Donate...
[i-link]
Our Manifesto
Our manifesto
Who governs Britain?
EU Documents
The Lisbon Treaty
That "mandate" analysed
EU Constitution - official version
Constitution analysis
Constitution Summit analysis
Building a political Europe
Myths
The seven basic myths
Good for the environment
Co-operating nation states
Europe reunited
The EU is democratic I
The EU is democratic II
Can't be a "superstate"
Keeping the peace in Europe
A free trade area?
Constitution for enlargement?
Qanagate
Corruption of the Media
click here for contents[i-click here for contents]
Blogroll
-
12 minutes ago
-
18 minutes ago
-
20 minutes ago
-
30 minutes ago
-
31 minutes ago
-
51 minutes ago
-
57 minutes ago
-
1 hour ago
-
1 hour ago
-
1 hour ago
-
1 hour ago
-
2 hours ago
-
2 hours ago
-
2 hours ago
-
3 hours ago
-
3 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
7 hours ago
-
8 hours ago
-
8 hours ago
-
11 hours ago
-
15 hours ago
-
16 hours ago
-
17 hours ago
-
18 hours ago
-
20 hours ago
-
20 hours ago
-
20 hours ago
-
22 hours ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
3 days ago
-
3 days ago
-
3 days ago
-
3 days ago
-
4 days ago
-
5 days ago
-
6 days ago
-
6 days ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
2 weeks ago
-
2 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
4 weeks ago
-
4 weeks ago
-
5 weeks ago
-
1 month ago
-
1 month ago
-
1 month ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
3 months ago
-
4 months ago
-
5 months ago
-
5 months ago
-
-
Climate Change
-
26 minutes ago
-
1 hour ago
-
4 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
6 hours ago
-
8 hours ago
-
18 hours ago
-
2 days ago
Blog Archive
-
►
2012
(407)
-
►
April
(29)
- We're moving home
- They keep on charging
- I have not forgotten
- Après le Dellers
- Cameron gets tough
- One of those days
- An all-time low
- This tells us precisely what?
- Why the cover-up?
- Water thieves
- Not only Greece
- An invite to the discussion?
- A dignified end
- We're not asking
- Thieves out to play
- Looters still at large
- A constitutional democracy
- Happy days
- Holding on to Boris
- Big European Brother
- A real veto
- We're sick of the lot of you
- A non-event
- Dismally led
- The burdenless burden
- The end of the Muppet show?
- A complete coincidence?
- Out to play
- Skulking in the shadows
-
►
March
(109)
- Framing the argument
- Clever old Sun
- A jolly good thing?
- Muddying the waters
- The not-so-free market
- A real rebellion
- By-bye election
- We've been busy
- Nuke plans scrapped
- Hold the front page
- The illusion of choice
- Schools 'n' hospitals reprise
- Dying the death
- The trivia rolls on
- Muddling through is awfully jolly
- Making a mockery of themselves
- The elephant in the letter box
- The Old Swan Manifesto
- A huge political mistake
- You don't say
- Why is this news?
-
►
April
(29)
-
▼
2007
(1691)
-
▼
March
(146)
- The alternative week-end toy
- A matter of respect
- The Saturday "toy"
- "Appropriate measures"
- Something of an irony
- "One of the most democratically representative in ...
- Demonstration
- News from Greece
- They call it installation realignment
- Holding to account
- Still behaving like adolescents
- Thanks for nothing
- Turkish gambit
- A proper inquiry
- Air cover
- This does not compute
- Where in the world?
- Three charged
- A nation of wimps led by wimps
- Feeding the crocodile
- Police raid EU offices
- Should we be impressed by this?
- He's probably right
- Sloppy reporting
- Pyjamas Media
- Can't help sympathizing
- Rules of engagement
- Oh dear!
- The pretence blown apart
- Different attitudes
- A foundation of lies
- You can rely on the Pope
- What's it to be?
- Definitely not "us"
- A sense of déjà vu?
- The sucess of the EU
- Fifty years of surrender
- The Berlin Declaration
- We already had one of those
- Pervasive it is…
- German judge does not come through
- Ourselves alone
- Outrageous
- Getting it wrong
- That didn't take long
- A lost cause
- French judge comes through
- Here we go again
- Some you lose and some you lose
- A very worrying development
- After Airbus, Galileo
- The mystery deepens
- Back from the brink… sort of
- Competing to recognize terrorists
- The power of lists
- Cheap and cheerful
- The winds of change
- The (Tory) retreat continues
- Overwhelmed to impotency
- Those Iraqi figures
- A lukewarm response
- Madness or higher dialectics?
- News from Sweden
- The biter bit
- Another eurosceptic campaign
- Contempt of Parliament
- Lustration in Poland, riots in Hungary
- Serial dishonesty
- Bureaucrats kill
- Why should universities live off the taxpayer?
- Are they fools or knaves?
- The full facts have not come to light
- The Airbus of space
- Funding of parties
- The price of betrayal
- As I left it…
- Well, of course, it is Bush's fault
- Trident
- Controlling the debate
- The propaganda machines
- Sentence upheld!
- Another suprise (not!)
- Well, goody for them
- More on that Global Warming story
- How true...
- Out of this world
- Light bulbs and Eco-Fascism
- Reporting from the West Bank
- Politicians trailing
- Worthy only of contempt
- This will hack off the Huns
- Working from home
- He is really going
- Two minds…
- Plane stupid
- London calling
- An unhealthy lack of information
- The Saturday "toy"
- The curse of the Eurobulb
- So, is it coming in by the backdoor?
- An excuse not needed
- As long as they pay for it
- Incredible…
- A cautionary tale
- A tale of two worlds
- Assisted suicide
- We are owed an explanation
- News from France
- Poles apart
- Robbing the present
- Is there a lesson to be learnt there?
- It ain't over yet
- What the papers say
- May they enjoy it while it lasts
- How will you do that?
- The scale of the problem
- A fabric of lies...
- Who is to lead?
- Value for money
- The bigger picture
- A self-indulgent posting
- I know this is a far-off country but still ....
- It's The Sun wot's doing it!
- What a coincidence
- Where have we heard this before?
- That's more like it!
- The Sunday "toy"
- You can beat a Pinzgauer
- Riots in Denmark
- Hooray for Hollywood!
- A certain lack of humility
- The Saturday "toy"
- How dare they kick our boots with the seat of thei...
- Apaisement
- Dog bites man…
- The great guru writes…
- It's a tax!
- The Tories at work
- French is the one
- Self deception
- Collective realization
- Carbon credits - the new indulgences
- Israel's temporary Arab president
- One dead fox
- A matter for contempt
- Airboom or bust?
-
▼
March
(146)
Showing posts with label friendly fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label friendly fire. Show all posts
AIR+-+A-10+006[i-AIR+-+A-10+006]With the passage of 24 hours or so and the benefit of reading an listening to dozens of media reports on the A-10 "friendly fire" verdict, reported yesterday, what strikes one is the utter dishonesty and lack of partiality of the coroner, Andrew Walker, matched only by a similar level of dishonesty in the media, which has used the incident to indulge in an orgy of "Yank-bashing".
If one was to single out a particular media source, however, one is forced to pick The Daily Telegraph and the egregious Thomas Harding. It was he, with the apparent authority of being a specialist correspondent, resorted to the tired cliché of "revealing" – something he does far too often - in February that US pilot training was "inadequate".
Then, with the passage of a month, he comes up with a very similar piece, claiming that "Insiders" – i.e., his mates in that he phoned up for a comment – "lay blame on US air force's training and kit".
What Harding writes, of course, is not untrue, but the error (and the prejudice) lies in the selectivity of the quoting.
That it is selective we know from the report of the Army Board of Inquiry, dated 27 May 2004 and republished on the MoD website. In its 27 pages, the report records multiple training and equipment inadequacies, and failures to stick to procedures, affecting both the British and the US forces. Not least of the inadequacies was the British UHF radio equipment, and the lack of such radios altogether, preventing the proper monitoring of frequencies.
What also comes over was that that small British force that was so tragically targeted by the A-10s was at "their limit of exploitation…", meaning that it was at the very edge of the area allocated to it, on a battlefield that "could have been described as porous, or less contiguous, with numerous small groupings of enemy vehicles operating in a 'shoot and scoot' mode of operation." In other words, by some ghastly coincidence, the British formation was exactly where the enemy should have been, presenting exactly the profile that would be expected of the Iraqi forces.
What the Board also reports is that, situational awareness (i.e., details of the force’s position) was maintained "by the use of an 'all informed' VHF net over which vehicles would pass regular reports providing the necessary information."
Blue+force+tracker[i-Blue+force+tracker]That, itself is highly revealing, marking out a strange omission from the Board of Inquiry record, confirming that the unit was not equipped with Blue Force Tracker, equipment which could have kept an on-going record of the positioning of the force and which was issued to British forces by the Americans.
No record of the A-10 incident can really be complete without also referring to a report released a year later. Entitled: "A Network-Centric Operations Case Study: US/UK Coalition Combat Operations during Operation Iraqi Freedom", it records the experience of forces using the Blue Force Tracker, which includes the following, highly revealing passage:
Interviews with personnel from 1 (UK) Armd Div highlighted that planning that had been undertaken prior to crossing the line of departure regarding the use of FBCB2/BFT had not resulted in the system being used as agreed between unit commanders. 7 Armd Bde was due to conduct a relief in place with units from 1 MARDIV (5 and 7 RCT) which was to be coordinated with the use of FBCB2/BFT. It should be noted that for both the Marines and UK forces, this was their first experience with FBCB2/BFT. Apparently, when the US forces were engaged by Iraqi forces south-west of Baghdad, the system was disregarded and the relief in place was conducted through the more familiar use of liaison officers on the ground. An interview with the former Commander of 15 MEU underscored problems related to the FBCB2/BFT (only one unit was made available to 15 MEU) – as well as MDACT/C2PC. As a result, the Marines abandoned use of this equipment during operations.Putting this in context, one can refer to a long and candid article on the military use of communications technology, pointing out the pitfalls and failings, but also including this passage:
The gear was clearly saving lives. The number of friendly-fire incidents that plagued U.S. troops during the first Gulf War dropped significantly, for example, thanks to the new, networked equipment. In November 2004, 10,000 marines participated in the assault on Fallujah. With drones watching overhead and commanders communicating better, not one marine was killed by friendly fire…In is not wholly unfair, therefore, to postulate that the events that led to Matty Hull's untimely death arose in part to the failure of the MoD to invest in modern communications technology and to invest enough time and effort in familiarising British troops with US technology which was provided to the operational formations in Iraq.
Either way, the situation was far more complex that the situation pained by either the hyperventilating Andew Walker or our loathsome media, including the rather pertinent snippet of information that the orange identification panels, of which so much play was made, were non-standard "enhancements", the nature of which had not been communicated to the US forces.
walke[i-walke]Further, the Board of Inquiry also reported that, "...the US authorities cooperated fully in the provision of all additional material and documentation requested by the Board" and it came to this conclusion:
… all those who were involved in this tragic incident appear to have been working to the best of their abilities, under intense operational pressure, in order to achieve their objectives.That is probably a fair verdict. It is one that takes account of the realities of the tactical situation and shows up for what it is the thoroughly dishonest verdict from Andrew Walker (pictured) and the serial dishonesty of the media in so glibly and superficially reporting his tawdry work.
Overall, though, the MoD - reflected in its statement - must be mightily relieved that Walker and a wholly inadequate media have once again let it off the hook on the equipment stakes. Not for the first time do we find ourselves asking when the media is going to start doing its job.
COMMENT THREAD