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John Kerry's Sucking Some Lemons by Now (Updated)

"Gottca!" 

ABC Highlights Role of NewsBusters In Getting Kerry Story Out

Posted by Mark Finkelstein on October 31, 2006 - 19:00.

This evening's edition of ABC's World News Tonight highlighted the role NewsBusters played in getting out the story of John Kerry's controversial comments on education and "getting stuck in Iraq."

Video here.

NewsBuster Warner Todd Huston was among the first in the blogosphere to break the story. As ABC senior national correspondent Jake Tapper described how "the Republican PR machine roll[ed] into high gear . . . and conservative blogs had a field day" two images of NewsBusters appeared on-screen, including one showing Huston's story.

http://newsbusters.org/node/8742
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Kerry: It Was a 'Botched Joke'  (Joke is on Kerry)
By Nathan Burchfield
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
October 31, 2006

(CNSNews.com) - Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) says comments he made Monday that appeared to imply that American troops were uneducated were a "botched joke" intended to insult President Bush.

At a news conference in Seattle Tuesday, Kerry refused to apologize and accused Republicans of distorting his comment in a "classic GOP, textbook Republican campaign tactic."

His comment was "clearly a remark that was directed at this administration."

Kerry said Republicans "know precisely what I was saying, and they're trying to turn this because they have a bankrupt policy."

At a campaign stop in California for gubernatorial candidate Phil Angelides, Kerry said Monday: "Education, if you make the most of it, you study hard, and you do your homework and you make an effort to be smart, you can do well. If you don't, you get stuck in Iraq."

Kerry's comment drew a strong reaction from conservatives, with some accusing him of "smearing" the troops by calling them uneducated.

In Tuesday's news conference, Kerry said most of the criticism had come from people who "never wore the uniform." One of the leading voices requesting an apology, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), is a Vietnam War veteran.

Criticism also came from the national commander of the American Legion, the nation's largest veterans' group.

"While the American Legion shares the senator's appreciation for education, the troops in Iraq represent the most sophisticated, technologically superior military that the world has ever seen," Paul A. Morin said in statement.

Morin said there is "a thing or two that they could teach most college professors and campus elitists about the way the world works."

"A generation ago, Sen. Kerry slandered his comrades in Vietnam by saying that they were rapists and murderers," Morin added. "It wasn't true then and his warped view of today's heroes isn't true now."

In Seattle, Kerry highlighted his own military background.

"If anyone thinks that a veteran would somehow criticize more than 140,000 troops serving in Iraq and not the president ... they're crazy," Kerry said.

While refusing to apologize, Kerry did offer praise for American soldiers, saying "this is the finest military ... that we've ever had."

http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200610/POL20061031d.html
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You Bet This Is The Finest Military!

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Photo, caption below.
Soldiers from the 463rd Military Police Company, attached to the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, pull security at the Saab al Bour Police Station, Oct. 27, 2006. U.S. Army photo by Spc. C. Terrell Turner
Iraqi, U.S. Soldiers Work to Save Saab al Bour
Residents begin to return as soldiers conduct missions against
suspected terrorists and work to quell violence.
By Spc. C. Terrell Turner
1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division

CAMP TAJI, Iraq, Oct. 31, 2006 — As international headlines report sectarian violence across Baghdad and the cities in the surrounding region, Iraqi Security Forces and Multi-National Division – Baghdad soldiers at Camp Taji, north of Baghdad, are working together to re-establish a level of security that will allow local residents to return safely to Saab al Bour.

During Ramadan, terrorist cells and rival Shia and Sunni factions pushed the level of violence to unprecedented levels and forced local residents to flee to nearby Khadimiya and other areas.

Soldiers from the 7th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, led the way in responding to the violence by aggressively conducting missions against suspected terrorists with mounted and dismounted patrols as well as providing counter-fire against mortar attacks.

The Joint Coordination Center, located at the Saab al Bour Police Station, houses the combined forces of 7th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment soldiers, Iraqi army soldiers and Iraqi police officers. Formerly part of a local government complex, the location now is the central command and control location for the coordination and mission execution in the greater Saab al Bour region. MND-B soldiers periodically rotate from Camp Taji to work at the JCC.

The soldiers said they felt their efforts were paying off.

“The numbers of attacks have decreased. This is my third time out here, and it’s been pretty quiet,” said Capt. Matt Cooper, assistant intelligence officer, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 7th Squadron., 10th Cavalry Regiment.

Cooper describes his job as “trying to paint a picture of what’s going on for the commander.”

In addition to that mission, Cooper said he seeks to develop the cities demographics to get a better block-by-block picture of the Shia and Sunni living in the town.

“The local nationals are starting to call the tip lines a lot more,” he said. “We send out as many patrols as we can to respond, but their level of trust in us is definitely starting to increase”

Maj. Anthony Nichols, senior Military Transition Team advisor, 1st Tank Battalion, 2nd Tank Brigade, 9th Iraqi Army Division, makes the JCC a daily stop between his patrols with his soldiers to compare notes.

“We captured 18 bad guys over the last 10 days,” he said. “I think we are having a large amount of success with keeping them from consolidating and establishing themselves in the city. The most effective strategy is to go where they think you won’t go.”

As violence within Saab al Bour grew, health care providers departed and left residents with few options outside traveling long distances for emergency health care. Soldiers from 7th Squadron., 10th Cavalry Regiment, responded by establishing a clinic inside the JCC for soldiers, Iraqi Security Forces and local nationals needing emergency medical assistance.

“We’ve treated about 35 local nationals for trauma injuries here,” said Staff Sgt. Robert Rushworth, aid station noncommissioned officer, HHT. “Anything life threatening means we call a medevac (medical evacuation), or if they are stabilized, the Iraqi police takes them to Khadimiya. The people know that we are here to help them when they get injured. Sometimes when the IPs go into town to respond to an incident, they bring the people here.”



Staff Sgt. Richard Giardine, medic, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 7th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, prepares an IV Oct. 15 at the Saab al Bour Medical Station, north of Baghdad. Soldiers from the 1st BCT have set up a patrol base to help curb sectarian violence that is plaguing the city. U.S. Army photo

As violence drops off in the city, the local clinics are reopening and Rushworth and his staff are seeing fewer patients.

“We had eight cases the other day, but that was an exception more than a normal day.” 

MND-B dominance over the airspace above and around Saab al Bour helps keep the number of mortar and rocket attacks to a minimum.

Fire Support Teams at a local observation point in the area coordinate with ground patrols to provide reconnaissance and coordinate air support from AH-64D Longbow Apache attack helicopters. This provides the 7th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, the opportunity to immediately react and retaliate against mortar fire.

“Before we started, there were a lot more mortar attacks,” said Sgt. Bernard Walla, fire support team chief, Troop B, 7th Squadron.

Recently, a patrol working with the fire support team pursued three fleeing suspected terrorists. An Apache spotted the men near the mortar site and reported their location to the patrol. After firing on the patrol, one of the suspected terrorists was killed and two were taken into custody.

“It’s getting better,” he said. “That was a very good example of the fire support teams working together.” 

Bryan said he currently conducts three to four patrols a day around the city, rotating on and off with another unit, for around-the-clock security in the area.

“It’s hot out here sometimes, but it’s not too tough working out here,” said Pfc. Francisco Camacho, a forward observer with HHT. “We hear mortars and gunfire periodically but lately, this past week, it has been getting better.”

As the people of the city return, Bryan sees them as hopeful but cautious.

“We make sure to stop and talk to people while we are on patrol,” he said. “They’re trying to be hopeful, but it’s been tough for them. They need electricity, food and money, but the main thing they need is the mortars to stop being fired in to the city and for snipers to stop firing on civilians. For us, that means establishing more of a presence around Saab al Bour to stop the insurgents from attacking residents.”

http://www.defendamerica.mil/articles/oct2006/a103106dg1.html

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