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Road Kill (Oliver North)
GOPUSA ^ | March 30, 2007 | Oliver North

Posted on 03/29/2007 9:01:06 PM PDT by jazusamo

March 30, 2007

On March 27 the solons of the U.S. Senate voted to assure defeat in Iraq by setting a "date certain" -- one year from now -- for the withdrawal of U.S. forces. As the 50-48 vote was being tallied, 15 British sailors and Royal Marines were being held hostage somewhere in Iran. While the barons of bombast were rushing to the microphones to crow about repudiating this president's failed strategy, U.S. aircraft from two carrier battle groups were screaming into the air over the Persian Gulf. And in a little-noticed footnote that same afternoon, the newswires from Baghdad reported that "a U.S. soldier and a civilian contractor had been killed inside the 'Green Zone' in Baghdad."

In keeping with tradition, the American soldier's next of kin will be notified by his service, his body will be escorted home on an "Angel Flight" and at his funeral, a military honor guard will solemnly present his family with a carefully folded American flag and a Purple Heart Medal on which the profile of George Washington appears. The U.S. civilian contractor, killed by the same "indirect fire" as the U.S. soldier, will be accorded none of these courtesies. She is simply a statistic: the 161st American civilian contractor killed in Iraq since 2003. When I called a friend in Iraq to ask about the circumstances, I was told, "Who cares about the civilian? We're just road kill."

The disparity in how these two American casualties are treated in death may be stark -- but it's nothing new. Civilian contractors have served beside -- and been treated differently than -- the U.S. military since the American Revolution. From 1775 when he arrived in Boston to assume command of the Continental Army, Washington depended on civilian contractors to provide food, weapons, ammunition, transport, armories, engineering, construction, clothing and medical assistance for his troops. Though many of these civilians shared the same hardships and privations as the troops they supported, they were more often criticized than honored by our government.

Modern warfare has made civilian contractors even more essential to our military -- and placed them at higher risk. Three weeks after Pearl Harbor, nearly 100 American civilian construction contractors were killed and wounded standing shoulder-to-shoulder with U.S. Marines and sailors defending Wake Island. When the tiny garrison was overwhelmed on Dec. 23, 1941, more than 1,000 contractors became prisoners of the Rising Sun and scores were subsequently worked to death and massacred by their captors. None of those who died received so much as a Purple Heart.

By the time I arrived in Vietnam in 1968, tens of thousands of American civilians were backing our efforts on the battlefield. My tiny platoon outpost overlooking Khe Sanh had a half-dozen American civilians manning sophisticated communications and detection equipment. At Con Thien, our infantry battalion was supported by U.S. civilian "tech reps" who maintained and operated fire control radars, ran generators and repaired everything from sensors to heavy equipment. One of the most famous photographs of the Vietnam War's ignominious end was an American civilian contractor's UH-1 "Huey" helicopter evacuating desperate Vietnamese refugees from the top of 22 Gia Long Street, a half mile from the U.S. Embassy.

Today's globe-spanning war on terror -- and a much smaller U.S. military to fight it -- place even greater burdens on civilian contractors. In Afghanistan, Iraq and Kuwait, more than 350 U.S. companies and nearly 100,000 American civilians are directly engaged in supporting U.S. and coalition efforts. In Iraq, civilian contractors man and protect more than 900 convoys a month delivering food, water, clothing, fuel, weapons, ammunition and equipment to the new Iraqi police and army. Nearly all major maintenance is performed by civilian contractors, including that for U.S. forces.

On each of my eight trips to Iraq reporting on U.S. combat units for FOX News, I have eaten food prepared by these civilian contractors, bathed in and drank the water they supplied, ridden in vehicles they had armored and communicated with equipment they had installed. In northern Iraq, I documented American contractors destroying millions of tons of Saddam's ordnance so that it wouldn't fall into the wrong hands. In Fallujah I saw the bridge where the mutilated bodies of four civilian contractors were hung by Al Qaeda in March 2004. And on every trip I've seen well-armed civilians from private security companies -- called PSCs -- protecting diplomats, sensitive installations, oil pipelines, news bureaus, Iraqi government officials and even senior U.S. military officers.

Though Gen. David Petraeus testified at his confirmation hearing on Jan. 23 that he was "secured by contract security in my last tour there," and described the PSCs as essential to his strategy for victory, he appears to have changed his mind. Last week the Maliki government issued regulations -- enforced by the U.S. military -- stripping weapons from all civilian contractors unless they have a new permit issued by the Ministry of the Interior (MOI). The Catch-22 in all of this is that the MOI has yet to issue any new permits.

Lawrence T. Peter, director of the Private Security Association of Iraq, says that the new regulation "disarms virtually all PSC personnel not working directly for the U.S. government and prevents any coalition civilian traveling through Baghdad from legally carrying a weapon." He added, "we now have American troops disarming American civilians. It just got a whole lot more dangerous to be a reporter, a reconstruction worker or a coalition diplomat in Iraq. The terrorists must love this."

Road kill, anyone?

-----------

Oliver North is the host of "War Stories" on the FOX News Channel.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: civiliancontractors; contractors; iraqwar; north; olivernorth
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1 posted on 03/29/2007 9:01:07 PM PDT by jazusamo
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To: 2rightsleftcoast; abner; ACAC; Arkinsaw; aumrl; bboop; Beck_isright; Belleview; Ben Hecks; ...
*PING*
OLIVER NORTH

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Photo credit: Freeper Jen’s Mom’s daughter with Ollie!

Recent columns
Tied In Knots
It Was Easier In Hanoi
Latin Liberty

Please FReepmail me if you would like to be added to, or removed from, the Oliver North ping list...

2 posted on 03/29/2007 9:05:05 PM PDT by jazusamo (http://warchronicle.com/TheyAreNotKillers/DefendOurMarines.htm)
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To: jazusamo
With all the hoohah about the movie "300" one must ask who is our Leonidas?

Darius and his son Xerses assembled armies to conquer and become rulers of the "whole world". 2500 years later we face the same threat from the same region.

So Rosie draws a parallel between Tonkin and the Twin Towers attack. She is a Mega-Idiot!

3 posted on 03/29/2007 9:19:21 PM PDT by Young Werther ( and Julius Ceasar said, "quae cum ita sunt.")
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To: Young Werther
She is a Mega-Idiot!

LOL!! That is an understatement.

4 posted on 03/29/2007 9:27:32 PM PDT by jazusamo (http://warchronicle.com/TheyAreNotKillers/DefendOurMarines.htm)
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To: Young Werther
one must ask who is our Leonidas?

No one, I hope. He and his 300 and a bunch more who stood with them all died. Leonidas had the honor of having his head chopped off and paraded on a spike.

Me, I'm with Patton. Let the other poor b**tard die for HIS country."

5 posted on 03/29/2007 9:34:15 PM PDT by patriciaruth (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1562436/posts)
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To: Young Werther

Rosie is a mountain of trailer trash whose single oriface should only be aimed at a toilet. She is too disgusting to be considered a human and there isn't an animal alive that would want to mate such a beast. Her only value on earth is that she is the world's largest barking @sshole, which is some distinction. I would spend more money to watch dog doo dry in the sun than watch her show...did God put her on earth to exemplify what hell is like?


6 posted on 03/29/2007 9:35:31 PM PDT by Stayfree (FLUSH HILLARY CALENDARS ARE THE BEST WAY TO RID US OF THE CLINTONS!!!)
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To: All

Colonel North is correct in saying our civilian contractors should be honored.


7 posted on 03/29/2007 9:49:53 PM PDT by jazusamo (http://warchronicle.com/TheyAreNotKillers/DefendOurMarines.htm)
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To: Stayfree

She speaks to Hitlery's biggest demographic, high school dropouts. They don't have the info or reasoning ability to defend themselves. They don't get cable.


8 posted on 03/29/2007 10:01:54 PM PDT by ClaireSolt (Have you have gotten mixed up in a mish-masher?)
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To: jazusamo

Nice words from North. I've been there, done that - 14 years as a civilian contractor and there are times when you're treated lower than dog dirt. And times when you aren't. But without going into details - if you're in the field and designated "essential personnel" you're in for the ride and you'd better never get caught because you're dead meat if you are. Makes life interesting.


9 posted on 03/29/2007 10:04:19 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: jazusamo

Can't we draft Ollie North for President?


10 posted on 03/29/2007 10:06:14 PM PDT by Prost1 (Fair and Unbiased as always!)
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To: Billthedrill

Ollie North never ceases to amaze me. He understands and recognizes everyone that's doing their jobs whether it be military, civilian or Iraqi's.


11 posted on 03/29/2007 10:11:08 PM PDT by jazusamo (http://warchronicle.com/TheyAreNotKillers/DefendOurMarines.htm)
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To: jazusamo

save


12 posted on 03/29/2007 10:11:18 PM PDT by Eagles6 (Dig deeper, more ammo.)
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To: Prost1

I wish we could, he'd get my vote.


13 posted on 03/29/2007 10:12:36 PM PDT by jazusamo (http://warchronicle.com/TheyAreNotKillers/DefendOurMarines.htm)
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To: jazusamo

bump


14 posted on 03/29/2007 10:47:51 PM PDT by Christian4Bush (Too bad these leftist advocates for abortion didn't practice what they preach on themselves.)
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To: jazusamo
"Colonel North is correct in saying our civilian contractors should be honored."

I'm betting most of them just wish they could be armed! (Legally anyways.)

That's just frickin' ridiculous.

15 posted on 03/29/2007 11:05:56 PM PDT by geopyg (Don't wish for peace, pray for Victory.)
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To: Prost1
Can't we draft Ollie North for President?

HEAR HEAR!!

And I want Michael Reagan (the adopted one) as VP
16 posted on 03/29/2007 11:06:27 PM PDT by do the dhue (DEM ARE RATS!!!!!)
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To: Allegra; Millee; carlr; PaulaB; Maximus of Texas; EX52D; ontap
Though Gen. David Petraeus testified at his confirmation hearing on Jan. 23 that he was "secured by contract security in my last tour there," and described the PSCs as essential to his strategy for victory, he appears to have changed his mind. Last week the Maliki government issued regulations -- enforced by the U.S. military -- stripping weapons from all civilian contractors unless they have a new permit issued by the Ministry of the Interior (MOI). The Catch-22 in all of this is that the MOI has yet to issue any new permits.

Lawrence T. Peter, director of the Private Security Association of Iraq, says that the new regulation "disarms virtually all PSC personnel not working directly for the U.S. government and prevents any coalition civilian traveling through Baghdad from legally carrying a weapon." He added, "we now have American troops disarming American civilians. It just got a whole lot more dangerous to be a reporter, a reconstruction worker or a coalition diplomat in Iraq. The terrorists must love this."


Gadzooks, this burns me up! Have we lost all common sense?
17 posted on 03/29/2007 11:31:17 PM PDT by Bender2 (Sen. Teddy Kennedy is still at large... and getting larger. - Ann Coulter)
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To: jazusamo
I'm a civilian in Colorado. A new characteristic is manifested in my personality since the ceasefire with Hezbollah and the election of the quitters and impeachers: cynicism. I've been saying, "I don't care," in response to these disappointing events as a way to protect my emotional and mental health; as opposed to worrying and getting worked up over the knowledge of things I have no control over. I voted. I am disappointed. So after the election in 2006, I purchased a firearm for the first time in my life. And every time I hear more bad news, I buy more ammo. The jihad is coming closer, and I don't trust my pacifist nation to keep me safe. What happened to the Byzantine Empire can happen to America.

Here are my recent bumper sticker designs.


18 posted on 03/29/2007 11:54:16 PM PDT by conservativeimage
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To: jazusamo; Bender2
The disparity in how these two American casualties are treated in death may be stark -- but it's nothing new. Civilian contractors have served beside -- and been treated differently than -- the U.S. military since the American Revolution. From 1775 when he arrived in Boston to assume command of the Continental Army, Washington depended on civilian contractors to provide food, weapons, ammunition, transport, armories, engineering, construction, clothing and medical assistance for his troops. Though many of these civilians shared the same hardships and privations as the troops they supported, they were more often criticized than honored by our government.

As usual, Ollie gets it.

A lot of people think we're the scum of the earth, but we don't care. We enjoy supporting the troops in this capacity. We know what we're doing...and the troops seem to appreciate it.

19 posted on 03/29/2007 11:59:56 PM PDT by Allegra (Hey! Quiet Down Out There!)
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To: LFOD; BroncosFan; Justa; Tinman; Eagle Eye

Ping!


20 posted on 03/30/2007 12:02:31 AM PDT by Allegra (Hey! Quiet Down Out There!)
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