Luggage are lined on the tarmac as U.S. Air Force servicemen board a plane bound for the U.S. at al-Asad air base in Iraq's western province of Anbar in this November 1, 2011 file photo. REUTERS/Mohammed Ameen/Files (IRAQ - Tags: TRANSPORT MILITARY)
NPR: Pentagon Questioned Over Blackout On War Zone Troop Numbers
For more than a decade, if you wanted to know how many U.S. troops there were in war zones such as Iraq and Afghanistan, you could readily find that information at a public Pentagon website that's updated every three months.
But since late last year, the Pentagon's stopped posting those numbers for Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
That public information blackout, along with the recent suspension of Pentagon reports on airstrikes and collateral damage in Afghanistan, has some lawmakers on Capitol Hill raising red flags.
"What's your view on the detail of the information that should be released?," Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed asked Lt. Gen. Scott Miller at his June 19 confirmation hearing to be the next U.S. commander in Afghanistan.
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WNU Editor: The blogger in me always likes to obtain information, post it, and to then discuss it. So this black-out of numbers is a disappointment. But when I put on my military hat, I understand the need for secrecy and to not feed information to the enemy. And let's face it, troop numbers is intel that the enemy will use. My hope is that some middle ground will be found, and that these numbers are posted at a later date instead of every three months.
Only if the enemy gives their numbers.
ReplyDeleteHmmmm. JB, they may have to cut back on their school destruction policy to get the knowledge needed to put out these numbers. This could be traumatic. Not that anything coming from these all conquering lions of the burning desert sands would be believable.
Special explanatory note for Anonymous; I'm being sarcastic. Added Footnote; Not sarcastic to JB. The muz-lumz who engage in this behavior.
Anybody remember the last time America won a war?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous Grenada. They kicked ass.
ReplyDeleteOn the number of troops. Did anyone ever believe the numbers released anyway?
ReplyDeleteI believe the troop numbers are fairly accurate. It's the number of contractors that gets a shrug of the shoulders. Quien sabe?