From: | themissinglink@eznetinc.com |
Date: | 3 Oct 2002 14:07:05 -0000 |
Reply: | cpeo-military |
Subject: | Re: [CPEO-MEF] "Green Troops" |
So what environmental laws kept the military from digging fox holes as part of their training? The introduction sets up a premise that the rest of the story does not support. In fact this whole issue of the military effectiveness being hampered by environmental laws is contrived. The military seems to feel that with the groundswell of public support after 9/11 that it can finally go on the offensive against these pesky environmental laws. It is classic military strategy to attack and deliver a fatal blow, in this case to environmental restrictions on training, when you have strategic momentum. This is another reason that the military should be stripped of environmental oversight over their own operations. They are not an organization set up to appreciate the non-military aspects of their United States footprint. Sincerely, Steven Pollack Incensed Activist www.familyjeweler.com/fortweb.htm ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lenny Siegel" <lsiegel@cpeo.org> To: "Military Environmental Forum" <cpeo-military@igc.topica.com> Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 11:28 AM Subject: [CPEO-MEF] "Green Troops" Green Troops GovExec.com, from the Magazine By George Cahlink October 1, 2002 gcahlink@govexec.com Military leaders say environmental restrictions on training are forcing them to go into battle with inexperienced forces. Last November, Marines from the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit flew 350 miles into southern Afghanistan from Navy ships to set up the first permanent U.S. base in the country at an abandoned airstrip. With Taliban and al Qaeda forces still lurking in the countryside, the Marines immediately were ordered to start digging defensive foxholes at the base, known as Camp Rhino. But despite six months of training before their deployment, most of the Marines had little experience putting shovels to soil. Some were digging their first foxholes since basic training. "When we got to Afghanistan, people were surprised just how much work there was for preparing a defense," says Lt. Col. Gregg Olson, director of operations and training for the unit, which is based at the Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton in southern California. Eventually, the Marines were called to help pick off Taliban and al Qaeda forces traveling along one of the region's main thoroughfares, known as Highway 1. They traveled about 60 miles from Camp Rhino across desert terrain in light armored vehicles to the outskirts of Kandahar. Once there, the Marines conducted raids and called in close air support to halt the flow of traffic on Highway 1 and kill scores of Taliban and al Qaeda soldiers. Olson is quick to praise the operation, but says the troops involved needed some on-the-job training when they set out for Kandahar. Initially, the Marines drove their vehicles north in long convoys as they had done in training, but commanders quickly realized those long lines were easy targets, and ordered the vehicles to disperse and take more rugged off-road routes. "Our drivers had to learn to be much more circumspect in their driving. They had not had much exposure to it. We had not had a good workout on the vehicles [before deploying]," says Olson. ... for the entire story, see http://www.governmentexecutive.com/features/1002/1002s3.htm -- Lenny Siegel Director, Center for Public Environmental Oversight c/o PSC, 278-A Hope St., Mountain View, CA 94041 Voice: 650/961-8918 or 650/969-1545 Fax: 650/961-8918 <lsiegel@cpeo.org> http://www.cpeo.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
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