Retired infantry officer. Conservative by nature and politics; Happily married and father and grandfather of eight. Loves V8 powered Range Rovers, Golden Retrievers, good books and technology and think there should be open season on Greenies. Born in the mid forties and overdue for servicing but most parts still work.

Only in NZ

Reminiscent of a scene from the movie Blazing Saddles a Kiwi holds police at bay with a knife to his own throat.
Stun grenades and shotguns were used to subdue a man holding a knife to his own throat in a tense armed stand-off in Auckland yesterday. More than 20 armed police stormed a two-storey home in the beachside suburb of Kohimarama after a three-hour seige, which ended when the man surrendered.
If the guy was hit by a stun grenade then ‘surrender’ isn’t the word I’d use….maybe ‘just sat there in a daze and allowed himself to be arrested’ could be closer. A 26-year-old man has been arrested and charged with breaching a protection order and will appear in Auckland District Court tomorrow.

Australia to help Thailand fight terror

Senator Vanstone has announced that Australia will help Thailand with new counter-terrorism and identity fraud measures and said cooperation between Australia and Thailand was important for the border protection of both nations because it would reduce the opportunity for terrorists to enter either country.

Senator Vanstone also announced, during her tour of the Suvarnabhumi Airport, Bangkok’s new airport, increased levels of training cooperation to assist Thai documentation examiners.

Good. I’ll be transitting through Bangkok in September on the way to Cambodia and would like to feel secure enough to have a night on the town re-visiting old haunts from my time there in the 70s.

Thanks, Amanda.

Does anyone know if the Jazz Bar in Patpong is still trading?

Treason by any other name..

WASHINGTON: President George W.Bush has branded the US news media “disgraceful” for disclosing a secret government program to monitor international finances and track terrorist funding.

The New York Times reported on Friday that the US Government had secretly monitored thousands of international banking transactions since the attacks on New York and Washington in order to track suspected terrorists.

The newspaper refused government requests not to publish the story, prompting other major media to follow with their own reports.
I’m definitely with George here but then I’m old fashioned enough to think that aiding and abetting the enemy in war time is treason and perpetrators of such acts should be at least incarcerated for the duration. Like Hicks. Some Democrats have criticised the program as another step in an aggressive Bush administration expansion of executive-branch powers. But US officials claim its database has provided valuable information about ties between suspected terrorists and groups financing them. And a result closer to home;
It has also reportedly led to the capture of al-Qa’ida operative Riduan Isamuddin Hambali, believed to have planned the 2002 bombings in Bali.
The Left will still argue argue against it even though the programme brought results; on the basis that anything that puts Bush in a bad light must be supported.

How do Muslims worldwide think?

Daniel Pipes reports on the dismaying results of a world-wide poll on Muslim attitudes to the west.
A proclivity to conspiracy theories: In not one Muslim population polled does a majority believe that Arabs carried out the attacks of September 11, 2001, on America. The proportions range from a mere 15% in Pakistan holding Arabs responsible, to 48% among French Muslims. …….In other words, in every one of these 10 Muslim communities, a majority views September 11 as a hoax perpetrated by the American government, Israel, or some other agency.
Conspiracy theories also pertain to larger topics.
Asked, “What is most responsible for Muslim nations’ lack of prosperity?” between 14% (in Pakistan) and 43% (in Jordan) blame the policies of America and other Western states, as opposed to indigenous problems, such as a lack of democracy or education, or the presence of corruption or radical Islam.
Overall, the Pew survey sends an undeniable message of crisis from one end to the other of the Muslim world. I see no mention of polling done in Australia and wonder what the outcome would be. I’m not optimistic as it will most probably take another generation of Australian education to bring some of the locals out of the 12th century. Read Daniels take on the poll and the original Pew Poll report here. The Pew Report is a .pdf but worth the read.

Socceroos beaten

I’m less than happy with soccer – we play well for 89.5 minutes and we loose because an Italian fell over and got a free kick for his dramatics. They are clearly better at the “fall over and appeal for a penalty” tactic than we are. I’m definitely over soccer.

A two dog day

A cold windy day in Brisbane and the dogs know what to do…. snuggle up below the deck level to keep out of the wind. The black lab is a year old now and has settled into a routine of chewing my sandals, track shoes and deck shoes while the old golden retriever sleeps away the day. At least they are ornamental features for the pool area and the black lab does takes her role as watchdog seriously.

Pte Kovco II

More from the Kovco Inquiry

Jake Kovco’s mates have a preminition about the body mix up

An unnamed soldier, codenamed Soldier 14, told the inquiry into Pte Kovco’s death and bungled repatriation that a group of fellow soldiers had tried to prevent any mix-up involving his body.

“We were looking after Jake and we wanted to make sure the job was done,” Soldier 14 told the inquiry in Sydney, via a video link from Baghdad. “Our job was to make sure he got home and I guess we wanted to make sure that it was him that went home and that’s why we, as a group, had talked about that. “One member then put forward that statement to Soldier 2, to make sure that it was him (Pte Kovco) because stranger things have happened.”
In all my days I have never heard of a body mixup other than on this one occassion. I wonder what historical precedence these guys used to express the concern that there might be a problem. It sounds like invention after the fact to me but then maybe it’s a known in-theatre problem. It’s hard to be sure from my desk in Brisbane. In another article Soldier 17, a 23-year-old private figures it was an accident
….yesterday told the inquiry he believed Pte Kovco could have been shot in the head while joking around with his two roommates.
And this………
Soldier 14 told the Sydney inquiry that Pte Kovco walked several metres in front of him as they were leaving their posts and then held a door closed on him at a weapons checkpoint so he could not get through. At the time, Soldier 14 said he decided he would clear his own rifle because he did not have Pte Kovco to follow the so-called “buddy system” of checking each other’s weapons when their duty finished. Soldier 14 said Pte Kovco had been carrying a rifle plus his 9mm Browning pistol on duty that day.
……raises the question; what were the NCO’s and Officers doing while all this horseplay was going on. The so called “Buddy System” aside, where soldiers check that each others weapons are cleared, surely the Corporal Section Commander has a responsibility to at least ensure this happens. The Inquiry now enters a phase of reviewing classified evidence in camera and fair enough too. It’s bad enough we have to wash our dirty linen in public without journalists and unqualified commentators debating operational security matters involving our troops in Iraq.

Gilly from Timor in trouble

AN Australian soldier who wrote a damaging email from East Timor has been sent home and will be disciplined.

The Courier-Mail yesterday revealed details of the email which included sensitive operational information.

The young artillery officer known as “Gilly from Timor”, revealed detailed operational information including the locations and roles of units in an email to a mate.

Continue reading »

Curiouser and coriouser

According to this report Pte Kovco dreamt of death by his own hand just one month before he died from a single gun shot wound to the head. I find it alarming that he not only had such a dream but he then recorded it in his private diary the next morning. Physciatrists would have a field day in a court case if armed with such startling information. I am further alarmed by the statements of the two soldiers with him at the time who are reported as saying;
The three men had been singing along to pop music, reminiscing and using laptop computers when Pte Kovco’s gun suddenly discharged just 5cm away from his head around 4pm. Pte Kovco’s pistol was in a holster slung on the bed post of his bunkbed, while he stood on the ground typing an email to his wife using a laptop perched on the top mattress.
I have been an Investigating Officer in the Army and know more than most punters about weapon handling, mishandling and the associated stories rationalizing same. I’m not saying it can’t happen, I’m just saying I have never heard of anything like it happening and therefore think a strong case exists to doubt the veracity of the evidence given too date…or, put more simply, someone is telling lies. If the pistol hadn’t had the trigger guard removed it would be virtually impossible for it to discharge whilst still in the holster. The trigger guards very reason for existance is to stop accidental discharges and for that reason is seldom removed.The SASR have been known to do so for improved reaction time but I have never heard of infantry troops doing it. I could be wrong but even if I am, we still have to move the muzzle of the weapon from the bedpost to 5 centimetres away from Pte Kovco’s head. I placed my laptop on my bed just now and adopted a typing position; this put my head more than 30 centimetres away from any bedpost. It’s too early to draw any conclussions other than, up to this point, the testimony given has some serious holes in it. If reported accurately the Investigating Officer must be doing some serious eye-rolling. “One of the them said `I didn’t hear the weapon cock nor did I see the weapon in his hand.” I would be beside myself in haste to ask; “then where was the pistol immediately after you heard the shot? In the holster, on the bed or on the floor? The answer to this would clear up some doubt. I presume the question was raised. The inquiry is expected to hear more evidence from Baghdad this week before adjourning until mid-July. Via Rick in comments.
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