Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Request for Congressional Involvment

This is a letter sent to Darlene Hooley, a Congressional Representative from Oregon, from one of the soldier's at Menwith Hiil, dated in early 2002.

There‘s two things that the army can never take from you. They can never take your integrity, and they can never take your pride.

These are the words spoken to me by SFC Hudinburgh, a wise and strong NCO of the 404th MI Company, whom a good majority of us young leaders someday aspire to be. His words were in response to the delicate position in which myself and a number of young leaders now find themselves, which I am outlining below, and seeking assistance for. When asking for redress in a convoluted situation such as mine, it is important to first outline the exact circumstances that have created such a situation.

As young NCO’s in the US Army, we define ourselves by seven ethical standards, known as Army values, which dictate our lives. We would find it,then, to be readily apparent that our senior leadership at all levels hold themselves accountable to those same standards, and enforces those standards equivocally across the command climate. It is only when our senior leadership violates these values, that a junior soldier must seek redress, be it through higher command leadership, Inspector General Requests, or Judge Advocate General Investigations.

A soldier who initiates the above actions expects certain reasonable discretions be taken when handling them, to include confidentiality and avoidance of any possible redress in response to such matters. Prudence suggests that with smaller, local commands, assistance would be readily be available through discussion with the next higher commander to expedite the complaint process. When this fails, soldiers have the option of disclosing command inquiries with Inspector General Requests, or Judge Advocate General Investigations. When a prolonged period of abusive command authority exists, however, at multiple levels in the command structure, and when soldiers have suffered extreme redress for utilizing the above military structures, it becomes necessary to seek further assistance through congressional means. Such has been the case of myself and fellow servicemen at Menwith Hill Station. The leadership under our Battalion Commander LTC Pastore, our company commander CPT Riley, our first sergeant, 1SG Riley, and several of their senior level subordinates, has contained such documented and repeated abuses of power and authority, that they must be addressed at the highest levels. To support this, I request that the following information be submitted for unbiased scrutiny to my congressional representative, and his staff.


ISG Riley has fabricated racial allegations against a junior SSG, SSG Turner, without credence. His basis for this was a police report, which contained no such allegations against SSG Turner. The police officer testified that no such racial incidents had occurred and any such allegations were completely fabricated on the 1SG’s behalf.


1SG Riley has called SSG Turner at operations on a night shift, while under the influence of alcohol. He slurred angrily at the soldier, claiming to be on his way to counsel him at 0300. He never arrived.

ISG Riley has repeatedly punished a junior soldier, PVT Dove, with UMCJ action, without attempting to resolve or identify the situation in which PVT Dove finds himself.


1SG Riley recommended a junior SGT, SGT Andrews, for UCMJ punishment for a minor incident; despite the fact this soldier was a stellar leader who never before had an instance of misconduct, and in direct opposition to her platoon sergeant’s recommendation.

1SG Riley ordered the platoon sergeant to counsel SGT Andrews that she would be receive UCMJ punishment, despite the fact that the UCMJ action never actually occurred.

1SG Riley contacted SGT Andrews on a night shift, while under the influence of alcohol. He slurred angrily at the soldier that he would be on his way to counsel her, but never arrived.

1SG Riley forced me to change a subordinate’s evaluation report as she was separating from the military, to include pending action he intended to take against her for missing work to take care of a sick child. SGT Taylor ETS’ed without receiving UCMJ punishment, even though it was still included in her final evaluation report at 1SG Riley’s insistence.

1SG Riley has been witness by many soldiers stumbling around on base while under the influence of alcohol, muttering and initiating drunken conversations.

1SG Riley and CPT Riley have both held company level training meetings in the base club bar with other SFC’s, while consuming alcohol.

1SG Riley has several times offered assistance to me and other soldiers personally, only to change his position entirely when finding the situation may negatively affect him.

1SG Riley has routinely fraternized with junior soldiers at dance clubs outside the base, in the local community of Harrogate, while under the influence of alcohol.


1SG Riley has allowed soldiers that are drinking buddies like SFC McClain and SSG Campanario, to routinely miss work, skip PT and training, and be held completely unaccountable for their actions by being placed in leadership positions.

Junior soldiers cite this as their number one concern that demonstrates the 1SG’s lack of ethics.

1SG Riley permitted marital indiscretions to take place between a junior soldier, SPC Dove, and SSG Campanario.

CPT Riley, the 404th MI Commander, has frequently been seen by myself and other soldiers flirting with his company orderly room clerk, SGT Catino.

CPT Riley has been seen kissing SGT Catino by civilians, soldiers, and members of other services outside of military duties, and has been overheard discussing his wife’s anger over the matter.

CPT Riley and LTC Pastore both permitted officers to bring kegs of beer to the Army organizational day; the entire command climate at Menwith Hill is overrun with alcoholism, and this incident has repeatedly been mentioned by junior soldiers as an example.

LTC Pastore and CPT Riley denied SPC Muhammad’s request for religious headgear despite previous army precedence for such an item. Another soldier, SSG Gregg Johnson was permitted to wear his headgear by a previous Menwith Hill command and still continues to do so.

The 404th Ml Company has failed to train its soldiers on simple Army tasks such as risk assessment and counseling. They have distracted IC inspections into such matters by presenting a few soldiers who train themselves, instead of giving a general representation of their overall training environment. A random sampling of 404th Senior NCO’s will demonstrate this lack of command Army knowledge.

LTC Pastore excludes SFC and above from professional interaction with subordinates by placing them in day support staff, where they are rarely seen for mentorship or guidance.

LTC Pastore has repeatedly claimed to investigate such incidents, but rarely finds any evidence in support of allegations made against both the Commander and 1SG of 4O4th MI Company.

1SG Riley has repeatedly ignored requests to resolve issues centered around soldier work positions, resulting in every single NCO working on a certain high priority system to receive negative evaluation reports, flags, bars, and denial of end of tour awards.

1SG Riley has caused severe professional redress to any individual who has attempted to inquire into the matter of why these soldiers are having trouble with this position; he has consistently refused to acknowledge documented problems with the day office. He instead blames junior soldiers with no support.

The 404th Ml Company has had two soldiers attempt to commit suicide under their command. Both instances were soldiers who have had excruciating negative actions taken against them by 1SG Riley and CPT Riley. With proper counseling and facilitation of their needs, the situation would have been avoided.

1SG Riley has repeatedly counseled a single NCO on situations that the soldier has filed IG complaints against about his back office supervisory staff. He does not understand the army ethic, and indicates that he feels that the soldier should ‘Ignore” evidence that completely substantiates a prolonged bias against fellow operators on the NCO’s position.

1SG Riley has ordered the same NCO to not talk with any junior enlisted soldiers and to not hold any leadership position; he gives orders specifically so he can later add them to counseling statements and convey inaccurate portrayals of individuals, stating, “I had to order the soldier not to talk to anyone”.

1SG Riley and SFC Dochterman have both caused severe distress since this soldier’s initial IG complaints were filed against them. SFC Dochterman has told different operators on shift, that if the soldier does anything that bothers them in any way, they are immediately to report it to him so that he may write it up and turn it in as proof.

CPT Riley is currently attempting retribution against this NCO’s complaints by initiating a commander’s inquiry into the soldier’s conduct as an NCO. As informed by 1SG, during this inquiry the soldier is to be flagged from all favorable actions, and must be sent to a mental health facility to have a professional evaluation on his mental stability.

At every opportunity during the above actions I and other soldiers have attempted all possible means of redress available. Our repeated requests for assistance have only been met by deference to the junior commands, which have made no honest effort to inquire into the above matters.

Instead, soldiers continue to find themselves the victim of 1SG Riley’s legal manipulation, which he uses to distort the truth. I have been reassured time and again that there would be no redress from such complaints. As it appears now, like the other NCO’s in my situation before me, I am on the verge of having my once stellar career destroyed. I can accept that penalty if it resolves the problems I have divulged above. As a great senior NCO, who does live up the army values, has taught me, “The Army can take everything from you. They can take your money, your rank. They can take your family, send you off to some godforsaken desert, and even take your life. But there’s two things they can’t take--your integrity and your pride. Your integrity; you know if it’s there or not and you keep it that way. Your pride is your own, well you’re the only that can take that away.” The process 1SG Riley has in place at Menwith Hill is so streamlined, that by the time this reaches your desk, undoubtedly my rank will have already been taken. My integrity and pride will still remain, as will the respect of my junior subordinates; what will suffer is their trust in military command and discipline.

I therefore, respectfully and humbly request that these matters be attended to, scrutinized, and resolved at the soonest possible date of convenience. There are issues of extreme urgency that need to be resolved at high levels in the army command at Menwith Hill station. Soldiers have already attempted to take their own lives. That alone should be an indicator of the type of dangerous environment that exists on site. Having resolved all other manners of solution, it is my sincere request that LTC Pastore, CPT Riley, and 1SG Riley all receive reprimand for their conduct in the course of my IG request and their own previous alcohol related incidents, and possibly relief of their duties. Although this is an extreme request, it is necessary recourse provided the above allegations, and the only way to assuage the legal wrangling and character assassination 1SG Riley uses to bully soldiers honesty and courage. I personally am requesting to be completely disassociated with this command as it has negatively affected both my career and chances for promotion. This inquiry has been made at several levels of command, but fallen on deaf ears. It is my humble and sincere hope that my congressional representative and his staff take a personal look into the charges I have levied, in order to facilitate a higher standard for the good nature and conduct of those in senior leadership at Menwith Hill Station.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Battle Buddies

My battle buddy in basic training was a laid back guy named Trochnell. He was a good guy, but an ordinary guy. Nothing stood out about him. He never talked much. We got along pretty well.

But if there's one thing I've learned about isolated training, (like PLDC, Basic Training, AIT, etc.) it's that they tend to make all Soldiers, even laid back gentlemen like Trochnell, want to fight one another.

So, Trochnell and I came to blows one day. It was a small incident, really, but it made me really think about the psychology behind it all. I mean, here you had me, a near pacifist, throwing blows with Trochnell, who's probably never even punched a guy his entire life, and for the life of me, I can't even remember what for.

Basic Training is a real mindfuck...it truly is.

For example, I remember going through the Gas chamber. There are only two things out of Basic Training I would never repeat again. One of them was the final road march, which nearly ruined me, and the other was that gawddamned fucking Gas chamber.

The Drill Sergeants are funny about it. They like to feed you as much chilly macaroni as possible before you go in. I remember them making us eat 2, maybe 3 extra meals that day. Then, they have the camera crew waiting on the outside so your parents can buy a tape of your misery as you leave the chamber vomiting.

You go in, line up against a wall. Everything is dark and red and spooky. Because, that's what the Gas chamber is...it's confronting your fears...letting your mind and body know that the equipment the army has given you is going to protect you.

But, it didn't protect everyone. Either the equipment was old and broken, or the seals didn't work, but one way or another, as we waited outside the line to go into the chamber, we'd see a soldier come running out crying because they couldn't breathe. They sent them out the front way, so we could all see how painful it was.

You went inside, and stood against the wall. The Drill Sergeant would come by and check your seal, then, at the proper moment, you would break your seal, take a breathe, and say your name and social security number. That was the easy part.

Then, at the end, EVERYONE had to break their seals at once. You stood in line, as the Drill Sergeant let each person out, one by one. If you held your breathe, or closed your eyes, you got sent to back of the line.

I remember breaking my seal, and I fully expected my eyes to hurt, and maybe my face. Everyone knows that about tear gas. I wasn't expecting my LUNGS to hurt! It's like breathing fire, and it's everywhere. You feel like you are standing and breathing in the pits of hell. Holding your breathe hurts, taking deeper breathes hurts...there's no escape. I remember standing there, moving sooo slowly towards the exit.

I closed my eyes...for the tiniest moment. I couldn't breathe, couldn't think. I thought I was going to die.

The Drill Sergeant physically YANKED me out of the line, by the back of my BDU shirt.

"Back of the line Soldier!"

And so I went...eventually I got out, and I was perfectly fine afterwards. I was never really in danger. The Gas chamber isn't about your body overcoming the elements. It's about your mind overcoming the fear.

Like I said, Basic Training really is a mindfuck...

And, not everyone was capable of handling it.

PVT Thompson was the guy who broke down in our basic training class.

He was a geeky kid, kind of medium size. I remember, we were standing outside the chow hall, and the drill sergeants decided to smoke us (make us do some push ups and other exercises). We did some push ups, then some flutter kicks...and so on. We did some overhead arm claps, and then to add to the torture, we had to hold our full canteens over our heads for as long as we could, while our string-noodled arms shivered from the workout.

Now, this stuff was easy to me. I mean...it hurt, but it was bearable.

But, something about this one particular exercise made this Thompson kid flip out. I remember, his arms slowly starting to fall, and the Drill Sergeant running towards him. It was the good looking female Drill Sergeant I talked about before.

"You better get that canteen up, private!" she yelled in his direction.

The normal response would be "Yes, Drill Sergeant!"

Instead, we all heard, "Fuck you, Drill Sergeant! I can't keep it up!", and EVERYONE turned their heads. Private Thompson was beat red, tears streaming down his face.

"What did you just say to me, Soldier, what did you just say?"

"I said I can't hold up this fucking canteen you fucking cunt!!"

He threw the bottle in her direction, and it landed at her feet. She began screaming in his face, at the top of her lungs, and within seconds, at least four other drill sergeants had joined her for support. They were all standing in a circle and yelling at the Private. He was standing perfectly still, yelling right back at the top of his lungs through the tears, his fists tightly clenched. His voice was intense and wavering, like nothing I've heard before or since. It was the voice of a mental breakdown, which shook all of us to the core.

One of the Drill Sergeants got behind Private Thompson...I couldn't really tell what happened, if he threw a blow first or if they just grabbed him, but either way, the entire group of Drill Sergeants dragged him off screaming, and that was the last we saw of Private Thompson.

For some reason, all of Basic Training seemed a lot more real after that.

There were a lot of emotions all flowing together towards the end of basic training. A lot of loneliness and longing for the normal life again.

I had just been to the hospital because for some reason my forearms were swollen up to the size of Popeye's. The doctor's called it muscle stress...whatever it was, it was damn weird looking. I was 118 lbs with bodybuilders arms. It took a day or so for the swelling to go down.

But, something about sitting their in that hospital, seeing the outside news, and the Burger King down the street. It reminded me that their was still a world outside of this tiny little camp, and I longed to be a part of it again.

For eight weeks, I had no contact with the outside world. Everyone else had spoken with their families and so on. Here, I was, ready to complete the course, and tackle the hardest physical task I'd every been through in my life, and I felt like I was going through it all completely alone.

Then the letter finally came...

Well Mr. **** :

Well I am glad that you finally gave us you adderss now we can write to you. You really don't know what it as been like around here not knowing how to write to you grandma calls almost every other day to find out if we heard anything from you or if we receive your adderss or when mom call's from work and ask me if you sent a letter and then there is poor *** waits right in the front room for the mail lady to see if there is letter from you and when there is he come's out yellowing we got a letter from ***** before I can even get out of the van. I want you to know that day you left was one of the roughfest day that I ever had in my life I look at your picture on the wall every night and think why did I let you join and then I say to my maybe it's for the best I want you to know that I am very proud of you and I Love You Very Much and I do miss you I will walk in your bed room and yell at you just to keep in practice. I want to know that if you don't think you can't make it you have nothing to be ashame of and you can come home and stay and go to school. I want you to know two things one is we had real bad time with ***** when you on the airplane man did he ever ball we didn't know if we could get him to quit then your mother started then you know what happen I started. Two. now your mother can never say you will be like *** again because you have done more than he will ever do in his life. I want you to remember one thing be proud of your self for you done more than any of the ****'s ever will do.

LOVE YOUR

DAD

P.S. You can call us collect if you want and remember one thing your dad stinks when it come's to writing letters. Will have new mattress on box spring for your room this week.

When I had received the letter, I took it to the bathroom. I sat down in one of the stalls, and frankly, I cried like a little bitch. I suppose part of it was missing home. Part of it was realizing how much I had already forgotten of who I was, in just those first 8 weeks, and part of it was a longing to see the outside world again.

I dried my face and left the restroom. A couple of the other guys smiled and nodded...most of them had done the same things the first time they received there letters from home. None of us said anything about it.

Two days later we started the final test. It began with a 5-6 mile road march. I remember the first five mile road march we did, almost four weeks ago. It was nearly impossible. It took every once of strength I had...and I was not looking forward to doing it again. I was even more not looking forward to the 15 miles on the way back.

We began the march by staggering off into two columns, one for each side of the road. You kept a 5-10 meter interval from the guy in front of you. Every once in a while one of the Drill Sergeants would give us the hand signal to halt, and we would stop and kneel or lay on the side of the road, behind cover, looking for an invisible enemy.

As we neared our campsite destination, something strange happened. We reached our destination, and I was feeling good. Not just good, but great! We marched around five miles, in the middle of the 100 degree heat, in full gear and rucksack, and I felt stronger then I had ever felt before.

We set up camp. Frankly, this was the absolute coolest part of basic training, and I think the most fun I've had EVER. We set up our own tents using the provided equipment. Everyone out at the campsite was supposed to dig their own foxholes, but the Drill Sergeant pointed at me and five other Soldiers. We were assigned "Special Duty".

Trochnell was left behind to dig our foxhole by himself. Now, in any other situation my battle buddy would have been pissed. But he and I both knew what "Special Duty" in basic training really entailed. It was never fun, and always much worse than the actual task at hand.

In this case, however, it was not so bad. We went out and about setting up the LRC course that we had to navigate later that night. It was standard stuff. Rope crossings, wall climbings. All of it was a lot easier than it had been eight weeks ago.

I was starting to fill out. In the past eight weeks I had gone from 118lbs to 138lbs. The newfound muscles were serving me well. I could run faster and farther as well. I remember in high school, running a mile seemed unfathomable to me. Now I could run two in less than sixteen minutes.

We got back from setting up the course, and I was just in time to help Trochnell finish up the foxhole. We covered it with some nice camouflage, and I'll be damned if by the time it was all said and done we couldn't see the campsite at all.

Or so we thought. It was early morning on the second day. During the whole field exercise we slept about 2-3 hours each night, between guard duties, exercises, etc. Around 3:30-5:30 each morning, we'd get up, grab our M-16s, and scurry into our foxholes to conduct perimeter security. It was during this lazy period that the Drill Sergeant managed to work his way into our perimeter. All I remember was the sound of a small "thunk" beneath us, and then white smoke everywhere.

But, even that was fun. The whole field exercise was a blast. We were dead tired by the time it was done. We didn't sleep at all that final night, but all in all it was the best time I had through basic training.

The time came to pack up. We filled in our foxholes, policed up the brass and garbage, and the Drill Sergeant assembled us into a formation. We brought along our rucksack and full gear, and stood at attention.

Now, this is where the fun ended.

Up until this point, when we traveled from range to range, for the different exercises, we were herded like cattle in the back of these tiny green trucks, 60 men to a truck. That would not be happening this time.

When the formation was finished, we were expecting to be dismissed and fall out to the truck.

Instead, the Drill Sergeant kept us at attention.

"Left face...forward march!"

Even though there was not a sound amongst us, you could feel the tension. Not only were we going to march home fifteen miles that night, after a low crawl under live fire, but we had now just been "unofficially" notified that we would be marching the two miles it took us to get to the live fire range.

I was a little angry, but mostly I was tired, in my mind, heart, body and soul, and I never hated a Drill Sergeant so much as that very moment.

Still, I knew this was it. I smiled, sucked up every ounce of motivation I had left in my tiny little spirit, and I moved on.

This was the march home...

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Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Dwight Bullard - Too Lazy to Council Subordinates...

Just a small update with this email...


I'm attaching two copies of the counseling that 1LT Bullard attempted to give to me while recommending me for UCMJ.

The incident was silly. I had decorated our work section for the Christmas holiday, something I've done every year in the military, as a way of establishing a tiny bit of morale with the troops.

Dwight Bullard and his cronies came in one morning and started complaining that a General (Maj. Gen. John DeFreitas - INSCOM Commander) was coming to visit and that all the decorations had to be taken down because they felt that he thought the decorations would be unprofessional.

Naturally, I disagreed. I thought the General would appreciate the fact that we cared enough for our troops to make them feel at home during the holiday season as best we could. LT Bullard and Mike Bolden, the section supervisor, had agreed only a week before.

Now, however, faced with the fact that the General was coming to visit, both LT Bullard and Mike reversed their positions, and were arguing with the soldiers and myself that everything had to be taken down. Never mind that this discussion should have taken place in private, not yelled to every operator in the work section.

We settled on an agreement. I would move the decorations to a less obvious location, where they wouldn't be so distracting to the visiting General. I agreed with this, and moved the tree behind a cabinet about four feet away from it's previous location in the middle of the hallway.

I left for the day, as it was the end of my shift. When I returned with my fellow soldiers for the next days shift, all of our decorations had disappeared, and the previous shift was angry because LT Bullard and Mike Bolden had made them take down all of our decorations.

I talked to my supervisor, Annette Wilson about this. Annette was an outstanding NSA Leader, who had recently stepped down from her position as watch supervisor, to take charge of our tiny little section until her tour of duty was over. She was stern, fair, and one of the only real leaders in the political nightmare that was Menwith Hill.

I was very concerned about the decorations, which were valued at around $1500, and a lot of which was personal property from different soldiers, some of which had been in their family for generations. When I talked to Annette about recovering the missing items, she suggested that Lt. Bullard had probably placed them in (Division Supervisor) Kevin Hay's office.

So, I went back to the office, with Annette, to recover the items. I asked Annette if I could redecorate now that the General had left, and she said I should probably wait until Lt. Bullard and Mike had regiven their approval.

Annette had a better idea. In the meantime, she thought it would be kind of funny and cute, if we decorated the Christmas tree and left it in Kevin Hay's office as a surprise when he arrived back from his holiday. Kevin and Annette were good friends, and she knew he would find it hilarious.

The next day, I was serving as interim platoon sergeant and doing some military paperwork on my off time. I passed Dwight Bullard's office, and he was smirking and asked about the Christmas tree. Mike Bolden was also their and said that he thought it was the funniest thing he'd seen in a long time. Lt. Bullard was halfway laughing, but also said that I shouldn't have "broken in" to Kevin Hay's office. It was weird the way he talked...he was acting like it was okay and he thought it was funny, but then he finished every sentence with "...we're gonna have to talk about this later..."

Later happened to be when Lt. Bullard came out to watch floor and started yelling at my in front of my subordinates, as documented in my previous email. As I said, Lt. Bullard never took the time to sit down with me and listen to the fact that Annette had given me permission to retrieve the Christmas tree. He was only interested in saving his career and becoming a part the witch hunt...

Below is a copy of Lt. Bullard's noncounselling...


And below is a copy of the "new" counseling he recreated after a lengthy discussion with IG working on my behalf...

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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Storms

I’ve always loved a good storm.

And in basic training they had some REALLY good storms.

Now, I don’t know why I’ve always loved a good storm. I’ve just always held some kind of a romantic notion towards the rain and thunder. Honestly, I miss some of those days when I could just sit alone in the dark and watch the storm roll in. I miss the sense of mystery it entailed.

I remember marching towards the chow hall with my platoon in basic training, and the drill sergeant calling cadence. It began to drizzle. We didn’t stop…I’m glad we didn’t stop. I LOVED every second of it.

I could see the horizon miles ahead in the distance, and one of the chow hall buildings sticking out of it.

Without warning, a roaring clap of thunder shook the ground along with a simultaneous bolt of lighting that struck beyond the chow hall in front of us. At the same time, the skies let loose, and the winds pounded us. Everyone jumped with a start and a couple soldiers chuckled and murmured under their breath. The drill sergeant stopped the formation.

“Platoon halt! Half Left Face!”

This meant that we all stopped at once, and turned slightly to our left. It gave us enough room for the next command.

“Front leaning rest position move!”

I smiled a tiny bit from the corner of my mouth. This was the pushup position.

“DROP!! Everyone just DROP! You do not have any bearing! You are afraid of a little bit of thunder! You want to be soldiers and you can’t even handle the weather! DROP!!!”

We began doing pushups to the drill sergeant’s cadence, with the pouring rain and the thunder surrounding us, and I loved every single little second of it.

It was in one of these fabulous basic training rain storms that I spoke to PVT Garland…the first and only time. She was my beautiful blonde haired blue eyed crush all through basic, who I would casually observe, but never really work up the nerve to talk to all through the length of the course. Except for that one brief moment…

It was the end of the day, the only daily 20 minutes of laziness we were allowed all throughout basic training. Most people were lined up outside the phones, calling home to loved ones, telling them how much they missed them.

I was about five weeks through the course, and hadn’t heard from my family yet. I had promised myself not to call them. After enduring eighteen years of torture, I had resolved to distance myself from that life and that pain that I once knew. Being as everyone else in basic training had already received several letters from their families, I was under the assumption that my family was ready to willingly abandon me as much as I was willing to abandon them.

So, while everyone else busied themselves with the phones and talking amongst one another, I would sit quietly outside on a bench ****** in my ***** ****. I was doing this one evening when the wildest storm broke out.

Most of the soldiers went running to the barracks. A couple stayed outside under the covered area and remained on the phones. I, on the other hand, put away my ***** **** and stood up. I walked directly into the rain, and stared up at the storm clouds, feeling the warm drops on my face and smiling at the sense of wonderment that this weather once instilled in me.

I spun slowly in a circle, staring at the sky. I know, it’s silly and gay to some, especially in the military, but I’m really beyond such trivial matters. It made me happy, and I don’t care who thinks it’s childish. I spun in the middle of the rain and the thunder and relished every moment.

And when I stopped spinning, that blue-eyed, blonde haired girl was standing right next to me, doing the same, and laughing. PVT Garland.

We spun together for a bit, with our arms outstretched, and she spoke a couple lines about how much she loved dancing in the rain and how happy it made her. I said the same.

And then it ended.

I can’t remember if the Drill Sergeants stopped us, or if the storm ended and we went back to our respective barracks. But, I know that was the extent of our entire conversation.

It’s a silly little moment. In the story of an entire military career full of politics and backstabbing and triumph and deceit, it’s really quite quaint. Still, these little moments were what made my career what it was.

Like the moment I fought the bastard Santos for the first time.

You see, my favorite thing about joining the military, was that it was a new life for me. It was a way of crafting a new personage. I did not have to be shy tortured loser from ****** anymore. I could be cool, heroic, and tough, and be respected for it. I could be the straight arrow and honorable man that I always wanted to be.

So I tried. I tried damned hard.

But the day Santos came out of the shower talking shit about he was going to rape this poor girl and he was going to beat up the Drill Sergeants, and he could beat the shit out of anyone in the room, I was just fed up. I stood up, and everyone looked. They knew what was happening.

“That’s not funny,” I told him.

You see, Santos had a way of getting on everyone’s nerves, but usually everyone ignored him and did what he said, out of fear. Everyone few days though, one Soldier would reach his breaking point, and attempt to stand up to Santos.

This was my day.

“What the fuck is your problem?” was his eloquent response.

I walked towards him.

“My problem is you’re always talking shit. No one here is scared of you. Half the people in this room could beat your ass. ”

“Oh yeah, mother fucker?” Santos roared as he darted towards me.

He swept me off my legs and lifted me into the air. Santos was a small kid, couldn’t have been more than 150-160 lbs, but I was even smaller. I was around 118 at the time, and I needed a waiver to get in.

I pounded on Santos back using really basic martial arts I had learned as a kid. Santos claim to fame was that he was a trained kickboxer, so I knew a fistfight was out of the question. After a few more blows to the back, Santos weakened his grip, and that’s when I busted out some pro wrestling holds I practiced with my little brother and daycare friends.

I was a grappler…always have been. I high school I infamously defended myself against a school bully by putting him in an inescapable “cross face chicken wing”. Of course, after I did let him go he threw a few choice blows, but I always gained the upper hand using leverage and speed.

But Santos was FAST. I mean, REALLY FAST. As he loosened his grip from the initial slam he was in the middle of giving me, I wrapped my arms around the front of his and put him in the best front facelock I could muster. Then, in what felt like a bad cheesy action movie move, I climbed the side of the bunk next to us with my now free legs, and dived backwards, driving his head into the ground.

The other guys in barracks gasped, and for a split second, Santos was still. I really wished he would stay that way…and I mean stay that way forever. For that moment in time, in all my rage and frustration, I really hoped I had broken the bastard’s neck.

It was only a split second. Santos raged as he attempted to stand up and reverse the hold. He slipped out, but I quickly wrapped him in a half, and then full nelson. Once in a great while, he’d throw a punch, or I’d sneak in a knee while I had him wrapped in a hold.

Santos would do this STUPID thing every time he escaped from a hold. He’d back away from me and do a couple of quick mid-front kicks in the air, like he was threatening me with his martial arts or something. At one point I just full on tackled him and wrapped into an STF with the same leg that he was throwing at me.

The whole fight really lasted less than three minute before the rest of the barracks pulled us apart. Basic Training fights never lasted really long, as no one wanted to get caught by the Drill Sergeants and be served with an Article 15. (The thought was horrible to me…nothing worse that a blemish on my military record from the very beginning. )

Truth be told, I don’t think I really won the fight with Santos. I mean…he was a friggin’ kick boxer. Yeah, I managed to keep him locked in holds for most of the fight, but he got in some really good blows and I definitely looked the worse for wear. No, I definitely did not win that fight that day with that particular bully.

But I did win respect, from my peers, and even from the Drill Sergeants, who have a sneaky way of figuring these things out even when no one tells them what happened.

Because, if a little ethiopian looking shit like me could hold his own with the big bad Santos, then anyone else could. Once again, I was a champion to the average guy.

Santos never got the same respect after that day. He still bullied other soldiers, but now other groups gathered against him, and not another day in basic training went by without someone standing up to him. I remember towards the end of basic, when Santos began talking shit again, and five soldiers at once muttered out of their mouths “Shut the fuck up Santos!”

Shortly after our fight, Santos was fire from being our Platoon Guide. He was replaced by a guy name Summers, who was one of Santos “Ghetto Infantry” members, but was much more level-headed than Santos. He treated the platoon with respect, and even stood up to Santos a couple times when it came to making the hard decisions. We were all happy with his appointment.

Santos was made into a Squad Leader, and strangely, I was also okay with that. He did calm down towards the end of the 8 week courses. Maybe Santos continued that trend and actually turned into a good leader somewhere down the line. Who knows? He had the potential.

I remember counting down towards the final road march. I was terrified. The final field exercise began with a 7 mile road march out to a field site. We would set up camp and conduct a variety of field training exercises over the course of three days. Then we would pack up, road march 2 miles to the live fire course.

At the live fire course, we would be required to low-crawl (and I mean LOW crawl) for a hundred meters while live ammunition was being fired over our heads and mortar was exploding around us.

From there, we were to dust ourselves off, and march back home, fifteen miles through the terrain, with a fifty pound rucksack, a 17 pound M-16, and full combat dress.

My buddy Hanner and I were sitting and talking about the end. Hanner looked at me.

“It’s gonna be hard.”

“The five mile march was hard.”

He was silent for a moment.

“Yeah, but at least we’re heading home. That’ll make it easier.”

I nodded in approval, “Yeah, then that will be the end of it. We clean weapons for a few days, and we go off to AIT.”

“I heard AIT’s even harder,” Hanner frowned, “Do you think it will be worse than this?”

I simply shrugged my shoulders.

Hanner shook his head. “I don’t think the road march will be that hard,” he smiled.

But his eyes betrayed his optimism. We both knew the worse was yet to come.

It was the longest, most grueling physical exercise I had ever put my body through…

For the first time in my life, something physically broke me…

My body was never quite the same…

Friday, June 15, 2007

Documented Examples

I am sending a documented example of how fruitless it was trying to change things at Menwith Hill. I had previously filed several IG complaints against SFC Dochterman, 1SG Riley, and a slew of others on the base who were continually harassing me and my soldiers, and attempting to ruin several careers in the process.

I had requested to the senior command and Army IG several times that I be placed in a different platoon due to the unethical bias of SFC Michael Dochterman (who I shall from this point forward refer to as DICKterman because he is truly a dick.), but the command stubbornly refused. As such, I continued to receive unverifiable, derogatory evaluation reports from DICKterman despite my best efforts as a Soldier.

It became a witch hunt, where DICKterman told everyone around me to give him all the information that they could so he could use it against me. Junior soldiers would whisper in my ear that SFC DICKterman had just been by to talk to them about me and wanted to know if I had done anything to them. Because Soldiers were refusing to talk to him, SFC DICKterman would make up statements and then force Soldiers into signing them. I learned this from my friend at the time, who said he was bullied into making this statement:



Which looks suspiciously close to this statement from one of SFC Dochterman's Senior Enlisted cronies:



Copy and paste much?

It turns out, then SFC DICKterman was so frustrated at not being able to find anything wrong with my performance, that he chose an incident where I had loosened my tie at work to exaggerate into something worthy of taking my rank. Granted, I probably shouldn't have been out of uniform, but keep in mind this is the ONE single item that they actually found wrong in the entire two years I was kept under scrutiny.

When the soldiers refused to follow along with his scheme, even after being threatened, SFC DICKterman collaborated with one of his bully counterparts, TSgt Harris, to construct the second statement, then threatened SSG Maurice Turner (One of the Soldiers who had previously experienced racism firsthand from 1SG Riley) if he did not submit a similiar statement documenting the incident.

SSG Turner refused, instead comprising by submitting the EXACT SAME STATEMENT as TSgt Harris, and admitting to me that he was doing so to save his career. There was no statement from CPT Jezercak, who witnessed the same incident, but did not want to become involved in the political witchhunt, and carried enough rank behind her to counteract SFC DICKterman's intimidating nature.

No soldier has confidence in a leader who has to whisper behind his subordinates backs instead of facing them head on, and the juniors knew SFC DICKterman was a complete tool. It backfired on him, as he quickly lost the respect of his platoon members and eventually left for a "day job".

But, not before giving me a series of horrible NCOER reports before he left. This was despite the fact that my supervisors...the people ACTUALLY WATCHING ME DO MY JOB said that I was the best soldier there and that they couldn't operate without me. DICKterman didn't listen to any of it...he made up a bunch of random derogatory bullshit and stuck it in my evaluation report, and since I didn't have the commands support, short of waiting three years for an army board to correct everything, there wasn't shit I could do about it.

Of course, all of this is in strict violation of AR 623-205, which states in paragraph 3-17:


"No references made to unproven derogatory information. No reference will be made to an incomplete investigation (formal or informal) concerning an NCO. References will be made only to actions or investigations that have been processed to completion, adjudicated,and had final action taken before submitting the NCO-ER to USAEREC; State AG; or CDR, AR-PERSCOM. "


So, despite the fact that the regulation clearly stated any negative NCOER information had to be investigated and adjudicated (of which this information had been neither), SFC DICKterman was blatantly allowed to disregard policy and throw a bunch of career-killing junk into my evaluation report with no ramification.

I tried to change this by appealing to the higher command for help. There is another clause in AR 623-205 that allows a soldier to request a commander's inquiry into a negative NCOER report. When SFC DICKterman sat me down, showed me a year's worth of negative counseling statements that he had just written in one day, and gave me a completely fabricated report, I told him straight to his face that I was going to request a commander's inquiry to LTC Pastore, the senior commander, and that it was illegal for the NCOER to be sent to PERSCOM (Where it is placed in your permanent folder) until the inquiry was completed. He said that was fine, and agreed. Here is the counselling form that he showed me, completely fabricated that day.



But, I knew SFC DICKterman all to well, and I knew that him and his racist good ole boy of a 1SG, Tommy Riley, would send the NCOER out under the rug, knowing full well that I intended to request an inquiry into it, and despite the fact that I had just told this to their faces. They were trying to keep things as quiet as possible.

So, I went down to the PAC office the next day, where they send paperwork out from the command. I walked right in the door, straight up to the SPC in charge of keeping track of the NCOERs, and asked if she had received mine yet. Indeed she had.

"Oh, it's right here. 1SG Riley told me that is was supposed to go out straight this afternoon." She pulled the paper out and showed it to me.

Like I said, they were trying to sneak it out under the rug. I'm glad I double checked, or I wouldn't even have had the chance to appeal. That's the way these people worked. If you weren't on the tip of your toes, they would sneak right past you, no matter what regulation it meant throwing out.

I explained to the SPC the regulation, and the procedures that had to be followed because I was requesting the commander's inquiry. That brave little bundle of 5 foot nothing walked right over to 1SG Riley's office and broke the bad news.

And he THREW A FIT!

There was screaming and stammering as he stood above her looking down and pointing. "Soldier that paperwork's supposed to go out today. Your not supposed to talk to that soldier about that paper."

God bless that little SPC, who coolly and calmly explained to the 1SG that she was going to have to follow the policy, and set the NCOER aside for the Batallion Commander to look at.

1SG Riley muttered under his breathe, "Fine, whatever, SSG ***, you're just digging yourself deeper," followed by another five minute lecture on not falling in line.

As part of requesting the commander's inquiry, I sent them this memo, along with the highlighted 623-205 NCOER Regulation:

THRU Sergeant Major, MHS MI BN (P)
MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, MHS MI BN (P)

SUBJECT: Request for Commander’s Inquiry


1. Under the provisions of AR 623-205, chapter 6, I am requesting a Commander’s inquiry into evaluation report ***. I have requested ongoing IG investigations into my rating scheme, and believe that because of this they are not serving my best interests as objective evaluators.

2. I believe that SFC Dochterman and 1SG Riley expressed biased judgment and included unverified, inaccurate information in the evaluation report mentioned above. My reason for this is the inclusion of several unproven statements of a derogatory nature in the Duty Performance/Values portion of the report, despite statements to the contrary from direct line supervisors who monitor my performance on a daily basis. I have also received Needs Improvement in the area of Responsibility/Accountability, with another derogatory statement pertaining to the same situation in support of the rating. I was also given a three in performance and two in potential, while ignoring several high profile contributions to the intelligence community. SFC Dochterman has ignored several of the efforts I made, that were mentioned by the commander of the MHS MI Grp in addition to national consumers, but abandoned them in support of his biased rating. He includes unsupported bullets that state I cannot perform without supervision, foregoing the input of direct supervisors that commend my daily mission contribution.

3. I respectfully request that all derogatory, unverified information be removed. SFC Dochterman has made blanket statements that I do not perform well without supervision, even though my direct line supervisor Annette Wilson will testify that I am the best operator on my position. I also request changing Duty from no, to yes in the Values portion of the report and eliminating a derogatory comment that does not support the rating. It also contains statements to the same effect as above, without evidence of what SFC Dochterman claims is substandard performance. In AR 623-205, this is specifically referenced, as statements of a derogatory nature must be fully investigated and adjucated before including them in an evaluation report. I would also like to receive a rating in performance and potential that more accurately reflects my abilities as an NCO. Peers, supervisors, and subordinates outside of the rating scheme still view me as a stellar NCO, and I have even been referenced at Navy training programs as an example of outstanding leadership. I feel that SFC Dochterman’s rating does not accurately reflect my performance, but rather provides an inaccurate, biased point of view, in retribution for ongoing requests for investigation into his conduct.



For months I got no response from the command on my NCOER. One afternoon I was bored and decided to check my OMPF, the permanent record where the army stores my NCOERs. Lo and behold, the original, unverified, made up NCOER appeared. The commander had supposedly "completed his investigation" and submitted my NCOER without notifying me. That's how confident the leadership was. They were afraid to tell me their findings to my face. I went to LTC Pastore's office to request the information.

I can't remember the entire conversation, but he said something like based upon reading the counseling statements provided by SFC Dochterman (The years worth that he came up with in a day), that the NCOER seemed accurate and that he could not change it. That's the extent of how hard the army investigates it's command issues.

With that type of hardcore detective work it's easy to see why 1SG Riley's racist reign of terror and CPT Riley's sexual harassment were allowed to last for so long.

I do remember the end of the conversation, however. I reread the regulation for LTC Pastore, explaining exactly why the NCOER was in violation. He has no response other than that he thought 1SG Riley and SFC Dochterman were not violating in his eyes. The army loves to look at it's regulations through various shades of gray. He said he didn't believe that they had any ill intentions.

Which is when I asked him "Well, then why did they try to rush my NCOER out the door without me knowing?"

"What do you mean?"

I explained what had happened, "I told them not to send it out yet, because I was requesting a commander's inquiry."

For the first time, LTC Pastore actually had a slight look of disgust on his face. He had brushed aside the stack of earlier complaints, but, I think a light bulb finally went on for him.

Still, he spoke, "SSG ***, I don't think they were doing anything unethical."

"Sir," I replied, "you don't try to hide things that are ethical."

LTC Pastore just said "Well," shrugged his shoulders and frowned a bit. He looked a little angry and confused as I grabbed my papers and left.

I was supposed to receive a written response to my commander's inquiry, but I didn't even bother asking. At this point, my fight was really through. They could write whatever they really wanted to about me, and there was nothing that I could do.

The funny thing though, is that I did get my written response. Months after getting out of the Army, while sifting through the stack of thousands of outprocessing papers that the command had given me, I found this small memo, that I never received but was obviously filed somewhere in the middle of my paperwork:

SUBJECT: Commander’s Inquiry — NCOER for ***


1. At the request of *** and lAW AR 623-205, I conducted an inquiry into his allegation that his NCOER (November 2004 — February 2005) contained unverified, derogatory, and inaccurate information. My main purpose was to provide a greater degree of command involvement in order to prevent injustices to the rated NCO and to correct errors before they became a matter of permanent record.

2. After personally discussing the evaluation with the entire chain of command and reviewing the NCOER, the Counseling Checklist (DA Form 2166-8-1), and a counseling statement, I’ve determined that SSG ***'s NCOER is accurate and lAW AR 623-205. The NCOER does not contain errors, injustices or illegalities.

3. Point of Contact: MAJ Kenneth Kaaihue, MHS MI Battalion (Provisional) Executive Officer at DSN (314) 262-7184 or Kenneth.kaaihue@menwithhill.af.mil.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Basic Training

I don't know what to say about basic training? It was fun. I was really scared at first...but I kept telling myself it was only eight weeks, and then I was off to training for my technical school, where I wouldn't have to worry about all this stupid army stuff anymore. (Or so I thought.)

What I didn't realize in the Army was that you did physical training ALL the time. I think if I had known that I probably wouldn't have signed up in the first place. The recruiter certainly didn't mention it. He told me I'd be sitting behind a desk for the next four years with no physical exertion whatsoever. He neglected to mention I'd be running at least 2 miles a day everday for the rest of my career. (Not to mention a six mile run every week!)

But, I know to get to that "desk job" part, I had to go through basic training first.

So, leaving off from before, there were eight of us on the plane to Ft. Jackson. We split a cab, and quite frankly, I don't even remember arriving. I know we were assigned to reception battalion, and we still wore civilian clothes the first day or two.

Reception Batallion is actually kind of nice. It's like mini-basic before you get to the hard stuff. They inprocess you, teach you the basics, give you the nice army haircut, fit you for uniforms, take some "before" pictures. The environment is very controlled, and the women are seperated from the men (temporalily). The drill sergeant marches you everywhere, but generally he is nicer than the basic training drill sergeants.

The eight guys I arrived with got lost somewhere in the shuffle of the hundreds of other candidates that were arriving with us. There were about thirty of us out of the hundreds that were chosen at random and assigned to a platoon and a small barracks. We established quite a camradery between us. In fact, I got along better with the reception guys better than my basic training platoon!

I became fast friends with one guy named Hanner in particular, strictly because we were both into professional wrestling at the time. There was another guy we nicknamed private asshole, because he was prior ROTC and pretended to already know everything. (I was prior JROTC, but I'll be damned if I was going to advertise it!) Another guy was named virus because he was sick all the time and had a constant runny nose.

I can definetely recall my first visit to the chow hall. The food was glorious! If there's one thing I'll remember about basic training, it's that the food was awesome! Even that first night when they fed us cold sandwiches because it was too late at night for the hall to be open. I ate to my hearts content, and that, combined with the constant physical training, put 20 pounds on me by the end of the course. It was my first major weight gain in the military.

I remember, that they finally gave us our PT uniforms, and so from that point we wore those all day, but with our combat boots instead of sneakers. Supposedly it had something to do with breaking in the boots. We didn't get BDU's until a few days later.

The first haircut was excrutiating. The damn barbers scrape the clippers against your head, knowing damn well if you bitch or cry out, the drill sergeants will have your ass. They laughed about it, and that part kind of pissed me off. It was uncessary pain...no training purpose behind it really.

On training method employed all through basic, and starting in reception, was that the Drill Sergeant selected one "student" to take charge of the platoon, and other "students" to take charge of the squads. It was "self leadership". The students were rotated out of the leadership positions from time to time so that everyone got a chance. Sometimes it became kind of a game for the drilll sergeants, where they randomly appointed and fired each person as a squad leader for a minute each. I was a squad leader in basic for maybe five minutes before I got "fired", and was replaced three more times.

I describe this because, this little game was one of my first lessons in leadership. Our platoon leader in basic training was a young black kid we called "Eagle" (I think, can't really remember if that's the exact name). Anyways, he kept us in line, made sure we got where we needed to be. Although, in doing this, he was a complete prick and everybody hated him. Now...some people would say that you have to be that kind of person to be a leader...(I think we all think that at first)

Except for the fact that when Basic Training actually started, Eagle was replaced right away by one of his subordinates. And for the rest of the course, he was beat up, kicked around, made fun of, and basically treated like the scum of the Earth, all for being a bastard of a leader in that first week of reception.

My first lesson of leadership: Treat your subordinates fairly, or they may come back to bite you, be it a week later, or maybe a lifetime.

When I later made my complaints against 1SG Tommy Riley...he reminded me of that stupid kid in basic training. He got his way by being a complete bastard about it, and didn't care who he pissed off because he was retiring soon. He screamed at soldiers, bullied them, and pushed his racist beliefs on the entire command. Only difference was Tommy Riley was an unethical bastard who didn't care about breaking military law. Eagle at least had some sort of moral compass.

What else about basic? Well...it's hard. Not too hard, not impossible, but it is challenging. I will credit my recruiter, because that's exactly how he described basic to me, and that's exactly how it was. Hard, but not impossible.

I mainly remember two things...the conflicts, and the environment. I don't remember many of the physical/mental tasks, because frankly, I passed them all easily. I'm fearless when it comes to road marching, climbing 40 foot towers, navigating obstacle courses, firing weapons. To me it's just a giant game. And, I'm a genius so the mental tests were laughable. It was the emotional conflicts that challenged me most.

I wasn't born a people person. I do pretty well now, after years of study and coursework on communicating with your fellow man. But, at eighteen I was an ignorant redneck from backwoods *** with a dark past and a huge chip on my shoulder.

And I was stuck in an open barracks with 60 other men just like me.

The worst of which was a bastard named Santos. He was a kickboxer from New Jersey, and a slick talking son of a bitch who I'm surprised even made it through basic, considering the fact that he got in at least 12 fights. He started around 30 others. I took him on twice...held my own, but didn't beat him nearly as bad as I wanted to. He made some comment about raping the blonde girl I wrote about previously.

There are some "bad" people in life I can tolerate, but assholes like Santos I could not. He didn't care for anyone or anything but himself. He talked non-stop shit, formed his own gang (Ghetto Infantry), tried to force himself on women trainees, and would help another soldier only if it made him look good.

Kind of like a junior CPT Paul Riley.

He graduated with us, but I know there's no way he made it through AIT without getting kicked out.

Before I left for Basic, I was given an empty *** from my older cousin ***. For some reason, I started to *** in it. A couple ***, but mostly *** and a few ***. I've always been a ***, but never much a of a *** keeper. Still...I will always be thankful for the gift that she gave me, because for that *** became the first of my "***" that would become a recognizable staple of my military career. I carried it everywhere I went all through basic and for the next four years.

I shared some of it with a beautiful young blonde woman. I remember her because she was one of the only two cute women in our batallion, (not counting the female drill sergeant, who was HOT!) and she was the only one who was not a total bitch. Garland was her name...and I specifically remember her for one silly little moment we shared together.

I remained friends with Hayner, and "Eagle" all through basic. I became friends with "Private Asshole", and a tough little redhead kid named Shelton who could wrestle the shit out of the biggest kids there. For that brief period of time, this group of kids would follow me anywhere.

If there's one thing I've noticed, it's that I've always been the leader of the middle tier. I've never been in that upper class, the popular guys...like Santos "Ghetto Infantry"...but I've always been a standout amongst common men. I demonstrated that in basic training, as the rest of the soldiers rallied around me while Santos was placed in charge of our platoon. That's right...only two weeks before graduation, and the Drill Sergeant stopped us in the middle of chow formation.

"Summerfield, you're out! Santos, get in there!"

Santos was our new platoon guide.

We all stared in disbelief...this piece of shit would be marching us across the graduation field. I silently made myself a solemn vow that I couldn't allow that to happen.

In the meantime, there were other things to worry about. It was towards the end of Basic Training.

We were hyping ourselves for the final road march. It was a fifteen mile road march with a 50lb. rucksack and full combat rattle.

Before we started the march, we had a three day field exercise, and a 100 meter low crawl under live ammunition.

I think, of all the courses in Basic Training, this was my only true test...

Sunday, June 10, 2007

From the hill...

Here is another comment from a soldier's spouse on the leadership at Menwith Hill:

Hi, I was referred to your blog by a close friend and I just wanted to tell you that I am elated to know that someone like you cares enough to expose these people. I recently PCS'd from Menwith HIll in December 2006, and my husband SSG *** went through hell there. Being from Puerto Rico and having a thick accent like he has, he had to prove himself everyday with those jerks, and he did. (The reason why he opted to lose $14,000 a year and move to Pensacola and work as an instructor in CID Corry Station.)I used to be in the army years ago and was a Paramedic. I encountered a lot of crazy things, but the worst was the ignorance and intolerance towards other races and cultures. It literally makes me sick. I just wanted to let you know to keep up the good work and that I can't wait to read your next blog.

Frances ***, NAS, Pensacola, FL.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

The Plan

Just thought I would post a picture of the two-faced piece of shit known as Dwight Bullard, who they put in charge of the 404th MI Company at Menwith Hill.

And, take a moment to tell you how this fight started, and why it continues.

And a little bit about who I am.

Most everyone has figured out by now that I wasn't actually in the military...I've only been to the states on holiday maybe twice in the last few decades. Menwith Hill soldiers all over myspace were trying to hunt down my sources. (I don't have an account...too dim to figure that stuff out. My grandson had to set this up for me!) But I did have access to a lot of information from those who were. I was a fly on the wall. An underpaid fly on the wall.

You bloody Americans get way too much money to sit in front of a computer all day. I did the same job for damn near minimum wage!

Most of the documentation I plan on posting here comes from about six different sources who were former soldiers of Menwith Hill, the majority of which were enlisted.

Some of of it was obtained through retired soldiers with access to FOIA (that's an american term?), and some of it comes from soldiers themselves who I keep in touch with directly.

I've been recieving more and more information as the site grows, and I hope to post some of those items too...keep sending them in soldiers. Your identities are protected here. I absolutely promise. Send your stories in to: thearmylies@gmail.com

I must state that I really can not vouch for accuracy of the information.

The beauty of the internet is that is an open forum, and in fact I could be posting absolute dribble.

I think the preponderance of evidence and testimony from these soldiers and former soldiers will be enlightening though, hopefully to the senior commanders and the general media.

Why did I take an interest?

A young senior airman walked into my cubicle one day.

She said that her army friend had taken her into their orderly room, and she said it felt terrifying just to be standing there.

It was like everyone in the room was going to kill each other. She could literally feel the tension.

So, I poked, and I prodded. I spoke to soldiers, observed the whole thing from a distance.

It's really quite a remarkable story.

For a couple years now I've maintained my silence. One reason was a promise I made to one of the soldiers, (the young SSG you've been reading about), to keep quiet until he left.

Another was my own pending retirement.

But, time wore on, and it began to wear on me. I became pretty brassed off. It's been my hobby...tracking this stuff down.

Dwight Bullard's promotion to Company Commander was the final straw for me. Granted, his name was only mentioned in a couple of the IG reports...it's the fact that he stabbed so many of his soldiers in the back during such a critical situation that bothers me.

Anyone who found themselves staring at the same stack of documents in front of them that I have, would undoubtedly believe that something horrible and unethical did happen at this base.

It's something that I believe tears at the very heart and fiber of the American philosphy, and it's militaristic way of life. It's all about a slow diffusion of ethics in a military command.

It starts with the small transgressions...senior leadership like SFC Rebekah James spreading her legs for junior enlisted soldiers like SPC Anderson, who was later promoted to SGT.

Then it gets a little more outrageous...men like SSG David Young getting shagged in the ass by junior enlisted PFC's in the Marine Corps.

Then you find out it's all part of a larger problem, with company commanders like CPT Paul Riley making out with his orderly room clerk SPC Catino, who gets promoted to SGT, and selected for promotion to SSG a few months later.

Then you find out an alcholic First Sergeant Tommey Riley tries to cover it all up by demoting soldiers, sending them to mental health, telling his whole company to stop "spreading rumours".

Then you find honest men like Dwight Bullard sliding down that slippery slope...until they join in on the bullying of culture of fear that pervades Menwith Hill. The senior leadership withdraws itself from it's soldiers. Men like SFC Dochterman, SFC McClain, and Dwight Bullard form gangs to intimidate anyone who comes forward to the appropriate authorities.

The senior command feigns igorance. The military JAG is on the main continent, as is the next level of command. The Inspector General spends two years investigating with no result.

And it ends, with two soldiers attempting suicide. Two seperate attempts.

To date the leadership at Menwith Hill has done nothing to change this army command, except promote the leaders who committed these transgressions in the first place, or allow them to retire with full military pensions.

There are a lot more sources, but the six I've worked closely with are the most detailed, and connected in a way.

Some of you think the idea of an outsider exposing all of these "secrets" at Menwith Hill is immature, unprofessional, and possibly illegal.

To which I would say, I'm just a silly old sod who really doesn't give a fuck what any of these people think anymore. All I have to do is sit around all day in front of my computer on the beach sipping wine and watching the younger girls walk by. Old age is wonderfully boring.

Maybe once this is off my chest, I'll find something better to do with my life.

I plan on writing all of the soldiers stories as first person blogs, because it keeps everyone more anonymous, and because a lot of my sources (one in particular I like because it tells the story of an entire military career) are first person perspectives.

So, I do offer a disclaimer that about 10% of this tale is completely fiction, namely to protect all of those involved. Some of it is reprinted emails, or IG complaints, with the names removed, changed, etc.

It's a narrative, a very intriguing narrative of a dark period for the military at a government protected american institution, and it's descent into chaos.

I think if you look very deeply, at the other 90%, you will reach the same conclusions as this old sod. Something very uncouth happened here, and the american army at Menwith Hill has done their very best to make sure that no one ever finds out.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Death

I've been thinking about death a lot lately...

Not suicidal, mind you, but just death in general, as a concept.

Do you think it will ever be beaten?

I read a lot of these articles. Things like Dr. Robert White who has perfected a technique for head transplants in chimpanzees and wants to translate his research to humans. Or, new anti-aging medicines that have tripled the lifespan of mice. There's even a video where a dog's head is cut off and kept alive artificially through the means of tubes and pumps.

My thoughts are...why aren't we doing more of this research?

Why isn't ALL of societies spent on these experiments?

Since the beginning of time, all creatures have fallen victim to this ticking time bomb known as death. In early human civilization, we created excuses for it, built religions around it.

But, what if death isn't a constant? I mean...who says we have to resign ourselves to a permanent, irreversible fate of non-existence?

My hypothesis is, that with human intellect, and the massive amount of technological progress we've made over these first few centuries, there is no reason to think that we can not beat death within the next few thousand years or so.

So, why are we putting it off now? Why are we, as human beings, not investing every single dollar we have in stem cell research, the human genome project, cyrogenics, human head transplants, and more?

I, for one, don't want to die. I want to live FOREVER. I don't think it's arrogant, and I don't think it's sac-religious. I think a human being not only has the right to life, but the right to extend that life as long as possible without interfering with the mortality of another human being. I think it is our duty as intelligent beings to pursue that right.

I always get a little sick and scared when I see people so peacefully accepting death.

Why?

Why would you embrace non-existence? Why give up a chance to leave even more of a mark on this world? I say fight! For the ones you love and the world around you. Fight for your every last breathe!

We take death for granted so much nowadays. We've become too accepting of death. We watch people get mutilated, slaughtered, tortured on television in fiction, and, with the advent of the world wide web, in real life.

And when we see a man's head being sawed off with a rusty knife, we no longer empathize. We only see the imagery. We see the brutality, but not the emotions that we used to. We don't make any effort to feel the fear he is feeling.

In less than a minute, he doesn't exist.

HE DOES NOT EXIST.

He leaves behind loved ones. He leaves behind images of the man he was and his place in the world, and memories in the minds of those who know him. But the essence of the person. The man who walked, spoke, and shared thoughts in his heart and mind just like you, no longer thinks anything. He is meat. A bag of flesh with no love, no happiness, no sadness. No soul.

Somewhere, deep down inside every man, is fear. We are born with this fear of non-existence. We are afraid of that instant in time where our opinion not only doesn't matter, but it disappears completely. We are not heard, because we have lost the ability to speak, or to even think about speaking.

I think our modern society needs to become re accustomed with that fear. We have become too accepting of death in our society. We see it all day and have become so accustomed to it that we embrace it as an unavoidable part of our lives.

We see thousands of men dying overseas...they no longer exist.

We see hundreds of thousands dying at home, living on the mean streets...they no longer exist.

We see children overdosing because of millionaire drug lords...they no longer exist.

We see disciples of the law chasing these drug lords, being gutted and tortured on the internet...they no longer exist.

All honest people, with wifes, mothers, and children...they no longer exist.

The American society, maybe even the world society, is becoming more apathetic towards death. You can blame the politicians, you can blame to government, you can blame the information generation.

But most of all, you can blame yourself, for forgetting what it is like to challenge the unknown shadow that looms over your every waking day.

For the first eighteen years of my life, I was suicidal, depressed, and living in a tortured environment. I did not fear death...I welcomed it.

For the past eight years, I lived a lonely, introspective life, investing every ounce of my being into the political machine of the government to which I proudly pledged my allegiance. I did not fear death...I ignored it.

Only now, with a job that allows me the free time to appreciate my life, and to appreciate my beautiful wife and child, do I fear death. I fear death, because now I have every reason to live, and I cannot imagine one second spent without them. I have trouble sleeping at night because of the knowledge that a day will come when I will absolutely never see them again. In fact, I will lose all memories of them, all concepts of the idea that I ever loved them or that their influence existed in my life. Someday, I will have to watch my beautiful wife die, or vice-versa, and the weight of those thoughts crushes me like a heavy stone.

Which leads to me to this determination.

We all must fight. We must embrace that fear of of a non-existent future and strive towards the common goal of defeating this beast called death. Because one day it CAN be defeated.

I DO fear death, because now I WANT to live for those I love.

But I will not submit to it.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Leaving...

           "All my bags are backed, I'm ready to go…I'm standing here outside your door…"

           You know the lyrics…they're from a famous John Denver song.  Of course, I've always loved Chantal Kreviazuk's cover better. 

           What can I say about leaving for the military? 

           Well, it was scary.  Damn scary.  Probably the scariest thing I've even gone through. 

           Which, is saying a lot, having lived the life that I have.  I remember the car ride the day before I got on the plane.  My recruiter stopped by the house to pick me up.  I didn't cry…the whole thing seemed too surreal.  I might have cried a little as the car pulled away, I really can't remember.  I just know the whole thing seemed rushed.  I can't even remember if I kissed my parents goodbye or not.

           The way it would work, is that I stayed in a hotel room overnight near the MEPS station, did all my paperwork the next day, where I officially enlisted, choose my job category, etc., and then had dinner with my parents.  I stayed at the hotel again that night, then met my parents at the airport the next morning, where I dispatched from the airport with about eight or nine of my peers.

           I remember the kid I roomed with…small, blonde haired kid.  We became pretty good friends, so much as you can become friends with anyone in a day and a half.  He was one of the eight that left on the plane with me.  He seemed small and shy…I wonder if he made it through?

           I can't remember much about MEPS…there's a lot of paperwork and interviews…a couple recruiters there to convince that the Army really was the best thing for me. 

           I wanted to be a linguist, but they told me I would have to wait a while to take the test.  Me, being that impatient little shit that I was, decided to choose another job.

           Now, I had no idea what I wanted to do.  I just knew that I was smart…an official genius is what the doctors told me growing up, and I wanted to something that would actually put my brain to work.  I also wanted to do something that involved sitting around a desk and had as little to do with combat and the military as possible. 

           So, I figured military intelligence was a good fit.  My recruiter actually picked my specialty for me, which I won't divulge here.  I didn't know what the title meant then, although it would come to define me and consume my career for the next eight years.  All I knew is that I would have as little to do with the actual Army as humanly possible.  Or so I thought…anyone who's actually been in the Army knows that every Soldier is a SOLDIER.  But, being a naïve, 18 year old kid who hadn't done his research, I didn't know any better.

           And, being in this MOS offered me all the college money I needed, which like I said before, was the only real reason I joined. 

           I remember signing the paper…I don't remember what it said.  I remember going through some silly little ceremony, where I raised my hand and swore allegiance. 

           I don't remember if my fingers were crossed behind my back.

           I remember the third best pancake breakfast in the history of the world at the hotel the next morning. 

           I don't remember when I met my parents, even though I know they were at the airport when I left. 

           I remember some big goofy kid taking charge of our little group.  He was the one that played the Chantal Kreviazuk song for me.  He also explained to me that my seat could used as a flotation device…which offered little comfort to someone riding a plane for the first time. 

           I remember…my mom, my dad, my little brother.  It was the last time I would see my little brother as still little…whenever I would later come home from leave he would be three feet taller with facial hair.  My mom would be 70 pounds heavier, and my Dad 50 pounds lighter.  Both would have gray hair. 

           At the time I didn't want to admit that these people, this place, and this life, would all change while I was away. 

           I had convinced myself that I would come home on leave over and over…that I would return to my little life a much better man, and make everyone else better in turn. 

           My mom cried, she always did.  I think…I can't quite remember, but I think the men in my family stayed strong in front of one another. 

           I also can't remember if I cried on the plane. 

           But I can remember that my first plane ride felt like I was stuck on a never-ending roller coaster.  I had to get used to the motion sickness.

           I can't remember their final words to send me off.  I can't remember what happened when we arrived, or how I got from the airport to the Basic Training post. 

           But I can remember that song…that song from the Armageddon sound track that my friend played for me on the airplane.  It become my anthem, my inspiration, and stayed inside my head through every tough obstacle I would face over the next weeks.

           And in the end they were not that tough…

           Not nearly as tough as that first day, when I said goodbye to all I had known and loved for eighteen years.

            And found myself "Leaving, on a Jet Plane".