You Big Mouth, You!

September 30, 2004

Sgt. Eric Kocher and Staff Sgt. Dan Lalota

USMC

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif.(Sept. 23, 2004) — One Marine carried on a relentless, one-armed fight. Another is credited with spearheading a counterattack that left an estimated 30 insurgents dead. Their tenacious response to an enemy ambush last spring near Fallujah, Iraq, earned them the Bronze Star Medal, awarded Friday in a ceremony at Camp Margarita.

According to command accounts, Sgt. Eric Kocher and Staff Sgt. Dan Lalota fought valiantly enough to merit the U.S. military’s fourth-highest award for combat valor.

Brig. Gen. James C. Williams, I Marine Expeditionary Force’s acting commanding general, presented the awards. “What the Bronze Stars exemplify are Marines who are committed when they are engaged in combat,” Williams said. “They have made a commitment to complete their mission, save their fellow Marines and take actions that would defeat the enemy.”

The ambush occurred April 7. Lalota and Kocher, along with about 23 additional Marines, set out on a patrol to root out enemy mortar positions. Kocher was out front, riding in the lead vehicle. An eerie emptiness at a gas station normally bustling with motorists tipped him off to impending danger, he said. Several cars closed in on the Marines as they drew nearer to the fueling station. That’s when Kocher’s worst fears were realized.

“We expected to get hit out there, but we didn’t expect it to be as bad as it was,” said Kocher, 25, from Northampton, Pa. Two rocket-propelled-grenades struck Kocher’s humvee, sending shrapnel tearing through every Marine in the vehicle. Three more RPGs sailed wildly past them. The blasts left the humvee smoldering and nearly inoperable. “At first I thought, ‘if we get hit again, none of us are going to make it,’” Kocher said.

Kocher’s Marines didn’t think the vehicle would move. All four tires were destroyed and the explosion forced shards of metal into the engine block. Kocher’s arm was mangled. He tightened a tourniquet around it before pouring fire back at enemy positions. His driver jumped into the turret, the machine gun belching bullets at the enemy positions. Meanwhile, Marines in the other four vehicles launched a counterattack of their own.

Lalota and his crew maneuvered around Kocher’s vehicle to bear down on the enemy. They rushed across 100 yards of open terrain, climbing berms and crossing a canal. They silenced numerous enemy machine gun and rocket positions, according to command accounts of the battle. Tragedy struck, though, as they scaled the final berm

A bullet hit Capt. Brent L. Morel, a team leader, who later died of his wounds. “He fell right next to me,” explained Lalota, 27, from Bay Shore, N.Y. Two Marines pulled Morel to safety and worked frantically to save his life, Lalota said. Meanwhile, Lalota and his crew killed the remaining terrorists and provided suppressive fire so Morel could be evacuated.

The gun battle left 30 enemy dead and an unknown number wounded. Best estimates say 40 to 60 attackers mounted the ambush.

Kocher is still recovering from his wounds. He’s almost back to full duty after nine surgeries. “I went to physical therapy for a week and it wasn’t fast-paced enough for me, so I just started going to the gym,” he explained. “I lost about 50 pounds after I got hit, and I have about 10 more pounds to go to get back to where I was.”

Lalota, a sergeant at the time of the attack, received a combat meritorious promotion at the ceremony as well as gold jump wings for his participation in combat parachute operations.

September 21, 2004

Teaching the Unthinkable

I taught part one of three of my WMD course last evening to the ambulance corps. This segment was bio WMD’s. The course is intended to provide the hours required by NYS for your EMT recert. In October I’ll cover chemical WMD and in November nuclear.

I’m trying to spend more time on the military variants, and how they could be used. Normally the course takes out the DOT yellow book and we go over placarding and such, standard hazmat stuff. When I was asked to teach, I realized the knowing what smallpox looks like and such is equally important to first responders. I’m trying to dispel some of the media fear mongering, yet provide appropriate cautions.

My smallpox discussion included the observation that measles, chicken pox, monkey pox, and small pox all produces oozing pustules of one sort or another. As a Basic level EMT all we really have to remember is that a patient with oozing pustules is very sick. And we don’t want to be.

I hope to post the Powerpoint slides and the manuals that I’m producing on my site after it’s all over and done.

September 16, 2004

A Real-life account of combat readiness

Filed under: UncategorizedChuck ---

USMC

NAVAL SUPPORT ACTIVITY, Norfolk Va. (Sept. 2, 2004) — �I�ve acquired a target Sir�. Permission to engage!! It sounds like dialogue taken from a movie or a video game, but with the steady squeeze of the trigger, reality comes crashing down, and a Marine realizes the importance of his daily training.

The day was Sunday, April 4th. Corporal Lonnie Young had been in Iraq since January, three long, hot months in the war-torn country and a far cry from his hometown of Dry Ridge, Kentucky — small-town America with a population of 2,000. Being called to the frontlines as a Defense Messaging System administrator, he quickly found himself providing convoy security and personal security for visiting general officers, but on this day he was setting up communication throughout the different camps.

Young and his co-workers, approximately seven civilian contractors and coalition fighters, pulled into the gates of Camp Golf in An Najaf to establish a communication link at the coalition base.

�While entering the front gate, I noticed a small group of protesters out in the streets,� Young recalled. �As we proceeded onto the base there were numerous coalition soldiers in �riot gear� near the front gate. Our rendezvous point was behind the first building in a large parking lot.�

After undergoing a short mission briefing, the convoy moved to the rear of the base to continue their mission at hand. Young and his team remained with the 5-ton truck and went to work installing a Motorola base-station radio in the Spanish Forces headquarters building. �We entered the building and had a quick discussion with the Spanish commander. After the short introduction, we went to the roof and began installing the radio antenna,� Young said. While on the roof, Young stopped for a brief moment to clear his head and admire the view of the cityscape. He recalls not seeing many people in the streets. Everything seemed tranquil and peaceful, a scarce sight in Iraq today. Little did he know that this was the calm before the storm.

�We went back downstairs to the radio room to continue the installs, and after about twenty-minutes we finished up everything. I then grabbed all of our gear and took it back outside to the five-ton truck.� �Since we were about twenty-minutes from chow time, I removed my cammie blouse and caught a quick 10-minute nap in the back of the truck. Andy, a civilian contractor, came outside, woke me up, and exclaimed that we were not getting a good signal on the radio and that we need to fix it. I told him that I would be right in to help. I got dressed, grabbed my weapon, and was about to get out of the truck when I heard the unmistakable sound of an AK-47 rifle fire a few rounds out in the street in front of the base.�

The shots Young heard fired were just the beginning of what would turn out to be a brutal four-hour firefight between eight commandos from Blackwater Security Consulting, a handful of U.S. and coalition force troops, and approximately 800 anti-coalition militia members. Upon hearing the shots, Young threw on his gear, grabbed his M249 Squad Automatic Weapon (SAW), and assumed a clear vantage point atop the roof alongside his comrades. He peered through his rear site aperture at the armed mob below, awaiting further orders to engage.

�After what seemed like an eternity, which was maybe just a few seconds, I could see people getting out of the truck and start running. One of the Iraqis quickly dropped down into a prone position and fired several round at us. I started yelling that I had one in my sights and asking if I could engage. �With your permission Sir, I have acquired a target�, I yelled over and over until finally, the Blackwater Security guys gave the call of commence firing,� Young explained. �I leveled the sights on my target and squeezed the trigger. I could see that the man had on an all white robe and was carrying an AK-47 rifle in his right hand. He seemed to be running as hard as he could when I fired off a short burst of 5.56 mm rounds. Through my sights I could see the man fall onto the pavement. I stopped for a second, raised my head from my gun, to watch the man lay in the street motionless.�

�I had a weird feeling come over me,� Young recalled. �I had many emotions kick in at once. I felt a sense of purpose, happiness, and sorrow, which all hit me at once.�

The battle raged on with rounds whizzing closely overhead, Young unrelentingly fired belt after belt of ammunition and suppressing fire, deterring the rebel fighters. �I was getting ready to make an �ammo� run when out of the corner of my eye, I saw Capt. Eddy get hit and fall to the cement rooftop,� he explained. �He made a short scream and then yelled for a medic. I leaned my weapon up against the wall and dove to his side. I started to remove Capt. Eddy�s gear carefully one piece at a time.

�At that moment, I could hear bullets ricocheting off through the air and smacking a tin air duct. I removed Capt. Eddy�s Interceptor vest and continued to cut off his brown T-shirt. I could see a small hole in his left arm that was gushing blood. I looked around him and shortly thereafter found another hole close to the center of his back. Quickly grabbing my medical kit from my load bearing vest (LBV), I dumped it out onto the ground and started to search through its contents.� Young grabbed a couple gauze patches and applied pressure to the blood spurting wounds.

�We came up with a plan. He said that he could run, so I put his right arm around my neck and called for covering fire. I heard everybody firing their weapons rapidly as we made our run for the door. The sounds were ear piercing and very intense. I continued on and carried Capt. Eddy down the stairs and into the tactical medical room they had set up on the first floor.�

�I then saw a beautiful sight. There were two tanks rolling out into the drive that leads to the front gate. I could hear their machine guns lighting up and their tracks slapping the pavement as they moved. You could sometimes see sparks come off of the tanks as bullets ricocheted off of its heavily armored hull. It was a great sense of relief to see them out there. It gave me motivation to continue on without noticing any kind of fatigue or pain that was throbbing through my knees from diving around and trying to dodge bullets.�

Young loaded up a few magazines and returned back to his rooftop position. Suddenly, out of the corner of his eye, he saw something red flash out in front of him�. SMACK! Again, the unforgettable sound of bullets ripping through human flesh rung in the young corporal�s ears. �It sounded just like a bullet smacking a target at the rifle range — a really sharp crack. I had heard that same crack when Capt. Eddy was hit. I looked down and to my left, and saw a horrific sight. I saw blood gushing and squirting out the side of a guy�s face.� That guy was a linguist for Blackwater Security. To this day, Young has yet to figure out his name. It was the first time that he had ever seen the man, but he still considered him to be a brother. He set down his weapon and leaped to the injured man�s side.

�I could see a quarter-sized hole in his jaw. By this time, the guy had lost about a pint of blood. I tried to press on the wound and stop the bleeding that way, but the blood was squirting out between my fingers. I had thought to myself that his carotid artery had to be cut. Using my index finger, I reached inside the hole and began to feel around. It took a few seconds to find it, but finally, I felt something like a large vein. I wrapped my finger around it and pinched as hard as I could.�

With bullets raining down on them, Young grabbed the guy by the back of his Interceptor vest and began to drag him. As he was dragging him, the Marine heard an ear-piercing smack, much like the all to familiar smack that he had earlier when the guys beside him had been hit. He then found himself hurling through the air and collapsing to the concrete rooftop.

�I had a burning sensation like I had never felt before on the backside of my left shoulder. My left eye was throbbing as I tried to rub out what I thought was dirt. I could no longer see out of my left eye. I picked myself up and looked around for who had been hit. I knew that I heard the unmistakable smack, but no one appeared to be shot. I went back to the guy that I was previously dragging and moved him on in behind a concrete air duct in the center of the front wall. There, the Blackwater medic came sliding in by the guy�s other side. I reached back inside the hole in the guy�s neck and pinched once again.� With every once of energy left in the weary Marine�s body, he hauled the badly injured man down off the rooftop and into the floor below where medics were still administering first aid to the wounded captain. As the battle raged on outside, the Marine grabbed his SAW and some more ammunition and ran back to his rooftop perch.

�I gazed over the streets with straining eyes, only to see hundreds of dead Iraqis lying all over the ground,� Young recollects. �It was an unbelievable sight; even though there were so many lying dead, the Iraqis were still running towards the front gate. I opened fire once again. Emptying magazine after magazine, I watched the people dressed in white and black robes drop to the ground as my sights passed by them. All I could think about at that time was that I had to either kill or be killed. It felt as if we were losing ground. In many senses we were, but that feeling just made me fight harder.�

Suddenly, Young felt a tugging on his back. He turned and looked over his right shoulder to see one of his officers yelling at him, ordering him off of the roof. It was then the Marine realized he was standing in a pool of his own blood. The last smack he heard was in fact his own flesh being torn. �Still a little confused about what was going on, he asked me where I was hit. I told him that I wasn�t sure but I thought that it was my back. I was sweating heavily and it was getting in my eyes. I took off my Kevlar helmet and wiped the right side of my face. I could feel the sweat dripping off my hand, so I flung my hand really quickly, as to fling all the water off�. my hand was painted bright red from fresh blood,� said Young. Feelings of dread overtook Young as he frantically felt around his face for a bullet hole.

Ka-Bar in hand, they cut the Marine�s green T-shirt to expose the bloodied wound. One entrance hole was found, right in line with his heart and there were no exit holes. �I said to the captain that I was good to go and started to put my Interceptor vest back on. I felt that I was able to get back in the fight, but the captain thought differently. After a short argument, the captain convinced me to get down off the roof.�

�A small bit of time passed and the room started spinning. My eyelids felt like they had bricks tied to them, and I was hot all over. I heard the �doc� say that they had to get me out of there. They started to pick me up and I gained enough sense to walk on my own. We ran outside and I saw three Blackwater helicopters sitting there. I ran to the farthest helicopter and got inside the front passenger seat. I felt very nervous as we took off from the ground. I didn�t have any body armor at all, nor did I have a weapon. I looked all around the base and saw that everybody was firing their weapons�. I felt almost helpless sitting there.�

Young explained that the helicopter ride to the hospital in Baghdad seemed like an eternity. Upon arrival, he went straight into surgery. After a successful operation, the round was removed from his back, and piece of shrapnel was removed from his left eye, but no major damage was done. The doctor even let Young keep the troublesome hunk of metal as a war trophy.

In the words of Maj. Douglas Fordham, the only other Marine attached to the DMS team of technicians, Young was critical to the success of the militia deterrence. �I can tell you this, before this attack ever broke out in the two days of operations that preceded it, I was very confident placing the security of my team and indeed my own life in the hands of this corporal,� explained Fordham. �I had no doubt in him. He exuded a level of confidence and professionalism found in few seniors and even fewer peers. As I look back on all of this, I believe that I have Cpl. Young to thank that I am still alive. Period.�

Young has seen the horrors of war; he�s experienced hell firsthand and learned the hard way that truth is far stranger than the fiction of movies. What could possibly make a man sacrifice his own well-being for the safety of two complete strangers? The answer is simple�. The title Marine.

WAVY reports that Cpl. Young is up for a Silver Star.

September 9, 2004

How Blogging Works

I’m no Stephen Hawking. I get no deep insights into time and space. I just blog. And, today, I’ve never been prouder to be a blogger.

Today we are seeing how blogging, and the freedom of information that the Internet brings, really works.

CBS, in its news show 60 Minutes, last night, proffered a number of documents that it says prove some things about President Bush’s service in the National Guard. The Internet, bloggers, kicked in to gear and did what they always do. Thousands of people looked at the information that CBS made available. Hundreds of people used the Internet to research the facts further. Dozens of people turned to experts that they knew. And, voila!

Major media has been fact checked. The three or four researchers that CBS had on the job have been trumped by dozens and dozens of Net users and bloggers.

The lads at Powerline lead the pack right now. Many, if not all, of the documents that CBS used in its news story last night were phony, fake, forged. Powerline lays it all out in far greater detail.

My point is: this is how blogging works. Fact checking, research and reporting. All at the speed of light. A story that it took CBS weeks to prepare was obliterated in a matter of hours.

This is the future of news. Old media will be held to the same standard that bloggers are. News has to be well researched, sources cited, corrections noted, and contributors linked. And it all has to be done quickly. The public’s right to know is turning in to “the public knows”. You don’t need to graduate from j-school to write the news in the Internet age.

September 4, 2004

We Get E-mail

Here’s a recent e-mail exchange with someone who, I presume, is farther left than I am.

SC:

Oh please, you must be kidding me… Bush has overseen, for the first time since the Great Depression, a loss of jobs. And those getting jobs are getting jobs that pay less when costs are increasing, ie. gas, health insurance, housing.

ME:
Job losses: simply not true. The household survey says so. The payroll survey says that we have more jobs today than we had at any time prior to March of 2000.

The average hourly earnings in 1982 dollars is higher than it has been since November 1978. The average hourly earnings for production workers was at a record high in August 2004.

The average weekly earnings in 1982 dollars is higher than it’s been since December 1984.

The home ownership rate for the 2nd quarter of 2004 is 69.2%, a record high.

In real (inflation adjusted dollars) gas is actually still cheaper than it was back in 1980!

Inflation remains at historic low levels.

And poverty rates in the Bush term so far are lower than they’ve been since before Reagan.

SC:
You left out a very important fact - you say “Payroll survey (US Govt?) … More jobs today than we had at any time prior to March of 2000″ You’re not realizing that the problem is the job creation is not keeping up with the population growth… 1982 $’s? What are you talking about… Do me a favor - don’t even respond - you clearly are one of those incapable of seeing what’s in front of you people.

[scratching my head] Wow! That was… [biting back sarcasm] interesting. Can we even call that a discussion?

When you talk about data that varies over time, it’s often helpful to use a common baseline. The government, when compiling its wages data, uses a baseline of 1982. A modicum of understanding about the data collected by the government would ensure that this was not a foreign notion. Not to mention that some education in economics would also provide a basis for informed discussion.

By his e-mail addy, SC is from New York City. Perhaps evidence of the failures in that city’s school system, or perhaps a suggestion that an institution of higher learning in the City lacks the ability to impart key knowledge to its tuition payers. Don’t know. Guess what? Don’t care.

September 3, 2004

Poverty Rate Update

Filed under: PovertyChuck ---

I have updated the table I created here.

TERM AVG % ALL AVG % FAMILIES
Reagan I 14.7 13.3
Reagan II 13.5 12.0
Bush 41 13.8 12.4
Clinton I 14.3 12.8
Clinton II 12.3 10.7
Bush 43 12.1 10.4

My original contention still holds.
Poverty is down under George Bush!

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