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Saturday, June 15 2013 @ 04:57 PM CDT

They Dare Not Speak Its Name

News ArchiveSubmitted by Reverend Chuck0:

THEY DARE NOT SPEAK ITS NAME



U.S. Army officials have been quick to spin the puzzling, horrifying attack
on his own superiors allegedly perpetrated by "Muslim soldier" Sgt. Asam
Akbar, described as a disgruntled platoon leader with an "attitude." The
assault by fragmentation grenades and automatic rifle fire left 12 soldiers
wounded and one dead at Camp Pennsylvania, a 101st Airborne base camp at
Kuwait City, Kuwait on the Iraqi border.

The next day George Heath, a civilian spokesman for the 101st, spoke from
the unit's Fort Campbell, Kentucky headquarters, "Incidents of this nature
are abnormalities throughout the Army, specifically the 101st." I'll leave
it for someone else to figure out how accurate Heath's statement is
regarding today's Army. However, I can tell you that not that long ago
attacks, very similar to the one at Camp Pennsylvania, on U.S. Army officers
and non-commissioned officers (NCOs) by their own men were common even in
the 101st Airborne.

I haven't been reading about or listening to or watching much of the
Warnography being transmitted by America's mainstream media lately, but
after Camp Pennsylvania, I ratcheted up my news consumption because it
rekindled memories that are not that distant. But as I
listened and read and watched quite a bit more intently these past couple of
days, no writer, no newscaster, no politician, pundit, or cabinet member, no
so-called analyst once wrote or uttered the magic word that is, in my
opinion, a key to the Akbar Case: Fragging.

When an American soldier killed or attempted to kill one of his superiors in
Vietnam the act was called fragging because the weapon of choice, as is the
case in Kuwait City, was a fragmentation grenade. As the Vietnam conflict
dragged on the Army rank and file, including many draftees, resorted to a
variety of methods to endeavor to kill their superiors, so fragging became a
comprehensive term that indicated any attempt on the life of an officer or
non-commissioned officer (NCO) by one or more of their subordinates. These
attempts, as you shall see, were often successful.

Despite strident denials of its existence that continue to this day,
fragging is a significant part of America's involvement in the Vietnam war,
espeically the latter years of that involvement.

According to 27-year army vet and former Vietnam combat commander Lt. Col.
Robert Heinl Jr. writing in 1971 in ARMED FORCES JOURNAL, "With extreme
reluctance (after a young West Pointer from
. . .Montana was fragged in his sleep) the Pentagon has now disclosed that
fraggings in 1970 have more than doubled (to 109) from the previous year."

Texas A&M historian Terry Anderson adds, "During the years of '69 down to
'73 we have incidents of fragging--that is shooting or hand grenading your
NCO or officer who orders you out into the field. The U.S. Army itself does
not know exactly how many . . .officers were murdered, but they know of at
least 600 cases, and they have another 1400 who died mysteriously."
According to Anderson, in the latter stages of America's stay in Vietnam,
the Army was not at war with a Vietnamese enemy but with itself.

Perhaps the most infamous fragging incident in Vietnam actually involved the
101st Airborne when that unit's Lt. Col. Wendell Honeycutt ordered and led a
fruitless, costly charge on Hamburger Hill, high ground with no strategic
value. The U.S. took horrible casualties but "won" the hill, only to abandon
it a short time later. Hamburger Hill is often viewed as a key event in
bringing home the idea for officer and enlisted man, for Green Beret and
peace protestor, for young and old all across America, that the country's
involvement in Vietnam was futile and pointless.

In the aftermath of Hamburger Hill, G.I. SAYS, one of many underground
papers published by enlisted men in Vietnam at the time, offered a $10,000
bounty for the killing of Lt. Col. Honeycutt who, despite the heavy losses
incurred by the 101st, bragged that he had been successful in his mission
which was to kill the enemy and destroy his equipment. The colonel, despite
several attempts on his life, probably mostly done by his own men, completed
his Nam tour and returned home safely.

Bounties on the heads of reckless, clueless field commanders who thought
nothing of putting their troops in harm's way then became commonplace in
Vietnam, but with much lower price tags, usually in the $50 to $1000 range.

Hamburger Hill was not the only mutinous incident involving the 101st
Airborne in Vietnam. A couple of years after the bloody battle for the
worthless hill, 13 black soldiers with the 101st became known as "the Phu
Bai 13" after they refused combat orders, forcefully took over a barracks
and issued a list of demands, some of which were met by the brass.

Congressional hearings held in 1973 estimated that less than 3% of all NCO
and officer deaths in Vietnam between '61 and '72 were the result of
fragging. But this percentage only took into account those killings done by
actual fragmentation grenade. The practice of fragging in Nam expanded to
include handguns, automatic rifles, booby traps, knives and bare hands as
weapons of choice for increasingly pissed off enlisted men. The Judge
Advocate General's Corps (the Army's legal branch) estimated that only about
10% of all fraggings resulted in someone being charged.

It should be noted that fraggings and other insubordination in the Army
spiked at a time when, according to Col. Heinl, writing in '71, "The morale,
discipline and battleworthiness of the U.S. Armed Forces are, with a few
salient exceptions, lower and worse than at anytime in the century and
possibly in the history of the United States. By every conceivable
indicator, our Army that remains in Vietnam is in a state approaching
collapse, with individual units avoiding or
having . . .refused combat, murdering their own officers and NCOs,
drug-ridden and dispirited when not mutinous."

Today's "All Volunteer Army of One" often seems to be the antithesis of the
preceding description or so we are told, so it seems, every minute of every
day. To be fair, saturation television coverage has given me the impression
that many of today's soldiers are dedicated, disciplined, sharp, committed
to the mission.

But there are negative universals in all warfare. Lousy nutrition. Cramped,
dirty, awful living conditions. Terrible weather. Unreasonable often
senseless demands made by supervisors. And what Michael Herr describes in
DISPATCHES his new journalism account of Vietnam, " . . .long periods of
boredom punctuated by moments of stark terror." Therefore, I'm not quite
ready to write off the alleged murder and maiming at Camp Pennsylvania as an
"anomaly" (as it's now being called by the television networks). It took
years of bad policy, pointless bloodshed and half-witted cowboy field
commanders in Nam for fragging to manifest itself. In the Iraqi theater a
fragging has occurred three days into the war. I think I'll wait and see
before I accept the "isolated incident/abnormality" explanation.

Two years ago, in a piece about outbreaks of mutiny in America's military,
Kevin Keating noted, "The crisis that racked American society during the
Vietnam war . . .wasn't profound enough to create an irreparable rupture
between the rulers and the ruled, or to give rise to a full-fledged
revolutionary crisis. The U.S. was still coasting on the relative prosperity
of the post WWII economic boom. Life wasn't as bad for as many people as it
is now, and that's why U.S. involvement in a similar protracted ground war
could have a much more explosive impact on American society."

A conscript or draftee Army is much more inclined to the type of sedition
wrought and witnessed in Vietnam which is one of the main reasons America's
military is now all-volunteer. But with the U.S. now the moral arbiter for
the world and a global policeman for capitalistic law and order, even an
all-volunteer force will begin to feel the profound strain of such an
undertaking, mostly because the American class distinction between the
ruler/planner (the corporate elite) and the ruled/worker (lower to middle
class) remains intact from the time of Vietnam. If Iraq turns out to be a
war that the U.S. can't win quickly or simply walk away from, then combat
refusals, equipment sabotage and fraggings would become anything but
abnormalities. I offer this speculation with no sense of anticipatory glee,
but there it is.

Steve Hesske is a Vietnam era vet who teaches writing and works as a
freelance writer in Montana.



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They Dare Not Speak Its Name | 19 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
comment by not a vietnam 'era' vet
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 23 2006 @ 06:52 AM CDT
Watch this 21 minute video of a U.S. Army Ranger talking about the atrocities he helped to commit. Listen to what his orders and instructions were before entering Iraq. I'd say fragging is what these commanders deserve. The tactic should be used liberally all the way up the chain of command. http://www.peacefilms.org/


comment by aaron
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 10:24 AM CST
Nice article. I\'ll just dispute one thing. ABC has been using the term \"fragging\" pretty regularly.
comment by pr
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 10:26 AM CST
I still say our friend and comrade Asam probably just ate to many twinkies and suffered a short \'blackout\' or temporary insanity.After a relativly brief period of observation he should soon be compos mentis enough to bayonet,blast and mass murder on command again.Let us pray.

http://www.antipsychiatry.org/
comment by steve hesske
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 01:19 PM CST

Thanks. Any specific examples of ABC using the term (shows, air personalities, etc.). Not disputing you at all--as the article indicates I hardly did a comprehensive survey, but I never saw the word nor did the many people I asked. Most people--even of the Nam generation--are unfamiliar w/ the term fragging (or have repressed it). Thanks again. sh
comment by a sim
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 03:49 PM CST
i also heard the term \"fragging\" explained in the media at some point. but now i\'m confused if it was on the CBC or on US media. in that same report was discussed how prior to vietnam this sort of thing was very popular in the US navy. where during WWII especially many navy officers were pushed off the side of the ship by disgruntled sailors. sorry i can\'t be more specific about where i heard it. all this war shit is blurred together in my mind already.
comment by aaron
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 04:01 PM CST
I\'m fairly sure George Stephenopolous (sp?) used the term Sunday morning on ABC.

I think I\'ve heard it from someone else, but I can\'t say for cetain.

comment by John Searight
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 04:03 PM CST
The first report I heard on CNN (even before the perpatrator had been caught and IDd) used the term \"fragging\". That\'s what brought my attention away from the newspaper I was reading.

John
comment by Delmar
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 04:11 PM CST
One thing that isn\'t being reported a whole lot is rank. The tents attacked were those of officers. A Captain was killed. Among the 15 other soliders injured, I believe... was a Colonel.
comment by Delmar
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 04:13 PM CST
The attack was on the brigade command center.
comment by aaron
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 04:18 PM CST
Yeah. I\'ve definitely noticed this. Reports keep using the word \"soldiers.\"

I was wondering if there was a deliberate attempt to ignore the rank divisions between the attacker and the attacked.

I did hear (probably from ABC) that the fragging was going to delay the operation of the unit because they would have to rebuild the chain of command.
comment by resist
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 05:23 PM CST
I was surprised when I heard a retired Marine colonel use the word fragging on NPR over the weekend.
comment by Steve Hesske
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 05:40 PM CST

Mutiny has always been a part of the military,especially in times of combat. I\'m sure there are examples from the first war between cave-dwellers. My point is that the WORD was coined during the Vietnam word, mainly because, initially, a fragmentation grenade was the weapon of choice, primarily because there would be no murder weapon to facilitate investigation.

Thanks for reading!
comment by Delmar
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 06:05 PM CST
This isn\'t just a \"unit\", this is a brigade. Usually 3 brigades make up a division (10 to 20 thousand troops). If they are delayed because of this attack on their command center, that\'s a big deal. Potentially, a brigadier general could have been in that tent. That about as high up as an enlisted man is going to have access too. Whoever did this attack just wasn\'t disgruntled about his boss, he probably planned it for maximum disruption of the brigade.
comment by Delmar
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 06:11 PM CST
\"a newspaper photo of the 1st Brigade\'s commander, Col. Frederick Hodges, showed him with blood on his uniform and his arm in a sling.\"

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,81898,00.html
comment by Steve Hesske
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 25 2003 @ 08:44 PM CST

Unit is a comprehensive term that could mean squad, division, whatever so, technically, my use of it is not incorrect, but the story would have been more effective if it had incl. your more specific info. However, I was in a hurry b/c I thought I was gonna get scooped on my idea. Silly me. The editor of the newspaper I semi-regularly write for refused to use it b/c she didn\'t \"see the parallels.\" Huh?

Thanks for reading!
comment by FOX
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, March 26 2003 @ 03:24 AM CST
Remember the Beltway sniper? CNN?
Sniper \'God\'.

> CNN exec: \"We\'re doing our best to report the story honestly\" (LAT)

> CNN confirms it considered using \"C.S.I.\" actors as pundits (NYT/r.r.)
comment by Another one bites the dust.
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, March 26 2003 @ 10:06 AM CST
Subject: Major Fragged.
Follows a CAPTAIN to the happy hunting ground for war criminals.
SOLDIERS MY ARSE! HA! Good score Asan...Yoda MAN! FREE ASAN AKBAR!
A second US soldier has died in Kuwait from wounds suffered when a fellow soldier allegedly lobbed grenades into three tents on Monday.
US officials say a reservist air force major died at an army field hospital in Kuwait.
A 27-year-old captain was killed and 14 soldiers were wounded in Monday\'s attack near the headquarters of 1st Brigade Combat team at Camp Pennsylvania in Kuwait.
The army sergeant accused of the attack has been flown to a military jail in Germany to await formal charges.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s817131.htm
comment by Steve Hesske
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, March 26 2003 @ 10:23 AM CST

You know Aaron as I thought about this I don\'t see where you are really in \"dispute\" w/ me. I didn\'t say YOU hadn\'t seen mention of the word fragging; I said I hadn\'t seen mention it. LOL

Thanks for reading AND paying attention.
comment by not a vietnam 'era' vet
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 05 2003 @ 09:57 PM CST
Sgt Asam Akbar should be hung quickly preferably in front of the assembled division. And why dosen\'t the author seem to remember the reason that Akbar acted is because he is a muslim. Akbar had not seen any combat. Most of his \'unit\' had not seen any combat. Akbar had no reason to act against his superiors other than the fact that he is a muslim. Akbar could have claimed status as an objecter but he chose to murder his fellow soldiers. Akbar is a poor excuse of a man and pitiful replica of a muslim.