February 4, 2012

Don North: Sixty-nine years after Dieppe truth is still a casualty

“If any question why we died, tell them because our fathers lied.”
Rudyard Kipling. Epitaphs of the war.

By Don North
MRE Vice President

The template for unashamed deceit of the news media in wartime is the disastrous raid on Dieppe Aug. 19, 1942. The controversy over the lessons learned at Dieppe continue to this day, perhaps proof that unless truthful, the “first rough draft of history” lives on without aggressive scholarship or journalism.

At the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, Ontario there is a citation on the wall of an official display; “Some insist that the lessons learned at Dieppe contributed to the success of later allied landings including Normandy. Others insist that the raid was poorly planned and an avoidable blunder.” It seems the Canadian preference is to “choose your own version of history on Dieppe.” [Read more...]

Obituary: Jack Pulwers, a giant in journalism

By Don North

Distinguished journalist, author and military historian Jack Edward Pulwers died March 29, 2011 at Fair Oaks Hospital in Fairfax, Va. of extended illness after congestive heart failure. [Read more...]

Mulholland to speak on Special Operations

Lt. Gen. John F. Mulholland, commanding general, U.S. Army Special Operations Command, will present “Army Special Operations: Striving and Structuring to Meet Persistent Global Security Demands” at the Association of the United States Army’s Institute of Land Warfare breakfast. [Read more...]

Hasan hearing ends after 4 minutes

by Sig Christenson
San Antonio Express-News and MRE board member

FORT HOOD — Prosecutors took nine days and 56 witnesses to finish their part of an evidentiary hearing for an Army psychiatrist charged with a shooting spree one year ago, but the defense took just four minutes. [Read more...]

Fort Hood may break record for suicides this year

Associated Press

Fort Hood officials are investigating a rash of suicides in recent days, including the apparent murder-suicide of a soldier and his wife. [Read more...]

WWII war correspondent Jack Shelley dies

When Jack Shelley came on WHO Radio to tell listeners the news of the day, children knew better than to interrupt. Shelley, who died Tuesday, was one of the most trusted reporters in the land. Listeners across Iowa gathered around kitchen tables during noon hours to catch his every word. [Read more...]

Pentagon ramps up efforts to prevent leaks to press

In an Department of Defense memo sent last week to officials and the news media, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs Douglas B. Wilson reaffirmed the Pentagon’s effort to curb the flow of leaked or otherwise unauthorized information to the news media. [Read more...]

Arms Control Association wants managing editor

The Arms Control Association, a national, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to promoting public understanding of and support for effective arms control policies, is seeking a full-time Managing Editor, a critical part of the small team that produces Arms Control Today, a monthly publication widely considered to be authoritative in its field. [Read more...]

Air Force Assoc. needs defense reporter in D.C.

The Air Force Association is seeking an entry-level defense reporter for Air Force Magazine’s print and online editions. [Read more...]

Defense News wants reporters

Defense News, the authoritative, global newsweekly is looking for reporters driven to break news, blanket their beats and establish themselves as leading authorities on programs, policies, people and business. Stories may take you from the Pentagon to Fort Bragg, N.C., from Paris to Singapore. [Read more...]