Archives » Thursday, November 15, 2007
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David Botti
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Nov 15, 2007 11:46 AM
A number of stories out there worth a look:
USA Today has an outstanding look at blindness injuries among recent veterans,
including interviews with blind vets who've really opened up and spoken
honestly. According to the paper, Iraq has the highest percentage of
eye injuries of any U.S. war dating back to WWI:
On the morning of Jan. 16 last year, Acosta led
soldiers on a 3-mile fitness run across Camp Anaconda in Balad, Iraq.
Suddenly, insurgents attacked the camp with mortars.
Acosta remembers that he stopped, turned to yell at his soldiers and then dived for cover.
"Bam! That was it," he recalls. "Lights out."
An explosion about 60 feet away sent a piece of
shrapnel — perhaps three-quarters of an inch long — through his left
eye. It struck his brain and came out his right eye.
"It was a perfect hit," Acosta says.
At the Marine Corps boot camp in San Diego, a Drill Instructor was found guilty yesterday
of assaulting and mistreating recruits. Prosecutors originally charged
Sgt. Jerrod M. Glass with 225 counts, while at the time of his court
martial the number dropped to eight. He could face 9 1/2 years
imprisonment. Of the platoon's 45 recruits, jurors found Glass abused 23 of them.
During the Glass trial, 23 Marines from Platoon 2167 testified that he
hit, punched and kicked them for minor infractions on dozens of
occasions. They also said he forced recruits to drink multiple canteens of
water after eating. When some of the recruits threw up, Glass forced
them to roll around in the vomit.
Once the Los Angeles Times puts the story into context, it's clear this is a big deal:
A conviction of this scope is rare. In the last three years, the
recruit depot, which has nearly 500 drill instructors, has seen 44
drill instructors charged with misconduct toward recruits. Of those 44,
only two before Glass went to court-martial; others were punished or
admonished through an administrative process.
A former Marine was charged with claiming
he'd been awarded the Purple Heart in order get a license plate
depicting the award. He ended up getting 18 months probation, 200
community service hours, and an order to undergo a mental evaluation.
In more uplifting military award news, four Army Green Berets were awarded the Silver Star for fighting that occurred near the Iraqi city Najaf:
The U.S. soldiers fought alongside their Iraqi counterparts for more
than 12 hours, killing hundreds of enemy, members of a cult known as
Soldiers of Heaven, whose plan was the takeover of Najaf and its holy
shrine.
The Special Forces soldiers also risked their lives when
they went to the aid of two American Apache attack helicopter pilots
who died when their aircraft was shot down by the enemy.
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