Monthly Archives: March 2010

Going Big

Well, if you were on the fence about attending the Milblog Conf, you might want to seriously consider scraping up the dough. Saving Abel has agreed to do a short acoustic set after the cocktail get together on Friday evening.

They are huge supporters of the troops and I personally love their music.

The wonderful sponsors here at Youserved, VA Mortgage Center, are also sponsoring the conference and you should come out and meet at least one of the guys who works for this great company!

Rock on and see you in April!!

Korea Attacks Japan!!

The email went out this weekend to military computers across the force:

Office of the Director of National Intelligence INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

(U//FOUO) DPRK has carried out nuclear missile attack on Japan

06 March 2010

(U//FOUO) Prepared by Defense Intelligence Agency

(U//FOUO) Today, March 06, 2010 at 11.46 AM local time (UTC/GMT -5 hours), US seismographic stations recorded seismic activity in the area of Okinawa Island (Japan). According to National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea has carried out an average range missile attack with use of nuclear warhead. The explosion caused severe destructions in the northern part of the Okinawa island. Casualties among the personnel of the US military base are being estimated at the moment.

(U//FOUO) In connection with the occurred events, it is necessary for the personnel of the services listed below to be ready for immediate mobilization:

CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY:
OFFICE OF INTELLIGENCE AND COUNTERINTELLIGENCE

DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY:
OFFICE OF INTELLIGENCE AND ANALYSIS

DEPARTMENT OF STATE:
BUREAU OF INTELLIGENCE AND RESEARCH

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY:
OFFICE OF INTELLIGENCE AND ANALYSIS

DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION:
OFFICE OF NATIONAL SECURITY INTELLIGENCE

FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
NATIONAL SECURITY BRANCH

NATIONAL GEOSPATIAL-INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

NATIONAL RECONNAISSANCE OFFICE

NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE

UNITED STATES ARMY

UNITED STATES COAST GUARD

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS

UNITED STATES NAVY

The emails appear to have come from the Director of National Intelligence and the Defense Intelligence Agency. I got four emails, two from each “source.” After the text is a link for more information that is a malicious virus and phishing attempt.

When I first got it, I thought, “I didn’t hear about this in the news.” So, I did a Google search. Surely, Korea launching an attack on Japan would put the military on high alert. Well, now we know.

If you get an email with similar language, do NOT open it. Delete it immediately, especially if you’re on a government computer.

Army Quality Review Targets E-9s to Boot

Stars and Stripes|by Nancy Montgomery

HEIDELBERG, Germany — The Army recently asked 45 of its Soldiers in the highest enlisted rank to retire for substandard performance, past criminal convictions, problems with alcohol, fraternization or sexual harassment in their recent pasts.

Of the 45 sergeants major whose records were flagged under the newly reinstituted Qualitative Management Program, 28 complied, putting in their retirement paperwork and quietly fading away.

But 15 fought it, arguing that they were valuable Army assets despite any previous incidents. A panel of their peers usually agreed: 12 of the 15 were allowed to remain on active duty. The remaining three were forced to retire, however.

Two of the original 45 cases that were flagged were deferred because investigations were still under way.

Lt. Col. Robert Yost, chief of the Army’s enlisted professional development, which deals with promotion, separation and retention policy, said that not all past problems, especially those that were singular events in a long career, deserved forced retirement.
“They might have received a letter of reprimand, say, eight years ago,” he said. “The board, they might have seen a very stellar performance since then.

“No, it’s not a zero-tolerance Army. Folks might trip,” Yost said. Most of the misconduct or poor performance evaluations took place four to seven years ago, he said.
The result seems to contrast with what officials said in August when they announced that after seven years of suspension during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the QMP program was back.

Officials said then that although affected Soldiers could make their arguments to the central promotions board deciding their cases, it wasn’t recommended. “The time to learn and grow from your mistakes has kind of passed,” said Gerald Purcell, a retired sergeant major who helped devise the program.

Yost declined to describe what sorts of misconduct or bad performances were involved in the three cases of the sergeants major forced to retire.

But he said that overall, those flagged usually had more than one negative item in their files, a combination of a general officer letter of reprimand or an Article 15, along with a poor performance evaluation or a relief for cause — sometimes for more than one incident, sometimes for the same one. Failing certain leadership courses was also among the things that would flag a file, but if the sole deficiency was a failure to meet weight standards, the file was not flagged.

The E-9s whose records were flagged were culled from a total of 3,511 that came under review. All had between 20 and 30 years of service and were eligible to retire, and the missteps had occurred while they were E-9s.

All 45 were entitled to an honorable discharge as well as their retirement, medical and other benefits.

Results from last month’s review of the records of some 9,000 master sergeants will be publicly released in three months. After that, 7,000 E-7s, sergeants first class, will undergo the same drill.

The program was brought back, officials said, because it had become increasingly clear that marginal NCOs who previously would have retired to avoid a QMP were no longer doing so without the program in place.

“We know it because the sergeant major of the Army gets notes about incidents and scenarios with senior leaders, incidents of misconduct,” Purcell said. “It’s become more frequent.”


Nebraska Guardsmen perform convoy security in Baghdad

Sgt. Jason Delancey, the assistant convoy commander and a Columbus, Neb., native, Spc. Seth A. Weyeneth, a gunner and a McCook, Neb., native, and Sgt. Clint L. Hay, a truck commander and a Lexington, Neb., native, with the 1195th Transportation company, 41st Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary), perform preventive-maintenance checks and services on a Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected vehicle March 2 at Contingency Operating Base Liberty in Baghdad. The Kearney, Neb., unit later went on a convoy security mission to Forward Operating Base Shield to deliver much-needed supplies.

From 13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) Public Affairs

VICTORY BASE COMPLEX, Baghdad – Soldiers from the 1195th Transportation Company, 41st Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) performed a convoy security mission March 2 to Contingency Operating Location Shield to deliver much-needed supplies to the base.

Due to the upcoming elections, convoys to smaller COLs around Baghdad will be scarce, so supplies needed to be delivered on time so COL Shield could sustain its mission through the Iraqi elections period. The 1195th Trans. Co. out of Kearney, Neb., provides convoy security primarily in the Baghdad area and must travel at night due to the Security Agreement. Staff Sgt. Nathan Reicks, the convoy commander for the re-supply mission and a McCook, Neb., native, said they were hauling basic supplies, fuel and ammunition to COL Shield to last them through the elections. “If the mission doesn’t get there, they can’t sustain and might have to close down,” he said. “A lot of these smaller COLs are helping in the training of the Iraqi’s and they need all the supplies they can get.” Reicks said being a convoy commander takes a lot of responsibility.

“You have to be willing to put your neck out there for the guys,” he said. “You are in charge and if anything goes wrong, you are the guy that has to have an answer for it.” Sgt. Clint L. Hay, a gunner and truck commander for the mission, said he has not seen many problems with the people in Baghdad. “Most of our problems are due to the weather,” he said. “A lot of vehicles we escort can’t really take the mud like the military vehicles we have, so we are always there to help them out the best way we can.” Hay, a Lexington, Neb., native, said the deployment has gone by fast. “I think most of us would rather be out on the road staying busy,” he said. Hay said he has enjoyed his time in Iraq and working with the Soldiers in the unit. “Through the good times and bad times, my fellow Soldiers and squad leaders have been there for me,” he said. “They are a great bunch of guys.” Spc. Tyler Lauer, a driver with the 1195th Trans. Co. and a McCook, Neb. native, said he was a food service specialist before the deployment and volunteered for any position on the convoy security team, so certain slots could be filled.

Besides driving, Lauer said he is always checking the roads, looking for possible improvised explosive devices, suspicious people and making sure it is a safe ride for the gunner and the tactical commander of the truck. “Tonight was busy, so we had to be on top of our game,” he said. “There was a lot of activity, so I was watching out for people, but mainly watching the other vehicles on the road.” He said the main thing he does while driving in downtown Baghdad is to keep focused on his mission and report anything suspicious to his truck commander. The group has grown together as a team, said Reicks. “That’s very important,” he said. “These guys understand each other’s strengths and weaknesses. Reicks is proud that everyone’s position is interchangeable. “We have multiple people that can lead a convoy and could jump up in the gunner spot or be a driver” he said. “We trained people to work around anything; we don’t have set people at any one position. Everyone knows how to do the other’s job.”


You Can Help! Let’s send 100,000 Care Packages to Troops deployed in Afghanistan this year

Operation Gratitude is at it again! Is there no end to their persistent and tireless efforts to support our troops? I hope not! They do so much, and they want to do more! Let’s see what we can do to help them out! The contest below is sponsored by Pepsi. Operation Gratitude founder and volunteers were on our spouse and family podcast last year. It’s a great organization!

Operation Gratitude’s goals are clear and simple:

  • To put smiles on the faces of our warriors in harm’s way
  • To express to our troops the appreciation of the American people
  • To give every American a way to say “Thank You” to our Military
If they win the $50,000 from this contest, every penny will be used on care packages and postage to send them. It takes a second to vote! It costs you nothing and our guys get a lot in return! Get to voting! They are currently number #9 — let’s make them #1 by Monday!

Obama to request 1.4% pay raise for 2011

I can’t wait to see what kind of raise Congress gives itself in 2011. I can guarantee you it will be a heck of a lot more than the people who sacrifice constantly for this Country. Yes, the Country’s economy is headed toward imminent disaster with the amount of debt we have — but cut Congressional pay and give it to those who work the hardest. Some of our men have had more deployments than Nancy has had botox injections. There’s perspective for you!

Obama to request 1.4% pay raise for 2011

By Karen Jowers – Staff writer
Posted : Sunday Jan 31, 2010 8:38:13 EST

EXCERPT

President Obama will seek a 1.4 percent military pay raise for 2011 as part of his defense budget request that will be unveiled Feb. 1, according to a point paper issued Tuesday by the White House.

If approved by Congress, it would be the smallest annual military pay raise since the birth of the all-volunteer force in 1973, a reflection of the lingering recession’s dampening effect on wage growth and living costs. The next-smallest raise in the volunteer era was a 2 percent increase in 1988.

In contrast, the pay raise for this year, which took effect Jan. 1, was a robust 3.4 percent.

The proposed 2011 raise would match the projected increase in the Employment Cost Index, a Labor Department measurement of private-sector wage growth. For 11 consecutive years, including this year, Congress set annual military raises half a percentage point above the increase in the ECI in order to whittle a perceived gap between average military and private-sector pay that supposedly has existed since 1982 and peaked in 1999. LINK TO ARTICLE

Throw Down Issued to Benefit Soldier’s Angels

The hosts and producer of You Served radio show, CJ, Troy, and Marcus, are issuing a challenge to the MilBlogosphere in a charity fundraising event with bald heads at stake.

Marcus has already lost a bet to shave his head bald from a bet on the second coin!

The new challenge is two-tiered with a third bonus tier added this evening during the You Served radio show.

The first tier is to raise $100 cumulative on the engravable memorial medallions we are auctioning in the You Served eBay Store (http://stores.ebay.com/userved). All proceeds will be donated to Soldiers Angels. The kicker and incentive on that cumulative total is that we have a generous anonymous donor who will donate $1,000 to Soldiers Angels if we can meet that $100 total. In addition to a donation of $1,000, CJ will shave his head along with Marcus! We currently have 2 coins auctioned with a total of $37.50, so we will need to raise $62.50 over the next 4 weeks (including this one). We will put up one coin a week to be auctioned.

The second tier is that if we can meet $250 cumulative total, not only will we garner that $1,000 donation, CJ and Marcus will allow Troy to shave their heads in Washington, DC during the Milblog Conference. It will be video recorded also, for all the listeners and donors to see! Imagine the fun and hilarity THAT would be.

The bonus challenge is if another person or organization donates an addtional $1,000 to the first tier, the Hero Maker Clayton Murwin, a regular listener of our show, will produce an orignal 16×20 military themed oil painting of the person or organization’s choosing!

This challenge is issued to all who enjoy a bit of good fun with a bit of humiliation mixed in. The You Served crew hopes everyone enjoys this bit of excitement for a good cause and that you don’t forget the real reason behind all of this; Soldier’s Angels!

On behalf of the entire You Served Radio Team,
Marcus

Stranger things have happened…

First let me say I am sorry for laying a little low last week. I was very sick for the first few days and then on Thursday of last week I started taking combat Aikido from a retired Special Forces Veteran in town. My butt has been sufficiently kicked in many, many ways for the past week and a half. My upper-respiratory infection is all gone thanks to antibiotics, but my muscles are screaming in pain — which is a good thing.

So, what strange thing has happened? I had a good old-fashioned, nerdy snort-laugh when I got my invitation and materials (maps, local info) for Nate’s graduation from BCT at Ft. Jackson in the mail yesterday. He graduated, what, about 4-months ago? I love it. Ah, what did Blue Star Mother’s do before the invention of the Internet where they could look up information and make to military graduations on time?

Be on the lookout. I have two podcast interviews for our Spouse and Family segment this month. I have one with a tactical defense trainer who talked with me about how a military wife can defend herself if she is caught somewhere without an obvious weapon. What can she do if she hears the dreaded “bump in the night” while her husband is deployed? He gives a lot of great advice.

The next podcast interview will be with Julie Negron of Jenny Spouse — the only cartoon by, for and about military spouses! I will give you the date for both of these broadcasts soon — the first one on self-defense will be within the next couple of days.

A conversation with Jacob McFerren

Who the heck is Jacob McFerren? He’s the political advisor to Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, commander International Security Assistance Force and U.S. Forces Afghanistan. As you know, our military commanders are having to not only conduct military operations, but also standing up peaceful governments in foreign lands that are friendly to the US. For that reason, our Generals need political advisors. This was a pretty good read and I wanted to share it with you so you can see how our commanders on the ground do what they do so successfully.

jacob Mcferren

As the political advisor to the top commander in Afghanistan, Jacob McFerren is responsible for helping foster international relations with the 44 countries that currently make up the coalition forces, both NATO and non-NATO contributing nations. McFerren and General McChrystal, along with the Afghan Minister of Interior and Minister of Defense traveled to Helmand province Feb. 15, where Afghan National Army, alongside U.S. Marine and British forces, are in the midst of a major operation to rid the province of Taliban presence.

Their trip took them to Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital, and to Showa, a village outside the capital, where they reviewed the progress being made during the last two days of the offensive. After meeting with many village representatives and local government members, McFerren was asked to describe the reception they received and the general feeling of the villagers.

When we were walking back from the helicopter, I said to the general, ‘That was good’ and the boss said something was different and I said I think it was the confidence, the confidence you could see in these people, in their eyes. They actually, it looked like they believed. They were seeing Afghan soldiers, Afghan police and Afghan leaders.

McFerren said that the local elders offered not only to help guide Afghan security forces through the villages to show where IED’s [improvised explosive devices] were hidden, but to point out people who didn’t belong and to show them where caches of weapons were hidden.

Essentially what happened was the mid-level and lower-level fighters put their weapons down and tried to melt into the local community. And as we know here in the communities of the Afghans, especially down south, you’re either known or you’re not and if you’re not know to them, you’re a foreigner. That type of decision by the local leaders, by the elders, to provide guides to the Afghan forces is just an incredible gift really to the Afghan leadership in Kabul which is borne about, I think by them seeing with their own eyes.”

One of the most moving scenes from the day for McFerren came when the group went to see where the ANA soldiers had replaced a Taliban flag with the Afghanistan national flag, which is now flying over the village.

The Afghan soldiers were securing the town at every intersection, on the roofs there were Afghan and British soldiers and you could see the partnership there. People started coming out of their homes and coming up to the governor and kissing his hand and putting his hand to their forehead. It was moving the governor incredibly and he said to the police chief, after four years I didn’t think they would recognize me, but not only did they recognize him, they came out to show their respect and to thank him.

Their eyes told a story, the eyes and the smiles; it was incredible walk actually, and it happened not just once, and not just twice, but at almost every block. So you had just on so many levels this obvious outward emoting of confidence of yes, we can do this, which actually we hadn’t seen beforehand so that is what I think is different.”

In addition to the positive response from the local population, McFerren said the cooperation between the ANA and the Afghan National Police was a welcome change from the often tension-filled relationship between the two military organizations.

In the past, at almost every level, there’s been friction between the ANA and the ANP; the ANA being much further along in training, resourcing and respect than the ANP, but there were three different instances that the ANA leader would brief and right behind him was a police member and they were sharing how the ANP would take over the security. There was no sign at all of the past friction we have seen; everyone was sharing in the moment and that what was so incredibly touching. Everyone was sharing in what was a national moment, although there a lot of people who don’t believe that this is a nation because of all the different tribes and ethnic groups. I guess you could have made that same argument about us a long time ago. You’ve got to start somewhere.”

Although this is a positive step forward for the security of the country, McFerren understands that there is much more to be done to build a safe, secure and thriving Afghanistan. Already the area is slowly returning to normal; children playing, people tending to their gardens and herds and traffic in the streets.

We’ve got a long way to go. This is just the beginning. The truth is going to be seen in the international resolve to actually help them build what they need to build and in many instances the Afghan people aren’t certain what they need to build because it’s never been here. They’re going to need a lot of help but it’s not doing it for them it’s doing it with them. It’s going to take a long time but it takes a long time to build especially in a place where nothing has been built prior. That all takes time, all takes resolve and an international resolve to move forward to make things safer.”

Most importantly, McFerren said a permanent Afghan security presence is needed not only in the south but throughout Afghanistan, in order to prevent insurgents from occupying villages and halting economic development.

They did before; they will again, it is their intent to do so. The worst thing we could do right now is to leave; to give them that opportunity. There needs to be a permanent security presence throughout the country. They [ANA] know that the fight isn’t over, but they know they have done something which no one was actually sure that they could, and not only doing, it but doing it well. They know they have a long way to go and they know that this is just the beginning, but they did it. Their own people saw that they did it. This will be huge for them.

This interview was performed by SSgt Sarah Brown, USAF.

VAMC is a sponsor of the 5th Annual Milblog Conference

VAMC continues to recognize the important of milblogs in keeping the public informed of issues that are military related. They started with the creation of this blog, then went on to help sponsor the You Served Radio show, and also have sponsored CJ, Marcus and Troy on several trips to previous milblog conferences and Blog World Expo Conferences. Now they have kicked it up a notch by becoming a major sponsor of this year’s 5th Annual milblog conference.

 

Read the full announcement at http://milblogging.com/index.php?entry=entry100303-043057

 

Not only are they a sponsor at the conference, they are working hard with the You Served Radio Show staff to put on one heck of a Radio show the night of April 8th the night before the conference kicks off. Stay tuned and get the early announcements about what all is planned for the conference by becoming a fan of You Served Blog and Radio at www.facebook.com/youserved.