Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

17 of 18 Families of the Fallen Denied Obama His Photo-Op at Dover
Thursday, October 29, 2009 | Kristinn

Posted on 10/29/2009 11:27:45 AM PDT by kristinn

Barack Obama was nearly denied the photo-op he traveled to Dover Air Force Base for early this morning as all but one of the military and civilian families of the fallen refused permission for the media to report on the return of their loved ones.

The sole family to allow media coverage was the family of Sgt. Dale R. Griffin.

According to media reports, Griffin's casket was the last to be brought off the C-17 cargo plane that carried the bodies of 15 soldiers and 3 DEA agents killed this week in Afghanistan.

That is a stark contrast to the reported 60% approval by families for media coverage since Obama lifted the ban on media coverage in April. Byron York reported a month ago that media interest has plummeted since April such that at most dignified transfers there is only an AP stringer there to take still photographs.

Obama met with the families of the fallen at a base chapel before the dignified return took place.

AP raw video of the military's dignified transfer of Sgt. Dale R. Griffin, featuring Barack Obama.

Obama's photo-op last night was the culmination of a long campaign by Obama's left wing allies like Code Pink to give aid to our enemies by highlighting the deaths of America's servicemen and women in the war on terror.

While not casting judgment on the decision by the family of Sgt. Griffin, the near unanimous decion of the families to deny Obama his photo-op, compared to the average 60%, is telling.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; US: Delaware; War on Terror; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; bho44; bhodod; cicobama; doverafb; fallen; militaryfamilies; obama; photoop
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 101-120121-140141-160161-178 next last
To: STARWISE

Will someone tell Sarah she needs contact lenses or Lazik. She needs to lose the bifocals.


141 posted on 10/29/2009 9:58:17 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 139 | View Replies]

To: Vendome; mystery-ak; ohioWfan; LUV W; DrDeb; NordP; silent_jonny; snugs; Kathy in Alaska; ...

Monday, December 22, 2008
EXCLUSIVE: Bush, Cheney comforted troops privately

Joseph Curl and John Solomon

EXCLUSIVE:

For much of the past seven years, President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney have waged a clandestine operation inside the White House. It has involved thousands of military personnel, private presidential letters and meetings that were kept off their public calendars or sometimes left the news media in the dark.

Their mission: to comfort the families of soldiers who died fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and to lift the spirits of those wounded in the service of their country.

On Monday, the president is set to make a more common public trip - with reporters in tow - to Walter Reed Army Medical Center, home to many of the wounded and a symbol of controversy earlier in his presidency over the quality of care the veterans were receiving.

But the size and scope of Mr. Bush’s and Mr. Cheney’s private endeavors to meet with wounded soliders and families of the fallen far exceed anything that has been witnessed publicly, according to interviews with more than a dozen officials familiar with the effort.

“People say, ‘Why would you do that?’” the president said in an Oval Office interview with The Washington Times on Friday. “And the answer is: This is my duty. The president is commander in chief, but the president is often comforter in chief, as well. It is my duty to be - to try to comfort as best as I humanly can a loved one who is in anguish.”

Mr. Bush, for instance, has sent personal letters to the families of every one of the more than 4,000 troops who have died in the two wars, an enormous personal effort that consumed hours of his time and escaped public notice. The task, along with meeting family members of troops killed in action, has been so wrenching - balancing the anger, grief and pride of families coping with the loss symbolized by a flag-draped coffin - that the president often leaned on his wife, Laura, for emotional support.

“I lean on the Almighty and Laura,” Mr. Bush said in the interview. “She has been very reassuring, very calming.”

Mr. Bush also has met privately with more than 500 families of troops killed in action and with more than 950 wounded veterans, according to White House spokesman Carlton Carroll. Many of those meetings were outside the presence of the news media at the White House or at private sessions during official travel stops, officials said.

The first lady said those private visits, many of which she also attended, took a heavy emotional toll, not just on the president, but on her as well.

“It is just so unbelievably emotional to be with the families, for everybody involved. I mean for us and for them and for everyone,” she said in a telephone interview with The Times on Saturday. “I’m very aware of how emotional it is and how draining it is for the president and for me, too. Both of us. But I think we do support each other, not by saying anything so much, but just by the comfort of each other’s presence, both when we are with the families and then afterward when we are alone.”

Mr. Cheney similarly has hosted numerous events, even sneaked away from the White House or his Naval Observatory home to meet troops at hospitals or elsewhere without a hint to the news media.

For instance, Mr. Cheney flew to North Carolina late last month and met with 500 special-operations soldiers for three hours on a Saturday night at a golf resort. The event was so secretive that the local newspaper didn’t even learn about it until three days after it happened.

Mr. Cheney and his wife, Lynne, also have hosted more than a half-dozen barbecues at their Naval Observatory home for wounded troops recovering at Bethesda Naval Hospital and Walter Reed and their spouses and children.

The vice president said Mr. Bush “feels a very special obligation to those who he has to send in harm’s way on behalf of the nation, and a very special obligation to their families, especially the families of those who don’t come home again.”

“He, in his travels, spends time with the families of the fallen. If he goes down to Fort Bragg, he’ll often times pull together the families of guys who were stationed at Bragg and killed in action, and spend time with the families,” Mr. Cheney told The Times in an interview last week.

Mr. Bush did just that when he visited Fort Bragg, N.C., in 2002, rallying 2,000 special-operation soldiers stationed at the base, which would send thousands of men to the two wars, hundreds of whom would never return. “I want their families to know that we pray with them, that we honor them, and they died in a just cause, for defending freedom, and they will not have died in vain,” he told the troops, his voice choking with emotion and his eyes welling up with tears.

That same month, in St. Petersburg, Fla., the president broke down in tears as he addressed the parents and family of one of the first soldiers to die in Afghanistan. “I know your heart aches, and we ache for you. But your son and your brother died for a noble and just cause,” he said as a tear rolled down his right cheek.

He stopped his speech, overcome by emotion as the crowd stood and cheered. His chin still quivering, he smeared away tears, smiled and shrugged his shoulders. Those were public events, but mirrored the scores of private meetings where emotions also ran deep.

“I do get a little emotional because it’s - I’m genuine when I say I’ll miss being the commander in chief,” the president told The Times. “I am in awe of our military. And I hold these folks in great respect. And I also sincerely appreciate the sacrifices that their families make.”

Mr. Bush sees his job as providing comfort to those who have sacrificed so much. “The definition of comfort is very interesting. Comfort means hug, comfort means cry, comfort means smile, comfort means listen. Comfort also means, in many cases, assure the parent or the spouse that any decision made about troops in combat will be made with victory in mind, not made about my personal standing in the polls or partisan politics.”

Asked where he gets the strength to meet with the families of soldiers whom he - as commnder in chief - sent to their deaths, he turned stern.

“You have to believe in the cause. You have to understand that - and believe we’ll be successful. If I didn’t believe in the cause, it would be unbelievably terrible. I believe strongly in what we’re doing. I believe it’s necessary for our security. And I believe history will justify the actions. ...

“The interesting thing is, most of our troops fully understand this. They know we must defeat the enemy there so we don’t have to face them here. And in a place like Iraq, they fully understood that Iraq was a front for al Qaeda. And they saw their mission as one of defending America by defeating al Qaeda,” he told The Times.

Meeting with the families of the fallen has allowed the president to step out of the bubble that often surrounds him, to meet real people. “I find out a lot about the individuals when the families come and see me, because one thing they want to do is, they want to share. They want to share pictures or letters or moments.

“And I ask them to describe their loved one. What should I know about this person? Or they volunteer - ‘You’d like this guy.’ And many of them have said - it’s amazing, the comforter in chief oftentimes is the comforted person - comforted because of their strength, comforted because of their devotion, comforted because of their love for their family member. And a lot of them said, Mr. President, please know that my child wanted to do this.”

Mrs. Bush said she, too, is moved by their private meetings with relatives of the fallen.

“Visiting with the families of the fallen is one of the most touching, moving parts of this job that George has. I remember best the most recent, which was on the Intrepid on Veterans Day, when we met with nine different families. I remember them all very well, but one story that stands out in my mind was this sister who had written a biography of her brother that she lost.

“So she asked if she could read it to us. ... It represents every single family that wanted us to know about their loved ones, and what they were like, what their sense of humor was like, what they liked to do, and what they were good at.”

The first lady said that many of the meetings have been kept private because “these are such personal times when people grieve. And we grieve with them. And these are not times when you would want a camera in the room or other people around. They are very emotional, personal times.

“And for all of these families to be in a room with the commander in chief who made the decision to send their loved one in harm’s way is, you know, a wrenching time for us and for them. For all of us, the consequences of the choices that a commander in chief makes are clear. It’s all about them, and their grief.”

Some private meetings with soldiers have been publicized at the request of the soldiers themselves. When Mr. Bush met with Spc. Max Ramsey, who lost his left leg in 2006 while serving in Iraq, and Sgt. Neil Duncan, a double-amputee injured in Afghanistan in 2005, it was Sgt. Duncan who asked for news coverage.

“I wasn’t sure my buddies would believe me,” Sgt. Duncan said, joking with the president. When Mr. Bush had visited him at Walter Reed, the sergeant had vowed to run again, and did so on the White House South Lawn’s jogging track in July 2007.

Although it was a Wednesday, Mr. Bush - who had scheduled a brief run - pulled the two soldiers through the trees to the White House pool after their jog.

“The group of us just sat there for like two hours maybe and chatted. On a whim, he just took two hours out of his schedule. ... We talked about personal things, how he feels about the war, what’s been hard, what it’s like being the president, some of the most difficult times for him. It was very, very cool - priceless.”

Sgt. Duncan said he’s glad he got the media to cover what otherwise would have been a private visit. “I thought it would be good for other soldiers to see that. It was a personal accomplishment - I wanted my family and my friends and people that I know and people I’ve never met to see it.”

The vice president, who has been derided in the media as “Darth Vader,” also has operated outside of the limelight to support wounded troops and their families even though he could have made political hay if he had made them public. He and his wife have hosted wounded troops and their families at his residence at the Naval Observatory, arranging for big-name country singers, such as Charlie Daniels and Sara Evans, to provide entertainment.

Pressed whether he ever considered allowing rap music at one of his barbecues for the troops, the vice president laughed.

“No rap, no. The country and western is sort of a compromise between old folks - you know, the big band sound of the ‘50s and the rappers that the younger generation understands,” he said.

Actually, Mr. Cheney did manage to connect troops at his home with the “American Idol” television phenomenon in February, when he hosted an event for about 50 wounded troops at the Naval Observatory that showcased Melinda Doolittle, the big-voiced singer who was a finalist on the sixth season of the hit show.

On June 30, the vice president - code-named “Angler” by the Secret Service for his love for fly-fishing - staged a fly-fishing event on his lawn with a group of wounded troops being helped out by the charitable organization Project Healing Waters.

Rather than the usual rubber waders and camouflage fishing hat, the vice president sported a dark suit, a white shirt, green tie and business shoes but still managed to show off his favorite fly-fishing cast to the troops. Instead of water, he aimed for a bright green patch of grass as the smiling military men and their wives picked up tips and practiced themselves.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/dec/22/bush-cheney-comforted-troops-privately/print/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

As we see more and more horribly every day, the contrast between the arrogantly showboat and leaders with class couldn’t be more stark.


142 posted on 10/29/2009 10:04:50 PM PDT by STARWISE (The Art & Science Institute of Chicago Politics NE Div: now open at the White House)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 140 | View Replies]

To: Never on my watch

This is going to go down in the “Anals” of assinine posing by poseur and the crappiest of craptastic briefings and photo-ops.

They qualified every statement.


143 posted on 10/29/2009 10:13:48 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously... You'll never live through it.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]

To: Victoria Delsoul

People are now looking for the scam.


144 posted on 10/29/2009 10:22:52 PM PDT by Nachum (The complete Obama list at www.nachumlist.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 122 | View Replies]

To: jakota

When I mustered out in ‘68, I had the extreme pleasure of giving the post C.O the middle finger salute. I was a “US” all the way.

In my defense, I must say I was drunker than shiT and very happy to have survived my long 2 years as a “drafted crute”


145 posted on 10/29/2009 10:50:05 PM PDT by primatreat (O"wee weed in his pants again. He no use fo HI'NI shots fo his Chilen. They no Guinea pigs fo Whity)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: 21twelve

I must have needed a good cry. Thank you for posting such a wonderful story.


146 posted on 10/29/2009 10:50:57 PM PDT by oldteen
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: 21twelve

What a wonderful story. I can not believe how much I miss this wonderful man.


147 posted on 10/29/2009 11:03:44 PM PDT by Irish Eyes
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: kristinn
"AP raw video of the military's dignified transfer of Sgt. Dale R. Griffin, featuring Barack Obama.

"Featuring Barack Obama". That's what it was all about, of course. But, he only succeeded in diminishing himself in the presence of those dedicated military personnel who understand and feel the import of that flag draped coffin carrying the body of Sgt. Griffin.

I thought about what Michelle Obama said about being proud of the U.S. for the first time after Barack Obama was nominated;and, the thought occurred the moment that casket passed in front of him that I had never been more ashamed of a POTUS, especially in his role as CIC. Perhaps her comment had something to do with the color of his skin. My thought did not.

Giving thanks for the service of Sgt. Dale R. Griffin, and all those others who have made the ultimate sacrifice, and praying for those who serve. God bless and protect them.

148 posted on 10/29/2009 11:06:34 PM PDT by LucyJo
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: STARWISE
Thank you so much for the ping.

"He IS the devil’s spawn .. I don’t care who he claims his father is."

I agree so much.

149 posted on 10/29/2009 11:35:14 PM PDT by Katarina (Thank God for Conservative talk radio.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 139 | View Replies]

To: STARWISE

Wow this is wonderful, thank you so much.


150 posted on 10/30/2009 12:05:20 AM PDT by Katarina (Thank God for Conservative talk radio.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 142 | View Replies]

To: jospehm20

Ditto.


151 posted on 10/30/2009 12:36:24 AM PDT by elizabethgrace (I pray for our military, our Republic, Bibi and Israel.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: 21twelve
Thank you, that's one of the best pieces I have read in a long time.

The link for the original article: http://www.eielson.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123111092.

152 posted on 10/30/2009 1:02:18 AM PDT by snowsislander
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: kristinn
He is hands down the most despicable person I have ever seen.
153 posted on 10/30/2009 1:06:31 AM PDT by mojitojoe (“Medicine is the keystone of the arch of socialism.” - Vladimir Lenin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: snowsislander

Thanks for the link. I think what makes it a great article is that it is written from the point of view of another military leader that understands what it means to be in President Bush’s shoes. And a leader that sounds to me like he probably learned something and is passing that knowledge onto others.


154 posted on 10/30/2009 1:21:58 AM PDT by 21twelve (Drive Reality out with a pitchfork if you want , it always comes back.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 152 | View Replies]

To: narses; neverdem; SJSAMPLE

From an Indiana (Terra Haute) paper on this this same story, by AP writers “always ever so unbiased” of course:

“The ban on media coverage of bodies returning to Dover was criticized for shielding the public from the human cost of war.

Now it is no more. Obama saw it directly, and the press bore witness.”

Also:

“In a surprise midnight dash to this Delaware base where U.S. forces killed overseas come home, Obama honored the return of 18 fallen Americans on Thursday. All were killed in Afghanistan this week, a brutal stretch that turned October into the deadliest month for U.S. troops there since the war began.

The dramatic image of a president on the tarmac was a portrait not witnessed in years. Former President George W. Bush said the appropriate way to show his respect for war’s cost was to meet with grieving military families in private, as he often did, but he never went to Dover to observe the remains coming off the cargo plane. Obama did so with the weight of knowing he may soon send more troops off to war.”

Associated Press writers Ken Kusmer and Jeni O’Malley in Indianapolis contributed to this report”


155 posted on 10/30/2009 1:45:08 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but socialists' ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: ConorMacNessa
I've watched Obie give salutes as he gets off Air Force One and Marine One. He doesn't even look at the soldiers as he renders his pathetic salute.

President Bush always looked the soldier right in the eye when rendering the salute. (At least when I saw him.)

156 posted on 10/30/2009 3:35:45 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: 21twelve

I’ve seen and heard similar stories. I have not always agreed with him in political decisions, but he is one honorable man.


157 posted on 10/30/2009 3:40:46 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: NativeNewYorker

That seems the most likely explanation.

Good gawd, this bastard is a monster. He is evil, gauche, manipulative, tacky, petty and arrogant beyond measure.

Off-topic, but in contemplating how in God’s name we’ve come to have this beast in the WH, did anybody see Hannity’s focus group from NJ on his show last night? Oh. My. God.


158 posted on 10/30/2009 4:31:53 AM PDT by bustinchops (Teddy ("The Hiccup") Kennedy - the original water-boarder)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: swheats

Huh? WHAT souls?


159 posted on 10/30/2009 4:33:31 AM PDT by bustinchops (Teddy ("The Hiccup") Kennedy - the original water-boarder)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: STARWISE

Could he be any less respectful to the families?

Pray for America and Our Troops


160 posted on 10/30/2009 4:55:41 AM PDT by bray (Silent No More)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 134 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 101-120121-140141-160161-178 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson