Thursday, November 22, 2012

February 20, 2008

Now they’re cooking with gas

Herat, Afghanistan-

 
For the past four years, cooks at Camp Zafar, an Afghanistan National Army Base in
the western region near Iran, have been preparing their Chai Tea the old fashioned way on wood burning stoves. However, with four of the ten stoves in the Afghan Tea Room there out of commission, preparing the Chai was becoming increasingly
more difficult and very time consuming.
That is until the US Army Corps of Engineers stepped in and retrofitted the facility with new high capacity propane fired stoves, making the process cleaner, safer and more efficient.
 
Read the main file:


 

Monday, November 19, 2012

Cranky Old Man Poem

Cranky Old Man Poem

When an old man died in the geriatric ward of a nursing home, the nurses found this poem. Its quality and content so impressed the staff that copies were made and distributed to every nurse in the hospital.

What do you see nurses?…… What do you see?
What are you thinking…… when you’re looking at me?
A cranky old man,…….not very wise,
Uncertain of habit…… with faraway eyes?
Who dribbles his food…… and makes no reply.
When you say in a loud voice…… …… ‘I do wish you’d try!’
Who seems not to notice…… the things that you do.
And forever is losing…… A sock or shoe?
Who, resisting or not…… lets you do as you will,
With bathing and feeding . . . .The long day to fill?
Is that what you’re thinking?…… …… Is that what you see?
Then open your eyes, nurse………… you’re not looking at me.
I’ll tell you who I am…… As I sit here so still,
As I do at your bidding,…… as I eat at your will.
I’m a small child of Ten…… with a father and mother,
Brothers and sisters…… who love one another
A young boy of Sixteen…… with wings on his feet
Dreaming that soon now …… a lover he’ll meet.
A groom soon at Twenty…… my heart gives a leap.
Remembering, the vows …… that I promised to keep.
At Twenty-Five, now…… I have young of my own.
Who need me to guide…… And a secure happy home.
A man of Thirty…… My young now grown fast,
Bound to each other…… With ties that should last.
At Forty, my young sons…… have grown and are gone,
But my woman is beside me…… to see I don’t mourn.
At Fifty, once more…… Babies play ’round my knee,
Again, we know children …… My loved one and me.
Dark days are upon me…… My wife is now dead.
I look at the future …… I shudder with dread.
For my young are all rearing…… young of their own.
And I think of the years …… And the love that I’ve known.
I’m now an old man…… and nature is cruel.
It’s jest to make old age…… look like a fool.
The body, it crumbles …… grace and vigour, depart.
There is now a stone…… where I once had a heart.
But inside this old carcass …… A young man still dwells,
And now and again…… my battered heart swells
I remember the joys…… I remember the pain.
And I’m loving and living…… life over again.
I think of the years, all too few …… gone too fast.
And accept the stark fact …… that nothing can last.
So open your eyes, people…… …… open and see.
Not a cranky old man.
Look closer ………………see……………………..ME!!

Remember this poem when you next meet an older person who you might brush aside without looking at the young soul within. We will all, one day, be there, too!
PLEASE DO NOT FORGET TO SHARE THIS POEM

Read here >>>  old-man-poem

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Afghan guards testify in village massacres


JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash., Nov. 10 (UPI) -- An Afghan guard testified at a hearing he was "shocked" and "nervous" when he saw a U.S. soldier return to base the night 16 Afghans were killed in their homes.

The guard, identified only as Nematullah, was one of two guards giving testimony in a hearing intended to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to court-martial Staff Sgt. Robert Bales for the March massacre.

"I was shocked and also I was nervous," Nematullah testified through an interpreter. "I can't believe that the guy was coming this way."

He said he briefed another guard who came on duty to relieve him about what he had seen. The second guard, Tosh Ali, testified he saw a U.S. soldier leaving the base a short time later.

The two guards testified Friday night by video from Afghanistan, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Army prosecutors allege Bales, 39, left Camp Belambay in Kandahar province twice the night of March 11 to kill residents of the villages of Alkozai and Najiban.

Prosecutors said the slayings were retaliation for an improvised explosive device attack several days earlier on a detachment of Army special forces troops.

Bales faces 16 counts of premeditated murder and six counts of attempted murder, along with alcohol and drug charges. If convicted of the murder charges, he could face the death penalty.

Prosecutors said Bales was covered in blood and carrying a rifle, a 9-milimeter pistol and a grenade launcher when he was arrested returning to camp about 4:30 a.m.

Featured Stories
 

US soldier calm as Afghans besieged camp over killings

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Washington — The US soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan villagers seemed surprised but calm when detained after the alleged massacre, as angry Afghans protested, witnesses said Tuesday.
The second day of a pre-trial hearing of Staff Sergeant Robert Bales heard how angry locals mounted a near-riot outside the US army base in the hours after the killings in March in the Panjwayi district of Kandahar province.
Bales, 39, mostly appeared passive during the 6-8 hours he was held before being helicoptered out of the base, although he did break his own laptop as his personal belongings were gathered together.

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From drug hell to wedded bliss: Afghan opium addicts get married at rehabilitation centre in Kabul

These pictures show the wedding of a pair of drug addicts who beat their addiction at a rehabilitation centre on the outskirts of Kabul.
Bride Sousan and groom Ali got married at the 'Mother Camp' rehabilitation centre for drug addicts on Friday.
Sousan, a widow and mother of three, and Ali overcame their drug problems at the clinic, which is run by Iranian Laila Haidari.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2231429/Afghan-opium-addicts-married-rehabilitation-centre-Kabul.html#ixzz2Ca9mtcFJ
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
These pictures show the wedding of a pair of drug addicts who beat their addiction at a rehabilitation centre on the outskirts of Kabul.
Bride Sousan and groom Ali got married at the 'Mother Camp' rehabilitation centre for drug addicts on Friday.
Sousan, a widow and mother of three, and Ali overcame their drug problems at the clinic, which is run by Iranian Laila Haidari.
 
 
 
 

More...

Obama marks Veterans Day with wreath-laying as Americans commemorate with patriotic flag displays and parades from coast to coast

'My SAS hero has been betrayed': Wife's torment after special forces husband is JAILED for 'illegally possessing' pistol given to him by Iraqis for outstanding service

The haunting faces of war: Startling pictures from America’s conflicts show more than 70 years of bloodshed
 
 
 
 
Haidari, a former documentary maker known as 'mother', runs a restaurant called Taj Begum, meaning 'Woman's Crown', and runs the shelter using the proceeds.


She also employs addicts to provide them with a chance to rebuild their lives and learn new skills while helping her run the business.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2231429/Afghan-opium-addicts-married-rehabilitation-centre-Kabul.html#ixzz2CaBHeLgp
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Haidari, a former documentary maker known as 'mother', runs a restaurant called Taj Begum, meaning 'Woman's Crown', and runs the shelter using the proceeds.
She also employs addicts to provide them with a chance to rebuild their lives and learn new skills while helping her run the business.
 
 
 
These pictures show the wedding of a pair of drug addicts who beat their addiction at a rehabilitation centre on the outskirts of Kabul.
Bride Sousan and groom Ali got married at the 'Mother Camp' rehabilitation centre for drug addicts on Friday.
Sousan, a widow and mother of three, and Ali overcame their drug problems at the clinic, which is run by Iranian Laila Haidari.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2231429/Afghan-opium-addicts-married-rehabilitation-centre-Kabul.html#ixzz2Ca9mtcFJ
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Unit's Youngest Marine Serves on First Deployment

CAMP LEATHERNECK, Afghanistan – As a senior in high school, Pfc. Clifford Dietrich made the decision to defend his country. A year and a half later he was on his way to Afghanistan.

Dietrich, a data helpdesk clerk with Regimental Combat Team 7, graduated high school during June 2011. Four months later, he was on his way to Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, S.C. After graduating from recruit training and completing training for his job, Dietrich was stationed at Twentynine Palms, Calif. Two months later he was on his way to Afghanistan.

Continue Reading...

Army pre-trial hearing into March 2012 Afghan massacre concludes

The US Army on Tuesday concluded its preliminary hearing for Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan villagers on Nov 11, 2012.

With 16 counts of murder and 6 counts of attempted murder, the atrocity case is the worst to be brought against an individual soldier since the Vietnam War. Bales, 39, could face the death penalty if found guilty in a military court. The Army will announce sometime in the next few weeks whether it will recommend a court-martial trial.
continue reading...

Afghan Army guards say they saw one soldier night of killings

Afghan National Army guards assigned to a combat outpost with Staff Sgt. Robert Bales insisted they spotted one U.S.  soldier walking into their camp and one leave on the night the Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier allegedly murdered 16 noncombatants and wounded six more.
 
 
 
Afghan National Army guards assigned to a combat outpost with Staff Sgt. Robert Bales insisted they spotted one U.S.  soldier walking into their camp and one leave on the night the Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier allegedly murdered 16 noncombatants and wounded six more.
One guard said he heard an American soldier laughing as he walked out of their outpost about 2:30 a.m. on the night of the killings.
Each guard said he tried to stop the soldier, but the American kept walking, using an Afghan phrase for “How are you?”
“I was shocked,” said Pvt. Nematullah, the Afghan guard who said he spotted a U.S. soldier walking into his camp about 12:30 a.m. March 11. “Also, I was nervous.”
He and Pvt. Tosh Ali were the first Afghans to testify in Bales’ Article 32 evidence hearing over video teleconference link to Camp Nathan Smith in Kandahar.
The hearing could shape a death-penalty court-martial for Bales, 39, and the Army is going to unusual lengths to gather evidence for the hearing. In coming days, several other Afghans – including ones whom Bales allegedly wounded – are scheduled to testify.
The video link connects a courtroom at Lewis-McChord with the one in Kandahar, and it allows attorneys for the Army and for Bales to interact with witnesses.
Both the prosecution and the defense had attorneys in Kandahar to question the witnesses in person, including Bales’ lead defense attorney, John Henry Browne of Seattle.
Col. Lee Deneke, an Army Reserve judicial officer, oversaw the hearing and interjected several times to clarify details while Nematullah and Toshi Ali spoke.
Deneke sounded frustrated at times as defense attorneys and interpreters tried to discern facts from Afghan witnesses.
The Afghans were consistent in describing the broad details of what they saw on the night of the killings, but some of the details they shared were lost in translation.
Nematullah, for instance, said the soldier walked into Village Stability Platform from the north.
That gibes with the Army’s allegation that Bales attacked two family compounds in the village of Alkozai, about 600 meters north of his base at Belambay, then returned to his post before making his second assault that night in the village of Najiban.
But defense attorneys confused Nematullah in asking him to describe the road that leads to Belambay. They said it runs east to west.
Nematullah agreed, but he insisted that the soldier he saw walked on the road from the north.
Nematullah also gave conflicting testimony about his position that night, saying once that he was on the ground at the gate to Belambay and once that he was in a tower.
He said he told the American to stop, but the American brushed by him. The American used an Afghan term that means “How are you?,” a response that confused the private.
Later, Tosh Ali said he saw an American leave Belambay about 2:30 a.m. Tosh Ali said the soldier was armed and wearing an American uniform.
Tosh Ali also told the American to stop, but the armed man kept walking. Again, the American asked the guard “How are you?” in an Afghan tongue.
Toshi Ali said he hear shots about half an hour after he saw the American leave the post. Najiban, the second village Bales allegedly attacked, is about 1,000 meters from Belambay.
Tosh Ali said the American was laughing as he walked out.
Both Afghan soldiers said the American they saw was wearing body armor, which contradicts previous testimony from U.S. soldiers who apprehended Bales at Belambay without his Kevlar vest.
Bales has been in court all week with four days of testimony gathered from soldiers and criminal investigators at Lewis-McChord. His wife, Kari, has sat behind him each day.
She and supporters have been taking notes. They appeared to smile a little when the Afghan witnesses contradicted themselves.
The two courtrooms are about 7,000 miles apart. Last year, no Afghans except ones on the U.S. payroll as interpreters testified in hearings for Lewis-McChord soldiers convicted of murdering three Afghans in Kandahar during their deployment there in 2010.
another Source:  NBC News

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/11/09/2362146/afghan-army-guards-say-they-saw.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/11/09/2362146/afghan-army-guards-say-they-saw.html#storylink=cpy

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Photos of Camp Shaheen - Serie 2

Bamz-e-Paigham Shaheen Camp 2008

Photos of Camp Shaheen - Serie 1





Malkin: Camp Bastion families want answers about Afghanistan

While Secretary of State Hillary Clinton boozes it up in Australia and the Pentagon grapples with more floozy eruptions, outraged military families are still waiting for answers about the forgotten 9/14 attack on Camp Bastion.

Muckrakers and distraction engineers are having a front-page field day with the so-called “sex scandal.” But for surviving relatives and colleagues of heroic Marine Lt. Col. Christopher Raible and Sgt. Bradley Atwell, it’s the national security scandal at Afghanistan’s Camp Bastion that deserves headline coverage.
There’s been a virtual blackout of the alarming story in the national press. As I reported last month, the meticulously coordinated siege by 15 Taliban infiltrators — dressed in American combat fatigues and armed with assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons — resulted not only in two deaths, but also in the most devastating loss of U.S. airpower since Vietnam. Six Harrier jets were destroyed; three refueling stations were wiped out; six hangars were damaged.
The attack came exactly six months after a failed suicide attack targeting Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and three days after the deadly attack on our consulate in Benghazi.
Yet, on Tuesday afternoon, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney announced President Obama is standing by beleaguered Marine Gen. John Allen. He’s the four-star general and lead U.S. commander in Afghanistan who is now entangled in former CIA Director David Petraeus’ sexcapades soap opera. Allen reportedly exchanged hundreds of “flirtatious” emails with Petraeus family friend and married Florida socialite Jill Kelley. Kelley is the alleged “other other woman” who told the FBI she was harassed by alleged Petraeus mistress and biographer Paula Broadwell.
While Petraeus stepped down, Obama “has faith in Gen. Allen, believes he’s doing and has done an excellent job” overseeing security in Afghanistan, Carney said.
Are families of our Marines at Camp Bastion happy with Allen and the Obama administration? Donella Raible, widow of Lt. Col. Raible, was blunt. “I’m not,” she told me Tuesday afternoon by phone. “I’m mortified. It shows the corruption in the whole Washington/Arlington culture.” Mrs. Raible, who is now raising three children (ages 11, 9 and 2) on her own, said, “I couldn’t sleep at night if I were (Obama). If they’re happy with things in Afghanistan, they should come look at the faces of those left behind.”
If not for the heroism of Lt. Col. Raible, Sgt. Atwell and their fellow brothers-in-arms, the entire Harrier squadron and a barracks-full of sleeping Marines could have been lost. Another Camp Bastion Marine wife and mother of two told me: “My husband survived, and I am so grateful, but I am also heartbroken for those who died. ... There is no excuse for this. We are the United States of America and supposed to be the badass of all badasses, and we are constantly made out to be fools and caught off guard. ... I blame this administration for these recent preventable losses of life.”
Deborah Hatheway, aunt of Sgt. Atwell, said the family received a standard-issue condolence letter from the White House last week. “That means nothing. This was not supposed to happen,” Hatheway told me. She blasted the “negligence, irresponsibility, incompetence and plain ignorance” that led to her nephew’s murder, and she believes the failures in Benghazi are tied to the fate of the fallen at Camp Bastion.
Off the record, several family members of Camp Bastion Marines have voiced persistent concerns about security in what was touted as one of the safest places to be in Afghanistan. “It is not a matter of if, but when” the compound is attacked again, one told me. Another relayed how a few weeks before the 9/14 attack, razor wire on the perimeter kept disappearing — but Marine sentries were barred from firing on suspected thieves to avoid causing civilian casualties. Others wondered why security hadn’t been stepped up given the public threat by the Taliban on September 10 to kill Prince Harry, who was stationed at Camp Bastion.
“And after the incident with Panetta, the security should have been so tight there that even a suicide mouse couldn’t get through,” Hatheway told me. “How could they let this happen? Someone has to speak up.”
Obama’s military leaders were asleep on the job — or sleeping with others instead of doing their jobs. Who will answer for this deadly disgrace?

Soldier targeted in insider attack uses injury as teaching tool for troops off to Afghanistan

WASHINGTON — Not a day goes by that Zach Camp doesn’t replay that terrible August day over in his mind.

Was there anything he could have done differently? Were there any signs that an Afghan Army soldier was going to turn his machine gun on the American troops he had been training alongside for months?

 


Nearly three months after the assault that sent Camp home with a gunshot wound, the Army first lieutenant says he doesn’t think there was any way he or his fellow team members could have anticipated the insider attack.
But after three surgeries to remove the bullet and fragments from his leg and months of physical therapy, Camp is turning his injury into a teaching tool for other U.S. troops heading to Afghanistan to work with Afghan forces.
“You get overwhelmed with a sense of betrayal, that you just got attacked by the same people you are trying to help,” said Camp, who deployed to Afghanistan in April with an Army team assigned to train Afghans in the rugged mountains near the Pakistan border. “I didn’t know who it was, I didn’t know it was an insider attack. It was hard to tell even where it was coming from — you just didn’t think it was coming from the actual place that we were going to.”
But it was.
The American team had just stepped outside the gate of U.S. forward operating base Mehtar Lam to make their daily trek across the street to the compound where they would train Afghan troops when they were met with a barrage of machine gun fire. An Afghan Army soldier, who probably had been training with the Americans for some time, shot two U.S. troops — Camp and an unidentified soldier who part of a nearby helicopter crew.
Other U.S. troops quickly came to the team’s rescue and killed the Afghan soldier.
At least 43 separate insider attacks, where members of the Afghan security forces or insurgents dressed in their uniforms turn their guns on U.S. and allied troops, have killed more than 60 NATO service members. That includes at least five attacks in the past two weeks.
The assaults have rattled the trust between the NATO and Afghan troops, raising questions about how effectively the allied forces can train the Afghans to take over security of their own country in 2014 and beyond.
In response, the U.S. has bolstered security surrounding its troops in Afghanistan and increased training on how to spot and prevent the deadly attacks, even as more of the training teams prepare to head to the front.
For the first time, the instruction for the teams involves a presentation from someone who’s experienced such an attack. Part of Camp’s message is that things can change very quickly.
“I think the fact that it’s one of their own telling them that, yes, this has happened to me, and it is a very real danger, I think it does hit closer to home with a lot of people versus just having a power point slide saying this is a statistic,” Camp said. “I know we see it on the news all the time, I saw it on the on the news just a few days ago, but I think when you have that real person sitting in front of you sharing that experience it become a lot more real.”

source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/soldier-targeted-in-insider-attack-uses-injury-as-teaching-tool-for-troops-off-to-afghanistan/2012/11/10/48b31cc2-2b43-11e2-aaa5-ac786110c486_story.html

Camp bastian

It was often said of Camp Bastion that the only correct decision that Britain ever made during its torrid history in Afghanistan was to build the base in the middle of nowhere, with isolation as its primary strength.

Anyone approaching from any direction should be easily spotted, tracked, identified - and, if they pose a threat, destroyed. That was the theory.

But the events of last Friday, when a force of Taliban gunmen managed to move up to and breach the Bastion’s security at around 10.15pm (local time), supposedly without being seen or heard, have sent a shock wave through Nato’s high command.

Initial reports state that the Taliban had been monitoring the eastern side of Camp Bastion for at least two weeks and had been posing as farmers working in a nearby maize plantation.

The attack only ever had one aim. It was a suicide mission designed to demonstrate that the Taliban can attack any Nato installation, no matter how secure.


A five-foot-high hole has reportedly been found in the outer fence which sits adjacent to the main runway. It is believed to have been caused by a suicide bomber detonating an explosive vest. One the fence had been breached, around 19 insurgents, many also wearing suicide vests, streamed forward firing rocket propelled grenades and mortars. Two US Marines were killed in the ensuing battle and five aircraft, including US Marine Corps Harrier jump jets and helicopters, were destroyed. A fuel storage tank and a helicopter maintenance tent were also hit and caught fire.

Camp Bastion became operational in April 2006, when the British Army moved into the Helmand badlands on a mission to bring security, assist local construction projects and help the Afghan government extend the rule of law.

In the intervening years, the base has grown in size, to cover around 20 square miles and now includes Bastion 1 and Bastion 2, Camp Leatherneck, home to thousands of US Marines and Camp Shorabak, the main Afghan National Army base in the province.

In 2006, Bastion’s runway consisted of a 100-yard dirt strip, designed to handle three aircraft movements a week. Today it is one of the busiest UK-operated airports and currently handles 600 aircraft a day (18,000 a month), more traffic than Luton, Edinburgh, Birmingham, Leeds-Bradford or Coventry airports.
 
Camp bastian is the main british base in helmand, here we see how things work there.