Posted on 12/19/2004 1:14:03 PM PST by ejdrapes
It's a shame those whores - I mean Senators, don't have confidence in him. It's a great way to avoid who is responsible for funding equipment - Congress.
What a load of crap. The transparency of this is obvious to those with I.Q.'s below 70 - these are people who, for personal motive (Hagel) or otherwise, dislike Rumsfeld, and are jumping at this non-issue to damage him. At some point, after enough of these non-issues are raised, you will hear the lamentation - "well, it's not this incident - but rather the cumulative weight of all of the previous non-issues" than demands his resignation. Ugh.
The President needs to make a statement and get behind Rumsfeld and shut this stuff down. Now.
On the Gravitas Scale, this story is about a negative 5.
The only insult is that these idiots think the SecDev has nothing else to do except sign letters. Every CEO I ever worked for used a signer rather than sign his own letters.
This is simply more of the ACT group in action - pressing the families of KIA soldiers to ruffle feathers within this admin. Dispicable.
I guess they are running low on things to throw at Rummy. It'll be interesting to find out if every other death notice in previous conflicts were hand signed.
Ditto.
The roar is getting too loud for taking any chances. Could be time for us to contact our representatives and let OUR voices be heard! Wouldn't hurt if "W" put int his two cents!
Being a conservative does not mean that we have to march lockstep and defend every incompetent that calls himself a conservative. Rumsfeld has shown himself to be incompetent, insensitive, blame thrower (casting aspersions at our Army for his failures) who's more interested in playing cutesy-pooh at his press conferences than he is in doing the expected tasks of the SecDef (signing the letters to the families takes but little of his "precious" time and shouldn't be an afterthought; this shows him for what he is, an arrogant Ivy Leaguer who dare not condescend to fuffill his job duties). Rumsfeld needs to show some previously unseen class, and resign.
Good post!
I wonder how many condolence letters were signed personally during Clintons disgraceful term. Just a cheap, underhanded way to try and drag down Rumsfeld and especially his boss President Bush. Hagel, McCain, Lott and the rest of the RINO eunuchs are as pathetic as their liberal sob sisters.
Chuck Hagel is disgusting.
Hagel is good at nit-picking, but just what answer would he have given to the soldier who asked Rummy a question fed to him by an embedded reporter?
This is indefensible. It is time for Rumsfeld to go.
While autosigning correspondence is not disrespectful in and of itself, this admission is indicative of a more disturbing institutional casual attitude on Rumsfeld's part toward American troops who have bled and died for their country. And before anybody flames me into oblivion, how much outrage would there be emanating from Freepers if Les Aspin, William Perry, or William Cohen had pulled this during a Clinton administration?
"Rumsfeld has shown himself to be incompetent, insensitive, blame thrower (casting aspersions at our Army for his failures)"
EVIDENCE - PLEASE!!
Actually, you don't have any .. and this pitiful attack on Rumsfeld is just over the top and way out of line. Since you're calling such an accomplished Patriot "incompetent" .. it's a good indication that you're the one who's incompetent. So .. to help you out - have somebody with a brain read the following to you - it's information you might be able to understand - but I won't be holding my breath:
The word from a soldier just back from Iraq (Awesome Letter to the Editor - San Diego Union Tribune) San Diego Union Tribune | 12/18/04 | DALE MELVILLE
Posted on 12/18/2004 7:25:08 AM PST by bkwells
The word from a soldier just back from Iraq
I have been in the Army for the last seven years. I have gone through the good and bad times in the military. It is a lifestyle that if you do not live every day, you cannot even come close to understanding.
I have been to Bosnia, Kosovo, and have just returned from Iraq. I can tell you that no one feels the loss of soldiers more than we do.
Even the families do not deal with the emotional pain and stress that we do when we have to pick up the remains of our friends the same friends that we joked with, lived with, even shared our deepest fears and worries of life with, and in many cases the same friend who saved your life the week before.
I am always concerned with how the Army can be more effective at saving the lives of my fellow soldiers. Armor is not always the answer. In fact, armor can prevent us from being able to do our job. Every pound of armor makes us less effective fighters.
I patrolled the streets of Baghdad in a Humvee that had no doors, let alone armor. This was a decision that I made so that I was a more effective soldier. With better fields of vision, I could respond more effectively to the hazards of a combat zone.
I am an explosive ordnance disposal technician tasked with the removal of the roadside bombs, or IEDs, and unexploded ordnance in Iraq. The IEDs in Iraq often have enough explosives in them that the armor on most trucks proves to be ineffective at close range. Armor is a great asset and improves morale in some cases, but it is not the answer to our problems in Iraq.
There has never been an IED campaign in the history of the world like the one we are living through in Iraq. There is no way the leadership that sent us to war could possibly have known to expect these extreme attacks on its fighting force and the effects on the morale that the Army has suffered during these attacks. What the Army needs is to hunt out and destroy these insurgents, and that, of course, is not an easy task.
Then comes the true kick in the gut. The news media do not report the great things that we have accomplished in this country the lives we have saved, and freedom that we are providing to a people who do, in fact, want this freedom. Freedom is not won overnight; there are pitfalls that must be overcome, and that takes time.
Instead, the media have decided to attack our morale by attacking our top leadership. There are a lot of things a soldier must deal with in combat; how are we supposed to perform when we have to deal with irrelevant controversy in Washington, D.C., as well?
The truth is that we have excellent leadership that supports us in every mission and provides us top-of-the-line equipment to accomplish our missions. We are at war, and war is not perfect.
I joined the Army because I love my country, a deeper and different love than I think most Americans can understand. I find this same patriotism in the soldiers I work with, even though there are prevalent risks to their lives. They do this because they and I believe in our country. We are soldiers: We adapt and over come all situations. We have been doing it since the birth of our country.
Leave our leadership alone, and we can and will win this war; and frankly, we do not need your selective reporting of how we are doing. We know our mission and objectives; our leadership has and continues to inform us wisely.
DALE MELVILLE Pine Bluff Arsenal, Ark.
Yet it is the job of others, including the President, to remind the Secretary, of what is expected of him, by them, by us.
In general, Mr. Rumsfeld has performed the job well, in response to friends and critics and foes.
Given that there are almost no competitors on even a short list, for the job, he stays.
Well, the first question I would ask (and it's not mentioned in the article - what a surprise), is whether the Secretary of Defense traditionally signs sympathy letters. Were they signed by hand in the 1960s? 1970s? 1980s? 1990s? Is Rumsfeld doing what has always been done, or has he changed policy here? Until we know the answer to that question, it's hard to pass any kind of judgement.
The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese used many, many IED's.
Yes, many a CEO will write a personal letter, personally signed, to the family of an employee who was killed on the job. While the letter will be written so as not to create legal liability, the expression of sympathy is indeed personal--and frequently, the letter itself is handwritten. A person dies but once, and there is but one opportunity to express sympathy. But why should Rumsfeld fake caring when he does not?
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