Military

al-Qaida’s Long-Term Strategy

Next time someone says “End the War” or “Get out of Iraq Now,” point them to CENTCOM where they have posted al-Qaida’s vision of the future in the Middle East and elsewhere (here, for example).

From CENTCOM:

We note seven critical themes from the Zawahiri-Zarqawi letter. The first four confirm al-Qaida’s long-term strategy and core beliefs; the latter three reflect new information about how senior al-Qaida leader Zawahiri views developments in Iraq – and elsewhere – turning against them.

You can see the English translation and the Arabic versions in the article “What Extremists Are Saying.”

Also, you can keep posted to CENTCOM activities by subscribing to the CENTCOM Electronic Newsletter.

Thanks to 1LT Brian Anderson, CENTCOM Public Affairs Office for the heads-up on this important issue.

CENTCOM Delivers Supplies to Earthquake Victims

CENTCOM shows they are ready, willing and able to supply relief to Pakistani earthquake victims.

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan — The first relief supplies from the United States ready for departure aboard here on a U.S. Air Force C-17 less than 48 hours after the devastating earthquake that left thousands dead and thousands more injured. The C-17 and its crew from the 7th Airlift Squadron, McChord Air Force Base, Wash., delivered 12 pallets — weighing almost 90,000 pounds — of food, water, medicine and blankets from Bagram Air Field, Afghanistan. Two aerial port specialists from Bagram’s 455th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron were also on the flight to coordinate and manage cargo at Islamabad. Airmen and soldiers at Bagram, with only a few hours notice, worked feverishly to palletize the supplies and prepare them for the flight.

(U.S. Air Force photo by Capt. James H. Cunningham)

This is just another example of how US Forces are in the region to help humanity, even though the mainstream media will ignore this type of story in favor of bombings and casualties and anything to make the military look “evil.”

Visit the CENTCOM website for more on this and other relief efforts.

Japanese-American WWII Soldiers Gather to Honor a Fallen Comrade

God bless these amazing men who came from far and wide to honor Torrance, California’s only WWII Medal of Honor recipient Ted Tanouye:

Veterans ‘Go for Broke’ in honoring fallen soldier

The old soldiers gathered in the morning sun, greeting each other with hands that trembled with age, snapping pictures of a granite monument to a fallen comrade.

They were Nisei, second-generation Japanese-Americans who fought in Italy and France while their parents waited behind the barbed wire of relocation camps. They had fought alongside Ted Tanouye, the Torrance farm boy who earned a Medal of Honor in World War II

Read the whole article in the Daily Breeze.

The Famous Salvation Army Doughnut

UPDATE: As you read this, please consider donating to the Salvation Army, who have been providing relief to victims of Hurricane Katrina and will, soon, provide relief to victims and first responders to Hurricane Rita.

The doorbell rang and Damsel went to the door to peer through the little porthole to see who was there. Looking out, she saw an older man dressed casually, with a grocery bag. Damsel is very cautious and surveyed the visitor for a few seconds before turning on the green light to open the door.

It turned out that it was Mike White from our local Salvation Army Citadel. Mike presented Damsel with a box of six of the ‘Famous Doughnuts‘ as a treat for us for our support over the years. Wow! Doughnuts!

Mike’s visit inspired me to look into the ‘Famous Doughnuts’ and I found this on the Southern California Salvation Army webpage (click on the ‘Famous Dougnnut’ display ad):

Lassie and a Soldier

On The Front Lines

The Salvation Army won its recognition during World War I for its work overseas. However, it was the doughnut that caught the doughboy’s fancy.

In August 1917, fighting raged near Montiers, France, as soldiers huddled in camp – hungry, weary and drenched by 36 consecutive days of rain. In a tent near the front lines, Salvation Army “lassies” (young, female Salvation Army members) made doughnuts by filling a refuge pail with oil. They made dough with left over flour and other ingredients on hand, and used a wine bottle as a rolling pin. With a baking powder tin for a cutter end a camphor-ice suck tube for making the holes; doughnuts were fried – seven at a time – in soldier’s steel helmets on an 18-inch stove. (Later, a seven-pound shell fitted with a one-pound shell was used to cut out the doughnut holes.)

Rain fell continuously and the water-soaked tent collapsed, but the 100 doughnuts made that first day were an immediate success. Soon, as many as 500 soldiers stood in muck outside the resurrected tent, waiting for the sweet taste of doughnuts.

Doughnuts Invade Home Front

Following the war, the returning “doughboys” brought back the taste of doughnuts with them – the doughnuts that The Salvation Army lassies had fried and served for them in France.

The doughnut’s identity with The Salvation Army stuck. Doughnuts appeared everywhere The Army did. Ever since that August day in France 81 years ago, millions of servings of “hot coffee and doughnuts” have been provided free by The Salvation Army to fireman, rescue workers, disaster victims – anyone in need. Salvation Army lassies made doughnuts the popular wartime food, and the doughnut came to symbolize the good work of The Salvation Army.

The Salvation Army Famous Doughnut is again on the front-lines of war. This time around, however, the battle is being fought against the unfair penalties of poverty: hopelessness, homelessness and hunger. You can help The Salvation Army replenish its financial ammunition by purchasing a box of The Famous Doughnut, available now in your local Ralphs Grocery Stores.

Now, I don’t want to encourage anyone to eat a lot of these, but don’t the Salvation Army Doughnuts look good?