This is from the October 20, 2003 program.
This is about the U.N. Security Council resolution that was passed unanimously a few weeks ago.
(I won’t try to pretend to know what the resolution actually accomplished. If somebody has a link to the damn thing, please email it to me, and I’ll post it here. The U.N. Security Council website is a little behind schedule apparently, and I can get its documents to manifest themselves in my browser anyway. Thanks.)
Daily Show On The U.N. Security Council Resolution (Small – 6 MB)
The Daily Show (The best news on television.)
Category Archives: The Shrub War
Daily Show On The Donald Rumsfeld Memo
From Jon:
“This week, a harsh report of America’s policy has surfaced, accusing our defense department of failing to adapt fast enough to emerging threats and questioning if America’s armed forces are even up to the task. In response, an angry Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld responded by saying, ‘I wrote what?!’ “
This is from the October 23, 2003 program.
Daily Show On Rummy’s Memo (Small – 5 MB)
The Daily Show (The best news on television.)
Daily Show: Mess-o-potamia Update – October 27, 2003
This is from the Monday, October 27, 2003 program and details the bombings on Paul Wolfowitz’ hotel, and, oh, the irony of it all.
Mess-o-potamia Update – October 27, 2003 (Small – 8 MB)
The Daily Show (The best news on television.)
Rob Courddry On The Shrub’s Blaming The Navy For “The Sign”
This clip was shown after this clip on October 29, 2003.
In this clip, Rob Courddry probes further into the familiar pattern of the Shrub’s blaming his mistakes on other agencies he, theoretically, has complete control over as Commander In Chief.
For example, it was the CIA’s fault about the faulty WMD intelligence that was included in his State Of The Union Address. Now it’s the Navy’s fault for following orders and hanging up the “Mission Accomplished” sign at his May 1 press conference.
Rob Courddry On “The Sign” (Small – 6 MB)
(Below: What the sign said.)
(Below: What they meant for the sign to say.)
The Daily Show (The best news on television.)
Jon Stewart On The Shrub’s Blaming The Navy For “The Sign”
This clip from the October 29, 2003 show has the Shrub answering questions at his latest press conference (Oct 28-29, 2003 or so), where he talks rather vaguely about “terrorists” who are responsible for the latest round of suicide bombings in Iraq.
(This clip goes with this clip.)
What the Shrub says, and what his press secretary clarifies later, is that it’s the Navy’s fault for misrepresenting that the war was over with the “Mission Accomplished” sign. (Despite the fact that all the Navy did was put up the sign that the White House printed up and brought to the event.)
Jon Stewart:
“The White House is basically saying they can’t be held responsible for what the Navy does with a sign that they made and brought to the ship.”
Here’s the little clip about “the sign”:
The Shrub Blaming the Navy for “The Sign” (Small – 4 MB)
Here’s the complete clip of this bit:
Jon Stewart On The President’s Latest Press Conference (Small – 11 MB)
The Daily Show (The best news on television.)
Hullaballo Over “Mission Accomplished” Banner – Shrub Says It Wasn’t His Idea, Sorry For The Miscommunication — White House Press Release Suggests Otherwise
As if the “Mission Accomplished” banner was the only thing that implied “Mission Accomplished,” during the Shrub’s memorable flight suit May 1 extravaganza.
Oh you thought I meant the mission was accomplished. I just meant a mission was accomplished: The mission of the USS Abraham Lincoln, of course… Sorry to give the wrong impression.
Gee, you don’t think anyone got that wrong impression because the White House sent out a press release that said President Bush Announces Combat Operations in Iraq Have Ended or anything, do you?
Bush Disavows ‘Mission Accomplished’ Link
In The Guardian UK.
When it was brought up again Tuesday at a news conference, Bush said, “The ‘Mission Accomplished’ sign, of course, was put up by the members of the USS Abraham Lincoln, saying that their mission was accomplished.”
“I know it was attributed somehow to some ingenious advance man from my staff – they weren’t that ingenious, by the way.”
That explanation hadn’t surfaced during months of questions to White House officials about proclaiming the mission in Iraq successful while violence continued.
After the news conference, a White House spokeswoman said the Lincoln’s crew asked the White House to have the sign made. The White House asked a private vendor to produce the sign, and the crew put it up, said the spokeswoman. She said she did not know who paid for the sign.
Later, a Pentagon spokesman called The Associated Press to reiterate that the banner was the crew’s idea.
Injured American Soldiers Claim They Have “Never Been So Treated Like Dirt”
Just to clarify again — These stories are not about our soldiers not getting proper medical treatment on the front lines. They are about Shrub War Veterans not getting propers medical treatment upon returning home.
But wait! It’s worse than that. Upon re-reading the article, I see that many of these soldiers had existing health problems that should have prevented them from being deployed in the first place. I also see that many of them were forced to reside in substandard housing, and received injuries from incidents like the roof falling in on their own barracks, rather than in active combat.
I hope the citizens of our armed forces can remember this experience long enough to vote the Shrub out next year.
By Mark Benjamin for UPI.
“I joined to serve my country,” said Cpl. Waymond Boyd, 34. He served in Iraq with the National Guard’s 1175 Transportation Company. He has been in medical hold since the end of July.
“It doesn’t make any sense to go over there and risk your life and come back to this,” Boyd said. “It ain’t fair and it ain’t right. I used to be patriotic.” He has served the military for 15 years.
Boyd’s knee and wrist injuries were severe enough that he was evacuated to Germany at the end of July and then sent to Fort Knox. His medical records show doctor appointments around four weeks apart. He said it took him almost two months to get a cast for his wrist, which is so weak he can’t lift 5 pounds or play with his two children. He is taking painkilling drugs and walks with a cane with some difficulty.
Many soldiers at Fort Knox said their injuries and illnesses occurred in Iraq. Some said the rigors of war exacerbated health problems that probably should have prevented them from going in the first place.
Boyd’s X-rays appear to show the damage to his wrist but also bone spurs in his feet that are noted in his medical record before being deployed, but the records say “no health problems noted” before he left…
Sgt. Buena Montgomery has breathing problems since serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom. She said she has been able to get to doctors but worries about many others who have not.
“The Army did not prepare for the proper medical care for the soldiers that they knew were going to come back from this war,” Montgomery said. “Now the Army needs to step up to the plate and fix this problem.”
In nearly two dozen interviews conducted over three days, soldiers also described substandard living conditions — though they said conditions had improved recently.
A UPI photographer working on this story without first having cleared his presence with base public affairs officials was detained for several hours for questioning Tuesday and then released. He was told he would need an Army escort for any further visits to the base. He returned to the base accompanied by an Army escort on Wednesday.
This reporter also was admonished that he had to be accompanied by an Army public affairs escort when on base. The interviews had been conducted without the presence of an escort.
After returning from Iraq, some soldiers spent about eight weeks in Spartan, dilapidated World War II-era barracks with leaking roofs, animal infestations and no air conditioning in the Kentucky heat.
“I arrived here and was placed in the World War II barracks,” one soldier wrote in an internal Fort Knox survey of the conditions. “On the 28th of August we moved out. On 30 Aug. the roof collapsed. Had we not moved, someone would be dead,” that soldier wrote…
“They are treating us like second-class citizens,” said Spc. Brian Smith, who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom until Aug. 16 and said he is having trouble seeing doctors at Fort Knox. The Army evacuated him through Germany for stomach problems, among other things. “My brother wants to get in (the military). I am now discouraging him from doing it,” Smith said.
“I have never been so disrespected in my military career,” said Lt. Jullian Goodrum, who has been in the Army Reserve for 16 years. His health problems do not appear to be severe — injured wrists — but he said the medical situation at Fort Knox is bad. He said he waited a month for therapy. “I have never been so treated like dirt.”
More On The Missing 4 Billion Of Iraqi Rebuilding Money
Iraq Rebuilding Cash ‘Goes Missing’
By Bill Jacobs for The Scotsman.
A new Iraq scandal erupted today as a report claimed billions of dollars earmarked for rebuilding the country have vanished after being handed to the United States-controlled governing body in Baghdad.
At least $5 billion (
4 Billion Dollars Missing From Iraq Rebuilding Fund
Wealthy Donors Asked to Dig Deep for Iraq Rebuild
By Alexander Smith for Reuters.
Hours earlier, a leading British aid agency accused Iraq’s U.S. and British administrators of failing to account for at least $4 billion meant to go toward rebuilding the country…
AID GROUP SAYS $4 BILLION MISSING
Britain’s Christian Aid said the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) had not publicly detailed cash flows since ousting Saddam Hussein in April.
All but $1 billion of more than $5 billion of Iraqi funds had disappeared into a “financial black hole.” It said the figures were a conservative estimate of oil revenues collected by the CPA since the war, prewar oil revenues from the U.N. “oil-for-food” account and seized assets of Saddam’s government.
The U.S.-led CPA has denied it has failed to account for the money.
Christian Aid said failure to account for the money would fuel suspicion that funds were going to U.S. firms given contracts to rebuild the country.
Five Part Series Of Interviews With Several High Ranking Soldiers On The Front Lines
Here it is — straight from the soldiers. What’s going on “over there.”
I haven’t even read it all yet, but it looks worthy of passing on.
I may write about this in more detail if I have time. But, for now, with everything else going on right now, I just didn’t want to space on making this available to you in a timely fashion.
Scoop has released a five part interview (Part 1 – with an enlisted man that has over 20 years in the service, Part 2 with a sergeant first class, Part 3 with a very recently disillusioned sergeant, Part 4, Part 5 – no link for 5 yet) with soldiers over in Iraq.
Here’s a quote from part one: