thedrifter
11-16-03, 08:24 AM
11-14-2003
Lynch Story Reveals More Than Media Deception
By Ralf W. Zimmermann
First it was a story of unprecedented military heroism.
Ambushed by vastly superior Iraqi military forces, a female U.S. soldier had courageously fought to her last bullet, suffering numerous and critical injuries. After fiercely resisting her captors and possibly being raped, Jessica Lynch quickly became the focal point of a daring rescue raid, involving everything and everybody labeled “special” in the U.S. military.
Pentagon film footage, shot with thermal imagery cameras, flashed around the world, touting U.S. capabilities and invincibility. American film producers and book publishers smelled bucks and cranked up their sales machineries.
But shortly after the raid, the BBC and AP, among other media sources, criticized the rescue as overblown and dramatized. Soon the claims of rape, multiple gunshot wounds and a fight to the last bullet faded. With a book release, TV movie and a “Primetime” interview, all superbly marketed around Veterans Day, a more complete truth has emerged.
The truth came from Jessica Lynch herself. In the “Primetime” interview, Lynch openly questioned the necessity to make her the focal point of a fine-tuned Pentagon propaganda campaign. She confirmed that her convoy was lost and that her gun jammed in the ensuing chaos. According to her own account, she didn’t shoot a single bullet.
Despite the media and hero hoopla, the Pentagon propaganda story about Lynch’s convoy ambush remains a disturbing mess. It’s an and endless list of tactical and leadership blunders that occur in many military units. The 507th Maintenance Company’s failures included:
* The unit relied on bad maps and became lost.
* Critical weapons malfunctioned, their maintenance neglected.
* Vehicles ran out of fuel.
* The unit had inadequate means of communications and wasn’t tied in with a quick reaction force.
* The unit’s soldiers carried no grenades and anti-tank weapons for close-in defense.
Most critical failures fell into the categories of bad leadership, shoddy training, omitted pre-combat checks and lack of personal discipline. Ultimately, unit leaders and especially commanders are responsible for success and failure in combat. How else could major screw-ups, such as lack of fuel, dirty weapons and lack of protective ammunition have been overlooked? Why did the chain of command not insist on better maps, security and adequate communications?
Many soldiers have written me that all too often, their chains of command ignore the concerns of subordinate leaders for fear of career repercussions. It seems that many senior leaders still live by the principle: “Do what we tell you to do or you’ll read it in your efficiency report.”
But in real combat, this “CYA-attitude” can’t stand! When combat survival is the issue, efficiency reports mean zip. To protect soldiers’ lives, good leaders must and will do what’s right for the mission, the unit and its people. If they can’t, they must abdicate!
In the end, Jessica Lynch’s comments and the official findings surrounding the 507th Maintenance Company debacle are important lessons for all supply and support units. They are the most vulnerable and exposed elements in modern war or peace-enforcement scenarios.
Have no doubt, in the ongoing Iraqi guerilla war, the enemy will continue targeting trucks and other soft-skinned vehicles before taking on U.S. armor. Consequently, tactical training and combat preparations for the “softer” support outfits must be more than fancy slide shows and cover-your-butt briefs. Rigorous drill and brutal pre-combat checks must become the norm.
Although the 507th ambush lessons were bloody, the truth can’t take away from individual courage by members of the company when faced with a bad situation. Soldiers like Pvts. Patrick Wayne Miller, Jessica Lynch and First Sergeant Robert Dowdy did their best to preserve lives. For that, they deserve our respect.
Is Jessica Lynch a genuine war hero? No, and she says so herself. Jessica is, however, an American soldier and a human being with dignity and character. She did her duty for America as expected from a proud soldier. She is a veteran who ultimately demonstrated the courage to tell the truth about war, human fears, suffering and doubts. And she had the guts to recover from it all by the power of the truth.
In a time when the truth is constantly spun to meet the demands of political expedience, we should feel encouraged that a young soldier stood tall for the truth. Despite pressures to act otherwise, she rejected a burdensome life of deceit and fiction.
I salute her as a true American and wish her the best for her future with her fiancé in Colorado Springs.
Ralph W. Zimmerman is a Contributing Editor of DefenseWatch. He can be reached at r6zimm@earthlink.net.
http://www.sftt.org/cgi-bin/csNews/csNews.cgi?database=DefenseWatch.db&command=viewone&op=t&id=254&rnd=987.4546093717394
Sempers,
Roger
:marine:
Lynch Story Reveals More Than Media Deception
By Ralf W. Zimmermann
First it was a story of unprecedented military heroism.
Ambushed by vastly superior Iraqi military forces, a female U.S. soldier had courageously fought to her last bullet, suffering numerous and critical injuries. After fiercely resisting her captors and possibly being raped, Jessica Lynch quickly became the focal point of a daring rescue raid, involving everything and everybody labeled “special” in the U.S. military.
Pentagon film footage, shot with thermal imagery cameras, flashed around the world, touting U.S. capabilities and invincibility. American film producers and book publishers smelled bucks and cranked up their sales machineries.
But shortly after the raid, the BBC and AP, among other media sources, criticized the rescue as overblown and dramatized. Soon the claims of rape, multiple gunshot wounds and a fight to the last bullet faded. With a book release, TV movie and a “Primetime” interview, all superbly marketed around Veterans Day, a more complete truth has emerged.
The truth came from Jessica Lynch herself. In the “Primetime” interview, Lynch openly questioned the necessity to make her the focal point of a fine-tuned Pentagon propaganda campaign. She confirmed that her convoy was lost and that her gun jammed in the ensuing chaos. According to her own account, she didn’t shoot a single bullet.
Despite the media and hero hoopla, the Pentagon propaganda story about Lynch’s convoy ambush remains a disturbing mess. It’s an and endless list of tactical and leadership blunders that occur in many military units. The 507th Maintenance Company’s failures included:
* The unit relied on bad maps and became lost.
* Critical weapons malfunctioned, their maintenance neglected.
* Vehicles ran out of fuel.
* The unit had inadequate means of communications and wasn’t tied in with a quick reaction force.
* The unit’s soldiers carried no grenades and anti-tank weapons for close-in defense.
Most critical failures fell into the categories of bad leadership, shoddy training, omitted pre-combat checks and lack of personal discipline. Ultimately, unit leaders and especially commanders are responsible for success and failure in combat. How else could major screw-ups, such as lack of fuel, dirty weapons and lack of protective ammunition have been overlooked? Why did the chain of command not insist on better maps, security and adequate communications?
Many soldiers have written me that all too often, their chains of command ignore the concerns of subordinate leaders for fear of career repercussions. It seems that many senior leaders still live by the principle: “Do what we tell you to do or you’ll read it in your efficiency report.”
But in real combat, this “CYA-attitude” can’t stand! When combat survival is the issue, efficiency reports mean zip. To protect soldiers’ lives, good leaders must and will do what’s right for the mission, the unit and its people. If they can’t, they must abdicate!
In the end, Jessica Lynch’s comments and the official findings surrounding the 507th Maintenance Company debacle are important lessons for all supply and support units. They are the most vulnerable and exposed elements in modern war or peace-enforcement scenarios.
Have no doubt, in the ongoing Iraqi guerilla war, the enemy will continue targeting trucks and other soft-skinned vehicles before taking on U.S. armor. Consequently, tactical training and combat preparations for the “softer” support outfits must be more than fancy slide shows and cover-your-butt briefs. Rigorous drill and brutal pre-combat checks must become the norm.
Although the 507th ambush lessons were bloody, the truth can’t take away from individual courage by members of the company when faced with a bad situation. Soldiers like Pvts. Patrick Wayne Miller, Jessica Lynch and First Sergeant Robert Dowdy did their best to preserve lives. For that, they deserve our respect.
Is Jessica Lynch a genuine war hero? No, and she says so herself. Jessica is, however, an American soldier and a human being with dignity and character. She did her duty for America as expected from a proud soldier. She is a veteran who ultimately demonstrated the courage to tell the truth about war, human fears, suffering and doubts. And she had the guts to recover from it all by the power of the truth.
In a time when the truth is constantly spun to meet the demands of political expedience, we should feel encouraged that a young soldier stood tall for the truth. Despite pressures to act otherwise, she rejected a burdensome life of deceit and fiction.
I salute her as a true American and wish her the best for her future with her fiancé in Colorado Springs.
Ralph W. Zimmerman is a Contributing Editor of DefenseWatch. He can be reached at r6zimm@earthlink.net.
http://www.sftt.org/cgi-bin/csNews/csNews.cgi?database=DefenseWatch.db&command=viewone&op=t&id=254&rnd=987.4546093717394
Sempers,
Roger
:marine: