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  • A Video Worth the 7 Minutes of Your Time

    David Botti | Oct 22, 2007 01:25 PM
    An Army soldier was impaled by a Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) in Afghanistan last year—but the warhead never went off. The Military Times has a remarkable video interviewing the soldier, Specialist Channing Moss, the doctor who operated on him unsure if/when the RPG would explode, and the explosives expert on hand to deal with the warhead.

    Moss was later treated at Walter Reed.

    From the accompanying print story:

    Moss was nearly dead as the Black Hawk landed at the battalion aid station at Orgun-E, about 20 miles from the site of the ambush.

    Collier signaled wildly over the roar of the helicopter’s engines to alert the aid-station staff that this was no ordinary patient.

    Oh recalled that it wasn’t apparent just how delicate the situation was until they began cutting away Moss’s combat uniform and unraveling all the gauze bandages.

    When he saw the tail fin of the RPG round, he yelled, “everybody get out!”

    “I had never even seen an RPG before, but I figured anything with a rod and fins on it had to be a rocket of some kind.”

    Oh asked for volunteers to stay in the operating room and help him save Moss’s life. Several soldiers raised their hands.


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  • In the News: 10.22.07

    David Botti | Oct 22, 2007 09:50 AM

    As the Iraq war continues towards the half-decade mark, the New York Times looks at children of fallen soldiers who were barely old enough to remember their fathers' deaths.  Now they're growing up and asking questions. [NYT]

    “As 3-year-olds, they have a pragmatic, concrete concept,” said Joanne M. Steen, co-author of “Military Widow: A Survival Guide.” “They’ll say matter-of-factly, ‘My daddy died.’ But at significant points in their lives, they go back and revisit this, and it’s really hard on the surviving spouse. They end up telling the story over and over again of how Daddy died at each stage.”

     



    A new report says vehicles are the number one accidental killer of soldiers. [Army Times]


    Former American POWs of WWII and Korea were asked about the validity of using torture in wartime.  Most denounced it, but added under certain circumstances the answers may not be black and white. [AP]

    "He doesn't want detainees killed or bones broken, but 'if we can put a little pain on one of them and get the information that we need that maybe might save lives, we need to do that.'"


    Brown University held a symposium about media coverage of Iraq, and how it connects, or disconnects the American public from the war.  According to a military public affairs officer present at the meeting, "...more than 700 reporters were embedded with U.S. troops in Iraq in 2003.  By 2005, there were about 20 embedded journalists." [Providence Journal]


    The South Florida Sun-Sentinel looks at how the lure of a quick path to citizenship through the military leads many young immigrants to enlist.

    "As of May, 21,521 noncitizens were on active duty in the military, according to data from the Department of Defense. The number peaked at 37,000 in 2003, months after President Bush signed an executive order in 2002 calling for the military to expedite the citizenship process for military personnel. It cut the average waiting period to six months, down from an average of five years."


    John Bruhns, a prominent activist and Iraq vet leaves the Americans Against Escalation in Iraq anti-war campaign, citing frustration with the legislative process and some of AAEI's tactics. [The Hill]

    “I feel I’ve done all I can,” Bruhns said. “I can’t continue to attack members of Congress to pass legislation that isn’t going to get passed.”
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