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Title: Air Force brigadier general dies of gunshot wound
Source: honoluluadvertiser.com
URL Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/a ... 200807281547/BREAKING/80728072
Published: Jul 30, 2008
Author: Associated Press
Post Date: 2008-07-30 21:31:32 by rack42
Keywords: suicide, general
Views: 2275
Comments: 20

ELMENDORF AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska — An Air Force brigadier general died of a gunshot wound that likely was self-inflicted, a spokesman said Monday.

Brig. Gen. Thomas L. Tinsley, the commander at Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage, suffered a gunshot wound to his chest late Sunday night and was pronounced dead within a half hour, said Col. Richard Walberg, who assumed command at Elmendorf after Tinsley's death.

"To the best information, it's possible it was a self-inflicted gunshot wound," Walberg said at a news conference. The weapon was likely a handgun.

Medical responders rushed to Tinsley's home on base but were unsuccessful in trying to save him. Tinsley's wife and college-age daughter were home at the time of the shooting.

Tinsley was named base commander in May 2007. He had served as an F-15 instructor pilot, F-15C test pilot, wing weapons officer, exchange officer and instructor with the Royal Australian Air Force.

His previous 22-month assignment was executive officer to the Air Force chief of staff, Gen. T. Michael "Buzz" Mosely, who in June resigned under pressure in an agency shake-up.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates ousted both Mosely, the Air Force military chief, and Air Force Secretary Michael W. Wynne, the agency's civilian head, holding them accountable for failing to fully correct an erosion of nuclear-related performance standards. One concern was a cross-country flight in August 2007 of a B-52 carrying armed nuclear weapons.

Walberg said Tinsley was not under investigation or undue stress.

"Gen. Tinsley was under no investigation," he said. "As far as stress, sir, this job, by nature of being an Air Force officer in a nation at war, is stressful. Undue stress, no."

Walberg lives across the street from the base commander's home.

He and his wife went to bed at about 10 p.m. Sunday and the base command post called about 10 to 15 minutes later.

"The individual on the end of the line was fairly agitated and said there was a report of a gunshot at Gen. Tinsley's house and people are screaming."

The colonel bolted out of the house with his wife behind him and met Col. Eli Powell, the 3rd Medical Group commander and an orthopedic surgeon, inside. Powell, who lives next door to Walberg, had also received a call. He started resuscitation efforts on Tinsley as family members watched.

Tinsley was declared dead at 10:30 p.m.

Representatives of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology will do a report and declare whether Tinsley's cause of death and determine whether it was a suicide, Walberg said.

"We're assuming it was, and I'm not prepared to make that statement," he said. A report takes an average of 30 days to complete, he said.

Tinsley's outstanding achievement was the care he showed for those under his command, Walberg said.

"Brig. Gen. Tom Tinsley's best accomplishment in the 15 months or so that he's been the commander is his absolute love, and I mean love with a capital L, for his airmen. His first thought in the morning, his last thought at night for his professional family was how can I better take care of these airmen who are being sent in harm's way."


Poster Comment:

Committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest? Official Biography

I'd put this in "Conspiracy" if such category existed.

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#20. To: rack42 (#0)

USAF Gen. Tinsley "accident" - Pilots For 9/11 Truth Forum

Tinsley and 9/11:

.....13. February 2000 - August 2000, executive assistant to the Deputy for Political-Military Affairs for Asia, Pacific and the Middle East, Directorate for Plans and Policy (J5), Joint Staff, the Pentagon, Washington, D.C.

14. August 2000 - November 2001, Director of Operations, 12th Fighter Squadron, Elmendorf AFB, Alaska ......

pre 9/11 at Elmendorf: http://www.historycommons.org/context.jsp?...ore091101virgo2

QUOTE

July 2001: NORAD Plans a Mock Simultaneous Hijacking Threat From Inside the US

NORAD is already planning for the Amalgam Virgo 02 exercise. This exercise, scheduled for June 2002, will involve the simulation of two simultaneous commercial aircraft hijackings. One plane, a Delta 757, flown by Delta pilots, will fly from Salt Lake City, Utah to Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage, Alaska. It will be “hijacked” by FBI agents posing as terrorists. The other plane will be a Navy C-9 bound from Oak Harbor, Washington to Vancouver, British Columbia, and will be “hijacked” by Royal Canadian Mounted Police. On both planes, military personnel will act as civilian passengers. US and Canadian fighters are to respond, and either force the planes to land or simulate shooting them down. Describing Amalgam Virgo 02 to the 9/11 Commission, NORAD’s Major General Craig McKinley later says, “Threats of killing hostages or crashing were left to the script writers to invoke creativity and broaden the required response for players.” About 1,500 people will participate in the exercise. USA Today will note that this is an exception to NORAD’s claim that, prior to 9/11, it focused only on external threats to the US and did not consider the possibility of threats arising from within the US. 9/11 Commissioner Richard Ben-Veniste will similarly comment that this planned exercise shows that, despite frequent comments to the contrary, the military considered simultaneous hijackings before 9/11.

ETA: a chunk of NORAD forces were sent away prior to 9/11, thereby lessening the number of available fighters on 9/11...

www.norad.mil/News/2001/090901.html

Quote

NORAD Maintains Northern Vigilance

Sept. 9, 2001

Quote:

CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN AFS, Colo. – The North American Aerospace Defense Command shall deploy fighter aircraft as necessary to Forward Operating Locations (FOLS) in Alaska and Northern Canada to monitor a Russian air force exercise in the Russian arctic and North Pacific ocean.

“NORAD is the eyes and ears of North America and it is our mission to ensure that our air sovereignty is maintained,” said Lieutenant-General Ken Pennie, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of NORAD. “Although it is highly unlikely that Russian aircraft would purposely violate Canadian or American airspace, our mission of vigilance must be sustained.”

NORAD-allocated forces will remain in place until the end of the Russian exercise.

NORAD conducted operation Northern Denial from December 1 to 14, 2000 in response to a similar, but smaller scale, Russian deployment of long-range bombers at northern Russian air bases. NORAD-allocated forces were deployed to three FOLS, two in Alaska and one in Canada. More than 350 American and Canadian military men and women were in involved in the deployment........

.....Brig. Gen. Thomas L. Tinsley, the commander at Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage, suffered a gunshot wound to his chest late Sunday night and was pronounced dead within a half hour, said Col. Richard Walberg, who assumed command at Elmendorf after Tinsley's death.

"To the best information, it's possible it was a self-inflicted gunshot wound," Walberg said at a news conference. The weapon was likely a handgun.

Medical responders rushed to Tinsley's home on base but were unsuccessful in trying to save him. Tinsley's wife and college-age daughter were home at the time of the shooting.

Tinsley was named base commander in May 2007. He had served as an F-15 instructor pilot, F-15C test pilot, wing weapons officer, exchange officer and instructor with the Royal Australian Air Force.

His previous 22-month assignment was executive officer to the Air Force chief of staff, Gen. T. Michael "Buzz" Mosely, who in June resigned under pressure in an agency shake-up.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates ousted both Mosely, the Air Force military chief, and Air Force Secretary Michael W. Wynne, the agency's civilian head, holding them accountable for failing to fully correct an erosion of nuclear-related performance standards. One concern was a cross-country flight in August 2007 of a B-52 carrying armed nuclear weapons.

Walberg said Tinsley was not under investigation or undue stress.

"Gen. Tinsley was under no investigation," he said. "As far as stress, sir, this job, by nature of being an Air Force officer in a nation at war, is stressful. Undue stress, no."

Walberg lives across the street from the base commander's home.

http://pilotsfor911truth.org/for...48078&st=0&#entry10748078

Study Says Terrorist Nuclear Attack Will Create Global Economic Collapse, Lack Of Basic Necessities, Severe Curtailment Of Civil Liberties Added: Jul 29th, 2008 7:16 AM

http://www.raidersnewsnetwork.com/full.php?news=18021

======

someone at libertyforum referred to Tinsley's replacement as (rabbi) [??]

"COLONEL RICHARD J. WALBERG

Colonel Richard J. Walberg is the commander, 3rd Wing, Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska. The 3rd Wing provides the commander, U.S. Pacific Command, trained and equipped tactical air superiority forces, all-weather strike assets, command and control platforms and tactical airlift resources for contingency operations. The wing flies the F-15C/D, F-22A, C-17, C-12 and E-3, and maintains a regional medical facility, providing care for all forces in Alaska. The installation also hosts Headquarters 11th Air Force, Headquarters Alaskan Command, Headquarters Alaska NORAD Region, and 94 associate organizations.

Colonel Walberg has commanded a contingency operations group and a flying squadron. While stationed at McGuire AFB, N.J., he was the commander of the 818th Contingency Response Group. He deployed to New Orleans International Airport for Hurricane Katrina/Rita relief efforts, where the 818th CRG evacuated more than 26,000 citizens. He was deployed five days after returning from New Orleans to Pakistan for the earthquake relief efforts, where more than 75,000 Pakistanis where killed and between 1-to-2 million were left homeless. He was also the first Joint Task Force Port Opening (JTF-PO) commander for U.S. Transportation Command. His staff tours include the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Logistics Directorate; Headquarters U.S. Air Force, and Headquarters, Air Mobility Command. *** He was on duty in the National Military Command Center on Sept. 11, 2001, during the terrorist attacks on the Pentagon. During and after the attacks, he stayed on duty in the NMCC, where he worked and authorized airlift relief missions into New York City and Washington, D.C. He deployed to Bosnia in 1995 for Joint Endeavor and to Dhahran AB, Saudi Arabia, during Desert Shield/Storm. His unit worked more than 10,000 airlift missions at Dhahran and took enemy missile fire from January 1991 until the war ended in February 1991. Colonel Walberg also holds the distinction of being the first Air Force colonel to earn his Air Assault Wings at the U.S. Army Air Assault School, Fort Campbell, Ky.

EDUCATION

1981 Bachelor of Science Degree Double Major - Accounting & Business, Illinois State University
1985 Squadron Officer School (Correspondence)
1993 Masters of Science Degree in Aeronautical Science, Embry-Riddle University......"["Muslim terrorists" trained here? ]

ASSIGNMENTS

.....12. August 2001 - July 2004, Deputy Division Chief and Emergency Action Officer, Joint Logistics Operations Center, Directorate for Logistics, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Washington, D.C.....

www.elmendorf.af.mil/libr...graphies/bio.asp?id=10278

=======================

U.S. jets escort Russian bombers off Alaska coast - http://CNN.com Two US Air Force F-15s escorted two Russian Bear long-range bombers out of ... The U.S. fighters from Elmendorf Air Force Base were dispatched to meet the ... http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/03/26/us.russian.planes/index.html

"...Charismatic and well-liked, Tinsley was visible in Anchorage, appearing frequently in the news. He helped oversee the transport of Maggie, the Alaska Zoo's elephant, to California last year. He was also working to secure funding for hangars so people servicing aircraft on base could work inside in the winter, Jeter said.

"He knew everyone's name. The lowest-ranking airmen that worked around him, he knew their names, he knew the names of their kids, he knew who they were married to," she said.

"I loved putting him in front of a crowd."

Tinsley had a reputation as a passionate advocate for the military. He oversaw the Elmendorf hospital and psychiatric care facilities that serve all military forces in Alaska, and he made mental and health treatment for returning veterans a priority.

In November, he and Mayor Mark Begich hosted a public luncheon for Anchorage mental health professionals, urging them to join forces with military doctors to provide psychiatric care for more than 4,000 soldiers and airmen returning from combat duty in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"Remember, this is much larger than just the soldiers and airmen returning," Tinsley said at the time. "This is also their families. And the families may not be able to get the care they need on base and need to get it downtown."

The Elmendorf hospital was running at capacity, Tinsley said. Dozens of military medics and psychiatric care specialists were scheduled to arrive in 2008 to assist with the caseload.

"This is not an issue because we're not going to let it become an issue," he said. "We're going to get out ahead of it."......"

http://www.adn.com/military/story/478085.html

================

Maybe war for Israel wasn't Tinsley's main motivation in life. Maybe we now have a fox guarding the chicken coop.

AllTheKings'HorsesWontDoIt  posted on  2008-07-31   17:18:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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