Marine Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich

Marine Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich

Its been a long, LONG, time since the Haditha Marines were incarcerated at Camp Pendleton. The Haditha incident happened in 2005 and consisted of Marines ‘clearing’ houses in an area in which an IED had blown up an humvee and from which the Marines were under fire.

After the democrats took over Congress in 2006, then Congressman John Murtha seemingly used the Marines who became known as the Haditha Marines to further his own political ambitions. He said they killed ‘in cold blood’ even though the party they broke up in Haditha was anything but a day at the beach. The Marines were taken off the battlefield and incarcerated at Camp Pendleton pending their trials. Murder charges were dropped and eventually the seven of the eight Marines were cleared.

Unbelievably, Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich is still on trial for ordering the Marines in his command to clear the houses in Haditha, Iraq. And worse, the question that seems to be central in his court-martial trial is whether or not Marines should be required to risk their lives to identify whether or not people in a hostile building are enemy combatants. In other words, if they are taking fire from a house, should they have to identify who all the occupants of that house are before returning fire. Sound ridiculous? Of course it is.

The former Marine officer who gave Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich the order to “clear” an Iraqi house near the site of an explosion that had just killed a Marine testified Friday that he expected Wuterich and his squad to “kill or capture the enemy I thought was in that building.”

William Kallop, who was a lieutenant in 2005 and is now a stockbroker in New York, said he believed insurgents inside the house were firing on Marines and thus the house could be deemed “hostile.”

According to the rules of engagement, Wuterich and his Marines were justified in using any amount of firepower in assaulting a “hostile” structure without identifying whether the people inside were combatants, Kallop said.

Kallop’s testimony came at the court-martial of Wuterich on charges of manslaughter, assault and dereliction of duty in the killing of 24 Iraqis by Marines on Nov. 19, 2005, in the Euphrates River community of Haditha. Among the Iraqis killed were three women and seven children.

While Kallop, who was a platoon commander, was called as a prosecution witness, his testimony appears to support the defense contention that Wuterich followed both his orders and training in assaulting two houses after the explosion that killed Marine Cpl. Miguel Terrazas and injured two other Marines.

The jury comprises four officers and four senior enlisted personnel, all with combat experience in Iraq or Afghanistan or both, as well as experience in “clearing” houses.

A Marine lawyer, testifying after Kallop, gave a different interpretation of the rules of engagement. Maj. Kathryn Navin, who had lectured Marines before they deployed, said a house cannot be declared hostile unless the people inside are known to have “hostile intent” or have committed “hostile acts.”

But Kallop said that in training at Camp Pendleton and March Reserve Air Base, and at briefings delivered in Iraq, Marines were not told they needed to identify individual targets as threatening when assaulting a “hostile” structure.

He said that he ordered “Clear south” and Wuterich responded, “Roger that, Sir.” He did not tell Wuterich that the house was “hostile,” Kallop said.

But Wuterich, in gathering his squad for the assault, told one of the Marines that the house was hostile and that the Marines should shoot first and ask questions later, according to testimony from former Marine Stephen Tatum.

No insurgents or weapons were found in two houses “cleared” by Marines. Dozens of Jordanian passports and stacks of American hundred-dollar bills were found in another house, however, indicating the neighborhood may have been used by insurgents as a staging point for attacks, Marine intelligence officers testified at preliminary hearings.

Kallop testified that after the explosion that ripped apart a Humvee, Marines were under attack by “a few bursts of small-arms fire.” He said he ordered a Marine to fire a grenade at the house after seeing a “turkey-peeker,” military jargon for a military-age male sneaking a look at Marines in a suspicious manner.

Kallop said he expected Wuterich to lead the Marines in his squad “to conduct movement to contact and kill or capture the enemy I thought was in that building.”

Responding to a question from defense attorney Haytham Faraj, Kallop said Marines are not required to risk their lives by stopping to identify individual targets while assaulting a hostile structure.

Can you imagine the heyday Major Kathryn Navin would have had with the bomber’s of Berlin in World War II? Under those rules of engagement most of the Allied Soldiers and Marines would still be in prison.

You can only imagine the effect this sort of politically correct nonsense has on our fighting men and women. Or you can read about some of the affects it has had here.

Its time to put this to rest. Free Frank Wuterich and end this sad chapter in American history.

 

1st Lt. Loren Douglas Hagen

1st Lt. Loren Douglas Hagen
25 years old from Fargo, North Dakota
U.S. Army Training Advisory Group
February 25, 1946 – August 7, 1971

U.S. Army

The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pride in presenting the Medal of Honor (Posthumously) to First Lieutenant Loren Douglas Hagen, United States Army (Reserve), for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as the team leader of a small reconnaissance team with the U.S. Army Training Advisory Group, in action against enemy aggressor forces while operating deep within enemy-held territory in the Republic of Vietnam, on 7 August 1971.

At approximately 0630 hours on the morning of 7 August 1971 the small team came under a fierce assault by a superior-sized enemy force using heavy small arms, automatic weapons, mortar, and rocket fire. First Lieutenant Hagen immediately began returning small-arms fire upon the attackers and successfully led this team in repelling the first enemy onslaught. He then quickly deployed his men into more strategic defense locations before the enemy struck again in an attempt to overrun and annihilate the beleaguered team’s members. First Lieutenant Hagen repeatedly exposed himself to enemy fire directed at him as he constantly moved about the team’s perimeter, directing fire, rallying the members, and resupplying the team with ammunition, while courageously returning small arms and hand grenade fire in a valorous attempt to repel the advancing enemy force.

The courageous actions and expert leadership abilities of First Lieutenant Hagen were a great source of inspiration and instilled confidence in the team members. After observing an enemy rocket make a direct hit on and destroy one of the team’s bunkers, First Lieutenant Hagen moved toward the wrecked bunker in search for team members despite the fact that the enemy force now controlled the bunker area. With total disregard for his own personal safety, he crawled through the enemy fire while returning small-arms fire upon the enemy force. Undaunted by the enemy rockets and grenades impacting all around him, First Lieutenant Hagen desperately advanced upon the destroyed bunker until he was fatally wounded by enemy small arms and automatic weapons fire.

With complete disregard for his personal safety, First Lieutenant Hagen’s courageous gallantry, extraordinary heroism, and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty, at the cost of his own life, were in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflect great credit upon him and the United States Army.

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives just so others may get to enjoy freedom. For that I am proud to call them Hero.

Those Who Say That We’re In A Time When There Are No Heroes, They Just Don’t Know Where To Look

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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Rick Santorum and Family

Rick Santorum and Family

I know the idea of global warming has made Al Gore rich (as well as others who have promoted it and benefited from the resulting change in whose pockets the money goes into. But does Global Warming really exist? Rising star of the GOP presidential candidacy says NO it doesn’t exist and we should drill everywhere. In fact, Rick Santorum told Rush Limbaugh earlier this month that global warming was based on ‘junk science.’. Pshaw!!!

When asked on Glenn Beck’s radio show earlier Santorum said that we should’ Drill everywhere’! He then said there is enough oil, coal and natural gas to last for centuries.

Who can disagree with that? Well I guess only those who see drilling in the United States as a bad thing and think we should only get our oil, coal and gas from unregulated sites overseas.

It is only common sense to drill here and reduce our dependence on foreign sources for our energy production. But the environmental propagandists prefer we don’t see the oil coming out of our own back yard. Forget the environment. Drill in places where its not as strictly regulated and help them make their fortunes by getting our energy resources from other countries while the rest of us have to pay exorbitant prices for oil, gas and coal.

I agree with Rick Santorun. Drill everywhere. Drill baby drill!!!!!

 
Battle of the Bulge

Battle of the Bulge

The Battle of the Bulge 67 Years Later


Life magazine has released some rare and never-before-seen photos of the Battle of the Bulge on the 67th anniversary of the beginning of that defining battle during World War II.

The Battle of the Bulge was fought between December 16, 1944 through January 15, 1945. The 41-day battle claimed almost 20,000 American lives, making it the bloodiest battle of World War II for Americans. By the end of the offensive in the frozen Ardennes Forest in Belgium there were over 19,000 American Soldiers dead, 1,400 British lost and a total of 110,000 allied forces casualties. There were about 85,000 German’s lost during the Battle of the Bulge. Even with their lower casualties, in the end, the Nazis were defeated and were unable to push through the Allied lines to capture essential fuel for their tanks and aircraft.

At one point, the German’s surrounded the Americans of the 101st Airborne who were hunkered down in the Ardennes. They were undermanned, running out of ammunition and food and freezing in below zero temperatures. While the 101st Airborne held the line while waiting for reinforcements from General George Patton’s 3rd Army a Nazi commander demanded the American’s surrender. The American commander, Brigadier General Anthony McAuliffe’s famous response to their demands was, ‘NUTS!’ And the battle continued, eventually turning against the Germans.

Sir Winston Churchill said of the Battle of the Bulge: ‘This is undoubtedly the greatest American battle of the war and will, I believe, be regarded as an ever-famous American victory.’ And so it was and has been.

I have a personal interest in the battle because as with most people in my generation virtually all of my uncles and male friends of my parents fought in World War II and many of them in Europe. I am aware of one uncle who fought in the Battle of the Bulge. So I find myself studying the faces of the men in these new photos from that period of time to see faces of people I have known. Of course, I don’t, but I do try to see. I do see the faces that could be any one of my uncles or the friends of my parents who fought and survived or was killed during that time in our history. My uncle could have been any of those men.

In the end there was victory, but it came at such a steep price. God bless these men and the women who held down the home-front while they were gone. They saved the world – at least for that generation.

You can see the recently revealed new photos from the World War II Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes Forests in Belgium here.



 
Nidal Hasan

Nidal Hasan

Remember when Army Major Nidal Hasan shot and killed 13 and wounded dozens of unarmed Soldiers at Ft. Hood, Texas? One of those was a pregnant woman. Remember how he had been saying he was going to do something like that, but the Army didn’t do anything about it because he’s muslim and that might have smacked of ‘profiling’ (Heaven forbid!). Remember how he had told people he was muslim first, American second? Remember how he had given away all of his belongings the morning before the shooting and had yelled ‘Allah Akbar’ while he was shooting American Soldiers who were trapped, unarmed, in a room like sitting ducks?

That shooting rampage became known as the Fort Hood Massacre. it has been one of a growing number of islamic militant terrorist attacks on military personnel within the United States. What this means is that the enemy is bringing the Global War on Terrorism to us rather than just fighting us in Iraq or Afghanistan. They are fighting us within our own borders. Do people understand this?

Well, according to the latest politically correct edition of the Department of Defense (DOD), Major Nidal Hassan’s Ft. Hood Massacre was NOT an act of terrorism or an enemy attack on American Troops. Nope. It was ‘workplace violence’. So instead of being a traitor and enemy combatant who had infiltrated our military, he’s just a disgruntled employee.

Thankfully, there are some in Congress who are taking exception to this reclassification and the danger in which it puts our military personnel.

Sen. Joe Lieberman noted that our military is a direct target of islamic terrorism, both within and outside of the United States. We must start identifying the threat and giving it a proper name.

We are doomed as a society if we continue down this path of self-destruction through politically correct constipated speech and thoughts. And frankly, offering up our Soldiers as sacrifices on the alter of political correctness is reckless, irresponsible, disrespectful, untenable and unforgivable.

 
Justin Timberlake Kelsey de Santis

Justin Timberlake Kelsey de Santis

Actor and singer Justin Timberlake was true to his word and accompanied Marine Corps Corporal Kelsey de Santis to the Marine Corps Ball celebrating the Marine Corps birthday the other night. Both Justine Timberlake and Corporal de Santis later wrote on Twitter and Facebook that they had a fantastic time.

Justin Timberlake wrote of the evening:

“I was truly moved,” Hollywood’s very own Prince Charming wrote on his blog about joining the 23-year-old at the party. “I felt so proud to be there. I felt like I was getting a chance to be among my heroes. It’s funny too, because a lot of them are SO much younger than me.”

Timberlake went on to explain that De Santis was a very attentive date. “She seemed to me to be so humble and honest … very cool,” Timberlake continued. “She simultaneously seemed like she was nervous about the whole evening and if I was going to enjoy myself. ‘Are you ok?’ she asked 2 or 3 times. ‘I hope you are having fun. I know you will once my crew of friends get here to the table.’ I have to tell you, it’s not every day that I meet a 23-year-old girl and she’s more worried about if I’m having fun or if I’m comfortable.”

The singer/actor walked away from the event with a new respect for the U.S. military. “It hit me all of a sudden that these were the type of people that look after us and our freedom,” he wrote. “Humble, concerned for others before themselves … this was the type of person our Marine Corps was building. I was really blown away.”

He says the evening ‘changed his life’:

“I knew I would have an evening that I wouldn’t forget…Something I could tell my friends about,” Timberlake writes. “What I didn’t know was how moved I would be by the whole experience.”

The “SexyBack” singer wrote that he was almost brought to tears by a video about Pearl Harbor, World War II and the September 11 terrorist attacks, which featured firsthand accounts from Marines.

“It was a surreal moment to be in that room with so many of our great Marines who have such a different type of connection to those stories,” he says.

“To all of you that serve every day for us…Ensuring our freedom, I say: My deepest gratitude to you. I’ve met so many of my heroes… From Michael Jordan to Michael Jackson. And, nothing makes me feel more honor and pride than when I get to meet one of you. Last night changed my life and I will never forget it.

“Thank you Corporal Kelsey DeSantis. Thank you for inviting me. And, thank you for being my hero.”

As for de Santis, she wrote and posted photos:

“I am so thankful to Justin Timberlake for accompanying me to the Ball and for his incredible post describing the events of the night.,” De Santis writes. “The experience he had is more than I could have ever hoped for, and I am truly humbled by the appreciation and respect that he has shown for the Marine Corps.”

De Santis recalls that “any uneasiness” she may have felt prior to meeting Timberlake “immediately went away as I realized what humble, good people Justin and those surrounding him are.”

The 23-year-old goes on to say that, not only did she get the chance to sit and talk at length with the “SexyBack” singer about her Marine Corps experience, but that when others began to arrive at the reception, Timberlake was more than gracious when it came to shaking hands and taking pictures.

“There was never a dull moment!” insists De Santis. “And I have to say Justin fit right in. As the night came to a close, we all walked out with Justin and said our goodbyes… but he didn’t get to leave the Ball without first receiving a bayonet engraved with ‘Justin “come tussle” Timberlake.’ Who knows, maybe J.T. will be enlisting next?!”

Well done!!

Next up – Mila Kunis to the Marine Corps Ball with Sgt. Scott Moore.

Below are some photos from the evening posted by Corporal Kelsey de Santis.

 
pipeline

To not make a decision is to make a decision, as the old saying goes. Apparently a decision (via non-decision on the part of the Obama Administration) has been made that puts another nail in the coffin of American energy independence, American jobs and the American economy. The loss of the TransCanada pipeline amounts to the loss of 20,000 construction jobs. $5 billion in tax revenue and 700,000 barrels of additional oil a day.

pipeline

So oil will be transported from Canada to China and we’ll get to buy our own oil back from China. It’s like we’re just giving our country away to China. Thanks environmentalists!!

The TransCanada Pipeline is to be rerouted due to Obama’s delays.

Delays in building the $7-billion Keystone XL pipeline project will force Canada to sell its huge oil reserves to China instead of the United States, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has bluntly warned President Barack Obama.

The White House has put off a decision on the 1,700-mile pipeline from Alberta to Texas until after the 2012 election so a study can be carried out into its impact on an environmentally sensitive area in Nebraska.

But late Monday, the company building the pipeline said it will do as the Obama administration officials requested. TransCanada announced the company will move its planned oil pipeline out of the environmentally sensitive Sandhills area of Nebraska.

Details on how they would alter the planned route were not available late Monday, but experts believe it would add another $1.7 billion to the cost.

But any delays, Canadian officials said, could mean up to 700,000 barrels of crude oil a day that would have eased the American energy crisis will be diverted to the Far East. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce estimates it will also cost 20,000 jobs.

Harper told Obama he was “disappointed” in the decision to delay the pipeline when the two leaders met face-to-face over lunch at the Asian Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Honolulu on Sunday. The president told him the delay was necessary to get all questions properly addressed.

Before their meeting, Harper told reporters the delay had been met with “extremely negative reaction” in the United States because it was “obviously what’s in the best interests of not just of the Canadian economy but also the American economy.”

But he blamed election year politics for the impasse. “This is simply the political season in the United States and decisions are being made for domestic political reasons that often have little or nothing to do with what other countries may think” said the Conservative party prime minister.

Canada’s National Resources Minister Joe Oliver said the decision will be costly for TransCanada Corp. the Calgary-based company behind the project.

“If it’s delayed too long then the project could fall off,” said Oliver. “The economic viability of any project could be undermined by excessive delay,” he added, saying the delay “wasn’t helpful.”

Oliver said he had just returned from a trip to China and Japan. “There’s a keen interest in our resources in both those countries,” he said. “The Japanese are interested in our natural gas, the Chinese in our oil and gas.

“Basically all of our energy exports are currently going to the United States. We have one customer, so it is a major fundamental strategic objective of Canada to diversify our customer base.”

Jim Flaherty, the country’s finance minister, also warned that China could get the oil that was expected to come to the States. “We’ve got to go where the trade is,” he warned. “We have great friends in the Asia-Pacific community and this is a tremendous opportunity in the long-term and medium-term for Canada.

“The sooner we can increasingly access markets in Asia the better,” added Flaherty, who said the delay would also hurt the United States as it would cost “thousands and thousands of high-paying, largely union jobs.”

U.S. Chamber of Commerce president Thomas Donohue echoed that view. “This is clearly a political decision and everyone knows it,” he said. “Unfortunately it will immediately cost more than 20,000 Americans an opportunity to get a job working on the pipeline and hundreds of thousands more jobs in the future.

“Politics has trumped jobs in this decision and we can only wonder if the administration’s delay will cause Canada to turn their pipeline west and ship their energy and American jobs elsewhere.”

Donohue said the State Department – which has jurisdiction as the pipeline crosses an international border – has already studied 13 different routes and decided the one through Nebraska was the best.

“The decision to delay the pipeline permit sends a signal to all Americans that even in the face of sustained high unemployment and instability overseas, jobs and energy security are not a priority,” Donohue said.

The Keystone XL pipeline would run from Hardisty, Alberta to Nebraska where it would meet up with an existing pipeline which would take the oil to Cushing, Okla. A second new segment would take the oil on to Houston and Port Arthur, Tex.

But the first section passes over the Ogallala Aquifer, a vast, shallow water table that yields nearly one-third of the nation’s irrigation, as well as tap water for huge portions of Nebraska and parts of South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Texas.

Critics, including politicians on both sides of the fence in Nebraska, say the route of the pipeline would present an unacceptable risk as a spill could contaminate the aquifer. Nebraska’s Republican Gov. Dave Heineman proposed an alternative route which would add an estimated $1.7 billion to the cost of constructing the pipeline.

The Nebraska Legislature was meeting late on Monday to decide its next move.

An initial environmental impact study found the pipeline would not have a significant effect, but the State Department announced in early November that it was investigating whether an alternative route can be found.

Canada now has the third-largest deposits of extractable oil in the world after Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. It is already the biggest supplier of American oil and is preferred over most other exporters because of the closeness to the United States and the long-standing friendship between the two countries.

 
First Lieutenant Walter Joseph Marm, Jr.

Walter Joseph Marm, Jr. is a Medal of Honor recipient for ‘gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty’ in the Battle of la Drang on November 14, 1965 during the Vietnam War. Read about him and see his photos below.

First Lieutenant Walter Joseph Marm, Jr.

I have written about other Medal of Honor recipients and participants in the Battle of la Drang. That battle was the first major battle between the U.S. Army and the VietCong and was the battle that was featured in the movie ‘We Were Soldiers Once … And Young’. You can read about some of the other Soldiers that were in that battle: Ed W. Freeman, Bruce P. Crandall and Rick Rescorla who distinguished himself in the Battle of la Drang and died in the World Trade Center Terrorist Attacks of 9/11/2001.

Tonight I ran across this article on Walter Marm and wanted to draw your attention to him as we have others here at Blue Star Chronicles.

Walter Joseph Marm, Jr. was born in Washington, Pennsylvania on November 20, 1941. He joined the United States Army as a Second Lieutenant and subsequently was sent to Vietnam as part of the Company A, 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile). He was awarded the Medal of Honor on December 19, 1966 for his actions during the Battle of la Drang on November 14, 1965.

Medal of Honor

You can read his citation here.

Second Lieutenant Marm recovered from his injuries and was promoted to First Lieutenant. He ultimately retired from the military as a Colonel in 1995.

Below are photos of Walter Marm and videos of the Battle of la Drang.

You might also be interested in another battle that happened a few days before the Battle of la Drang, on the 8th of November 1965.

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