Saturday, October 4, 2014

Man floating in bubble rescued by Coast Guard


ORLANDO, Fla. — A longtime endurance runner and peace activist whose latest goal was to reach Bermuda in a homemade floating "Hydro Pod" was rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard on Saturday after he began suffering from fatigue.


Coast Guard air crew were able to safely pick up Reza Baluchi and the bubble Saturday morning, Coast Guard spokeswoman Marilyn Fajardo said in a statement. He was transported to a nearby Coast Guard station and found to be uninjured, Fajardo said.


A statement on Baluchi's website said the Iranian exile had planned to make the 1,033-mile trip in his self-designed bubble to raise money "for children in need" and "to ... inspire those that have lost hope for a better future."


Baluchi has made headlines many times before with previous efforts to break long-distance running and cycling records , including one six-month journey in which he ran around the perimeter of the United States, and a seven-year bike trip that he said brought him across 55 countries on six continents. His self-professed mission is to promote world peace and unity. His perimeter run was to raise money for a children's hospital, according to his website.


Baluchi was granted asylum in the United States in 2003 after being arrested in Iran for so-called pro-Western and anti-Islamic activities, including eating during the holy month of Ramadan, according to his lawyer at the time, Suzannah Maclay. Baluchi served 1 1/2 years in jail for associating with "counterrevolutionaries" and was hung from a tree by handcuffs for carrying a prohibited movie, Maclay said. The Coast Guard described him as a U.S. Citizen.


The "Hydro Pod" is a large bubble made of 3-mm- (0.11-inch)-thick plastic, Baluchi's website, "Run With Reza" says. The bubble, which he propelled forward by running inside and pushing it with his arms, was housed in a large aluminum-type frame studded at intervals with inflated soccer balls. A man who appears on a video during the bubble's construction compares it to a hamster wheel.


According to the site, Baluchi planned to run in the bubble in the mornings, cool off in the sea while leashed to the floating sphere, and sleep in a hammock inside it at night. In addition to the protein bars the Coast Guard said it found in his bubble, he planned to catch and eat fish, the site said.


Officials originally received a report of Baluchi floating in the bubble on Wednesday. The Coast Guard arrived on the scene about 70 nautical miles east of St. Augustine to find him disoriented and inquiring how to get to Bermuda. Crew members conveyed the dangers of the proposed trip and asked Baluchi to end it.


He refused, but activated his locator beacon Saturday because of fatigue, Fajardo said.



Hewitt on ‘Criminal Minds’: A long, winding path to lasting TV stardom


Here’s a milestone that might remind you of your own mortality: Jennifer Love Hewitt shot to fame on Fox drama “Party of Five” ... (dramatic pause) ... almost twenty years ago.


We know! It seems like just yesterday that JLH was TV’s new It Girl, gracing magazine covers with then-boyfriend Carson Daly, even cracking the pop charts as a singer.


Her attempt at grown-up movie stardom never really took off, though, beyond the “I Know What You Did Last Summer” and “Garfield” films. Unbowed, she redevoted herself to television long before it became an acceptable landing place for other big-screen refugees.


It was a shrewd choice that paid off: Hewitt has now been rewarded with a regular role on a CBS procedural — “Criminal Minds,” on which she debuts Wednesday night — the closest thing to a steady paycheck in Hollywood. Here’s a look back and a step-by-step guide to how she won the TV industry lottery:


Step 1: Make your mark on a red-hot teen show. (1995 to 2000)

With her role as Sarah on the low-rated but cult favorite “Party of Five,” Hewitt (16 when she joined the cast) became a brand name for a savvy young audience, making her a go-to pick for guest spots on other shows: Her appearance on “Boy Meets World” as Jennifer Love Fefferman is still one of the show’s classic episodes.


Step 2: Attempt a spin-off. (1999)

“Time of Your Life” — where Sarah moves to New York — flamed out quickly but nonetheless established her as the break-out star from "Pof5."


Step 3: Try the pop-princess route. (1999 to 2002)

“How Do I Deal”, “BareNaked” ... not ringing a bell? So, they didn’t become pop standards, but they got radio play at the turn of the century — and during a relatively quiet moment in her acting career, the videos kept one of Hollywood’s most fetching physiques in the public eye. See also her cameos in the LFO (“Girl on TV”) and Enrique Iglesias (“Hero”) music videos.


Step 4: A shot at the big leagues. (circa 1997 to 2002)

She headlined a series of teen-centric movies (“I Know What You Did Last Summer,” “Can’t Hardly Wait,” “Heartbreakers”), but none led to serious grown-up roles or lasting stardom. Time to retrench!


Step 5: Date strategically.

Throughout her career, JLH stayed in the magazines by dating a list of eligible Hollywood bachelors: Joey Lawrence, Patrick Wilson, Jamie Kennedy, John Mayer (supposedly inspiring his hit “Your Body is a Wonderland.”) She finally settled down last year with actor Brian Hallisay and after a much-chronicled pregnancy, gave birth to her daughter, Autumn.


Step 5: Return to the small screen. (2005 to 2010)

Network TV was happy to have her back, and “The Ghost Whisperer” — she starred as the antiques dealer who can communicate with the dead — was a surprise long-running hit for CBS, even when relegated to Friday nights.


Step 6: Go for controversy with an edgy cable drama (2012 to 2013)

Nothing gets buzz like a role as a lingerie-wearing masseuse who goes “the extra mile” to please her male clients. “The Client List,” based loosely on a real-life Texas massage parlor/bordello, did well for the Lifetime network — and hey, if viewers were tuning in for nothing more than titillation, that was hardly a problem. The drama lasted only two seasons, however, reportedly canceled after Lifetime balked when Hewitt, an executive producer, tried to get a bigger role for Hallisay, then her co-star and fiance.


Step 7: Step up to a (hopefully) long-running role on a blue-chip procedural. (2014)

“Criminal Minds” is an aging show in its 10th season, but no matter. CBS signed Hewitt amid much hype to star as Kate Callahan, a top agent joining the FBI’s Behavior Analysis Unit to help crack all kinds of gory cases — starting with the season-premiere killer, a California maniac who leaves his victims unrecognizable.



Santiago scores late, Army beats Ball State 33-24


WEST POINT, N.Y. — A.J. Schurr scored twice on short runs, Angel Santiago added a game-saving touchdown run in the waning moments, and Army's potent ground attack was enough to hold off Ball State 33-24 on Saturday at rainy Michie Stadium.


The win snapped a three-game slide for Army (2-3), which has won both of its games at home. Ball State (1-4) lost its fourth straight.


A steady rain fell for most of the game, and that played to the advantage of the Black Knights and their tough triple option. Averaging 316.5 yards rushing per game, Army racked up 236 yards on the ground in the first half alone, setting up Schurr's touchdowns and two field goals by Daniel Grochowski.


Santiago clinched it with an 11-yard run with 3:41 left after Ball State had rallied to within three points after trailing by 17.


Larry Dixon ran for a career-high 188 yards on 28 carries and Army finished with 425 yards rushing, holding the ball for nearly 38 minutes.


The Black Knights haven't learned to finish a game yet, though, and the lessons have been painful. They squandered a 14-point lead in the second half last week in an overtime loss at Yale, an FCS team, and they had to withstand a 22-point rally in the fourth quarter to hold off Buffalo in the season-opener.


It was more of the same against the Cardinals, who made it interesting at the end, driving twice for scores in the fourth quarter before finally getting derailed by Jeremy Timpf's third interception of the season. The pick came with under 3 minutes to play.


Mann completed six passes for 81 yards in a near-perfect drive, shaking off a sack, and completing it with a 6-yard pass over the middle to tight end Dylan Curry with 8:35 left to pull the Cardinals within 27-24.


Mann, just 6 of 11 for 43 yards in the first half with a slippery ball, finished 18 of 26 for 173 yards. Jahwan Edwards rushed for 142 yards on just 12 carries, scored twice, and caught five passes for 44 yards.


Ball State was ranked 16th in the nation in red zone defense, allowing opponents to score just 68.8 percent on 16 trips inside the 20-yard line. Army scored all three times it made it inside the 20-yard line in the first half in building a 20-10 lead.


The Black Knights were coming off losses to No. 14 Stanford (35-0), Wake Forest (24-21), and Yale (49-43).


In Army's lone victory, Dixon ran for 174 yards and two touchdowns against Buffalo, and his performance against Ball State was the ninth 100-yard game of his career, tying him with Charlie Jarvis for seventh all-time at West Point.


Both teams scored off turnovers in the first quarter.


Army capitalized first — on the second play from scrimmage. Edwards caught a pass in the right flat but fumbled when Chris Carnegie hit him, and Carnegie recovered at the Ball State 29.


Schurr's 16-yard run around the right side on third-and-13 kept the Black Knights from squandering the opportunity, and four plays later he scored on a 1-yard keeper for a 7-0 lead.


Ball State returned the favor when defensive end Tracy Key forced a fumble by Army tailback Joe Walker and Michael Ayers recovered for the Cardinals at the Ball State 44. Edwards then atoned for his miscue, bursting off right tackle and scoring on a 56-yard run with 6.44 left.


Two turnovers, two scores.


Schurr nearly made it three after a 40-yard run by Dixon when his pitch attempt hit the turf and Noel Ball recovered for Ball State at the Cardinals 15. Army challenged the call on the field and the play was ruled an incomplete pass, giving the Black Knights the ball, and Schurr scored four plays later on a 1-yard keeper.


Scott Secor kicked a 22-yard field goal for Ball State late in the second quarter and Grochowski booted a 21-yarder 7 seconds before halftime for a 20-10 lead.


Army gained what appeared to be a daunting 17-point lead with 3:02 to play in the third. Santiago's 37-yard completion to Edgar Poe gave the Black Knights a first down at the Ball State 9 and Aaron Kemper scored on the next play on a run up the middle.


Ball State finally broke through early in the fourth with its first sustained drive of the game, going 74 yards in nine plays. Mann's 5-yard completion to KeVonn Mabon on a fourth-and-3 play set up Edwards' 6-yard run that sliced the lead to 27-17.



DC hospital evaluating patient who has Ebola-like symptoms


Two Washington, D.C.-area hospitals said within hours of each other Friday that they had each admitted a patient with symptoms and travel histories associated with Ebola.


A person who had recently traveled to Nigeria came to Howard University Hospital in the District overnight "presenting symptoms that could be associated with Ebola," spokeswoman Kerry-Ann Hamilton said in a statement.


"In an abundance of caution, we have activated the appropriate infection control protocols, including isolating the patient," she said. "Our medical team continues to evaluate and monitor progress in close collaboration with the CDC and the Department of Health."


Just hours later, Shady Grove Adventist Hospital in Rockville, Md., north of Washington, confirmed that it was evaluating a patient who "presented with flu-like symptoms and a travel history that matches criteria for possible Ebola."


But on Friday night, Shady Grove Adventist officials said they had ruled out Ebola. "Our medical team has determined that the patient has malaria and does not have Ebola," the hospital said in a statement.


While Ebola continues to devastate West African nations including Liberia and Sierra Leone, the outbreak in Nigeria – where the Howard patient had traveled – may actually be coming to an end, with no new cases since Aug. 31, the CDC reported earlier this week. At one point, 894 people in Nigeria were being monitored since they had come into contact with someone sick with Ebola.


Overall, the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history has killed at least 3,439 people in West Africa and infected thousands more, according to the World Health Organization.


But before an Ebola case was confirmed in Dallas this week, there had not been a single Ebola diagnosis in the United States.


Potential Ebola patients who were evaluated in New York, California, New Mexico and Miami all tested negative for the virus.


People with Ebola are not contagious until they begin showing symptoms, which include a fever of greater than 101.5 degrees Fahrenheit, severe headache and vomiting. And you can only get Ebola through contact with a contagious person's bodily fluids.


Several Ebola patients have been transported from West Africa to the United States, including three Americans who were in Liberia — doctors Richard Sacra and Kent Brantly and missionary worker Nancy Writebol — who have already been discharged after they were successfully treated here. A Liberian American, Patrick Sawyer, fell ill after traveling to Nigeria and died of the disease.


The NIH in Bethesda recently admitted an American patient who had been exposed to Ebola.


On Thursday night, NBC News announced that a freelance cameraman working for the network in Liberia has tested positive for Ebola and will return to the United States for treatment.


In Maryland, all health providers and labs are required to report suspected Ebola cases to the state Department of Health and Mental Hygiene immediately, said spokesman Christopher Garrett. The state agency works with local health departments to ensure that proper procedures, including isolation, are followed; information has been distributed to hospitals, nursing homes, labs and other providers.


Officials at several local hospitals said they have been following CDC guidelines. At the University of Virginia Health System, an emerging-infectious-diseases work group was formed earlier this year to respond to MERS; this summer, that group began preparedness planning for the possibility of Ebola infections.


The system has already been tested; the University of Virginia Health System has had one patient who met CDC criteria for Ebola screening, based on travel history, fever and other symptoms.


"We confirmed that concern with public health authorities and went through the formal process of admitting and evaluating that person for Ebola,” said Costi Sifri, director of hospital epidemiology, infection prevention and control. “We ruled out the possibility of Ebola.”



Islamic State video depicts beheading of British hostage Alan Henning



CAIRO — An Internet video released Friday purports to show an Islamic State group fighter beheading British hostage Alan Henning, the fourth such killing carried out by the extremist group now targeted in U.S.-led airstrikes.


The video mirrored other beheading videos shot by the Islamic State group, which now holds territory along the border of Syria and Iraq, and ended with a militant threatening a man they identified as an American named Peter Kassig.


"Obama, you have started your aerial bombardment of Shams (Syria), which keeps on striking our people, so it is only right that we continue to strike the neck of your people," the masked militant in the video said.


National Security Council Spokesperson Caitlin Hayden confirmed that Kassig was being held by Islamic State militants, in a statement issued Friday evening.


"At this point we have no reason to doubt the authenticity of the video released earlier today. We will continue to use every tool at our disposal — military, diplomatic, law enforcement and intelligence — to try to bring Peter home to his family," Hayden said.


The Associated Press could not immediately verify the video's authenticity, though it was released in the same manner as other Islamic State group videos and the masked militant sounded similar to the one who carried out the other slayings.


In a statement, the British Foreign Office said it was working to verify the video.


"If true, this is a further disgusting murder," the statement read. "We are offering the family every support possible; they ask to be left alone at this time."


Britain has been supporting U.S. military efforts against the Islamic State group by using British forces to help with logistics and intelligence gathering, as well as recently taking part in airstrikes in Iraq. The Internet video released Friday begins with a news clip announcing British strikes against the Islamic State group.


British Prime Minister David Cameron said Henning's apparent slaying showed "how barbaric and repulsive these terrorists are."


"Alan had gone to Syria to help get aid to people of all faiths in their hour of need," Cameron said in a statement. "The fact that he was taken hostage when trying to help others and now murdered demonstrates that there are no limits to the depravity of these ... terrorists.


"We will do all we can to hunt down these murderers and bring them to justice."


President Barack Obama's counterterrorism adviser, Lisa Monaco, said the U.S. had seen the video and was evaluating it.


Later, Obama said the United States strongly condemned Henning's "brutal murder." He said the U.S., along with Britain and other allies, will "work to bring the perpetrators of Alan's murder" to justice and will continue to "taking decisive action to degrade and ultimately destroy" the Islamic State group.


French President Francois Hollande said he is "outraged by the heinous crime."


"This crime like previous ones will not be unpunished. France will continue to lend support to the people and authorities of Iraq in their fight against terrorism," Hollande said in a statement.


This is the fourth such video released by the Islamic State group. The full beheadings are not shown in the videos, but the British-accented, English-speaking militant holds a long knife and appears to begin cutting his victims, who include American reporter James Foley, American-Israeli journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid worker David Haines and now Henning.


FBI Director James Comey has said American officials believe they know the identity of the masked militant, though he's declined to name the man or reveal his nationality.


Kassig, a 26 year-old American now threatened by the Islamic State group, enlisted in the Army in 2004, and became a Ranger, ultimately serving in the 75th Ranger Regiment, an Army special operations unit.


According to his military record, Kassig trained at Fort Benning, Ga., in 2006, and deployed to Iraq from April to July 2007. He was medically discharged at the rank of private first class in September 2007. His home of record at the time of his enlistment was Indianapolis, Ind.


His parents, Ed and Paula Kassig, issued a statement through a media relations firm, asking for the world to pray for their son.


"The Kassig family extends our concern for the family of Alan Henning. We have read about his work and his generous character with great respect and admiration," the statement said. "We ask everyone around the world to pray for the Henning family, for our son, and for the release of all innocent people being held hostage in the Middle East and around the globe."


The family said Kassig had been working for the relief organization SERA when he was captured on Oct. 1, 2013 on his way to Deir Ezzour in eastern Syria. He converted to Islam while in captivity and the family has heard from former hostages that his faith has provided him comfort.


Henning, 47, nicknamed "Gadget," had joined an aid convoy and was taken captive on Dec. 26, shortly after crossing the border between Turkey and Syria. Earlier this week, Henning's wife Barbara Henning asked the militants in a televised plea: "Please release him. We need him back home."


Dozens of Muslim leaders in Britain have urged the Islamic State group to release Henning. His wife had said she had been given hope by "the outcry across the world" over her husband's imprisonment.


Mohammed Shafiq, chief executive of the Ramadhan Foundation, a Muslim charity, called Henning "a British hero."


His "barbaric killing is an attack against all decent people around the world," Shafiq said.


The Islamic State group has its roots in al-Qaida's Iraqi affiliate but was expelled from the global terror network over its brutal tactics and refusal to obey orders to confine its activities to Iraq. It became even more extreme amid the bloody 3-year civil war in neighboring Syria, growing stronger to the point of being able to launch a lightning offensive across much of northern Iraq, routing security forces there and shooting down an Iraqi helicopter on Friday. The group has become known for filming and releasing footage of mass shootings it conducts, as well as beheading opponents and targeting religious and ethnic minorities in the areas it attacks.


The extremist group has been widely denounced by mainstream Muslim authorities.


Other foreigners are thought to be held by the Islamic State group. On Friday, the father of John Cantlie, a British photojournalist held by the group, appealed for his release in a video, saying he was a friend of Syria.


Lawless reported from London. Associated Press writers Lolita C. Baldor, Bradley Klapper, Josh Lederman and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.



Top enlisted sailor aboard destroyer Stout fired for fraternizing




NORFOLK, Va. — The top enlisted sailor aboard the Norfolk-based destroyer Stout has been fired from his job.


According to Lt. Cmdr. Cate Cook, a spokeswoman for the Navy's Fleet Forces Command, the commanding officer of the Stout determined Friday that Master Chief Petty Officer Albert J. Marcucci had engaged in an "unduly familiar relationship" with a female subordinate, something prohibited by military regulations. He also was determined to have made a false official statement and was detached for cause after a nonjudicial punishment proceeding, she said.


Marcucci, trained as a Navy corpsman, reported aboard the Stout in May 2013 as command master chief, according to his official biography. Before that, he served in presidential support duty, working at Naval Support Facility Thurmont, Md. — better known as Camp David, the presidential retreat. He has extensive experience with the Marine Corps, including deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.


This is the second time in three years that a top leader aboard the Stout has been relieved of duty: In early 2011, the commanding officer, command master chief and eight other sailors were removed from the ship after investigators determined they had caused a hostile work environment.


Cook said Marcucci, now assigned to a job at the Commander of Naval Surface Forces Atlantic in Norfolk, received a punitive letter of reprimand. Additional administrative actions could follow.


The female sailor with whom Marcucci fraternized also is being held accountable, officials said.


©2014 The (Norfolk) Virginian-Pilot. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.




Friday, October 3, 2014

Islamic State preparing for offensive on strategic town on Syria-Turkey border



BEIRUT — Islamic State militants heavily shelled a Kurdish town on Syria's border with Turkey on Friday as jihadi fighters prepared an all-out offensive for the strategic site, whose capture would provide a direct link between areas under their control in Aleppo and their stronghold in Raqqa to the east.


The fighting came as Turkey's prime minister pledged his country would do what it could to prevent the fall of Kobani, although he did not spell out what assistance Turkey would provide. Turkey's parliament gave the government new powers Thursday to launch military incursions into Syria and Iraq, and to allow foreign forces to use its territory for possible operations against the Islamic State group.


Kurdish officials and activists said that Islamic State group fighters had so far not penetrated the frontier town as fighting raged on the eve of a major Muslim holiday.


"It looks like they are going to attack tonight and try to enter (Kobani) on the day of the feast," said Nasser Haj Mansour, a defense official in Syria's Kurdish region, referring to the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha that begins Saturday in most Muslim countries.


"Kurdish fighters are ready and prepared to repel any attack."


Haj Mansour said shelling of Kobani on Friday afternoon killed three civilians.


Kobani and its surrounding areas have been under attack since mid-September, with militants capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages. The assault, which has forced some 160,000 Syrians to flee, has left the Kurdish militiamen scrambling to repel the militants' advance into the outskirts of the town, also known as Ayn Arab.


The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that some 3,000 Kurds were stuck on the Syria-Turkish border, prevented by Turkish authorities from crossing to safety.


The Observatory, which monitors Syria's civil war, reported intense fighting Friday to the east and southeast of Kobani, where it said seven Islamic State fighters and 13 Kurdish militiamen were killed.


The assault came despite renewed U.S.-led airstrikes in the area. The United States has been bombing the Islamic State group across Syria since last week and in neighboring Iraq since early August.


An Associated Press reporter monitoring the fighting from the Turkish border town of Suruc reported intense shelling of Kobani from the south and west. One tank moved on the edge of the town as shells landed just 500 yards (meters) from the Turkish border. Ambulances whizzed to and from the border, bringing the wounded to Turkey for treatment.


Ismet Sheikh Hassan, the Kurdish defense minister for the Kobani region, said Islamic State fighters were advancing from the east, west and southeast of Kobani, firing rockets on the town. He called on the U.S.-led coalition "to hit (militant) tanks instead of bases."


The latest round of fighting over Kobani came after Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told Turkey's ATV television station late Thursday that his government "would do whatever is necessary, our utmost to prevent Kobani's fall."


Asked what would happen if Kobani were captured, Davutoglu said: "We would not want Kobani to fall. We have opened our arms to our brothers who have come from Kobani."


Davutoglu did not elaborate, however a senior aide said the prime minister was not signaling imminent military intervention by Turkey, but rather support for the Kurdish militiamen battling the militants, though he did not rule out eventual Turkish military involvement in Syria. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record.


On Friday, Syria's Foreign Ministry warned Turkey that deploying troops inside its borders would be seen as an aggression, and called on the international community to "put limits to the adventures" of the Turkish leadership.


Turkey has been one of the strongest backers of Syrian opposition groups fighting to remove President Bashar Assad from power.


Asked about Davutoglu's statement, Nawaf Khalil, a spokesman for Syria's leading Kurdish Democratic Union Party, said: "How does he want to prevent the fall of Kobani and until now Turkey has done nothing."


Khalil said Kobani is now almost empty of civilians and the situation is "very dangerous." He said Kurdish fighters in the town "will fight until the last gunman and last gunwoman."


Also Friday, the Observatory and Syrian state media said government forces advanced in northern Aleppo province, capturing three villages, including Handarat. The capture of the villages tightens government control of areas linking the contested city of Aleppo with other parts of the province.


The Observatory and the Local Coordination Committees, which also monitors Syria's 3½-year-old civil war, reported several airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition targeting Islamic State positions in the group's strongholds of Raqqa and Aleppo, as well as the eastern oil-rich region of Deir el-Zour that borders Iraq.


U.S. Central Command said the coalition on Thursday and Friday continued its airstrikes, destroying an Islamic State group garrison in the northeastern province of Hassakeh and two tanks in Deir el-Zour. It said two strikes north of Raqqa hit two modular oil refineries and a militant training camp, while another strike northeast of Aleppo struck a building occupied by the Islamic State group.


Meanwhile, in Iraq, Islamic State militants armed with a rocket launcher shot down an Iraqi military attack helicopter Friday, killing two pilots and raising new worries about their ability to attack aircraft amid the ongoing U.S.-led airstrikes.


The Mi-35 helicopter crashed outside the town of Beiji, 130 miles north of Baghdad and home to Iraq's largest oil refinery, authorities said. U.S. Central Command said it carried out airstrikes in Sinjar and Fallujah over Thursday and Friday, while Canada announced it was joining the aerial campaign against the militant group in Iraq and might extend the strikes to Syria if invited by the Assad government.


Fraser reported from Ankara, Turkey. Associated Press writers Burhan Ozbilici and Mohammed Rasool in Suruc, Turkey, and Frank Jordans in Geneva contributed to this report.



North Korea's No. 2 makes surprise visit to South Korea


SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea's presumptive No. 2 and other members of Pyongyang's inner circle made a surprise trip Saturday to South Korea for the close of the Asian Games, a visit that will include the rivals' highest level face-to-face talks in five years.


After months of tensions, including a barrage of insults between the divided neighbors and an unusual number of North Korean missile and rocket test firings, expectations for any breakthrough aren't high, but even the visit itself is significant, allowing a valuable meeting between confidants of North Korea's authoritarian leader and Seoul's senior official for North Korean affairs.


The North Korean delegation to the games in Incheon was led by Hwang Pyong So, the top political officer at the Korean People's Army and considered by outside analysts to be the country's second most important official after leader Kim Jong Un.


The visit comes as rumors swirl in the South about the health of Kim, who has made no public appearances since Sept. 3 and skipped a high-profile recent event he usually attends. A recent official documentary showed footage from August of him limping and overweight and mentioned his "discomfort."


Unification Ministry spokesman Lim Byeong Cheol told reporters that the North Korean officials plan to hold talks over lunch with South Korean Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl-jae and national security director Kim Kwan-jin before flying back home later Saturday.


It was the first senior visit of this kind to the South since conservative South Korean President Park Geun-hye took office in early 2013. The last such trip was in 2009. It wasn't clear what the officials would talk about. Lim said there were no immediate plans for the North Koreans to meet with Park.


One South Korean analyst saw the talks as a crucial moment for inter-Korean ties over the next few years.


If no progress is made after Saturday's talks, the rivals' strained relations will likely continue until Park finishes her single five-year term, said analyst Cheong Seong-chang at the private Sejong Institute.


Cheong speculated that the North Korean officials were probably carrying a message from Kim Jong Un. The visit could also be part of an effort to show that Kim has no problem making high-profile political decisions and has no serious health issues, he said.


The other North Korean officials, Lim said, are Choe Ryong Hae and Kim Yang Gon, secretaries to the ruling Workers' Party. Hwang, the No. 2, holds other top posts, such as a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission led by Kim Jong Un and a vice marshal of the army.


High-level North Korean visits to South Korea have been highly unusual since inter-Korean relations became strained after Park's conservative predecessor Lee Myung-bak took office in early 2008 with a tough line on the North.


In 2009, senior Workers' Party official Kim Ki Nam and spy chief Kim Yang Gon, the same official who visited Saturday, came to South Korea during a mourning period to pay their respects to the late liberal South Korean President Kim Dae-jung. During the visit, the North Koreans met President Lee, conveyed a message from then leader Kim Jong Il and discussed inter-Korean cooperation.


Besides the recent North Korean test firings of rockets and missiles, both sides have leveled harsh criticism at each other, with North Korean state media calling the South Korean president a prostitute.


The Asian Games participation by the North was welcomed as a step forward.


North Korea boycotted the 1986 Asian Games and the 1988 Summer Olympics, both in Seoul, but attended the 2002 Asian Games in Busan, the 2003 University Games in Daegu and the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships in Incheon. Those last three came during an era of liberal governments in Seoul that were more accommodating to Pyongyang.


North Korea had said ahead of these games that it wanted to send both athletes and cheerleaders but later balked at sending cheerleaders because of what it called South Korean hostility.



Pentagon doubles number of troops deploying to fight Ebola


WASHINGTON — The number of soldiers deploying to West Africa to confront the Ebola crisis has been doubled, as safety procedures are being put in place to protect American troops from the disease, the Pentagon said Friday.


The deployment of an additional 1,800 soldiers comes on top of Tuesday’s announcement by the Defense Department that 1,400 troops would be sent to combat the pandemic. The influx will bring the total Army commitment to Operation Unified Assistance -- which is being run out of Monrovia, Liberia -- to 3,200 soldiers.


On Friday, Pentagon press secretary Rear Adm. John Kirby told reporters that even more troops could be sent.


“We project that there could be nearly 4,000 troops deployed in support of this mission. … And we want to preserve the flexibility to go higher than that if we need to,” he said.


There are about 200 DOD personnel on the ground in Liberia, according to the Pentagon.


Kirby said that assessments about force requirements have changed as commanders have spent more time on the ground gathering information.


A series of safety precautions and protocols are being implemented to try to prevent American soldiers from contracting the virus, which is spread when people come into contact with bodily fluids of those infected.


U.S. troops won’t be taking care of Ebola patients. Most will provide engineering, medical, civil affairs, command and control, aviation and logistical support to a broader international and inter-agency effort to fight the pandemic, which has killed more than 3,000 people.


“They’re getting trained on the disease itself and on how to protect themselves from it,” Kirby said. “While they’re there, they’re going to be constantly monitored on a regular, frequent basis.” After the mission is over, there will be a screening process to make sure they haven’t experienced any symptoms.


Kirby said that the risk of American soldiers getting infected is relatively low. “There is no expectation that U.S. troops are going to be getting close to those who are being treated for Ebola. ... We aren’t going to be in the treatment business,” he said. But if troops need to be in a place where personal protection equipment is required, “we will have that available to them, and they will be trained on how to use it.”


Despite the precautions, the threat of exposure won’t be completely eliminated, according to Kirby. Troops deemed to have been exposed to the virus could be quarantined for up to three weeks and monitored closely to determine if they were infected. The incubation period for Ebola is two to 21 days. Soldiers not believed to have been exposed won’t be quarantined before they redeploy, Kirby said.


“The focus is going to be on making sure that our troops are not exposed, and if they are exposed, getting them the care that they need as quickly as possible and as efficiently as possible,” he said.


The troops participating in Unified Assistance are coming from a variety of locations. More than 1,800 will come front Fort Campbell, Ky., including elements of the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) Headquarters; soldiers from the 101st Sustainment Brigade; elements of the 86th Combat Support Hospital, 44th Medical Brigade; and a Military Police company from the 16th Military Police Brigade.


Other deploying personnel include 500 soldiers from the 1st Medical Brigade, the 36th Engineer Brigade and the 85th Civil Affairs Brigade at Fort Hood, Texas; 500 soldiers from the 1st Armored Division’s aviation brigade at Fort Bliss, Texas; 160 soldiers from the 4th Engineer Battalion at Fort Carson, Colorado; 120 engineers and public affairs troops at Fort Bragg, N.C.; 10 soldiers from the 20th CBRNE Command at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland; and about 100 troops from civil affairs, combat support and combat service support units at Fort Benning and Fort Stewart in Georgia and Fort Eustis in Virginia.


Troops who deploy to Liberia will receive hardship duty pay of $150 a month, officials said. That’s $75 less than the imminent danger pay that was authorized for the country until June 2014.


A defense official speaking on the condition of anonymity said the combatant commander could move to reinstate imminent danger pay if conditions warrant, but according to DOD policy, such pay only applies in areas affected by civil war, insurrection terrorism and wartime conditions.


The presence of Ebola doesn’t meet the criteria, said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly.


Hazardous duty incentive pay is authorized for servicemembers working in laboratory conditions with dangerous pathogens -- not for the kind of work that will be assigned to most of those who are deploying.


Additionally, troops with dependents will receive a family separation allowance of $250 a month retroactive to the day of arrival, starting after 30 days.


Those who deploy may be eligible for the Humanitarian Service Medal and the Armed Forces Service Medal, although U.S. Africa Command has yet to submit a request for either medal, officials said.


harper.jon@stripes.com

Twitter: @JHarperStripes


carroll.chris@stripes.com

Twitter: @ChrisCarroll_



Should the White House become a protective bunker?


The resignation of Secret Service Director Julia Pierson is the most visible fallout from the Sept. 19 incident involving Omar Gonzalez, an Iraq War veteran who managed to jump the White House fence, sprint across the lawn, open the (unlocked!) front door, and get all the way to the so-called Green Room, deep within the iconic mansion.


Her departure may tamp down some of the outrage over the lapses in security. (Pierson's resignation was preceded by the news that an armed man was allowed to share an elevator with the president at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta last month). What may linger is the disquieting reminder of the apparent contradiction between our democratic ideals and the need to keep the head of state safe.


A little history: In the early years of the republic, the chief executive was ridiculously, perilously accessible. European visitors found it baffling that ordinary people — the so-called rabble — could accost the president, even insult him.


This openness reflected the idea that in a democracy, the president is merely one of us. And to many from the Old World, the accessibility of the president captured the radicalism of the "democratic experiment" underway in the U.S.


Although the earliest presidents — George Washington and John Adams especially — tried to keep their distance from the populace, even they had limited success. But Thomas Jefferson, who rode to office in 1800 on the votes of common people, ostentatiously demolished the barriers separating him from ordinary Americans.


In Jefferson's era, no security detail kept watch over the president. He ventured alone onto the muddy streets of Washington, chatting with passers-by, though not everyone recognized him.


And foreign visitors expressed amazement that when they knocked on the door the presidential mansion, the president himself occasionally answered, sometimes dressed in the 19th-century equivalent of pajamas. Jefferson also took pains to open the White House to the public, particularly on special occasions: secular holidays such as New Year's or July 4.


His successors continued what one newspaper described in 1818 as the "Republican custom" of allowing access to any and all. That year, about 3,000 visitors thronged the White House when James Monroe rededicated the building. No one was frisked; no one was submitted to a security screening.


Yet Monroe was the first president to take security seriously. He built an iron fence around the perimeter of the White House; he even had a semblance of a plainclothes security detail. He ended Jefferson's practice of allowing strangers to roam unattended. He may even have deployed sharpshooters on the roof during big receptions. Nonetheless, the White House remained remarkably porous and the president generally accessible.


Andrew Jackson took that accessibility to new levels, beginning on the day he was inaugurated, March 4, 1829. After he delivered a short speech, thousands of well-wishers followed him back to the White House and promptly trashed the place. Jackson fled, and the White House staff managed to expel the mob by moving the booze onto the lawn.


Washington's elite recoiled in horror. As recounted by Jackson biographer Robert Remini, Doyenne Margaret Bayard Smith wrote, "What a pity, what a pity! No arrangements had been made [and] no police officers placed on duty and the whole house inundated by the rabble mob."


Even so, Jackson continued to dismay the kept the more genteel inhabitants of Washington by keeping the White House open to all.


"Such a crowd & such a motley crowd," sniffed military engineer Alfred Mordecai. "From the vice president to an intoxicated canal labourer in a dirty red plaid cloak … It is a striking picture of democracy, and truth to tell, it strikes me with disgust."


Jackson didn't care. He continued to welcome "all the refuse that Washington could turn forth from its workshops and stables," as one commentator observed. The open-doors policy endured even after an assassination attempt in 1835.


Jackson's successors did more in the way of security, but even that was laughably limited. John Tyler, who inherited the presidency after the death of the Whig Party's William Henry Harrison, quickly became the most hated man in Washington after it turned out he was really a Democrat. The death threats led to a small security detail, nothing more.


And Abraham Lincoln? He had been haunted by rumors of assassination plots before ascending to the office, and letters containing death threats arrived on an almost daily basis during the Civil War. Yet he refused to erect a barrier between himself and the citizenry, preferring to keep the White House remarkably open to the public.


"It would never do," he wrote, "for a President to have guards with drawn sabers at his door, as if he fancied he were, or were trying to be, or were assuming to be, an emperor." And so, though there was a minor security detail at the White House, it remained ineffectual, and it wasn't unusual for Lincoln and his wife to encounter total strangers wandering the building.


Outside the White House, Lincoln traveled practically unprotected. Even though he presided over the creation of the Secret Service, its mission was to protect the currency from counterfeiters. (The mandate to guard the president was added in the 20th century).


We know how that story ended. And although we can lament that Lincoln (or for that matter, Presidents James Garfield and William McKinley) might have been spared had there been better security, it's worth waxing nostalgic about the fundamental, unmediated quality of our democracy that had to be abandoned as we made our presidents safer.


There's nothing to be done about this; the head of state must be protected. But some of our most famous leaders — Jefferson, Jackson and Lincoln — might question whether a democracy can remain truly healthy, never mind fully function, if the chief executive is kept so separate from the people who elect him.


Stephen Mihm, an associate history professor at the University of Georgia, is a contributor to Bloomberg View.



Peter Kassig, threatened with next beheading, is former Army Ranger



INDIANAPOLIS — Peter Kassig first visited Beirut on a college spring break trip. What the former Army Ranger from Indiana saw there prompted him to return, the next time as a medical assistant and humanitarian worker hoping to offer blankets, food and medical care to victims of the region's conflicts.


Kassig founded a nongovernmental organization that provided aid for refugees fleeing the civil war in neighboring Syria. But his work in Lebanon led to his capture by militants on Oct. 1, 2013, while en route to eastern Syria.


On Friday, Kassig, 26, appeared in an online video that purported to show a masked militant who threatened to behead the Army veteran next, after the apparent beheading of British hostage Alan Henning.


The Associated Press could not immediately verify the video's authenticity, though it was released in the same manner as other Islamic State group videos and the masked militant sounded similar to the one who carried out other slayings.


In a statement issued Friday evening, National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden confirmed that Kassig was being held by Islamic State militants.


"At this point we have no reason to doubt the authenticity of the video released earlier today. We will continue to use every tool at our disposal — military, diplomatic, law enforcement and intelligence — to try to bring Peter home to his family," Hayden said.


The video and threat were a heartbreaking development for Kassig's family and friends, who have stayed silent since his capture while working to secure his release.


Kassig's parents issued a statement Friday describing their son's work and asking for privacy.


"We ask everyone around the world to pray for the Henning family, for our son, and for the release of all innocent people being held hostage in the Middle East and around the globe," the statement said.


According to his parents, Kassig, an Indianapolis native, converted to Islam while in captivity and now goes by the name Abdul-Rahman. He served in the Iraq war and later became an emergency medical technician.


In a January 2013 interview with Time, Kassig said he traveled heavily throughout Lebanon to assess the needs of people there.


He said he designed his aid organization, Special Emergency Response and Assistance, or SERA, around a belief that "there was a lot of room for improvement in terms of how humanitarian organizations interact with and cooperate with the populations that they serve."


SERA, he said, focused on supplementing the work of larger organizations by delivering aid that could "do the most good for the most people over the longest period of time possible."


"It's about showing people that we care, that someone is looking out for those who might be overlooked or who have slipped through the cracks in the system for whatever reason," he said.


SERA has since suspended its efforts while Kassig's family has worked to win his release.


Indiana Gov. Mike Pence asked for prayers Friday for Kassig and his family during "this unspeakably difficult time."



Sidestepping cuts, US likely to use ‘war credit card’ to pay for Iraq-Syria action



WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has been issuing dire warnings this year that the military is fast approaching a severe money crunch — a problem compounded now by the war in Iraq and Syria.


With mandatory defense cuts looming next year and new war costs mounting, Congress will almost certainly reach for an old standby accounting solution to keep money flowing — the Overseas Contingency Operations fund, a so-called war credit card.


The OCO account, separate from the base defense budget and exempt from spending reductions set to remain in place until 2021, allows the military to respond quickly to unforeseen crises. It also allows Congress to sidestep tough budget decisions such as trimming troop benefits and eliminating weapons systems the military says it no longer needs while paying for a war that the Obama administration says could last years.


Critics say relying on the fund also enables the Pentagon to avoid the rigid cost controls and spending reductions that were the goal when Congress agreed to mandatory spending caps to reduce the growing federal debt.


“There is currently no limit on OCO, so there is as much room as they need,” said Todd Harrison, a defense budget senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington, D.C.


Spurred on by budget cuts, the military has proposed freezing troop pay raises at 1 percent, slashing commissary benefits, overhauling Tricare health care coverage, and retiring hardware such as the A-10 Thunderbolt aircraft and the USS George Washington aircraft carrier.


The CSBA recently estimated the military could soon face $300 billion in mandatory cuts.


Meanwhile, war costs are quickly mounting since bombing began in August.


The Pentagon says it is spending up to $7 million to $10 million per day on an air offensive against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria that is likely to be long and difficult. Lawmakers also authorized the Obama administration to begin training and arming Syrian rebels into a proxy ground army, which will take years and could eventually cost over $1 billion dollars.


Analysts estimate the annual cost of the war could range between $2.4 billion and $18 billion.


Congress will almost certainly pay that bill using the OCO account, said Gordon Adams, an analyst with the Stimson Center and a professor at American University.


“It is like a drug. It is the magic feel-good for anybody’s budgetary needs,” he said.


Lawmakers must hash out a new defense spending plan by Dec. 11, when the stop-gap spending measure they passed just before leaving Washington for mid-term elections expires.


The White House has already requested $65.8 billion in OCO funds for the coming year.


“If they don’t come back sometime after the election and bump that [OCO budget] up $10-$15 billion, I will be shocked,” Adams said.


That means Congress will not have to shoehorn the cost of the war into the base budget. It has so far rejected many of the cost-cutting measures suggested by the Pentagon, which military leaders say are necessary to keep the services ready to protect the country but often mean painful hits to lawmakers’ home districts.


The Air Force put the A-10 aircraft — beloved by infantry troops — on the chopping block but it was protected in the House by Rep. Ron Barber, D-Ariz., whose district includes Davis-Monthan Air Force Base with the highest concentration of the aircraft in the world. Barber is locked in a tight mid-term race with a retired A-10 pilot.


The OCO has been criticized for years as a kind of budget credit card and a slush fund for wasteful spending. There was a move among some lawmakers and advocacy groups to have it abolished earlier this year but it gained little traction.


“I think the biggest negative long-term consequence is it completely eliminates budget discipline and planning in the Pentagon,” Adams said.


He said supplemental wartime spending over the past decade has contributed to a bloated military bureaucracy where civilian jobs outnumber uniformed positions.


While Congress is likely to sidestep difficult budget decisions, Adams said serious Pentagon reform and cost-cutting will also be derailed if OCO spending increases for the war.


“It you don’t do it [reform] now, wait to see the disaster you have when this war is over,” he said.


Jim Hasik, a defense analyst with the Atlantic Council, called the OCO fund an “accounting workaround” used to avoid the mandatory budget caps imposed by Congress and said it has potential drawbacks.


But he said overall it makes good sense to separate defense accounts that have different goals. The base Pentagon budget is aimed at long-term military preparedness and daily operations while the OCO pot can provide the spending flexibility needed to deal with sudden and unforeseen threats.


That flexibility can prove critical to the fight and protecting troops. When improvised explosives became a top threat in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. spent $50 billion to field 24,000 mine-resistant vehicles that could survive the blasts and protect occupants.


With the threat receding, those mine-resistant trucks and other vehicles may be costing the government $100 million just to ship them back from Afghanistan, according to a Government Accountability Office report. Many of the trucks should simply have been destroyed or given away because upkeep is not economical, auditors said.


“There is absolutely potential for more overspending any time you use a supplemental account, sure. In a sense, that is actually part of the plan,” Hasik said. “You worry less about checking up on the waste and abuse and you just worry about getting it done fast.”


For now, the top concern is whether the Obama administration has a strategy that will ultimately win the war against the Islamic State and not whether more reliance on the OCO account with cause problems in the future, Hasik said.


“I’m not worried that the door is open [to irresponsible spending] because somebody is talking about using supplemental funding,” he said. “I’m worried that there is no logical end game.”


tritten.travis@stripes.com

Twitter: @Travis_Tritten



'American Sniper' trailer drops ahead of Christmas release



If you’re looking for some cinematic firefights after Christmas Day presents and brunch, you’re in luck.


The film version of former Navy SEAL Chief Special Operator Chris Kyle’s best-selling American Sniper memoir is coming to theaters Christmas Day, the tale of his path toward 160 confirmed kills, the most of any shooter in American history.


Actor Bradley Cooper was able to meet with Kyle once before the SEAL was murdered in 2013.


“Thank God I got to talk to him once on the phone. It was a very quick conversation. But I did tell him how serious I was about making this movie,” Cooper told USA Today. “And he should just know that whatever fears he had about Hollywood, to just put them aside and trust me. That I was going to do everything I could to tell this story.”


Kyle published the book in 2012 and became an icon in American military lore and marksmanship culture.


Unfortunately, he was killed in 2013 by a fellow veteran, whom he’d taken shooting to help relieve the man’s post-traumatic stress.


Tags: , , , , ,



Leave a Reply



New program helps families of fallen access education benefits


Even with hundreds of millions of dollars in scholarship money and education benefits available for spouses and children of fallen service members, many of those families struggle to pay for college because they don’t know the benefits exist, or have trouble accessing them, a nonprofit group says.


So the group, the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, has announced its new program offering an online portal at www.taps.org/edu/ to help families identify scholarships and education benefits, as well as get one-on-one guidance through the maze.


Since a pilot program began in January, TAPS has helped 420 survivors with their education benefits, said Bonnie Carroll, the group’s CEO and founder, at an event in Washington, D.C., announcing the new program, which in its pilot phase alone has helped 140 widows and children submit information and applications.


“This is just the beginning,” Carroll said. “For these families, it means the dream of education is now possible.”


The public-private partnership between TAPS, the Veterans Affairs Department, the 45 states that have educational benefits of some kind for the families of the fallen, private organizations providing scholarships, and companies that have contributed to the effort “will ensure all education resources available to these children are now fully accessed,” said Carroll, who founded TAPS following the death of her husband, Army Brig. Gen. Tom Carroll, in a 1992 military plane crash.


She credited two family members who “harnessed their pain, saw a need and took action” in creating the new program — Ashlynne Haycock and Tabitha Bonilla.


Haycock’s father, Army Sgt. 1st Class Jeffrey Haycock, died while serving in 2002, when she was 10. Her mother, Nichole, died in 2011 when Ashlynne was a junior at American University. Among the obstacles she faced with funding the remainder of her education, she said, was trying to get a $30,000 loan without a parent to co-sign for it. A number of lenders tried to convince her that a 9 percent or 10 percent interest rate was reasonable for a $30,000 loan.


In working with TAPS staffers to find college financial assistance, it became clear there was no central place to go for information about available scholarships. Then Bonnie Carroll suggested that Haycock, now 23, could come up with a solution to the problem.


Haycock said families have been grateful for the program, noting that case workers often help them fill out applications and work with VA and other organizations when there are glitches.


The portal also has been key, said Bonilla, whose husband, Army Capt. Orlando Bonilla, died in Iraq in January 2005 — just 11 months after her father, Army Sgt. 1st Class Henry Bacon, died in Iraq.


“Families are overwhelmed. They don’t know where to turn,” said Bonilla, who has been working with Haycock on the project and has had her own difficulties with education funding. While a senior at Campbell University in North Carolina, her funds from VA and private scholarships ran out, and she got a bill from the university for $12,000.


“I definitely didn’t know about states’ survivor education benefits,” she said. “I might have qualified for benefits in Texas.”


Of the 45 states that offer educational benefits of some kind for families of fallen service members, two-thirds fully waive tuition and/or fees, and most of the others offer full or partial scholarships. The TAPS program also informs families about federal benefits to assist spouses and children of the fallen, such as the Marine Gunnery Sgt. John D. Fry Scholarship and the Survivors and Dependents’ Educational Assistance program.


Seven-year-old Lina Caboteja, daughter of Marine Staff Sgt. Nick Caboteja Jr., said her father died when she was 3 years old. “I miss him a lot,” she said.


She’s now in second grade, and said she’s happy that she’ll be able to receive a scholarship “when I go to college to learn to become the president of the United States.”


Lina’s mother, Bridgette, said the TAPS portal has helped her see the range of available opportunities for her children.


“This is one less thing I have to worry about, and I know my husband would be glad his children are taken care of.”



Colleges adapt to post-9/11 vets' needs


Bryan Box, a 28-year-old student veteran, carries a large thermos with “SAB9491T” scribbled on its side. The inscription is Box’s battle roster, which he described as a digital “dog tag” used by the Army to identify soldiers.


He added the “T” at the end simply because it holds his tea. He has another thermos with an “S.” That one is for soup.


As fall semester sets in, Box navigates the University of Alaska Anchorage campus while still carrying the ID code that labeled him for during his six years as an enlisted soldier. In school, he’s learning both biology and how to adapt.


Not long ago, he was sitting atop mountains in Afghanistan with an ashtray and binoculars, waiting to stop anyone with weapons from moving across the border from Pakistan. Now Box likens his life on campus to “being on an alien planet.”


Box is far from alone in the transition from soldier to student. The veteran population at Alaska’s two largest universities is increasing at rates that outpace the growth of total enrollment.


At UAA, the number of student veterans and their dependents jumped 38 percent between 2009 and 2014, compared to 4 percent in campuswide enrollment. In the same period at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the total student population shrank by 8 percent while the number of veterans swelled 61 percent, according to university records.


A national trend


The trend is national. Some 1 million student veterans were enrolled in colleges in 2013, double the number in 2009, according to the Veterans Affairs Department. As the military continues to downsize, VA expects the numbers to keep growing.


To accommodate student vets, UAA and UAF have made changes. Staff has been hired and student veteran resource centers have been created as campus hubs to help with VA paperwork, health care, housing and enrollment. The centers also act as meeting spots for veterans who rely on one another to regain the camaraderie lost when they left active duty.


First comes the paperwork.


Brian Fausett said he spent more than a year hassling VA to process paperwork so he could enroll in UAA through the department’s Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Program, a service for veterans with service-related disabilities.


“I was actually going to go to welding school because it didn’t look like UAA was going to happen,” said the 33-year-old veteran, who served eight years in the Army.


Fausett said it wasn’t until he went through a liaison in Sen. Mark Begich’s office that a VA employee called him and set up a meeting. Now he’s a part-time student studying natural sciences. By the time he was accepted, he said, key classes were closed and enrolling as a full-time student was no longer an option.


Through VA, Fausett should receive tuition payment and a stipend for books and housing, but that’s still being worked out, he said.


Nichole Grunwald, military and veteran community services assistant at UAA, said navigating the benefits process can be among the most difficult and frustrating steps for student veterans. Grunwald staffs the resource center that opened in 2011 with one other full-time employee.


“We fought like junkyard dogs to get the veteran center here,” said Box, who is also president of the UAA chapter of Student Veterans of America, a national organization that provides student veterans with resources and support.


According to a 2012 survey by the American Council on Education, 71 percent of nearly 700 schools had specific programs and services for service members and veterans.


Beyond initial paperwork, student veterans must also have their benefits certified each semester by a university official, said Eric Pedersen, associate vice chancellor for Enrollment Services at UAA.


In the past five years, the university has gone from one to three certifying officials to handle the growing pile of forms, he said.


Seeking reconnection


Doug Bowers, 51, is a senior at UAA majoring in social work. He served in the Army for 22 years and deployed twice to Afghanistan. He has three grown daughters and, he said, little in common with his nonveteran peers.


“If it wasn’t for the vet center, it would be a lot rougher,” Bowers said. “The vet center gives you the camaraderie, the connection. You can speak freely about these types of shared experiences, where in the general population you just sit there quiet as a church mouse nine times out of 10.”


In general, student veterans are older than their peers. Many have families. Many have seen war, and some still suffer its lasting effects.


Bowers underwent multiple knee surgeries, has lower-back pain and is diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. Box said he has to sit at the back of the classroom. After years on quiet mountains waiting for sounds of attack, he can’t tolerate the noise of other humans breathing too loudly around him. As for Fausett, his eyes are constantly shifting. He watches rooftops, reflections and people.


“I watch the mood and the behavior of the people around me because if people start running I’d like to know which way they’re going so I can join them,” Fausett said. “That’s not PTSD in the sense that it’s a mental crippling, that’s a learning response.”


Grunwald said counseling and health care services are offered through the university’s health system and at the VA.


Once a student veteran herself, Grunwald started classes at UAA in 2008. Something she had to get used to, she said, was the number of young students in her entry-level classes.


“It was a shock for me. I didn’t like it at first,” she said. “I didn’t like all the chaos and the noise.”


'A bunch of privates'


Fausett compared campus to “a battalion that has no officers and no sergeants and it’s just a bunch of privates.”


An on-campus housing community for student veterans was launched at UAA this fall. Grunwald said she spearheaded the group housing after several veterans came looking for accommodations that didn’t involve living with an 18-year-old. Grunwald had 12 spots reserved, but in a last-minute scramble to fill rooms, she could find only four interested veterans.


Box said the university’s firearms and alcohol bans might deter student veterans from living on campus. Also, the dorms are not family-friendly, he said.


Next academic year, Grunwald said, she hopes to reserve apartment-style dorms and get the word out to veterans earlier.


She said she expects the numbers of student veterans on campus to keep climbing. Recently, she said, she’s seen an uptick in the number of service members using GI Bill education benefits after having their enlistments cut short as the military grows smaller.


“The Air Force has been cutting people. The Army has been cutting people,” she said. “Some have had their minds set to be career service members and are now having to quickly find a job, so the GI [Bill] is what they’re turning to.”



U.S. awards $450M to link job training, employers


The Obama administration is awarding nearly a half-billion dollars to community colleges that are partnering with employers on job training.


Massasoit Community College in Massachusetts and Wisconsin’s Chippewa Valley Technical College are the largest recipients and will each get about $20 million.


A Maryland program will receive $15 million to partner with companies like Raytheon and IBM to train workers with little education for jobs in cybersecurity or information technology. Community and technical colleges in Kentucky will get $10 million to expand online learning for degrees in computer and medical fields.


Vice President Joe Biden and the secretaries of Education and Labor will announce the grant winners Monday at the White House. Linking job training to industry demand is key to the administration’s strategy to improve wages and reduce unemployment.