Words cannot express....
....the anger I feel toward the American press tonight. I came to this article at Mudville Gazette via one of Cori Dauber's articles. Cori points out that the Internet is more and more the source for not only up-to-date on-the-scene information but also almost instantaneous critique of the media coverage.
What makes the media environment in which this war is being fought so radically different is that for the first time troops inside the combat zone can also critique the media's reportage of events they themselves witnessed in this compressed fashion, and in a way that is widely, indeed globally, available. That's never before been the case, and as the ability to milblog becomes more widely known among the force, and the availability of milblogs becomes more widely known to the news audience, this is bound to have more of an influence on the way news coverage is interpreted.So I went to the Mudville Gazette, and I read in full every article that he linked to. But when I read this comment, my blood boiled and I cursed the US media. This is their churlish response to the awful tragedy of the suicide bombing in the mess tent in Mosul.
Look at the additions to our knowledge and understanding of what happened at Mosul provided by milbloggers, helpfully gathered together in one place by Greyhawk.
An Army reporter visited us after the attack on the dining facility. She spent a lot of time here at the CSH talking to our Soldiers, medics, and doctors. The result of her wonderful efforts is found below. I think you will appreciate this as much as I did. SPC Victoria Castillo is one of the stellar medics we have working in our EMT (ER). SFC Daniel White is a senior medic/LPN/Assistant Chief Ward Master/All-around good guy. 1LT Sarah Kuehl is one of our outstanding, hard-working ward nurses. MAJ Simon Telian is our number one stud general surgeon; we have lost track of the number of lives and limbs that he has saved (in medical jargon there is a term "too numerous to count").Those bastards! They have time, space and ink to tell the insurgents' story, but they can't even be bothered with the story of our troops? We should hang every one of them! What the hell is the matter with these people? How can they call themselves Americans? Why should we give them one more dime of our money? They make me so mad I could spit!
Coincidentally, she reports that she sent this out to almost 1200 newspapers. She only heard back from a few... To me, THIS is news. Based on the overwhelming number of emails I have received, there are a lot of people out there who are interested in reading about this stuff much more often than reading about the daily reports of the numbers killed or wounded.
Well I'm publishing her story right here, in its entirety.
Medical heroics save lives in Mosul attackIt's time for those of us who read blogs and understand the power of the Internet to rise up against the foul media in this country and call them to account. They are not just failing us. They are working against us and for the enemy.
By Spc. Blair Larson 139th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment
Many Soldiers at Forward Operating Base Marez in Mosul will forever remember December 21 as the day an explosion ripped through the chow hall, interrupting their noon meal with a shower of shrapnel and thousands of tiny metal ball bearings. The American people will remember watching on television the most deadly attack on Multi-National Forces in Iraq since the war began. But the medical personnel at the 67th Combat Support Hospital (CSH) in Mosul that day will remember the scene at the hospital as huge numbers of casualties arrived and the harrowing hours they spent tending to their injured comrades.
Although the attack tragically took the lives of many Soldiers and civilians, the extent of the destruction could have been much worse. Were it not for the quick response of the Soldiers and medical professionals who began treatment immediately after the explosion, many more lives could have been lost.
Immediately after the dust cleared from the explosion, Soldiers began to bandage and move the injured to the hospital. Using tables as stretchers and shirts as bandages, the Soldiers on the scene instinctively performed the medical aid that every Soldier is trained to do in order to stabilize a casualty until medical personnel arrive.
The attack was reported by radio to the Soldiers at the CSH, who immediately began preparing for the arrival of the injured. An announcement went out over a speaker in the medical personnel living area, alerting the Soldiers who were on call. As they arrived at the hospital, the staff reported to their assigned areas, ready to put their skills to use.
"I walked through the door and saw patients everywhere; some were bleeding, some gasping for air," said medic Spc. Victoria Castillo.
It was a scene they had rehearsed many times before. The medical personnel from the 67th Combat Support Hospital have trained constantly to handle a mass casualty scenario, and in the past 11 months, they have responded to several incidents requiring treatment of multiple injuries.
Although the hospital has many well-trained specialists, the first moments after a tragedy like this are filled with everyone pitching in to help with basic life-saving procedures such as stopping bleeding and patching wounds. Even the support personnel were active participants, as the unit's mechanics, cooks and engineers carried litters and copied down vital information.
"During a mass casualty situation, everyone drops their individual skills and becomes a medic, focusing on the basic skills like making sure bleeding and breathing are controlled," said Sgt. 1st Class Daniel White, the Assistant Chief Ward Master.
As the patients arrived by the dozens, the medical personnel used a triage process to sort the more serious injuries from the lesser ones and began to stabilize and treat the casualties. Nearly 90 U.S., Iraqi and multinational casualties were brought to the hospital for treatment.
"When the patients arrived, they were evaluated by priority and sorted by how serious their injuries were. Surgical patients were identified and the worst were brought to the operating room," said Maj. Simon Telian, a general surgeon at the 67th CSH.
In a perfect example of organized chaos, the hospital came alive. X-ray technicians with portable equipment examined those with broken bones. A radiology specialist gave CT scans to those with abdominal and head wounds. The lab and pharmacy kept the patients supplied with blood and painkillers. Within the first eight hours, the medical staff had performed eight major surgeries and many more minor surgeries.
The injured were stabilized and some were evacuated by helicopter to larger hospitals in Balad and Baghdad. Several would eventually continue on to a military hospital in Germany.
During the evacuation and treatment of the injured, a barrage of mortar rounds hit the hospital. Even under those dangerous circumstances, the medical staff bravely moved the wounded to shelter and continued their treatment.
The hustle and bustle of the trauma center required the help of every staff member. For hours, the medical professionals hovered around the makeshift beds, stabilizing and comforting the injured Soldiers. "You just keep going non-stop without looking back," said Castillo.
Although some of the injured were civilians, the majority of the casualties were U.S. Soldiers. Treating fellow Soldiers can take an emotional toll on medical professionals. "It is more difficult to work with American Soldiers because you feel closer to them," said 1st Lt. Sarah Kuehl, a registered nurse at the 67th CSH.
For the medical Soldiers who deal with life and death situations, instinct takes over as they work. Their extensive training automatically kicks in, and they are focused completely on the person whose life is in danger. "Situations like that are overwhelming. You have no time to think, you just have to do your job," said Castillo.
An emergency can never be planned for enough. Though Soldiers use common scenarios when they train, there are always factors that change when a real emergency arises. The more than 90 casualties treated by the 67th CSH is the largest number of casualties any hospital in theater has seen at one time during the Iraq war. "If someone had told me we would be faced with this kind of situation, I would have told you that it's not possible," said White. "But we worked hard, and we worked as a team to pull it off."
After every patient was treated and stabilized, the reality of the situation set in. Twenty-two people were dead and 40 were evacuated to larger hospitals. The scene in the hospital was the worst any of the medical personnel had seen in the last 11 months. "At the end, we got together as a group after we took a last look at the patients to make sure everyone was stable. Only then were we able to relax and talk about the experience," said Telian.
Thanks to the dedication and determination of the medical staff, many Soldiers' lives were saved that day. The Army's highly skilled medical professionals perform heroics every day and are essential to the success of the Multinational Forces' mission in Iraq.
They deserve nothing but the fullest and most complete condemnation.
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