Comments on: Wounded Vet Told To Pay Back Bonus
Partially-Blinded In Iraq, GI Billed For Army Signing Bonus; Pentagon Admits Mistake
- He raised his right paw and went in combat for this nation. They demand the money back. That is cold and greedy. He is a vet .
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- Yes! Make the Soldiers Pay for the War!
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- All candidates who ignore the Bu$h dictatorship are liars.
The general public is now aware of the Republicon coup.
Let''s discuss it openly, or is everyone already too afraid? - Reply to this comment
- UNBELIEVABLE!!! Anyone who has been in Iraq and have become disabled and receives such a bill/letter, needs to mail it back and tell whom ever sent it, to take it and wipe their rear ends with it.
This is such an embarrassment. - Reply to this comment
- this reminds me of the monkey who got his hand caught in the hollowed out coconut while he was trying to steal rice out of it, if he kept his hand full of rice his hand wouldn''t come out, if he opened it to get out he got no rice soooooooooo the "government" has a choice to make, make good on their commitments or re-instate the draft to get bodies as now the young men + women know the facts regarding the "backdoor" contract operations of our pentagon.
Hummmmmmm, do the voters in Iowa know that a vote of Obama is a vote for Jessie Jackson, Al Sharpton and the original "dime a dance" Oprah??? - Reply to this comment
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The records also underscore how the insurgency in Iraq remains both overwhelmingly Iraqi and Sunni. American officials now estimate that the flow of foreign fighters was 80 to 110 per month during the first half of this year and about 60 per month during the summer. The numbers fell sharply in October to no more than 40, partly as a result of the Sinjar raid, the American officials say.
Saudis accounted for the largest number of fighters listed on the records by far %u2014 305, or 41 percent %u2014 American intelligence officers found as they combed through documents and computers in the weeks after the raid. The data show that despite increased efforts by Saudi Arabia to clamp down on would-be terrorists since Sept. 11, 2001, when 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi, some Saudi fighters are still getting through. - Reply to this comment
- SHAME, SHAME, SHAME on the DofD (hah!) and a sick-azzed government that would do this kind of thing to one of our bravest citizens who was serving his country in a place they should never have sent him to in the first place!! The idiots who perpetuated this "mistake" ought to be punished - to this brave young man I say "Jordan, you are a true HERO. Don''t let these Bas-tards get you down. THank you for your sacrifice for our country, and God bless and keep you."
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The records also underscore how the insurgency in Iraq remains both overwhelmingly Iraqi and Sunni. American officials now estimate that the flow of foreign fighters was 80 to 110 per month during the first half of this year and about 60 per month during the summer. The numbers fell sharply in October to no more than 40, partly as a result of the Sinjar raid, the American officials say.
Saudis accounted for the largest number of fighters listed on the records by far %u2014 305, or 41 percent %u2014 American intelligence officers found as they combed through documents and computers in the weeks after the raid. The data show that despite increased efforts by Saudi Arabia to clamp down on would-be terrorists since Sept. 11, 2001, when 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi, some Saudi fighters are still getting through. - Reply to this comment
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The records also underscore how the insurgency in Iraq remains both overwhelmingly Iraqi and Sunni. American officials now estimate that the flow of foreign fighters was 80 to 110 per month during the first half of this year and about 60 per month during the summer. The numbers fell sharply in October to no more than 40, partly as a result of the Sinjar raid, the American officials say.
Saudis accounted for the largest number of fighters listed on the records by far %u2014 305, or 41 percent %u2014 American intelligence officers found as they combed through documents and computers in the weeks after the raid. The data show that despite increased efforts by Saudi Arabia to clamp down on would-be terrorists since Sept. 11, 2001, when 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi, some Saudi fighters are still getting through. - Reply to this comment
- SHAME, SHAME, SHAME on the DofD (hah!) and a sick-azzed government that would do this kind of thing to one of our bravest citizens who was serving his country in a place they should never have sent him to in the first place!! The idiots who perpetuated this "mistake" ought to be punished - to this brave young man I say "Jordan, you are a true HERO. Don''t let these Bas-tards get you down. THank you for your sacrifice for our country, and God bless and keep you."
- Reply to this comment
Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




