Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Wire: Leading Defense Senator Says No Veto Anticipated on F-22, Engine

Off the Wire

Off the Wire:

WASHINGTON, July 7, 2009 -- Newswire services this afternoon reported that Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that he did not foresee a veto over the authorized funds for seven more Lockheed Martin F-22s and for a second Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) engine produced by General Electric and Rolls Royce.

The Pentagon did not request any funds for either program for its 2010 budget.

"I do not foresee a veto on those two issues," Levin told reporters on Tuesday. In a recent statement of administration policy, the Office of Management and Budget singled out those two programs as issues prompting a veto recommendation to the president, The Hill newspaper reported.

The Hill noted the following details:

Levin said President Obama will likely receive a 2010 defense authorization bill with which he will agree 98 percent. Obama would have to find issues of "fundamental principle" to veto the defense bill, Levin said, casting doubt that the F-22 and the JSF engine would be such issues.

The F-22 and the engine "are matters of great concern" and they are only two of about 20 big issues, Levin said. There are another “16 or 18 issues that we agree with the president,” he added.

Levin and committee ranking member John McCain (R-Ariz.) did not support authorizing more funds for seven more F-22s in 2010. But Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), in whose state Lockheed builds the planes, won narrow approval (13-11) for an amendment he offered during the committee’s closed mark up of the 2010 defense authorization bill.
The defense authorization bill could come up on the Senate floor as early as this week.

The Hill said that Levin supports funding for a second JSF engine while McCain does not.

(Report from newswire sources.)

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US Air Force Confirms Cases of H1N1 (Swine Flu) in Elmendorf Community

News in Balance
News from the U.S. Air Force.

News in Balance:

ELMENDORF AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska, July 7, 2009 -- Officials from the Alaska State Public Health Laboratory and Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine Laboratory confirmed several cases of 2009 H1N1 influenza virus in the community here July 6.

The patients did not require hospitalization and have made full recoveries.

These cases have had no impact on operations at Elmendorf Air Force Base. With a growing number of cases of H1N1 flu in the Anchorage area, it is expected that there will be cases in the military community.

"Here in Alaska, we're taking the necessary precautions to ensure military members, civilian employees and their families are safeguarded from this disease," said Col. Paul Friedrichs, the 3rd Medical Group, commander. "If personnel are experiencing symptoms, which include fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, or other symptoms that are similar to those of common flu, they should contact their health care provider."

(Report from a U.S. Air Force news release.)

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Pentagon Identifies Navy Casualty (OEF)

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, July 7, 2009 -- The following news release made available Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement identifying a casualty:
The Department of Defense announced today the death of a sailor who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

Petty Officer Second Class Tony Michael Randolph, 22, of Henryetta, Okla. died July 6 in an improvised explosive device attack on his convoy in northern Afghanistan. Randolph was assigned as an individual augmentee to Combined Security Transition Command - Afghanistan.
(Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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Combat Camera Video: US Marines Conduct Water Operations

video

NOTE: News readers click here to watch the video.

Focus On Defense:

WASHINGTON, July 7, 2009 -- Embedded above is a video package about U.S. Marines conducting water operations during a two day long training evolution. )Produced by Lance Cpl. Eugenio Montanez, 1st Marine Division. Length: 00:02:09.)

COMBAT CAMERA More Military Imagery on THE TENSION

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Photo Essay: US Navy's New Littoral Combat Ship Independence (LCS 2)

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GULF OF MEXICO (July 2, 2009) The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) underway during builder's trials. Builder's trials are the first opportunity for the shipbuilder and the U.S. Navy to operate the ship underway, and provide an opportunity to test and correct issues before acceptance trials. (Photo courtesy Dennis Griggs General Dynamics.)

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GULF OF MEXICO (July 2, 2009) The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) underway during builder's trials. Builder's trials are the first opportunity for the shipbuilder and the U.S. Navy to operate the ship underway, and provide an opportunity to test and correct issues before acceptance trials. (Photo courtesy Dennis Griggs General Dynamics.)

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GULF OF MEXICO (July 2, 2009) The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) underway during builder's trials. Builder's trials are the first opportunity for the shipbuilder and the U.S. Navy to operate the ship underway, and provide an opportunity to test and correct issues before acceptance trials. (Photo courtesy Dennis Griggs General Dynamics.)

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MOBILE, Ala. (July 2, 2009) The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) prepares for builder's trials from the Austal USA shipbuilding facility in Mobile, Ala. Builder's trials is the first opportunity for the shipbuilder and the U.S. Navy to operate the ship underway, and provides an opportunity to test and correct issues prior to acceptance trials. (Photo courtesy Dave Hinds General Dynamics.)

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GULF OF MEXICO (July 2, 2009) The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) underway during builder's trials. Builder's trials is the first opportunity for the shipbuilder and the U.S. Navy to operate the ship underway, and provides an opportunity to test and correct issues prior to acceptance trials, and will include demonstration to the Navy's Board of Inspection and Survey (INSURV). (Photo courtesy Dennis Griggs General Dynamics.)

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MOBILE, Ala. (July 2, 2009) The Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) Independence (LCS 2), the U. S. Navy's first trimaran littoral combat ship, departs Mobile, Ala. to begin builder's sea trials in the Gulf of Mexico July 2, 2009. LCS is a fast, agile, focused-mission ship designed to defeat asymmetric "anti-access" threats such as mines, quiet diesel submarines and fast surface craft. The 417-foot Independence is designed and built by the General Dynamics Littoral Combat Ship team. Builder's trials test the vessel's propulsion, communications, navigation and core mission systems, as well as all related support systems. Following the completion of builder's trials, Independence will prepare for acceptance trials that will be conducted by the U.S. Navy's Board of Inspection and Survey later this summer. Independence will be outfitted with reconfigurable payloads, called mission packages, which can be changed out quickly. These mission packages focus on three mission areas: mine counter measures, surface warfare and anti-submarine warfare. Independence is scheduled to be delivered to the Navy later this year and will be home ported in San Diego, Calif. (Photo courtesy of General Dynamics.)

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MOBILE, Ala. (July 2, 2009) The Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) Independence (LCS 2), the U. S. Navy's first trimaran littoral combat ship, departs Mobile, Ala. to begin builder's sea trials in the Gulf of Mexico July 2, 2009. LCS is a fast, agile, focused-mission ship designed to defeat asymmetric "anti-access" threats such as mines, quiet diesel submarines and fast surface craft. The 417-foot Independence is designed and built by the General Dynamics Littoral Combat Ship team. Builder's trials test the vessel's propulsion, communications, navigation and core mission systems, as well as all related support systems. Following the completion of builder's trials, Independence will prepare for acceptance trials that will be conducted by the U.S. Navy's Board of Inspection and Survey later this summer. Independence will be outfitted with reconfigurable payloads, called mission packages, which can be changed out quickly. These mission packages focus on three mission areas: mine counter measures, surface warfare and anti-submarine warfare. Independence is scheduled to be delivered to the Navy later this year and will be home ported in San Diego, Calif. (Photo courtesy of General Dynamics.)

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Independence in front of construction shed a few days after launch. (Photo by Donovan Ravenhull.)

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The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) is the second ship in a new design of next-generation combat vessel for close-to-shore operations is seen here in this May 2008 file photo. The ship will have a crew of less than 40 Sailors and will be able to reach a sustained speed of more than 50 knots. The larger flight deck will accommodate two SH-60 Sea Hawk helicopters or one CH-53-class helicopter. (U.S. Navy Photo.)

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The littoral combat ship Independence (LCS 2) is the second ship in a new design of next-generation combat vessel for close-to-shore operations is seen here in this May 2008 file photo.. The ship will have a crew of less than 40 Sailors and will be able to reach a sustained speed of more than 50 knots. The larger flight deck will accommodate 2 SH-60 Sea Hawk helicopters or one CH-53-class helicopter. (U.S. Navy Photo.)

COMBAT CAMERA Recent Military Imagery on THE TENSION

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Commentary: A Life of Worth, Overlooked

Commentary

Commentary:

WASHINGTON, July 7, 2009 -- Army 1st Lt. Brian N. Bradshaw was killed in Afghanistan on the same day that Michael Jackson died prompting a letter to the Washington Post from Bradshaw's aunt, Martha Gillis, who shared her thoughts on the media's misplaced priorities.

In the letter the Post headlined, "A Life of Worth, Overlooked," Gillis, a resident of the Washington, DC suburb of Springfield, Virginia, fondly recalled her nephew and asked a question for which the media has no meaningful answer.

It seems fitting to reproduce her letter here today, on a day when the media are transfixed on Michael Jackson's public memorial service, on a day when the media's misplaced priorities are once again on full public display:
A Life of Worth, Overlooked
Sunday, July 5, 2009

My nephew, Brian Bradshaw, was killed by an explosive device in Afghanistan on June 25, the same day that Michael Jackson died. Mr. Jackson received days of wall-to-wall coverage in the media. Where was the coverage of my nephew or the other soldiers who died that week? There were several of them, and our family crossed paths with the family of another fallen soldier at Dover Air Force Base, where the bodies come "home." Only the media in Brian's hometown and where he was stationed before his deployment covered his death.

I remember Brian as a toddler wandering around in cowboy boots and hat, not seeing the need for any other clothing. He grew into a thoroughly decent person with a wry sense of humor. He loved wolves and history. Most Christmases, I gave him a biography or some analysis of the Civil War. He read such things for pleasure.

He had old-fashioned values and believed that military service was patriotic and that actions counted more than talk. He wasn't much for talking, although he could communicate volumes with a raised eyebrow.

He was a search-and-rescue volunteer, an altar boy, a camp counselor. He carried the hopes and dreams of his parents willingly on his shoulders. What more than that did Michael Jackson do or represent that earned him memorial "shrines," while this soldier's death goes unheralded?

It makes me want to scream.

MARTHA GILLIS
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Combat Camera: US Marines Conduct Patrols in Afghanistan

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U.S. Marine Sgt. Derek Forte briefs members of the 3rd Marine Regiment's Gulf Company, 2nd Battalion before a patrol of Now Zad, Afghanistan, a mine-infested town deserted by its residents and controlled by the Taliban, June 26, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marines conduct a patrol during early morning operations through the mine-infested town of Now Zad, Afghanistan, has been deserted by its residents and controlled by the Taliban, June 27, 2009. The Marines are assigned to the 3rd Marine Regiment's Gulf Company, 2nd Battalion. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marines conduct a patrol during early morning operations through the mine-infested town of Now Zad in Afghanistan's Helmand province, June 27, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Lukas Ellinger and fellow Marines conduct a patrol during early morning operations through the mine-infested town of Now Zad in Helmand province, Afghanistan, June 27, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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A U.S. Marine looks over a terrain map of the Now Zad, Afghanistan, as other Marines conduct a search of a building while on patrol during early morning operations Helmand province, Afghanistan, June 27, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marines conduct patrols through the abandoned city of Now Zad, Helmand province, Afghanistan, June 26, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marines patrol the small town of Dahanah, next to Now Zad, Helmand province, Afghanistan, in order to develop relationships with the civilians in the area, June 26, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marines talk with village elders in Dahanah, the town next to Now Zad, with the aid of interpreters, Helmand province, Afghanistan, June 25, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marines meet and talk with a Dahanah village elder with the help of interpreters while on patrol in the small town that neighbors Now Zad, Helmand province, Afghanistan, June 25, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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A U.S. Marine meets and talks with a Dahanah village elder with the help of interpreters while on patrol in the small town that neighbors Now Zad, Helmand province, Afghanistan, June 25, 2009. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marine Sgt. Perry Bessant, right, fellow Marines and Afghan army soldiers conduct a dismounted patrol through the rugged terrain of the Farah province's Golestan district, in Afghanistan in search of improvised explosive devices, June 23, 2009. The Marines are assigned to the 3rd Marine Regiment's Fox Company, 1st Platoon, 2nd Battalion. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marine Pfc. Dustin Hill uses binoculars to watch the countryside from his guard post on Forward Operating Base Delaram, Farah province, Afghanistan, June 22, 2009. Hill is a radio operator assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

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U.S. Marine Pfc. Dustin Hill watches attentively from his guard post on Forward Operating Base Delaram, Farah province, Afghanistan, June 22, 2009. Hill is a radio operator assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3. (Uncredited U.S. Marine Corps photo.)

COMBAT CAMERA More Combat Camera Imagery on THE TENSION

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USS Essex Begins Talisman Saber

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CORAL SEA (June 25, 2009) Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Handling) 3rd Class Steven Viles, from Chicago, stages an AV-8B Harrier for take off from amphibious assault ship USS Essex (LHD 2). (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Greg Johnson.)

Focus On Defense:

USS ESSEX, At Sea, July 7, 2009 -- The forward-deployed amphibious assault ship USS Essex (LHD 2) began exercise Talisman Saber 2009 (TS09) July 6 off the coast of Australia.

The exercise is designed to enhance bilateral interoperability between U.S. and Australian forces and will include participation from more than 20,000 U.S. and 10,000 Australian personnel.

"The military alliance we've shared with Australia has set a great example in the Asia-Pacific region," said Capt. Brent Canady, Essex's commanding officer. "Our efforts throughout TS09 will help to further that alliance by enhancing our interoperability, readiness and flexibility."

The exercise, concentrated in the Shoalwater Bay Training Area near Rockhampton in central Queensland, will focus on crisis action planning and execution of contingency response operations. TS09 will provide an opportunity to work in a joint environment and refine procedures and doctrine.

Essex sailors will be instrumental in accomplishing the primary goal of the exercise, which is to train Marines of the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) and the Australian Deployable Joint Force Headquarters as a designated, combined task force.

With the 31st MEU Aviation Combat Element (ACE) and Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron (HSC) 25 embarked, Essex's aircraft include the CH-53E Sea Stallions, CH-46E Sea Knights, MH-60S Sea Hawks, AH-1Z Super Cobras and UH-1N Huey helicopters, as well as AV-8B Harrier jet aircraft, but without Essex's air department, the aircraft wouldn't be able to leave the flight deck.

"We're out there from morning to night," said Chief Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Handling) (AW) Kevin Johnson. "This exercise is definitely going to be demanding, but being forward-deployed, we train like this all the time, and our personnel are ready for the challenge."

Essex's schedule typically includes 10-hour flight operations per day while underway, a routine that will most likely intensify during TS09. Flight deck personnel will have to rely on each other to successfully complete the demanding exercise, said Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Handling) 3rd Class (AW/SW) Lois Braxton.

"It's an amazing group of sailors here," said Braxton. "We really try to look out for each other and keep each other on our toes. As long as we're working together, we're going to be on top of anything that happens out on the flight deck."

Essex's air department isn't the only group of sailors who will play a pivotal role throughout the exercise. The ship's deck department will also be hard at work launching Marines from the well deck via landing craft air cushion (LCAC) vehicles.

"This kind of experience is vital to the progression of our younger sailors," said Chief Boatswain's Mate (SW/AW) Christopher White. "We've got a lot of sailors who don't have experience doing the kind of things we do during a full-scale exercise, and Talisman Saber provides a great opportunity for them to get that experience."

The sailors who do have the experience will look to use TS09 as an opportunity to mentor some of the deck department's more junior sailors, said Seaman Fredrick Smith, who has been aboard Essex for a little more than a year.

"I've done a lot of well deck operations, like launching LCACs and LCUs (landing craft utility), but this will be my first time participating in Talisman Saber," said Smith. "I think it should be a good learning experience for a lot of the guys here."

For TS09, Essex has been assigned three LCACs from Assault Craft Unit 5. LCACs are high-speed, over-the-beach fully amphibious landing craft, capable of carrying a 60-75-ton payload. They are used to transport weapons systems, equipment, cargo and personnel from ship to shore and across the beach.

Throughout the exercise, Essex's crew will operate with a heightened awareness regarding the diverse marine life off the coast of Australia. Sailors have received training on how to identify marine mammals and respond appropriately to avoid collisions with sea life.

"We're very aware of the great number of diverse species in the ocean, especially the unique marine life near the Great Barrier Reef," said Canady. "We're doing everything we can to prevent any mishaps that would cause harm to any of these animals or damage the environment where they live."

Essex departed its homeport of Sasebo, Japan, June 12 for TS09. Essex was commissioned October 17, 1992, and is capable of carrying 1,200 sailors and 1,800 Marines. It is 844 feet long, can travel at 24+ knots and displaces 40,650 tons.

Essex is the lead ship of the only forward-deployed U.S. amphibious ready group (ARG) and serves as the flagship for Combined Task Force 76, the Navy's only forward-deployed amphibious force commander. CTF 76 is headquartered at White Beach Naval Facility, Okinawa, Japan, with a detachment in Sasebo, Japan.

(Report by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Greg Johnson, USS Essex Public Affairs.)

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Wire: Suspected US Missiles, Pakistan Jets Hit Militants

Off the Wire

Off the Wire:

WASHINGTON, July 7, 2009 -- Even as newswire services this morning headlined a quote from President Barack Obama's speech in Russia, "The future does not belong to those who gather armies on a field of battle or bury missiles in the ground," suspected U.S. missiles hit followers of a notorious militant leader close to the Afghan border.

Between 12 and 16 militants were killed when two missiles hit a training camp run by Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan tribal region, intelligence officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to media. The missiles were believed fired by American drones, the Associated Press said.

AP noted the following details:
Five foreigners were among the dead, but their nationalities were not known, the officials said. Top Arab leaders of the al-Qaida terror network are believed to be hiding in the region, as well as scores of militants from nearby countries such as Afghanistan and Uzbekistan.

Mehsud was not among the victims of the strike, the fourth in the space of two weeks targeting him or his followers.

Hours after the strikes, Pakistani war planes bombed militants positions around 25 miles (40 kilometers) away, the army said. Casualties in those strikes were unknown.

The army insisted it was not coordinating the missile strikes with Washington and reiterated its opposition to them despite the damage they were inflicting on Mehsud's followers.

"It hurts the campaign rather than helps," said Maj. Gen Athar Abbas, arguing that they alienate local tribes whose support the military needs to defeat Mehsud.
The United States is believed to have launched more than 40 missile strikes against targets in the border area since last August, according to a count by the Associated Press.

The U.S. does not directly acknowledge responsibility for launching the missiles.

(Report from newswire sources.)

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US Marines Blaze a Trail Across Helmand Province

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

HELMAND PROVINCE, Afghanistan, July 7, 2009 -- As U.S. Marines launch the largest helicopter insertion since the Vietnam War, Marine Corps convoys are blazing a path towards the Helmand River Valley across terrain where no roads exist. Temperature and the harsh landscape are expected to be their biggest obstacles said military planners. Their mission here is threefold.

"Within the first 96 hours, we'll build Forward Operating Base Payne from the ground up. Right now it's just a blank slate. We'll also build a combat outpost nearby. And finally, we'll build a fording site across the Helmand River," said Lt. Col. Chris Braney, commanding officer for Combat Logistics Batalion-8.

CLB-8's mission is just one element of a major offensive which involves more than 10,000 U.S. Marines and Sailors. The ultimate goal of the operation is to bring security and stability to Helmand province which has seen the most insurgent attacks in Afghanistan.

With temperatures in the 120's and terrain that consists of a hard, rocky ground pitted with deep potholes and covered by several inches of a soft talcum-like powder, Braney said he expects his vehicles to take a beating during the 112 kilometer drive which could last longer than 24 hours.

"We trained for these conditions for five weeks back at Twenty-Nine Palms on the Mojave Viper Training Center," said Braney. "Since we've been here we've hit IEDs, multiple attacks. The success my Marines have had here I attribute to our training."

The only difference between training on the range and Helmand province is the road, or lack thereof. The path from their base to the objective is literally a line on a map. No vehicle has ever made this drive.

According to Braney, "by far the distance and the terrain are the most difficult part of the mission. We're prepared for any attacks, but by far it's the distance and terrain will be the most difficult part of this."

Each convoy has at least one wrecker to repair vehicles that break down. The soft dirt Marines call "moon dust" gets into the oil and clogs air filters. According to Braney, when convoys arrive at his forwarding operating base, one out of four can't immediately go back out because of mechanical problems. Half lose their air conditioning along the way. These are vehicles that were driving on an actual road. What maintenance problems the U.S. forces will encounter driving through the desert remains unknown.

"We're used to going into the unknown," Braney said confidently.

(Report from an uncredited Regimental Combat Team 3 news release.)

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US Marines Secure Southernmost Point of Operations in Afghanistan

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Within minutes of unloading heavy equipment earthmovers, the U.S. Marine Corps begins construction on Combat Outpost Payne. The COB is being built by Combat Logistics Battalion-8 with support from Engineering Support Battallion-8. The officer in charge of the construction project said COB Payne will be completed within 96 hours of their arrival at what is now the southernmost point of operations for the U.S. Marine Corps in Afghanistan. The mission also calls for a bridge to be built across the Helmand River and the rebuilding of the district governor's compound that until the Marine's arrival, was taken over by insurgent forces. (Photo by 1st Lt. Dave Hecht, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

Dispatches from the Front:

HELMAND PROVINCE, Afghanistan, July 7, 2009 -- After a 10 hour bumpy, dusty drive through the desert, the United States Marine Corps has now secured the southernmost point of operations in Helmand province and begun construction on what will be the largest combat outpost ever built by Combat Logistics Batallion-8 out of Camp Lejuene, N.C.

"This is the tip of the spear. Right now we are the farthest south Marine Unit in Afghanistan," said Capt. Chris Annunziata of Norfolk, Va. "Everything that happens south of the river depends on us."

Within minutes of bulldozer and excavators being unloaded from flatbed trucks, construction began on COP Payne which overlooks the Helmand river valley. Annunziata, the onsite officer in charge of the construction project said building the COP will take just 96 hours to complete. The COP will serve as a logistical center for all operations that will eventually take place south of the river along the border with Pakistan.

By the end of the first day of construction, a ten foot wall of dirt and gravel surrounded the 600 foot by 600 foot compound and a burn pit was dug for disposing of garbage. At the same time, other crews are working on a fording site across the Helmand River and fortifying Khan Necsion, a former Taliban stronghold that will now be handed over to the district governor.

"I have the best equipped and most motivated Marines," said Annunziata. "These men and women are true professionals and I couldn't be more proud of them." The Marines carried out their work under the oppressive Afghan sun with temperatures soaring into the 120s.

Across the river, a curious lone rancher and his herd of cattle watched as COB Payne took shape. He was the only Afghan seen since departing Forward Operating Base Dwyer the night before.

"I wasn't expecting any contact with insurgents on the drive down here," said convoy commander, Lt. Tabitha Pinter of Detroit, Mich. "This was a complete surprise. The enemy had no idea we were coming and they had no idea we'd take the route we took." The convoy of 35 trucks and armored vehicles drove through 112 kilometer of barren desert where no roads currently exist.

The Marines aren't letting the quiet beauty of the river valley catch them with their guard down.

"All was quiet when we built Fire Base Thunder. It was three or four days later the insurgents learned we were there and that's when they started their attacks," said Annunziata.

(Report by 1st Lt. Dave Hecht, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

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Monday, July 6, 2009

Wire: Taliban Confirms Capture of US Soldier

Off the Wire

Off the Wire:

WASHINGTON, July 6, 2009 -- Newswire services this evening reported that a Taliban Web site says that it has captured a missing U.S. soldier American authorities had earlier said may have been kidnapped.

The report of the capture was last in a routine list of Taliban activities posted on the Web site.

"It is to be said that five days ago, a drunken American soldier who had come out of his garrison named Malakh, was captured by mujahedeen... He is still with mujahedeen," said the report.

The short message did not elaborate on his whereabouts or their plans for him, nor did it provide any proof of its claim, the Associate Press reported.

The U.S. military earlier said it had intercepted communications in which insurgents talked about holding an American.

The soldier was noticed missing during a routine check of the unit on Tuesday and first was listed as "duty status whereabouts unknown."

His body armor and weapon were found on the base.

This is a developing story.

(Report from newswire sources.)

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Pentagon Identifies Marine Casualty (OEF)

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, July 6, 2009 -- The following news release made available Monday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement identifying a casualty:
The Department of Defense announced today the death of a Marine who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

Lance Cpl. Charles S. Sharp, 20, of Adairsville, Ga., died July 2 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.
(Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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US Airpower Summary, July 6, 2009: Helicopters Rapidly Transport Patients

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HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters and "Guardian Angel" teams can transport patients to field hospitals in less time than it takes for a civilian patient to reach emergency care by ambulance in most major cities. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. James L. Harper Jr.)

Dispatches from the Front:

SOUTHWEST ASIA, July 6, 2009 -- Coalition airpower integrated with coalition ground forces in Iraq and International Security Assistance Force troops in Afghanistan during operations July 5, according to Combined Air and Space Operations Center officials here.

In Afghanistan, a Royal Air Force GR-4 Tornado conducted a strafing run in a wooded area near Gereshk against anti-Afghan forces fighting positions. Enemy personnel in the trees were firing on a friendly unit with small arms and rocket-propelled grenades.

Near Asadabad, Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles dropped guided bomb unit-31s on enemy mortar emplacements. Enemy forces were detected preparing to launch an indirect fire strike, leading to the aircraft targeting them in self-defense of friendly forces. Nearby, Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt IIs conducted shows of force to prevent an enemy attack near a coalition forward base.

A GR-4 and a coalition aircraft carried out strikes in the vicinity of Kandahar to take out enemy fighting positions along a treeline and a weapons cache concealed in the woods. The aircraft employed GBU-38s, Paveway guided bombs and cannon strafes, hitting multiple enemy positions and destroying an enemy ammo dump. Intelligence was received that the enemy was preparing an attack, prompting the aircraft to intervene before anti-Afghan forces could initiate hostilities.

In the vicinity of Farah, an F-15E flew a show of force to deter enemy forces who had been firing at an Afghan and coalition unit. The aircraft also conducted route reconnaissance helping ground forces locate improvised explosive devices set up by anti-Afghan personnel, helping to reduce the threat the IEDs posed to security forces and Afghan civilians.

Strike Eagles were scrambled to provide overwatch for a friendly ground unit which came under enemy RPG and automatic-weapons attack near Shahid. The attack ended when the aircraft flew a show of force over the area.

A coalition aircraft, a Marine AV-8B Harrier and an Air Force B-1B Lancer conducted shows of force in the Musa Qaleh, Delaram, and Gereshk areas respectively, deterring enemy attacks during ground operations. The presence of airpower assets stopped enemy forces from acting and allowed Afghan and coalition missions to continue without risk to Afghan civilians from enemy fire.

Joint terminal attack controllers assigned to coalition units verified the success of these missions.

Twenty-four Air Force intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft flew missions as part of operations in Afghanistan. In addition, two coalition aircraft performed tactical reconnaissance.

In total, 61 close-air-support missions were flown in support of ISAF and Afghan security forces, reconstruction activities and route patrols.

In Iraq, coalition aircraft flew eight close-air-support missions for Operation Iraqi Freedom. These missions integrated and synchronized with coalition ground forces, protected key infrastructure, provided overwatch for reconstruction activities and helped to deter and disrupt hostile activities.

Twenty-four Air Force and Navy ISR aircraft flew missions as part of operations in Iraq. In addition, two Air Force aircraft performed tactical reconnaissance.

Air Force C-130 Hercules aircraft and C-17 Globemaster IIIs provided intra-theater heavy airlift, helping to sustain operations throughout Afghanistan, Iraq and the Horn of Africa.

Approximately 120 airlift sorties were flown, 300 tons of cargo were delivered and about 2,530 passengers were transported. Airlift included about 20,650 pounds of aerial resupply cargo dropped over Afghanistan.

Coalition C-130 crews flew as part of operations in Afghanistan or Iraq.

On Jul 4, Air Force HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters and "Guardian Angel" teams transported 14 patients to coalition field hospitals from locations in Afghanistan. Pararescue team members aboard the helicopters located, rescued and began treatment to stabilize patients in the battlefield. The Pave Hawks transported these patients to field hospitals in less time than it takes for a civilian patient to reach emergency care by ambulance in most major cities.

U.S. Air Force aerial refueling crews flew 35 sorties and off-loaded approximately 2.0 million pounds of fuel to 110 receiving aircraft.

(Report from a U.S. Air Force news release.)

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Pentagon Discusses Passing of Former Defense Secretary Robert S McNamara

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Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara works at his desk in the Pentagon on March 17, 1961. McNamara, who served under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, died July 6, 2009, at 93. (Pentagon photo by Army Master Sgt. Frank Hall.)

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, July 6, 2009 -- The defense secretary who presided over the department during the Cuban Missile Crisis and the U.S. involvement in Vietnam died today.

Robert S. McNamara, the nation’s eighth defense secretary who served in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, died here following a long illness. He was 93.

McNamara became defense secretary on Jan. 21, 1961, and served as such during the coldest part of the Cold War. In 1962, the Soviet Union began building missile sites in Cuba. The sites would have Soviet nuclear missiles capable of hitting any city in the United States in minutes. President John F. Kennedy and his advisors challenged Soviet Premier Nikita Kruschev.

McNamara was a member of the small group of advisors called the Executive Committee who counseled Kennedy on the matter. In the view of many historians, the United States and the Soviet Union came closer to a nuclear war during this time than at any other in history. McNamara supported the president’s decision to quarantine Cuba to prevent Soviet ships from bringing in more offensive weapons. During the crisis, the Pentagon placed U.S. military forces on alert, ready to back up the administration’s demand that the Soviet Union withdraw its offensive missiles from Cuba.

Vietnam was the major issue for McNamara. During the Kennedy administration, U.S. involvement in South Vietnam was limited to American Special Forces advisor teams and their support. The numbers of U.S. troops in Vietnam reached 17,000 by the time Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963.

In 1964, the so-called “Gulf of Tonkin incident” – in which North Vietnamese ships fired on U.S. Navy vessels – caused President Lyndon B. Johnson to retaliate by bombing North Vietnam. Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, giving the president the authority to increase the number of U.S. troops and missions in South Vietnam.

The number of American troops in South Vietnam hit 485,000 by the end of 1967, and it reached almost 535,000 by June 1968.

McNamara loyally supported the war in Vietnam, but grew disillusioned. By 1966, he questioned whether the war could be won by deploying more troops to South Vietnam and intensifying the bombing of North Vietnam. McNamara traveled to Southeast Asia many times to assess the war first-hand. North Vietnam’s Tet Offensive, launched in February 1968, was a strategic victory for the enemy. American servicemembers won every battle, but the heart had gone out of U.S. determination to win the war.

By the end of the Tet Offensive, McNamara had resigned, leaving office on Feb. 29, 1968. Johnson presented him with both the Medal of Freedom and the Distinguished Service Medal.

McNamara was born June 9, 1916, in San Francisco. In 1937, he graduated from the University of California at Berkeley with a degree in economics and philosophy, and he earned a master’s degree in business administration from Harvard in 1939. In 1940, he married Margaret Craig, who founded the Reading is Fundamental program in the 1960s and died in 1981. He entered the Army Air Forces as a captain in early 1943 and left active duty three years later with the rank of lieutenant colonel.

After the war, McNamara joined the Ford Motor Co. as manager of planning and financial analysis. He rose through the ranks and was named the president of Ford on November 9, 1960. Less than five weeks after becoming president of Ford, McNamara accepted Kennedy’s invitation to join his Cabinet. After leaving the Pentagon, he served as president of the World Bank.

The former defense secretary is survived by a son, Robert Craig; two daughters, Margaret Elizabeth and Kathleen; and his wife, Diana Masieri Byfield, whom he married in San Francisco in 2004.

(Report by Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service.)

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