04/26/2021 | admin

On Leaving Afghanistan- Some Thoughts From MFSO Members

When Jeff and I first heard the news that we were given a date certain for all US troops to leave Afghanistan, we were taken aback.  After 20 long years of MFSO families working so hard to make this happen and always watchful of approaching deadlines and promises, it’s seems odd to be startled at the news? Even after hearing it officially from President Biden’s own lips, we are still in disbelief. Since that day the MFSO office has been receiving emails from members who have been part of the struggle over the years and who wanted to share their feelings and concerns about what it all means to us as military families. Below are some of the statements we were allowed to share with you. We hope you will send your thoughts too so we can share them.

“It is long past time for the U.S. military role in Afghanistan to end. Military families who have been speaking out for many years to bring our troops home know that this move honors our troops – including those who died as a result of this ‘forever’ war – because continued death, including the deaths of increasing numbers of Afghan civilians, honors no one, and solves no problems. There is much that must happen now, including taking care of our troops coming home with visible and hidden injuries of war, and bringing about a new foreign policy that opposes these occupations and will not hinder the emergence of civilian voices, leaders and the forces who will ultimately bring justice and peace to their own country.”
Nancy Lessin, Co-founder, Military Families Speak Out

I am delighted to hear the news that we will bring home all troops from Afghanistan by Sept 11, 2021.  Our cries have been heard!  I hope that this will be the first of our troops matching home from all countries we have no business being in! I am cautiously optimistic that this will come to pass but I know the MIC is not happy about it. What shall be, shall be.
Diane Bremer
Mom of active duty son, Army
Red Wing, Minnesota

I feel tremendous relief that the troops are coming home from Afghanistan.  I also feel an overwhelming sadness for the men and women who served in Afghanistan; for those who did not come home, were injured (physically or mentally) or committed suicide.  I also feel great sadness for the huge losses and suffering the Afghan people endured and will continue to endure in their homeland destroyed by 20 years of war.

As the Afghanistan Papers confirmed, the military and the U.S. government knew early on that the Afghanistan War was a debacle and could not be won.  It didn’t understand Afghanistan nor did it have a strategy.  Yet, our government and military were unwilling to admit the Afghanistan war could not be won, damn the consequences.

These tragic decisions have destroyed people on all sides, for absolutely no gain.  This is shameful.  When will we learn that war and violence are not the path to a better world?
Mary Hladky, Mother of Army Infantry Officer who served 13 months, during Obama’s Surge, Zhari District, Kandahar Province

What a terrible and shameful tragedy – the war against Afghanistan. More than 2400 American troops and more than 38,000 Afghan civilians were killed. (NYTimes, 2019) There were many millions of war refugees. There were countless people injured. Moral injury, PTSD and other devastating impacts of war will persist. The poisoning of civilians and military from burn pits, the damage to the environment and people’s health has been horrendous. My heart goes out to other military families and Afghan families whose loved ones were killed or injured.  The costs were over $1.5 trillion dollars, not including money spent on medical and disability costs for veterans, all money that should have been spent instead in our communities for education, housing, health care, social services and other human needs. Shame on the elected officials who voted for this war and those who voted to continue funding the war. A salute to the millions of people who marched and demonstrated, lobbied and petitioned both to prevent the war in Afghanistan and to demand an end to the war. We will remain vigilant to make sure that not only the troops come home, but the contractors, the CIA, the Special Forces, must come home, too. We must make sure that absolutely no U.S. drones or other weapons of war will be used in Afghanistan.
Paula Rogovin, mother of an Iraq war veteran

It’s been 20 years now and it’s past time for our troops to come home. I have more faith in President Biden bringing the troops home than I did in the former president.  I believe President Biden will make a smooth transition and not make more problems for us. This is a start, but we need all the troops out of the Middle East.
Ed Garza, Former board member
Santa Ana CA

I am relieved that our troops are finally leaving Afghanistan after 20 years, but I’m concerned that we have not learned our lesson about the costs of starting and continuing wars of choice. We should have been out of Afghanistan shortly after we went in.  Delta Force spotted Osama Bin Laden leaving the mountain caves for Pakistan after the Battle of Tora Bora but was denied permission to take him out. That would have ended our involvement.

I am now concerned about the future of the Afghanis who helped US forces as translators, etc., and those who tried to bring democracy to Afghanistan.  I hope that President Biden will welcome them into the US as refugees as they will be in danger when the Taliban returns to power.

Our wars of choice have destroyed nations (Vietnam and Iraq) while bringing riches to the corporations that supply war. Tens of thousands of our troops have died or are injured from wounds seen or unseen, families have been destroyed. I hope we will not repeat these mistakes.
Anna Berlinrut, Mom of Marine deployed 8 times in harm’s way
Connecticut

I’m heartened by President Biden’s resolve to end the war in Afghanistan.  However,  I’ll believe it when I see it because other presidents like Bush, (“Mission Accomplished”), Obama and Trump,  promised before, but no one has brought them all home yet. But I’m hopeful he will follow through this time. As a military family member himself, I believe Biden really understands the toll war takes on our families more than the other presidents did . He knows what it’s like to wait and wonder. My daughter was injured when she was deployed and we had to wait so long to find out how she was. If you’ve been a military family member long enough you will do whatever it takes to find out how your loved one is.
Lorna Farnum
Daughter deployed to Kosovo
Hawaii

I have cautious optimism regarding brining our troops home.  It is past time, that is a worldwide truth.  I am holding my breath for every family and friend of a deployed troop.  The joy of thinking they will be home soon; is balance with the possibility of retaliation.  That is hell.  I grieve, I rejoice.
Corla Coles,
Mother in law of Active Duty Army Reserve
Redlands, CA

Oh God. I think it’s a good move and that it’s inevitable. I wonder, are we really getting out? It’s a win for the US, but a tragedy for the Afghani people. As inevitable as this is, it’s unavoidable.  Who would have thought that 9/11 would be the beginning of a 20 year war- America’s longest war that would cost $2 trillion, the lives of tens of thousands Afghans -3,502 NATO casualties  and over 2, 312 of our US troops. I remember when Bin Laden died, I was in NYC and people we jubilant. I was with them, and then I thought later that I never celebrated someone dying before.

Afghanistan has a corrupt government, there’s no real industry except opium. 70% of Afghans live on a dollar a day, there are few schools, their infrastructure is weak, electricity and water are erratic in the nation’s capital, and I fear women and girls are going to be the ones who will suffer the most. Where does the Taliban get their money? Why aren’t we talking about that? The pain is going to come, but what can you say? You can’t police the whole world, but if we haven’t fixed this in 20 years, we never are going to fix it.  After 20 years of presidents saying we’re getting out, the US has no credibility. I’ll believe it when I see it. This announcement is dredging up a lot of emotions right now for veterans and military families.
Don Kimball,
Uncle to Active Duty Marine and veteran
South Portland, ME

As military families whose loved ones/children have been in Afghanistan, we welcome the news that our troops are coming home. We hope that this is just the beginning of troop withdrawals from the Middle East and other countries where we have participated in unjust wars. These wars have endangered the lives of our children and haven’t done anything to protect us.
Rossana Cambron
Mother of action duty Army
Los Angeles, CA

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04/01/2021 | admin

(LA Times) To the editor: How were we able to sustain 20 years of war? Multiple troop deployments and a spineless Congress that hid behind the AUMF.

LA Times Letters to the Editor – April 1, 2021

“To the editor: How were we able to sustain 20 years of war? Multiple troop deployments and a spineless Congress that hid behind the AUMF. Throughout three presidential administrations, Congress has failed in one of its most sacred duties — to protect this country and the lives of our troops.

After I once complained about my son’s sixth deployment, someone thoughtlessly responded: “Well, he wanted to go, didn’t he?” Yes, and the truth is that he and most of his other buddies would agree to redeploy as often as they were asked to, regardless of their physical and mental state. That is what they were trained to do. But the founders never meant for one man, the president, to have complete authority to send these troops to war. They wisely gave Congress the power to authorize and fund war to limit the president’s power.

We don’t need the AUMF to protect us. Just get rid of it.

Pat Alviso, Long Beach

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02/09/2021 | admin

HAVE A HEART: Free Reality Winner Campaign (Updated July 19, 2021)

UPDATE for 7/10/21  (Via The Intercept):  HOME, BUT NOT FREE: NSA WHISTLEBLOWER REALITY WINNER ADJUSTS TO HER RELEASE FROM PRISON

Despite their elation that she is out of prison, though, Winner’s family and friends say she is far from free. Every day is still marked by intrusions, like the app carceral authorities require her to put on her phone to monitor her and needing prior approval to go to Walmart with her mother for errands. Winner is projected to be transferred from home confinement to supervised release in November.

That’s why they are continuing their year-and-a-half-long campaign for a presidential pardon or clemency, saying the whistleblower is being gagged from telling her own story.

UPDATE for 4/26/21:  Full Frontal Host Samantha Bee urges her viewers to “write a sternly worded letter” to President Biden:

https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/

The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Friends of Reality Winner- please take action this week to help get Reality Winner’s mom, Billie, a meeting with her Congressman Filemon Vela. After serving five years in prison, Billie’s family has not heard a word from her representative in congress.  She would like to meet with him to ask that he intervene out of compassion and call for her daughter to be released from the remaining part of her prison term. She has already served 4 of her 5+ year sentence, which was the longest for the unauthorized release of a single document of government information. Early on Courage to Resist supported her as a whistleblower for exposing Russian hacking of the 2016 elections, which took place under the Trump administration. She is a decorated veteran with an honorable discharge. She suffers from depression, survived COVID and harassment while serving her time.  The issue is no longer about her guilt or innocence, but her excessive sentence and if Congress member Filemon Vela will have a heart and  step up and say she is no longer a threat to security and should be released.  At the very least, he should be willing to meet with the parents.

Congressman Filemon Vela

DC Office 202-456-1111

Texas Office 956-544-8352

 Please call Congress member Filemon Vela’s offices in DC and Texas beginning 3-10 to 3-19. Then another group will continue calling until we get our meeting. Identify yourself as a military family, if you are one, and demand that he meet with Reality Winner’s parents and that he intervene to get her released for the following reasons:

  • Reality has received the longest sentence for the release of a single classified document
  • Reality is a decorated veteran living in his district- it’s long past time for him to hear them out
  • Her family and friends are concerned about her health- she is suffering from depression,harassment and had COVID
  • She is not a threat to anyone and in fact looks forward to a life of service to her country

NEXT WEEK VETERANS CHAPTER 110 FOR PEACE WILL CALL FOR THIS SUSTAINED ACTION UNTIL REALITY IS RELEASED OR CONGRESS MEMBER VELA MEETS THE PARENTS- spread the word!

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01/25/2021 | admin

MFSO Newsletter January 2021

MFSO Newsletter – January 2021

Military Families Speak Out
January 2021

Troops Home Now!

Editorials from MFSO members:
Tracy Eiswert, Ocala, Florida

On December 23, 2020 a delegation of MFSO and Veterans for Peace members met with Joe Biden’s transitional team. Below is a loose transcription of Tracy’s remarks to the Biden staff.

Our tragedy begins in 2004 when my husband and father of Unity and Breanna was sent to Tuz, Iraq on Operational Base Bernstein from 2004-2005. After being honorably discharged, he returned home on November 25, 2005 with no obvious scars. I remember counting all fingers and toes as he stepped off the bus! Just when we felt that our nightmare had ended, we immediately noticed a change in his behavior after his return.

My name is Tracy Eiswert. I live in Ocala, Florida. I am the widow of Scott Eiswert who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom. He was a combat engineer specialist with Troop E, 2nd squad 27th regimental combat team with the Army National Guard. The VA’s failure to properly diagnose and treat Scott’s PTSD contributed to his suicide. Today, I want to talk to you about bringing our troops home. I am not going to talk about the politics of ending our 17 year-long presence in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria. I want to appeal to your compassion. The American people are currently suffering as a result of having their loved ones overseas and from the mental health strain we put on the soldiers themselves. 17 years is a long time! It is time now to end the suffering of all Americans who continue to sit by the phone waiting for the word that it’s their son, husband, mother or father that has been killed! This is our stress and anxiety from not knowing from day to day. Think of the loneliness of husbands, wives, sons and daughters that depend on the emotional support in our day-to-day lives; the children that do not have a father or mother present to help meet all those milestones in life that determines character and personality. What is the mental health cost of keeping our soldiers overseas? Seriously, what is the cost on the American people, the mental health system, insurance premiums, and LOSS of LIVES  due to SUICIDE??? Let’s talk cost benefit. Unless you are putting a price tag on America lives, does the benefit of keeping our soldiers overseas outweigh the cost of LIFE?  I am not ignorant to the benefit of having Iraq and Afghanistan as allies, but we should have secured that by now.  Seventeen years is a very long time and we have to ask ourselves is a trillion plus dollars and thousands of lives worth the effort?

In the News:

The Pentagon continues Afghanistan troop drawdown despite law barring it and plans to reduce troop levels in Afghanistan to 2,500 by Jan 15 despite the new defense law that prohibits personnel levels in the country from dipping below 4,000 Link to article

Biden should finish the job-“A conditions based withdrawal means no withdrawal at all”.. Trump got that part right, but will Biden do better and finally conclude our country’s longest war?  Link to article

Support for full withdrawal from Afghanistan grows: 73% of veterans support a full withdrawal of American military forces and 69% of family members agree. Link to article

Will Biden Turn Syria into another Afghanistan?  US forces are building up in eastern Syria. Will Biden take the middle road or choose endless war? Link to article

Will We Really Leave Iraq for Good?  Iraqi PM Mustafa al-Kazemi said this week that most American troops will leave Iraq “within days”. American advisers say once American forces withdraw they won’t return, “even if ISIS manages to conquer whole cities.” Link to article

Meet your New and Growing MFSO’s Advisory Board
Ann Wright-US Army colonel, Ret and U.S. State Department official, known for her outspoken opposition to the Iraq War and recipient of the State Department Award for Heroism, after helping to evacuate several thousand people during the civil war in Sierra Leone.
David Swanson-is a peace activist, journalist, radio host and author of several books including War Is a Lie.  Long time MFSO ally, David currently resides in Virginia and is the Executive Director of World Beyond War.
Andrew Bacevich– US Army colonel, Ret., an American historian specializing in international relations, history and diplomacy, Professor Emeritus of International Relations and History at the Boston University and co-founder and president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.
Jane Bright- is the mother of Sgt. Evan Ashcraft who died on July 24, 2003 along with two other U.S. soldiers in an ambush near Mosul when Evan was 24 years old. Jane and her husband founded the Evan Ashcraft Memorial Foundation in his memory which  provided grants and scholarships for many years to returning soldiers, thereby fulfilling Evan’s wish to help others.
Laurie Loving- Longtime advisors and MFSO leaders, she and her husband established the N.CA MFSO chapter when Laurie’s son deployed to Iraq.  Organizers of many actions at the state Capitol and DC, where Laurie spoke at the Washington monument surrounded by combat boots and shoes, they continue advise the national organization, most recently as part of the MFSO-VFP coalition which successfully established an ongoing relationship with key members of President Biden’s transition team.
Daniel Sjursen- Graduate and American History teacher at West Point and US Army officer, he served combat tours with reconnaissance units in both the Iraq and Afghanistan surges. Medically retiring as a major due to post-traumatic stress, he transitioned to full time writing, speaking, and peace/social justice work.  He is a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy (CIP), contributing editor at Antiwar.com, and member of Veterans for Peace

MFSO Meets with President elect Biden transition team December 23, 2020 Getting a meeting with the Biden transitional team seemed like a pipe dream, but thanks to the So. Cal local chapter, the national MFSO board MFSO convinced us to “go for it”. On the advance planning team were Paul Cox, Gerry Condon (VFP) and Pat, Jeff, Laurie Loving and Diane Bremer (MFSO) and MFSO supporter Jan Meslin. We requested an on-going dialogue with the administration and that all troops be brought home now from Iraq and Afghanistan. On Dec 23 were met with representatives from the Biden transition team, which included staff from Dr. Jill Biden’s office on vet care, and a foreign policy representative. Representing MFSO were Michael McPhearson (Army dad and former Exec. Dir. VFP), Tracy Eiswert (Gold Star spouse) and Pat Alviso (active duty Marine mom) representing VFP were Garett Reppenhagen (VFP Exec. Dir) and Danny Sjursen (ret. Army Major, historian, former grad and teacher at West Point, author). We aimed for the heart when we told our stories and felt the Biden team was moved.  They promised to submit our written testimony to the appropriate people in the White House and identified us as future stakeholders for meetings they will recommend. In the meantime, the planning team continues to meet to identify how we can make the greatest impact on this administration while continuing to organize to bring all of troops home NOW. We welcome and listen to all comments… mfsooc@earthlink.net

From Jeff’s desk
Remembering our military families members who died in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan in 2020: Army Spc. Antonio I. Moore, 22, Marine Gunnery Sgt. Diego D. Pongo, 34, Marine Capt. Moises A. Navas, 34, Air Force Staff Sgt. Marshal D. Roberts, 28, Army Spc. Juan Miquel Mendez Covarrubias, 27, Army Sgt. 1st Class John David Hilty, 44, Army Staff Sgt. Ian P. McLaughlin, 29, Army Pfc. Miguel A. Villalon, 21, Air Force Lt. Col. Paul K. Voss, 46, Air Force Capt. Ryan S. Phaneuf, 30, Army Sgt. 1st Class Javier J. Gutierrez, 28, Army Sgt. 1st Class Antonio R. Rodriguez, 28, Army Spc. Branden T. Kimball, 21, Army 1st Lt. Trevarius R. Bowman, 25, Army Spc. Vincent S. Ibarria, 21 and Army 1st Lt. Joseph T. Allbaugh, 24.  You will always be remembered.

Note: The opinions above and in future editorials do not reflect any official stance approved by the MFSO board, which meets monthly and posts official positions decided by the board on our website. Your responses and opinions are welcome. If you would like to send your own editorial on any MFSO related issue, please send to mfsooc@earthlink.net

Contributions & editing by: Tracy Eiswert, Jeff Merrick & Pat Alviso
4,586 American Troops killed in Iraq; 2,452 American Troops killed in Afghanistan

Copyright © 2021 Military Families Speak Out, All rights reserved.
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01/07/2021 | admin

MFSO Newsletter December 2020

MFSO Newsletter December 2020

Military Families Speak Out
December 2020
Troops Home Now!

Editorials from MFSO members:
Jeff Merrick
Long Beach, CA

So Are We Getting Out of Afghanistan or Not?

President Trump has ordered the Defense Department to cut the number of troops in Afghanistan from 4,500 to 2,500 and Iraq from 3,000 to 2,500 by Jan. 15, 2021- just days before he is set to leave office.  Both political parties are livid over Trump’s plan to reduce troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, even though most Americans and active duty military are for getting out now. Staying one more day in Afghanistan is not worth any more deaths, injuries, Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI) or cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and that includes all the military family members, many of whom have secondary PTSD.

We need to accept the facts about Afghanistan; no one has ever controlled the whole country, even when we had over 100k U.S. troops in country. We controlled the large cities but not the countryside.  We have been training the Afghan military/police for over 17 years, and yet some people still say we can’t leave before Afghans can protect themselves.  I guess we must be poor teachers because I was very good at my job in the military after just one year of training and another year on the job. So it really doesn’t make a difference whether we leave tomorrow or 2030; Afghanistan will end up in a civil war. Plainly, endless war means we have no real exit plan.

Pushing through a complete U.S. military departure from Afghanistan in the next two months is not precipitous. After nearly 20 years of war, most of them stalemated, inhumane and corrupt, it is long overdue.  American politicians and some people in the military still believe we can win and control Afghanistan; as the Russia and British governments discovered, this is foolish and not even feasible.

How did we end up in this quagmire of endless war? The U.S. military has been at war or engaged in other combat operations in all but about 11 years of our history. Having almost 800 U.S. military bases abroad provides a key to understanding why we have been fighting almost without pause since 1776. These bases have expanded our boundaries, while keeping the country locked in a perpetual state of nearly continuous war that has largely served our country’s economic and political interests and left millions of innocent civilians dead, wounded and displaced.  While other nations have spent the bulk of their treasury on their people, Americans have invested in a state dedicated above all to preparing and waging war. You only only to look at the size of our military and consider the growing homeless population in the US, to know we must change our priorities and start working to not only save ourselves but the entire planet.

The only thing President-elect Biden needs to know about Afghanistan is that the only way to honor all those killed in endless war is to stop the bleeding and bring all of our troops home now. This does not mean that the 2,451 died for nothing- just talk to anyone who deployed- they died protecting their buddies so they could come home. Too many didn’t come home, but we will never forget them. We know we have to stop the wars sometime; there’s no point in any more needless deaths, so let’s show respect for the lives of our troops and their families and make it now.

Read more about the history of Afghanistan from World History Website: Link

In the News: 

The threat to our security isn’t reducing troop levels, it’s failing to withdraw them entirely.. While it may sound good on paper to keep 2,500 troops in both Afghanistan and Iraq, doing so will perpetuate the decades long military failure.  Link to article

A ‘Sacred Obligation:’ Jill Biden Pledges Support for Military Families   Will Dr. Jill Biden’s family ties to the military really help our military families or will her focus only be on helping military kids face endless war? Link to article

Accelerated  troop pullout fuels concern about an accelerated U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan. And so the debate and the second guessing continues- If  Biden keeps a residual force, that would require a renegotiated deal with the Taliban, which they and the Afghan government have already rejected. Deputy Director of the Asia Program at the Washington-based Wilson Center reports that the US can’t rein in rising insurgent violence, and has contributed to the violence through its own actions that maim and kill civilians, not to mention its complicity in Kabul’s corruption. Link to article

The Case for Getting Out of Afghanistan Now  Acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller wrote in his introductory memo to the Defense Department, “All wars must end.. and requires compromise and partnership. We met the challenge; we gave it our all. Now, it’s time to come home”. Withdrawal to a smaller force is…“strategic and feasible, but the Washington foreign policy establishment is the obstacle for total withdrawal of our troops which “inflates threats, exaggerates benefits, and conceals costs”. Link to article

Will US troops actually leave Syria in exchange for hostages?  The US seeks the release of two American citizens believed to be held hostage in Syria. President Trump would like to have the victory of bringing hostages home and withdrawing from complicated wars. Could these factors lead to a complete exit in Syria before Trump’s exit? Link to article

MFSO ACTION UPDATES

  • Have you met the MFSO board yet? Check out our website at mfso.org and meet the powerful group of MFSO leaders who steer the organization in the right direction to keep us relevant and on the right path.
  • A committee made up of MFSO & VFP members has sent a letter requesting a meeting with President-elect Joe Biden and staff to discuss bringing all of the troop’s home now. To that end we have signed a joint letter and agreed on points of unity.
  • Our board is very concerned about the large influence of the think tank Center for New American Strategy (CNAS) and the potential appointment of Michele Flournoy. CNAS opposes total withdrawal and supports first strike to protect American interests. Flournoy is the founder of CNAS. Have you called your Senator yet? link to Call to Action
  • Hope you’ve taken a moment to support veteran and whistleblower Reality Winner- sign and send a letter to Pres. Trump/ and send her a note. Be sure to follow strict prison letter writing guidelines on how to write to Reality and  send letter to president.

From Jeff’s desk
This week I watched an honest, realistic account of returning combat troops from Afghanistan. “Once a Marine” I would recommend this excellent film to anyone who wants to understand what happens to our troops during combat and after coming home.  Available free if you have Amazon Prime Video! Link

Note: The opinions reflected above and in future editorials are not a reflection of any official stance approved by the MFSO board, which meets monthly and posts official positions decided by the board on our website. Your responses and opinions are welcome. If you would like to send your own editorial on any MFSO related issue, please send to mfsooc@earthlink.net

Contributions & editing by: Jeff Merrick & Pat Alviso

4,586 American Troops killed in Iraq; 2,451 American Troops killed in Afghanistan

Copyright © 2020 Military Families Speak Out, All rights reserved.
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12/15/2020 | admin

Letters to the Editor: The U.S. Strategy in Afghanistan Is Endless War. Bring Our Troops Home Now

MFSO Board Member Jeff Merrick’s Letter to the Editor:

https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-12-10/endless-war-afghanistan-bring-the-troops-home-now

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11/17/2020 | admin

Action Alert: Oppose Nomination of Michele Flournoy as Secretary of Defense

Soon Pres. Elect Biden will be announcing his choice for Secretary of Defense and Michelle Flournoy seems to be at the top of his list. As military families, we are very concerned about her appointment, since she opposes withdrawal of our troops from the Middle East. Flounoy and several others from the think tank she founded, the Center for New American Security, are invested in the escalation of war and pre-emptive strikes.  We urge you to call you Senator now, mention that you are a military family and speak out against her appointment for Secretary of Defense. Below is more information about Flounoy and the policies she has supported. Please call your Senator today and get the word out to all your contacts.

Action Alert

 WHAT: Oppose Nomination of Michele Flournoy as Sec. of Defense

 HOW: Contact your U.S. Senators (202) 224-3121

WHY:  Oppose hawkish Flournoy’s nomination because she wants to increase arms sales to Saudi Arabia to police the Middle East while the US pivots to Asia to escalate troop deployments for more “war games” in the South China Sea. Flournoy advocates:

·      Preparation for multiple simultaneous large theater wars.

·      Pre-emptive unilateral military strikes.

·      Sale of more weapons to Saudi Arabia’s brutal regime in contrast to President-elect Joe Biden’s position to end US support for Saudi genocide in Yemen.

·      Escalation of provocative roving war games in the South China Sea, ramping up the risk of a hot war with China or North Korea, both nuclear powers.

·      Increased use of drone warfare.

·      Symbolizes the revolving door between Pentagon, consultants and military contractors.

·      Investment in new weapons systems when resources are urgently needed to address the climate crisis and COVID-19, etc.

WHEN: Call and email NOW as Biden will reportedly announce his cabinet choices as early as Thanksgiving. Biden’s nominees, to pass muster, must be approved by a majority of the Senate.

Please share the links below with Senators, on social media & with like-minded organizers:

Will Michele Flournoy be the Angel of Death for the American Empire? Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S. Davies. Common Dreams. 9/22/2020

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2020/09/22/will-michele-flournoy-be-angel-death-american-empire

Progressives Slam Biden’s Foreign Policy Team

https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/biden-trump-war-military/

Tim Shorrock. The Nation. 9/21/20

Democrats are walking a fine line on the election’s main foreign policy issue: China. Akbar Shahid Ahmed. Huffington Post. 8/22/20

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/biden-china-foreign-policy_n_5f403019c5b697824f987e15

How to Prevent a War in Asia by Flournoy (Foreign Affairs, June 18, 2020)

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-06-18/how-prevent-war-asia

“…if the U.S. military had the capability to credibly threaten to sink all of China’s military vessels, submarines, and merchant ships in the South China Sea within 72 hours, Chinese leaders might think twice before, say, launching a blockade or invasion of Taiwan; they would have to wonder whether it was worth putting their entire fleet at risk.”  Flournoy

“Washington needs to clarify—and consistently demonstrate—its commitment to the Indo-Pacific region, making clear who and what it is willing to defend. It must deploy more senior officials and additional military forces to the region, to underscore its enduring presence, strengthen its relationships, and counterbalance China’s influence. It should conduct more regular military exercises with allies and partners in the region, both to demonstrate capabilities it has already and to accelerate the development of new ones.”

Background on Flournoy (Wikipedia)

 Michèle Angelique Flournoy (born December 14, 1960) is the former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy under President Clinton and the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy under President Obama, serving as a principal advisor to U.S. Secretaries of Defense Robert Gates and Leon Panetta from February 2009 to February 2012.[1] During her tenure in the Clinton administration, Flournoy was the principal author of the May 1997 Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), which advocated the unilateral use of military power in defense of US interests.[2] While serving in the Obama administration, Flournoy crafted the administration’s policy of counter-insurgency in Afghanistan[3] and helped persuade President Obama to intervene militarily in Libya.[4]

 After leaving the Obama White House, Flournoy joined the Boston Consulting Group as a senior advisor, overseeing the development of $32 million in military contracts.[7][8] In 2018, she joined the board of Booz Allen Hamilton, a publicly traded consulting firm with military contracts and cyber security expertise.[9] She is currently the co-founder and managing partner of WestExec Advisors

For more on Biden’s cabinet choices, read “Meet the Contenders for Biden’s Cabinet” (Politico, 11/7/20).

https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/07/joe-biden-cabinet-picks-possible-choices-433431

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