, nor snow – nor IEDs

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On Afghan Odyssey, Gifts to Troops Brave Ambushes, Bombs

Wall Street Journal: Back home in Watertown, Minn., Courtney Mittelstaedt selected her husband’s Christmas gifts with the care and sweet mischief of a newlywed.

She bought Legos, a plastic duck in a Santa Claus suit and Christmas tree-shaped marshmallows, “his favorite candy,” said Mrs. Mittelstaedt, a 20-year-old hairdresser. She used Spider-Man wrapping paper to remind him of the last time they went to the movies, before her husband, Army Private First Class Cody Mittelstaedt, went to war 7,000 miles away.

“He’s gone and Christmas is so hard without him,” said Mrs. Mittelstaedt, who married last year. “Buying gifts and wrapping them up for him makes me feel like he’s involved and he’s here with me.”

Her husband’s presents will join 6.4 million pounds of mail the U.S. Postal Service estimates it will ferry this month from families, friends and kindly strangers to U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

After Mrs. Mittelstaedt wrapped, sealed and addressed the gifts to Forward Operating Base Gardez, she took them to her post office, where the workers know her by name. She has become a regular customer, sending packages of letters, toys and candy at least once a week since her husband was deployed overseas three months ago.

“Everything is so serious there, it’s war,” she said. “So when he gets the packages I want him to smile and not think about his day. I don’t know if it takes off the weight, and I’m sure it doesn’t work like that, but I can pretend, I guess.”

Postal Service offices across the U.S. funnel packages to Afghanistan through its International Service Center in Newark, N.J. Then they travel by air—usually via Manama, Bahrain—to Bagram Airfield outside of Kabul, according to a Postal Service spokeswoman.

From Kabul, the delivery of Christmas letters, trinkets and toys to troops in combat bases is the job of private contractors, including Innovative Logistics. The Florida-based military contractor moves U.S. mail by truck across some of Afghanistan’s most dangerous terrain, braving Taliban ambushes and improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, planted on roadsides.

The men who carry the mail in heavily armed convoys—Americans, Bosnians, Afghans, Fijians—call themselves the Pony Express, in homage to the short-lived mail service that connected California with Missouri before the Civil War.

“The U.S. post service has rain, sleet or snow. We have all of that plus IEDs,” said Jeff Bedford, 38, as he rode in a mail convoy during a three-hour drive this month from Kabul to Gardez, capital of the insurgent-filled Paktia province.

Mr. Bedford’s convoy brought spare fuel canisters, and each crew member carried a medical kit. They also brought Pop-Tarts, beef jerky, water and Gatorade for the ride. The mail, including Pfc. Mittelstaedt’s gifts, traveled in 20-foot cargo trucks, accompanied by an escort of gun trucks—fortified and bulletproofed bank trucks with roof-mounted machine-gun turrets.

Innovative Logistics took over its mail delivery contract from another contractor in May and retained some previous staff, including Mr. Bedford, a former Marine who has been injured twice on the job. The combat mailmen are well compensated because the work is so dangerous. For one, they can’t count on immediate rescue or medevac help that U.S. troops take for granted. Contract employees doing work for the military in Afghanistan generally earn more than $100,000 a year.

At the height of the summer fighting season, two out of the three mail convoys would be “hitting the panic button” to notify the company headquarters of an insurgent attack, said Dan Wildtraut, 55, a former Sarasota, Fla., police officer who serves as Innovative Logistics’ country manager.

Last year, Mr. Bedford’s convoy was struck by a 500-pound IED after delivering mail to the dangerous province of Ghazni in the southeast. The explosion knocked him unconscious and killed three Afghans and a Bosnian contractor. A Fijian driver died after he was thrown out of his vehicle and pinned beneath a gun truck.

When Mr. Bedford awoke, his team was under heavy fire from insurgents. He grabbed his gun and fought back, he said, his adrenaline masking the pain from two ruptured spinal disks. He and his men called for help but waited nearly five hours for a coalition quick-reaction force to arrive from Ghazni, about 13 miles away.

Lt. Col. Miroslaw Ochyra, spokesman for the Polish military that is responsible for Ghazni province, said the quick reaction force arrived at the ambush site “later than usual” because it was deployed five times that day, including a mission to assist Polish soldiers who had come under fire.

When the soldiers finally found the mail convoy, they asked Mr. Bedford if they could call in an Apache helicopter strike to destroy the two disabled gun trucks with a Hellfire missile. The convoys often carry registered mail, including classified documents, which can’t fall into enemy hands.

“I said, ‘Rock on, whatever works,’” Mr. Bedford recalled. “Typically, we burn them, but they wanted to use a missile. Fine with me. Whatever got me out of there fastest.” On this latest trip, Mr. Bedford’s convoy passed the site of two fresh IED explosions. One had blown a crater large enough to swallow the front half of a cargo truck.

The convoy then began a long climb to an elevation of 10,000 feet on rough, icy roads, at one point wedged between the mountainside and a sheer cliff.

About a dozen workers have died and many more wounded in the past three years delivering the mail here. The most recent employee killed, an Afghan gunner, died in a Taliban ambush near the eastern city of Jalalabad in September. The company uses about 100 employees for a delivery service that the U.S. military might require a battalion task force of 1,200 troops, given the required ground and air support.

When the convoy reached F.O.B. Gardez, two cargo trucks unloaded roughly 10 tons of mail. Pfc. Mittelstaedt was assigned to retrieve his unit’s portion, which he loaded onto a pickup truck.

He parked in front of a badly cracked concrete basketball court, which is flanked on one side by the “Wall of Heroes” bearing the names of 32 troops killed in action. A carved wooden sign proclaiming, “No girls allowed” hung above the entrance to the unit’s living quarters.

The troops from Task Force Rakkasan 1-187 swarmed the court to collect their mail under a cold winter sun. Pfc. Mittelstaedt, who is a sniper, stood in the truck’s pickup bed and threw packages to his colleagues for them to divvy into piles on the court. “I’ll just tell you this once,” he joked, “this pile here, this pile is the snipers’ pile.”

The letters and packages came mostly from families and friends. But there also was mail from individuals and groups that send care packages to random soldiers. These gifts usually include candy, hygienic supplies and, for some lucky troops, home-baked pies.

Pfc. Patrick Pease, a 21-year-old soldier from Indiana, got his lucky turn that day. After three months in Afghanistan, he received two packages from the Blue Star Mothers of America, a volunteer group: Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups and M&M’s stuffed into Christmas stockings.

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After dispatching his mail duties, Pfc. Mittelstaedt grabbed his Army-issued knife and slashed open his package. The 23-year-old smiled. He placed the Santa-clad plastic duck on a shelf alongside Star Wars-theme Santa toys, previous gifts from his family. His rifle hung on nails in a plywood wall.

He also received a letter from a U.S. family he didn’t know, Mr. and Mrs. Wendle of Spring Branch, Texas. “Wishing you the most memorable Christmas yet, and wishing you home soon,” Pfc. Mittelstaedt read out loud. “From Donna.” He tossed the card on his Christmas shelf. “I don’t know ‘em,” he said. Tuesdays and Thursdays—mail days—are “the best days ever,” he said.

Soon, the Pony Express riders were getting ready to head back down the treacherous road to Kabul, piling into their trucks as driver Miroslav Gogic, a 44-year-old former Serbian soldier blasted the music of pop singer Celine Dion, to the annoyance of his colleagues.

Medic Justin Perkins sat next to him in the passenger seat, shouting over the music and engine noise. “There’s a lot of animosity between contractors like us and the Army,” said Mr. Perkins, 30, from Alaska. “They look down at us because we do the same job they do but get paid a hell of a lot more.”

On delivery days, there is no animosity, he said: “Everyone loves the mailman.

If you’d like to send a care package to our troops, go to Soldiers’ Angels or anysoldier.com.

DCG

A Hero to Remember

Sgt. David M. Gerardi

Sgt. David M. Gerardi

Soldier earns Silver Star for valor in Afghanistan as Marine

US Army: It’s not every day a National Guard sergeant receives a Silver Star for actions performed as a Marine. But that’s exactly what happened in Pittsburgh, Dec. 10.

Sgt. David M. Gerardi, a weapons sergeant with the Army National Guard’s 19th Special Forces Group, received the nation’s third highest medal for his actions while deployed in 2011 as an active-duty Marine with 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 2nd Marine Division (Forward), II Marine Expeditionary Force.

When Gerardi completed his enlistment with the Marine Corps this year, he transferred to the Army National Guard to pursue a new challenge — to become a Green Beret.  Gerardi, whose award reads like a script from a big studio movie production, humbly accepted his Silver Star in front of a small group of family, friends and Marines from 3rd Recon Bn.

He credits his fellow recon Marines for his heroic actions. ”I know the award talks about me a lot, but those guys did more to bring me home than I could ever do for them,”Gerardi said of his brothers-in-arms as tears swelled in his eyes. “I have been honored to serve with the best Marines and Soldiers.”
He choked up when answering questions about the day for which he was being recognized.

It was June 6, 2011, in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Gerardi, a corporal at the time, and team mates were providing security near Balozai village when they came under fire. They were pinned down in a canal, receiving fire from several enemy positions a little more than 100 yards distant.

Gerardi identified a firing position at a mud wall forward of the team that would give him a clear line of sight to the enemy position presenting the greatest danger to his team. Without hesitation, he crossed an open field to get to a wall less than 45 yards from the enemy. He was greeted with a volley of rocket-propelled and 30mm grenades, as well as medium machine-gun fire that prevented him from returning fire.

Despite the intense fire, he maneuvered to a more vulnerable position along another wall that afforded a better angle for him to fire on the enemy. Despite rounds striking within inches if his body, Gerardi provided suppressive fire, which allowed his Marines to extract a wounded Afghan soldier.

“The training kicked in,” Gerardi said.”Going to that position just made sense. That way, I wasn’t conflicting with the other guys’ line of fire.” Gerardi continued to coordinate with other Marines on the ground to provide suppressive fire despite the chaos of enemy fire continually impacting around his position.

Throughout the five-hour engagement, Gerardi showed “stalwart determination and vigilance” while providing precision fire, thereby allowing his team to extract after nightfall, according to his Silver Star citation.

“Because of his dedication and superior knowledge, he was able to accurately engage,” said Cpl. Josh Davenport, a recon Marine who served with Gerardi.

“He wasn’t just shooting blindly or because he was scared,” Davenport said. “He was saying, ‘I’m going to do this job better than anyone else,’ and he did. For that reason, he got the Silver Star. He was braver and more dedicated. He definitely earned it.”

Maj. Gen. Melvin Spiese, commanding general of 1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade, presented the medal to Gerardi. Spiese said Gerardi was a testament to his generation. “He proved himself to be an astute and courageous tactical fighter that day, and his heroic and selfless actions under fire saved the lives of his fellow Marines, turned the tide in an intense firefight and was an inspiration for those serving with him,” Spiese said.

“Sergeant Gerardi choose to serve his country in a time of war and to do so as an infantryman and reconnaissance Marine. He, like every other Marine on the battlefield, could have chosen to do something different other than accept the responsibility for the security of their country as a U.S. Marine,” he said.

Gerardi’s parents attested to his passion for the military. They said they never doubted their son’s tenacity. “We always knew he’d grow up to do something amazing,” said Gerardi’s father Michael “I’m just happy he’s home. I’m so proud of him.”

Though Gerardi has left the Corps, his impact on the Marines who served with him will last a lifetime. “He’s an example to all of us in our community,” Davenport said. “One of the biggest things we take from him is his heart. He puts everything into it. He brings guys together.

“You can feel the sense of pride that he has in the job that he does, and he’s definitely one of the best.”

Hooah!

DCG

New U.S. Army manual forbids our soldiers from criticizing Islam

The evidence is mounting that the Obama regime at best coddles radical Muslims, at worst it’s actively supporting and arming them. To wit:

  • The Obama regime refuses to call US Army psychologist Nidal Hasan, who perpetrated the worst shooting ever to take place on a U.S. military base, at Fort Hood on November 5, 2009 — an Islamic jihadist. Despite eyewitness testimonies that Hasan had shouted “Allahu Akbar! (Allah is Great!)” before opening fire, killing 13 and wounding another 29; and regardless of internal Army reports indicating Hasan’s fellow officers had reported his outspoken sympathy with radical Islam since 2005.
  • In August 2011, afraid of offending the delicate sensibilities of Muslims, the U.S. Marine Corps banned Marines serving in Afghanistan from — I kid you not — audible farting.
  • In Sept. 2012, a highly-decorated 18-year veteran Army officer, Lt. Col. Matthew Dooley, was fired from teaching a course on Islam because he had the temerity of actually teaching “negative aspects” the truth about Islam. (More evidence at the end of this post.)

The latest is a new U.S. Army handbook for troops deployed to the Middle East, forbidding our soldiers from making derogatory comments about the extremist Taliban, pedophilia, or Islam in general, as well as any comment approving of rights for women.

Aren’t we fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan? So if the Obama regime were in power then, U.S. soldiers in the Second World War would have been barred from making “derogatory comments” about Hitler and the Nazis.

What lunacy.

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The non-partisan public interest organization Judicial Watch reports Dec. 11, 2012:

Here is a strong indicator that the Obama Administration’s crusade to appease Islam has gone too far; a new U.S. military handbook for troops deployed to the Middle East orders soldiers not to make derogatory comments about the Taliban or criticize pedophilia, among other outrageous things.

It gets better; the new manual, which is around 75 pages, suggests that Western ignorance of Afghan culture— not Taliban infiltration—is responsible for the increase in deadly attacks by Afghan soldiers against the coalition forces.

The soon-to-be-released Army handbook is still being drafted, but [The Wall St. Journal] … got a sneak preview and published an article [for subscribers only] that should infuriate the American taxpayers funding the never-ending war on terror. The manual is being created because someone with authority bought the theory that cultural insensitivity is driving insider attacks on U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

More than three dozen insider attacks have killed 63 members of the U.S.-led coalition this year, according to the article, and some blame “American cultural ignorance.” The bottom line is that troops may experience social-cultural shock and/or discomfort when interacting with Afghan security forces, the new military handbook says. “Better situational awareness/understanding of Afghan culture will help better prepare [troops] to more effectively partner and to avoid cultural conflict that can lead toward green-on-blue violence.”

The draft leaked to the newspaper offers a list of “taboo conversation topics” that soldiers should avoid, including “making derogatory comments about the Taliban,” “advocating women’s rights,” “any criticism of pedophilia,” “directing any criticism towards Afghans,” “mentioning homosexuality and homosexual conduct” or “anything related to Islam.”

At least one high-ranking military official had the backbone to publicly criticize the new manual, albeit through a spokesperson. U.S. Marine General John Allen, the top commander in Afghanistan, doesn’t endorse it and rejected a proposed forward drafted by Army officials in his name. “He does not approve of its contents,” according to a military spokesman quoted in the story.

Earlier this year the Obama Administration changed the way federal agents are trained to combat terrorism and violent extremism by eliminating all materials that shed a negative light on Muslims. Under White House orders, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) destroyed instructional material that characterizes Muslims as prone to violence or terrorism in a government-wide call to end Islamophobia.

Under Obama practically every major federal agency has been ordered to participate in Muslim outreach initiatives, including the Justice Department with a special program to protect Islamic civil rights, Homeland Security meetings with extremist Muslim organizations and the nation’s space agency (NASA) with an unprecedented mission to focus on Muslim diplomacy.

Additionally, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signed a special order to allow the reentry of two radical Islamic academics whose terrorist ties long banned them from the U.S. and the administration sent an America-bashing mosque leader (Feisal Abdul Rauf) who blames U.S. foreign policy for the 9/11 attacks on a Middle Eastern outreach mission. The Obama Administration even ordered a government-funded meal program for home-bound seniors to offer halal cuisine prepared according to Islamic law.

About U.S. Marine General John Allen who has refused to endorse the new Muslim-appeasing military manual: This is the same Gen. Allen whose previously-announced promotion is now indefinitely postponed, and who will soon be replaced by Gen. Joseph Dunford as commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan. See “Obama purges U.S. military command (Part 1),” Dec. 3, 2012.

See also:

H/t Eyes Wide Shut

~Eowyn