Metzger on her way back to States
Stars and Stripes - European edition
Friday, September 15, 2006
Air Force Maj. Jill Metzger, who went missing for three days in Kyrgyzstan after reportedly being kidnapped, is on her way home after spending four days in Germany receiving medical tests and evaluations.
The Air Force took Metzger from Landstuhl Regional Medical Center to Ramstein Air Base, where she boarded a U.S.-bound military cargo plane on Thursday afternoon, said Maj. Krista Carlos, a spokeswoman for U.S. Air Forces in Europe. Her final destination is her home station at Moody Air Force Base, Ga., where she will meet her husband.
She has not talked to the media since she reported being kidnapped while on a shopping trip to the capital of Bishkek.
While she was at [Landstuhl Regional Medical Center], her focus was to heal and recover and [she] really asked that everybody let her do that, Carlos said on Thursday.
She reportedly told investigators that someone stuffed an object in her jeans and told her it was a bomb before she was kidnapped on Sept. 5. Police in Kyrgyzstan have told reporters in recent media reports that Metzgers quick departure from the country hampered their investigation. They also reportedly said Metzger gave confusing accounts of her ordeal, leading to speculation over what happened.
http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=40059
By Lisa Burgess - Stars and Stripes Mideast edition
Friday, September 15, 2006
ARLINGTON, Va. The war in Afghanistan has had one positive effect for NATO, according to the alliances deputy chief of transformation, U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. James Soligan: It has given members a sense of urgency and fostered changes in equipment and interoperability that otherwise might have taken years to institute.
I think there is a sense of urgency. I think there is a sense of commitment to provide the operational commanders [in Afghanistan] with the capabilities they need that help streamline both decision processes, funding and implementation, he said.
That urgency is good for NATO, Soligan said. Its accelerating the deliveries of some [new] capabilities, based on operational needs.
One example of an accelerated program is Friendly Force Tracker Afghanistan, a tactical command and control system that allows NATO forces to talk to each other, Soligan said.
A capability that was not part of the dialogue two years ago has now been funded by NATO and will be in theater by November or December, Soligan said.
The alliance is also funding counter-improvised explosive device improvements, as well as hoping to guide national investments in those areas, Soligan said, again, driven by the operation requirement on a much shorter time line than the normal process that would likely have taken place if, in fact, Afghanistan was not happening.
Another example is NATOs discussions about unmanned aerial vehicle capabilities, he said.
I believe, ultimately, the [UAV] implementation capability will be much quicker, because it is being forced by the operational requirements of NATOs Afghanistan mission, instead of being just a theory or a discussion going through a normal process, Soligan said.
Soligan was among the participants in the first annual NATO chiefs of transformation conference, which was held in Norfolk, Va., from Sept. 11-13 at the headquarters of the alliances Supreme Allied Commander for Transformation, U.S. Air Force Gen. Lance Smith.
For troops who are in Iraq or Afghanistan today, NATO transformation meetings like the one that Soligan and other participants just attended are more than just a lot of people sitting around and showing each other PowerPoint slides, he said.
For folks are deployed, [looking at all the coalition] capabilities that are brought into theater [that are not as] effective at working together as we would like, the real goal is to talk about how we can make those capabilities more effective in supporting their operations today, and establishing those standards they need to be effective for the future, Soligan said.