Tuesday, September 4, 2012

MILITARY SITS SILENT AS OBAMA JABBERS AWAY

Submitted by: Kathy Hawkins
Obama speech to soldiers met with silence..... 
Started by TONY SALAZAR 

President Barack Obama was greeted with fleeting applause and extended  periods of silence as he offered profuse praise to soldiers and their families  during an Aug. 31 speech in Fort Bliss, Texas.
His praise for the soldiers — and for his own national-security policies — won cheers from only a small proportion of the soldiers and families in the  cavernous aircraft-hanger.
The audience remains quiet even when the commander-in-chief thanked the  soldiers’ families, and cited the 198 deaths of their comrades in Iraq and  Afghanistan.
The audience’s reaction was so flat that the president tried twice to elicit  a reaction from the crowd.  
“Hey, I hear you,” he said amid silence.
The selected soldiers who were arrayed behind the president sat quietly  throughout the speech.
CNN and MSNBC ended their coverage of the speech before it was half-over.
Obama and his wife are also trying to reach out to military families in  several critical swing-states, including Virginia and Florida. (RELATED: Obama  warm to scientists, cold to soldiers)
 
That outreach, however, has been damaged by repeated flubs from the White  House, including its public emphasis on soldiers’ wounds rather than on their  accomplishments, and Obama’s effort to distance himself from the anti-jihad  campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan.
For example, Obama gave Vice President Joe Biden the task of developing a  post-war agreement with Iraq’s government in 2009. The effort failed, reducing  U.S. gains from the campaign that killed almost 4,500 troops, and as well as  thousands of jihadis and Sunni insurgents seeking to regain power. The  subsequent withdrawal of nearly all U..S. troops has allowed Iran to increase  its influence in Iraq. In turn, that influence helps it support Syria’s  dictatorship against Sunni insurgents.
Throughout Friday’s speech, the loudest reactions came when the president  name-checked the nicknames of the soldiers’ brigades. Major military units have  their own rival cheers, and those could be heard from portions of the audience  when he referred to individual units.
The troops’ silence continued through several obvious applause-lines.
There was isolated cheers when Obama said his withdrawal policy would ensure “fewer deployments ... more time to prepare for the future, and it means more time  on the home front, with your families, your home and kids.”
The silence deepened when the president lauded his strategy of withdrawal  from the war. “Make no mistake, ending the wars responsibly makes us safer and  our military even stronger, and ending these wars is letting us do something  else; restoring American leadership,” he said amid complete silence.
When he said demobilized soldiers would find jobs because “all of you have  the skills America needs,” he got little reaction.
There was no reaction when he promised stepped-up recruitment of soldiers for  police jobs.
He won some applause when he announced his support for soldiers injured in  combat.
The most enthusiastic applause came when he lauded the soldiers’ military  mission, and promised continued support for that professional task.
An anecdote about his meeting with a wounded soldier was met with a tepid  response, until he described the soldier’s determination to recover and return  to his unit. “He’s where every soldier wants to be – back with his unit,” Obama  said, generating applause.
Similarly, his declaration that “around the world there’s a new attitude  toward America, a new confidence in our leadership” yielded only silence, while  his next sentence — “When people are asked ‘Which country do you admire most?’ one nation always comes out on top, the United States of America” — prompted  relative enthusiasm.
The White House’s video-feed cut off 10 seconds after the president finished  his speech, before the audience’s reaction overall could be gauged by  viewers.   Make your comments HERE:

Expert to Review Obama's Signature of Letters To Fallen Seals

From the blaze.:
 
Handwriting Expert to Review President Obamas Signature on Autopen Letters
The Obama White House is denying claims that the letters sent to families of fallen Navy SEALs were signed by an electronic autopen that can replicate his signature. But a veterans group isn’t ready to just take the administration at its word and has vowed to get to the bottom of “autopen-gate,” FoxNews.com reports.
White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters on Friday that every letter sent to families of slain service members is signed by the hand of President Obama.
Even so, Veterans for a Strong America, a nonpartisan military watchdog group, says it will hire a handwriting expert to determine whether the letters sent to the parents of Navy SEALs killed in Afghanistan were signed by the commander-in-chief or by the previously mentioned electronic autopen.
FoxNews.com has more details on this story:
Karen and Billy Vaughn, whose son Aaron Vaughn was one of 17 SEALs and 13 other Americans killed in a helicopter crash Aug. 6, 2011, raised the issue at a Tea Party rally in Tampa during the Republican National Convention. Karen Vaughn said she compared the signature on her letter, dated Sept. 23, 2011, with those received by other families of SEALs and determined the signature was mechanical.
President Obama made history when he became the first chief executive to use the auto pen to sign a bill, authorizing its use to extend key provisions of the Patriot Act last year while he was in France.
“After reviewing letters from several families of fallen Navy SEALs, it appears that the letters may have been auto-penned, so we are going to have nationally recognized handwriting experts review the letters given the strong circ***tantial evidence which exists in this case,” Joel Arends, chairman of Veterans for a Strong America said in a statement to FoxNews.com.
Arends is also peeved that the condolences were merely form letters, with only the names of the recipients changed. That’s something the White House had no choice but to admit — and they did. However, officials added that presidents have always sent form letters, especially when war deaths stack up.

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