Tuesday, August 19, 2003

GULF WAR II "MYSTERY ILLNESS"
RAISES TROUBLING QUESTIONS


I heard a really interesting interview earlier this evening on Pacifica's Flashpoints show. Instead of trying to explain, I'll just cut to the chase. This is an excerpt from a press release issued by the American Gulf War Veterans Association, an advocacy group:

Contrary to the “pneumonia” and “mystery illness” labels, enlightening information surfaced today on “THE POWER HOUR” radio show (www.thepowerhour.com) in an interview with Mark Neusche, father of Josh Neusche, one of the GW II troops to lose his life from the “mystery illness” while serving in Iraq. The father stated that his 20-year-old healthy son, a former track star and non-smoker, had written home on June 26th explaining that he would be going on a 30-hour “hauling” mission, but that he could not disclose what they would be hauling. The son had stated that he had been to the Palace of Sadaam Hussein, and it was later learned that he was “hauling” at the Baghdad Airport.

Marsha Paxson also appeared on the show, as she is the journalist who broke the U.S. story for the Lake Sun Leader (www.lakesunleader.com). Although the “facts” behind this story are continually changing, Ms. Paxson is one of the few journalists who is remaining true to the facts of the original story. Ms. Paxson revealed in her articles that the father reported that his son was not the only ill soldier. Neusche stated that while his son was in a coma at Landstuhl Hospital, the father overheard the nurses say that they were expecting numerous sick troops to be brought in all at one time. In fact, the father actually witnessed approximately 55 other troops being received by the hospital after they were transported by a military ambulance (bus). According to the father, the transported troops were exhibiting varying degrees of the illness. Some walked, some were in wheelchairs and others were on respirators. In the commotion, a doctor reported to the father that his son was suffering from a “toxin.” No mention of pneumonia was ever made to him, nor was it ever reported in the medical record.

Paxson and the AGWVA now question the diagnosis, the actual number of troops that were reported ill, and when the DOD first became aware of this incident.

One of the most surprising statements to come from The Power Hour interview conducted on “The Genesis Network” was that while the son, Josh Neusche, was a healthy young soldier on June 26, 2003, when he reported that he was going to serve on the secret hauling mission, by July 1, 2003, he was in a coma, and that day was suddenly classified by the military, as medically retired from the Army without Josh or his family’s consent. Josh did not die until July 12, 2003. Among other problems that this new classification created was that the DOD was no longer obligated to assist the family in getting to Germany to be with their son as he lay in a coma. Because the DOD would not provide even so much as plane or taxi fare for the Neusche family, all 650 members of the 203 Engineer Battalion each contributed $10.00 to make the family’s final visit possible.


(Their emphasis.)

For the entire press release, click here.

Troubling questions:

1. What were these soldiers hauling?
2. Were they hauling chemical weapons?
3. If so, are these the missing WMDs?
4. If so, why hasn't Bush paraded them before the press in order to prove his case for the war?
5. Why was this hauling operation at the Baghdad Airport?
6. Why does the Department of Defense seem to be covering up the whole thing?

The interview that I heard on Flashpoints pretty much asserted that this incident may very well have been a botched attempt by the Pentagon to fabricate evidence of the missing weapons of mass destruction riffing on the old "throw down gun" technique employed by the LAPD anti-gang unit in the 90s. That's pretty big, and, if true, terrible. I'm going to keep my ears open on this one.

I'll try to post a link to the Flashpoints interview that I heard when they get the streaming audio online tomorrow.

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