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Two Of Soldiers Who Penned Times Op-Ed Criticizing War Appear To Have Died

09.12.07 -- 9:11AM
By Greg Sargent

It appears that two of the soldiers who helped co-write a riveting New York Times Op-ed last month criticizing U.S. war strategy in Iraq have now died.

The two soldiers are Staff Sergeant Yance Gray and Sergeant Omar Mora. Those are the names of two of seven soldiers who co-wrote the Op-ed, which described the political debate in Washington as "surreal," opining that "to believe that Americans, with an occupying force that long ago outlived its reluctant welcome, can win over a recalcitrant local population and win this counterinsurgency is far-fetched."

Now a local Texas station is reporting that Mora was killed Monday in a vehicle rollover accident that killed seven troops.

Meanwhile, the Associated Press reports that Gray died in the same accident.

Asked for confirmation that these two are the same soldiers that wrote the Op-ed, the Pentagon press office declined to comment, saying that official comment only comes once 24 hours have passed since soldiers' deaths. Over at Editor and Publisher, Greg Mitchell says that they are the same, as does a diarist over at Daily Kos.

Back when the soldiers' Op-ed appeared, it received scant media attention -- far less, for instance, than an Op-ed by Michael O'Hanlon and Kenneth Pollack arguing that the surge is working.

In their Op-ed, the soldiers wrote that despite their grave misgivings about the war strategy's likelihood for success, "as committed soldiers, we will see this mission through." Now, even as the likes of O'Hanlon and Pollack continue to argue in Washington that the surge is working, and even as the "surreal" Washington political debate the soldiers described continues, the two men's commitment to the mission has cost them their lives.

Late Update: Greg Mitchell also writes that a local newspaper in Texas interviewed Mora's mother, who confirmed that he was indeed one of the authors of the Op-ed.

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