(U//Unclassified stuff) These are some of the stories from over 30 years of police work and over 20 years of US Army and National Guard adventures. “It’s not an adventure unless some part of it sucks!” ©2007-2013
30 June 2011
23 June 2011
Bosnia and War Crimes
From the Soldier side: When I look back on my "military" times, I wonder if the time I spent doing things overseas was worth me being gone. Yeah, it was kind of exciting and interesting at times, but the deployment we did in Bosnia kind of seems like we just spun around in circles and never really got much done.
Then my old buddy Sergeant Grumpy posted something on Face Book (I barley use that thing, but once in awhile there's something I read). His post was about one of the assholes we were looking for in Bosnia.
The news article started with:
Ratko Mladic, the former Bosnian Serb general held responsible for the massacre of some 8,000 Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica in 1995, was arrested on Thursday, signaling Serbia’s intention of finally escaping the isolation it brought on itself during the Balkan wars, the bloodiest in Europe since World War II.
I went to Srebrenica many times. One of the times we noticed that they were building something. It turned into a giant graveyard for all the folks murdered there. We went by one of the buildings where they'd line folks up and kill them.
Warehouse of death
Each time we went back, we saw they'd added more and more grave markers. The field was large enough to bury a lot of people...a hell of a lot.
I will NEVER forget one day we were driving around after first arriving in Bosnia. One of my very young SECFOR (Security Force) guys saw all the empty and blown up homes and asked: "How come all the people haven't moved back home?"
CI Roller Dude at the "new graveyard"
17 June 2011
Reversed roles...
From the citizen side:
As a cop for 32 years, and a CA Army National Guard Soldier, I had helped evacuate people in all kinds of disasters...floods, fires and earthquakes. I can recall many times when I was standing at a traffic check point and citizens drove up and asked: "How bad is this fire?"
Many times, I had no answer for them....I always felt sorry that they had to leave their home or I was blocking them from getting to their home.
Yesterday, I was in the citizen's position when deputies from the Cochise County S.O. drove into my yard and told me we had to leave soon.
I was busy hosing down the yard and the house...and the fu--ing propane tank.....I heard several of them explode yesterday.
As the fire got within a few miles, I saw the air tankers start dropping that orange/red shit on the fire....
If I ever find them pilots, I'll buy them a beer.
The fire is still going....and the winds change every minute.... so I'm going back out on the hose...
...and another fire started near the Army Fort. Home of the MI. Hopfully the Army can do a better job at stopping it.
As a cop for 32 years, and a CA Army National Guard Soldier, I had helped evacuate people in all kinds of disasters...floods, fires and earthquakes. I can recall many times when I was standing at a traffic check point and citizens drove up and asked: "How bad is this fire?"
Many times, I had no answer for them....I always felt sorry that they had to leave their home or I was blocking them from getting to their home.
Yesterday, I was in the citizen's position when deputies from the Cochise County S.O. drove into my yard and told me we had to leave soon.
I was busy hosing down the yard and the house...and the fu--ing propane tank.....I heard several of them explode yesterday.
As the fire got within a few miles, I saw the air tankers start dropping that orange/red shit on the fire....
If I ever find them pilots, I'll buy them a beer.
The fire is still going....and the winds change every minute.... so I'm going back out on the hose...
If you look close, you can see the air water dropping plane.
...and another fire started near the Army Fort. Home of the MI. Hopfully the Army can do a better job at stopping it.
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