Feral Jundi

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Military News: America’s Last Draftee, General Mellinger

Filed under: Military News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:10 AM

   I really liked this article, and it even motivated me to start a new category.  Many of us have military roots, and these types of stories are great.  Today’s all volunteer fighting force is truly a heroic, tough, and intelligent bunch. I also think it is important to note that civilian contractors are volunteers too, and it is a system that works.  I could not imagine working with someone that did not want to be there or was doing a job against their will.  Although a draft should never be taken off the table for national defense, it’s just if we can get troops that want to be there, then that to me seems the most optimum scenario.  (Although I am sure the Starship Trooper fans out there would disagree–lol.) Semper Fi. –Matt

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General Mellinger 

America’s Last Draftee: “I’m a Relic”

By Mark Thompson/Washington

Saturday, Feb. 07, 2009

     America’s generals love to brag about their all-volunteer Army. That’s because they tend to overlook Jeffrey Mellinger. He donned his Army uniform for the first time on April 18, 1972, about the time the Nixon Administration was seeking “peace with honor” in Vietnam and The Godfather was opening on the silver screen. Nearly 37 years later, he’s still wearing Army green. Mellinger is, by all accounts, the last active-duty draftee serving in the U.S. Army.

     “I’m a relic,” Mellinger concedes with a self-deprecating laugh. But the last of the nearly 2 million men ordered to serve in the Vietnam-era military before conscription ended in 1973 still impresses 19-year-old soldiers. “Most of them are surprised I’m still breathing, because in their minds I’m older than dirt,” the fit 55-year-old says. “But they’re even more surprised when they find out this dinosaur can still move around pretty darn quick.” 

(more…)

Monday, August 4, 2008

News: Syrian Brigadier General Mohammad Suleiman Assassinated

Filed under: Israel,News,Syria — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 4:17 PM

   First Mughniyah, now Suleiman?  Very cool.  Who ever is behind these assassinations (wink, wink), is doing a pretty damned good job of it.  At this point, I am sure the Hezzies and Syria are just tweaked beyond belief. LOL  Thanks to Doug for letting me know about this one.  –Head Jundi  

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Slain Syrian General Oversaw Weapons Shipments to Hezbollah

By Ellen Knickmeyer and Samuel Sockol

Washington Post Foreign Service

Monday, August 4, 2008; 2:46 PM

CAIRO, Aug. 4 — A Syrian general shot to death at a beach resort over the weekend was a top overseer of his country’s weapons shipments to Hezbollah, according to opposition Web sites and Arab and Israeli news media.

Syria by late Monday had issued no reaction to widespread reports of the assassination of Brig. Gen. Mohammad Suleiman near the Syrian port city of Tartous on Friday night.

Maher al-Assad, head of Syria’s Republican Guards and a brother of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, attended Suleiman’s funeral on Sunday, the Reuters news agency said, citing unidentified sources.

The Syrian president is on a state visit to Iran. His government enforces rigid secrecy about security matters.

The Free Syria Web site of Abdul Halim Khaddam, a former Syrian vice president now living in exile, said a sniper on a yacht shot Suleiman. The Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat newspaper said he was struck by four bullets fired from the direction of the sea.

Suleiman, 49, was known to have been a top security official, a friend to Syria’s president and his brothers since their youth, and a former schoolmate of at least one of the brothers.

Israel’s Haaretz newspaper said Israeli officials believed Suleiman had been in charge of shipping Iranian and Syrian weapons to the armed Lebanese movement Hezbollah, including long-range rockets used in attacks on Israel.

Haaretz did not identify its sources. Israel’s Yedioth Ahronoth daily said the slain man also had been in charge of Syria’s alleged nuclear program. In September, Israeli warplanes destroyed what U.S. officials described as a clandestine nuclear site in Syria’s eastern desert.

Asked whether Israel was responsible for the reported assassination, Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, said, “The Israeli government has neither any direct knowledge nor any comment on this incident.”

A February bombing in Damascus killed Hezbollah military commander Imad Mughniyah. Israel denied Hezbollah accusations of responsibility for the assassination.

Despite their enmity, Israel and Syria earlier this year confirmed they were conducting indirect talks through Turkey on a possible peace deal, based on the return of the Golan Heights to Syria.

Olmert and other Israeli officials in recent weeks have stressed weapons smuggling by Syria to Hezbollah as a major Israeli concern.

Sockol reported from Jerusalem.

Link to Washington Post Article

 

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