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Why we are fighting

April 16, 2008 Leave a comment

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Cross posted at Grizzly Groundswell

Why doesn’t
someone like this run for president?

This is one of the most profound articles that I have ever read about this Presidency, this era, and this so-called war. No matter your politics, you owe it to yourself to read this.

An assessment of where the US stands in relation to the Middle East
problems, this one is from the guy who had his finger on the nuclear
trigger for three years as head of our defense and response complex
buried under Cheyenne Mountain at Colorado Springs.
He was the only person who could initiate a nuclear attack after
advising the sitting president of a missile launch by our enemies and
our need to respond. No political or civilian type in the US had more
knowledge about day to day military actions around the world.

 

 


Everyone
should find quiet time to read this. As far as I am concerned, it is
exactly the direction we should go and the consequences of not doing so
are well thought out.

 

 


-John R. ( Jack ) Farrington, Major General, USAF (Retired)

Middle East Imperative
by: James Cash, Brigadier General, USAF, Retired

 

 

 

 

 

I
wrote recently about the war in Iraq and the larger war against radical
Islam, eliciting a number of responses. Let me try and put this
conflict in proper perspective.

 

 


Understand; the current battle we are engaged in is much bigger than just Iraq.
What happens in the next year will affect this country and how our kids
and grand kids live throughout their lifetime, and beyond. Radical
Islam has been attacking the West since the seventh century. They have
been defeated in the past and decimated to the point of taking hundreds
of years to recover. But they can never be totally defeated. Their
birth rates are so far beyond civilized world rates, that in time they
recover and attempt to dominate again.

 

 


There are eight terror-sponsoring countries that make up the grand threat to the West. Two, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan,
just need firm pressure from the West to make major reforms. They need
to decide who they are really going to support and commit to that
support. That answer is simple. They both will support who they think
will hang in there until the end, and win.

 

 


We are not sending very good signals in that direction right now, thanks to the Democrats.

 

 


The other six, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, North Korea and Libya will require regime change or a major policy shift. Now, let’s look more closely.

 

 


Afghanistan and Iraq
have both had regime changes, but are being fueled by outsiders from
Syria and Iran . We have scared Gaddafi’s pants off, and he has given
up his quest for nuclear weapons, so I don’t think Libya is now a threat. North Korea (the non-Islamic threat) can be handled diplomatically by buying them off. They are starving. That leaves Syria and Iran. Syria is like a frightened puppy. Without the support of Iran they will join the stronger side.

 

 

 

 

 

So where does that leave us? Sooner, or later, we are going to be forced to confront Iran, and it better be before they gain nuclear capability.

 

 


In 1989 I served as a Command Director inside the Cheyenne Mountain complex located in Colorado Springs, Colorado
for almost three years. My job there was to observe (through classified
means) every missile shot anywhere in the world and assess if it was a
threat to the US or Canada. If any shot was threatening to either nation I had only minutes to advise the President, as he had only minutes to respond.

 

 


I watched Iran and Iraq
shoot missiles at each other every day, and all day long, for months.
They killed hundreds of thousands of their people. Know why? They were
fighting for control of the Middle East
and that enormous oil supply. At that time, they were preoccupied with
their internal problems and could care less about toppling the west.
Oil prices were fairly stable and we could not see an immediate threat.

 

 


Well, the worst part of what we have done as a nation in Iraq is to do away with the military capability of one of
those nations. Now, Iran has a clear field to dominate the Middle East, since Iraq
is no longer a threat to them. They have turned their attention to the
only other threat to their dominance, they are convinced they will win,
because the US is so divided, and the Democrats (who now control
Congress and, unfortunately, may control the Presidency in 2008) have
openly said we are pulling out.

 

 


Do you have any idea what will happen if the entire Middle East turns their support to Iran,
which they will obviously do if we pull out? It is not the price of oil
we will have to worry about. Oil WILL NOT BE AVAILABLE to this country
at any price. I personally would vote for any presidential candidate
who did what JFK did with the space program—declare a goal to bring this country to total energy independence in a decade.

 

 


Yes, it is about oil. The economy in this country will totally die if that Middle East
supply is cut off right now. It will not be a recession. It will be a
depression that will make1929 look like the "good-old-days".

 

 

 

 

 

The bottom line here is simple. If Iran is forced to fall in line, the fighting in Iraq will end over night, and the nightmare will be over. One way or another, Iran
must be forced to join modern times and the global community. It may
mean a real war—if so, now is the time, before we face a nuclear Iran with the capacity to destroy Israel and begin a new ice age.

 

 


I
urge you to read the book "END GAME" by two of our best Middle East
experts, true American patriots and retired military generals, Paul
Vallely and Tom McInerney. They are our finest, and totally honest in
their assessment of why victory in the Middle East
is so important, and how it can be won. Proceeds for the book go
directly to memorial fund for our fallen soldiers who served the
country during the war on terror. You can find that book by going to
the Internet through Stand-up America at
http://www.ospreyradio.us/http://www.ospreyradio.us/ or http://www.rightalk.com/, http://www.rightalk.com/.

 

 


On
the other hand, we have several very angry retired generals today, who
evidently have not achieved their lofty goals, and insist on ranting
and raving about the war. They are wrong, and doing the country great
harm by giving a certain political party reason to use them as experts
to back their anti-war claims.

 

 


You
may be one of those who believe nothing could ever be terrible enough
to support our going to war. If that is the case I should stop here, as
that level of thinking approaches mental disability in this day and
age. It is right up there with alien abductions and high altitude
seeding through government aircraft contrails. I helped produced those
contrails for almost 30 years, and I can assure you we were not seeding
the atmosphere.

 

 

 

 

 

The human race is a war-like population, and
if a country is not willing to protect itself, it deserves the consequences. ‘Enough – said!’

 

 


Now, my last comments will get to the nerve. They will be on politics. I am not a Republican. And, George Bush has made enough

 

 

mistakes
as President to insure my feelings about that for the rest of my life.
However, the Democratic Party has moved so far left, they have made me
support those farther to the right.

 

 


I
am a conservative who totally supports the Constitution of this
country. The only difference between the United States and the South
American, third world, dictator infested and ever-changing South
American governments, is our U.S. Constitution.

 

 


This
Republic (note I did not say Democracy) is the longest standing the
world has ever known, but it is vulnerable. It would take so little to
change it through economic upheaval. There was a time when politicians
could disagree, but still work together. We are past that time, and
that is the initial step toward the downfall of our form of government.

 

 


I
think that many view Bush-hating as payback time. The Republicans hated
the Clinton’s and now the Democrats hate Bush. So, both parties are
putting their hate toward willingness to do anything for political
dominance to include lying and always taking the opposite stand just
for the sake of being opposed. JUST HOW GOOD IS THAT FOR OUR COUNTRY?

 

 


In
my lifetime, after serving in uniform for President’s Kennedy, Johnson,
Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, and Bush, I have a pretty good feel for
which party supported our military, and what military life was like
under each of their terms. And, let me assure you that times were best
under the Republicans.

 

 

 

 

 

Service under Jimmy Carter was devastating for all branches of the military. And, Ronald Regan was truly a salvation.

 

 


You can choose to listen to enriched newscasters, and foolish people like John Murtha (he is no war hero!), Nancy Pelosi, John Kerry, Michael Moore, Jane Fonda, Harry Reid, Russ Feingold, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Ted Kennedy, and on-and-on to include the true fools in Hollywood if you like. If you do, your conclusions will be totally wrong!

 

 


The reason that I write, appear on radio talk shows, and do everything I can to denounce those people is simple. THEY ARE PUTTING THEIR THIRST FOR POLITICAL POWER AND QUEST
FOR VICTORY IN 2008 ABOVE WHAT IS BEST FOR THIS COUNTRY!
I cannot abide by that.

 

 


Pelosi clearly defied the Logan Act by going to Syria, which should have lead to imprisonment of three years and a heavy fine. Jane Fonda did more to prolong the Vietnam War than any other human being (as acknowledged by Ho Chi Minh
in his writing before he died). She truly should have been indicted for
treason, along with her radical husband, Tom Hayden, and forced to pay
the consequences.

 

 


This country has started to soften by not enforcing its laws, which is
another indication of a Republic about to fall.

 

 


All Democrats, along with the Hollywood elite, are sending us headlong into a total defeat in the Middle East, which will finally give Iran total dominance in the region. A lack of oil in the near future will be the final straw that dooms this Republic.

 

 


However,
if we refuse to let this happen and really get serious about an energy
self-sufficiency program, this can be avoided. I am afraid, however,
that we are going in the opposite direction.

 

 


If we elect Hillary Clinton and a Democrat controlled congress, and they carry through with allowing Iran to take control of the Middle East,
continue to refuse development of nuclear energy, refuse to allow
drilling for new oil, and continue to do nothing but oppose everything
Bush, it will be over in terms of what we view as the good life in the
USA.

 

 


Now,
do I think that all who do not support the war are un-American? Of
course not. They just do not understand the importance of total victory
in that region.

 

 


Another failure of George Bush
is his inability to explain to the American people why we are there,
and why we MUST win. By the way, it is not a war. The war was won five
years ago. It is martial law that is under attack by Iranian and
Syrian outside influences, and there is a difference.

 

 


So,
what do I believe? What is the bottom line? I will simply say that the
Democratic Party has fielded the foulest, power hungry, anti-country,
self absorbed group of individuals that I have observed in my lifetime.
Our educational system is partially to blame for allowing the mass of
America to be taken in by this group. George Bush has done the best he can with the disabilities that he possesses.

 

 


A
President must communicate with the people. And, I would tell you that
Desert Storm spoiled the people. Bush Senior’s 100-hour war convinced
the people that technology has progressed to the point that wars could
be fought with no casualties and won in very short periods of time. I
remember feeling at the time, that this was a tragedy for the US
military. To win wars, you must put boots on the ground. When you put
boots on the ground, soldiers are going to die. A President must make
the war decision wisely, and insure that the cause is right before
using his last political option.

 

 


HOWEVER,
CONTROLLING IRAN AND DEMOCRATIZING THE MIDDLE EAST IS THE ONLY CHOICE
IF WE ARE HELL BENT ON DEPENDING ON THEM FOR OUR FUTURE ENERGY NEEDS.

 

 


-Jimmy L. Cash, Brigadier General, USAF, Retired

Arab Press covers Meeting of Pope and King Abdullah

November 7, 2007 Leave a comment

Interesting that the Arab world is reporting the meeting between the Pope and the Saudi King at the Vatican.  Here’s what AsiaNews has to say about the coverage in the Middle East.

11/07/2007 15:49
SAUDI ARABIA – VATICAN

Pope and Abdullah focus on religious freedom, says Arab press

Saudi sources say discussion underlined rejection of terrorism. The ‘historic meeting’ is reported in papers and TV both inside and outside Saudi Arabia with spotlight on inter-faith co-operation. Some however forget to mention that the former includes the Jews.

Beirut (AsiaNews) – Arab media gave wide coverage to yesterday’s ‘historic’ meeting between Benedict XVI and Saudi King Abdullah. All media outlets stressed how both sides shared the same view about the role religion can play in achieving peace and justice, but not everyone reported that Jews are also included in the process. Many, especially in Saudi Arabia, did refer to the Vatican’s request that Christians be granted religious freedom that a “just solution” be found to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Saudi Arabia’s official news agency SPA reported that the “two sides [. . .] stressed that violence and terrorism have nothing to do with a religion,” something that was in yesterday’s Vatican news release. The news agency noted that the Saudi monarch stressed the importance of religion for peace and justice but did not mention the Jews as was the case in the original press release.

Another Saudi paper, Arab News, talked about the “dialogue between Muslims, Christians and Jews [. . .] to promote peace, justice and moral values” and mentioned the meeting’s “warmth.” It also noted its significance since the Saudi monarch met the Pope in his capacity as “Custodian of the two holy mosques.”

Both King Abdullah and Pope Benedict said that “violence and terrorism have no religion or nation,” and that all “countries and peoples should work together to eradicate terrorism.”

It added that yesterday’s meeting came just weeks after 138 Muslim clerics and intellectuals wrote a letter to Benedict and other Christian leaders, and quoted several expatriates living in the kingdom who welcomed the king’s meeting with the pope as a step towards better relations between Muslims and Christians.

The Arab Herald, which also emphasised the historic and warm nature of the meeting, gave wide coverage to the Vatican’s request for broader religious freedom, noting that in the past this demand was a sticking point between the two sides.

The online paper published a range of opinions from some of its readers. One reader noted that no state should impose its views on worshippers; another complained that Muslims are not fully free in Europe because of restrictions on Muslim women wearing the hijab, whereas Christian nuns can wear their own veil; and another instead pointed out that whilst Europe is dotted with mosques, no church exists in Saudi Arabia.

Arab papers outside of the kingdom have largely carried news stories from international news agencies. They, too, stressed the historic nature of the meeting.

Pan-Arab Asharq Al-Awsat noted that the “Vatican has said it wants to pursue a dialogue with moderate Muslims.”

The Kuwait Times called the event a “historic meeting” in which religious freedom, co-operation between Muslims, Christians and Jews and peace in the Middle East took centre stage, noting also that the “Vatican wants greater rights for the 1 million Catholics who live in Saudi Arabia, most of them migrant workers who are not allowed to practice their religion in public.”

Finally, al-Jazeera started off its report on the meeting by saying that “King Abdullah has become the first Saudi monarch to meet a Catholic pontiff,” adding that the two “discussed [. . .] the situation of Saudi Arabia’s Christian minority, the need for greater inter-faith collaboration and prospects for peace in the Middle East.” Further into the text the Qatar-based satellite TV broadcaster quoted yesterday’s Vatican press release that referred to “collaboration among Christians, Muslims and Jews,” asserting also that the “Vatican wants more rights” for Christians.

Source:  http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=10738&size=A

Looks like the Saudi’s may be trying to get some backing before they let the massive numbers of Catholics working in Saudi have Mass on Sunday without getting arrested.  Not only are churches not allowed, neither are Bibles, rosaries or religious meetings in homes.  Asia News also notes that The US has put Saudi Arabia on the list of countries violating rights of religious freedom for the first time.  Here are links to other articles in the AsiaNews that are relevant to this subject.

11/06/2007 VATICAN – SAUDI ARABIA
Pope and King Abdullah talk about inter-faith dialogue and peace between Israelis and Palestinians
11/07/2007 INDIA – SAUDI ARABIA
Brian O’Connor: the doubts and hopes of King Abdullah’s visit to the Pope
by Nirmala Carvalho
09/17/2004 UNITED STATES – SAUDI ARABIA
For the first time Riyadh on US list of states violating freedom of religion
09/07/2004 SAUDI ARABIA
A catacomb Church? Perhaps, but one that is alive and well . . . and universal
by Giuseppe Caffulli

03/27/2007 SAUDI ARABIA – ARAB LEAGUE
Some positive moves from Riyadh summit for Israel, not for Lebanon

Julia

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , ,

The Case of the “Blasphemous” Balls

August 27, 2007 Leave a comment

Trying to do a good thing, a coalition gift of soccer balls to kids in Afghanistan is rejected and the infidels are castigated yet again for insensitivity to the Prophet.  Maybe these Islamic countries should remove the Koranic verses from their flags if they don’t want inadvertant insults to Islam.

Anger over ‘blasphemous’ balls
By Alastair Leithead
BBC News, Kabul

Demonstration over football dropped by US troops

The footballs angered residents in Khost

A demonstration has been held in south- east Afghanistan accusing US troops of insulting Islam after they distributed footballs bearing the name of Allah.

The balls showed the Saudi Arabian flag which features the Koranic declaration of faith.

The US military said the idea had been to give something for Afghan children to enjoy and they did not realise it would cause offence.

The footballs were dropped from a helicopter in Khost province.

Some displayed flags from countries all over the world, including Saudi Arabia, which features the shahada, one of the five pillars of Islam – the declaration of faith.

Football dropped by US troops

The balls were intended as a gift to Afghan children

The words, which include the name of Allah, are revered, and Muslims are very sensitive about where and how they can be used.

Saudi Arabia has complained to the World Cup’s ruling body in the past about the use of its flag on footballs.

Mullahs in Afghanistan criticised the US forces for their insensitivity, and around 100 people held a demonstration in Khost.

Afghan MP Mirwais Yasini said: "To have a verse of the Koran on something you kick with your foot would be an insult in any Muslim country around the world."

A spokeswoman for the US forces in Afghanistan said they made "significant efforts to work with local leaders, mullahs and elders to respect their culture" and distributing the footballs was an effort to give a gift the Afghan children would enjoy.

"Unfortunately," she added, "there was something on those footballs we didn’t immediately understand to be offensive and we regret that as we do not want to offend."

Source:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/6964564.stm

Here’s a clearer photo of the offending part of the soccer ball at the Cranmer blog .

There is no god but Allah and Mohammad is his messenger’ balls

One has to pity the US forces in Afghanistan. A simple attempt to spread a little goodwill through the universal language of football – which is variously considered by its adherents to be akin to a religion if not a political struggle – is bearing all the hallmarks of becoming a major international incident.

They stand accused of ‘insulting Islam’ for distributing footballs bearing the name of Allah. It is reminiscent of ‘Allah’ on Nike trainers or Burger King ice cream. But in this case they were damned if they do, and damned if they don’t, for the name of Allah flies regularly from flagpoles all over Saudi Arabia, and Cranmer has never heard complaints that he has been hoist aloft and hung out in all weathers. To have omitted the Saudi flag would also have been an insult, so the whole design of the ball is an example of US ‘insensitivity’.

The flag features the Shahada, the Islamic declaration of faith: ‘There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger’ – and people were going to kick it…

And now the Mullahs of Afghanistan are leading demonstrations against ‘the West’.

Cranmer finds this a little rude. The footballs were intended as gifts for the children, and when one is in receipt of a gift, the normal rules of social etiquette demand that one politely accepts it even if it is destined for the dustbin. But not when you’re dealing with Mohammedan Mullahs. They could have chosen to politely point out the insensitivity, on the quiet, permitting a subtle withdrawal and rectification. But no, they are marching, shouting, and protesting, and will no doubt soon be burning effigies and killing someone.

Where in Islam might Christians purposely look for offence where none (presumably) is intended?

Another possible explanation for the outrage is that the Saudi flag section is touching the Israeli flag section. 

Julia

 

Lieberman puts the smack down on Reid

April 26, 2007 Leave a comment

I just love Lieberman.  I relaly don’t agree with him on everything politically, but at least he has some back bone and will not back down to the Islamofascists horde that wants to take over the Middle East and drive Israel to the sea.   I agree with everything he has to say in his remarks on the floor.

NRO via Captain’s Quarters

“Mr. President, the supplemental appropriations bill we are debating today contains language that would have Congress take control of the direction of our military strategy in Iraq.

Earlier this week the Senate Majority Leader spoke at the Woodrow Wilson Center and laid out the case for why he believes we must do this—why the bill now before this chamber, in his view, offers a viable alternative strategy for Iraq.

I have great respect for my friend from Nevada. I believe he has offered this proposal in good faith, and therefore want to take it up in good faith, and examine its arguments and ideas carefully and in depth, for this is a very serious discussion for our country.

In his speech Monday, the Majority Leader described the several steps that this new strategy for Iraq would entail. Its first step, he said, is to “transition the U.S. mission away from policing a civil war—to training and equipping Iraqi security forces, protecting U.S. forces, and conducting targeted counter-terror operations.”

I ask my colleagues to take a step back for a moment and consider this plan.

When we say that U.S. troops shouldn’t be “policing a civil war,” that their operations should be restricted to this narrow list of missions, what does this actually mean?

To begin with, it means that our troops will not be allowed to protect the Iraqi people from the insurgents and militias who are trying to terrorize and kill them. Instead of restoring basic security, which General Petraeus has argued should be the central focus of any counterinsurgency campaign, it means our soldiers would instead be ordered, by force of this proposed law, not to stop the sectarian violence happening all around them—no matter how vicious or horrific it becomes.

In short, it means telling our troops to deliberately and consciously turn their backs on ethnic cleansing, to turn their backs on the slaughter of innocent civilians—men, women, and children singled out and killed on the basis of their religion alone. It means turning our backs on the policies that led us to intervene in the civil war in Yugoslavia in the 1990s, the principles that today lead many of us to call for intervention in Darfur.

This makes no moral sense at all.

It also makes no strategic or military sense either.

Al Qaeda’s own leaders have repeatedly said that one of the ways they intend to achieve victory in Iraq is to provoke civil war. They are trying to kill as many people as possible today, precisely in the hope of igniting sectarian violence, because they know that this is their best way to collapse Iraq’s political center, overthrow Iraq’s elected government, radicalize its population, and create a failed state in the heart of the Middle East that they can use as a base.

That is why Al Qaeda blew up the Golden Mosque in Samarra last year. And that is why we are seeing mass casualty suicide bombings by Al Qaeda in Baghdad now.

The sectarian violence that the Majority Leader says he wants to order American troops to stop policing, in other words, is the very same sectarian violence that Al Qaeda hopes to ride to victory. The suggestion that we can draw a bright legislative line between stopping terrorists in Iraq and stopping civil war in Iraq flies in the face of this reality.

I do not know how to say it more plainly: it is Al Qaeda that is trying to cause a full-fledged civil war in Iraq.

The Majority Leader said on Monday that he believes U.S. troops will still be able to conduct “targeted counter-terror operations” under his plan. Even if we stop trying to protect civilians in Iraq, in other words, we can still go after the bad guys.

But again, I ask my colleagues, how would this translate into military reality on the ground? How would we find these terrorists, who do not gather on conventional military bases or fight in conventional formations?

By definition, targeted counterterrorism requires our forces to know where, when, and against whom to strike—and that in turn requires accurate, actionable, real-time intelligence.

This is the kind of intelligence that can only come from ordinary Iraqis, the sea of people among whom the terrorists hide. And that, in turn, requires interacting with the Iraqi people on a close, personal, daily basis. It requires winning individual Iraqis to our side, gaining their trust, convincing them that they can count on us to keep them safe from the terrorists if they share valuable information about them. This is no great secret. This is at the heart of the new strategy that General Petraeus and his troops are carrying out.

And yet, if we pass this legislation, according to the Majority Leader, U.S. forces will no longer be permitted to patrol Iraq’s neighborhoods or protect Iraqi civilians. They won’t, in his words, be “interjecting themselves between warring factions” or “trying to sort friend from foe.”

Therefore, I ask the supporters of this legislation: How, exactly, are U.S. forces to gather intelligence about where, when, and against whom to strike, after you have ordered them walled off from the Iraqi population? How, exactly, are U.S. forces to carry out targeted counter-terror operations, after you have ordered them cut off from the very source of intelligence that drives these operations?

This is precisely why the congressional micromanagement of life-and-death decisions about how, where, and when our troops can fight is such a bad idea, especially on a complex and changing battlefield.

In sum, you can’t have it both ways. You can’t withdraw combat troops from Iraq and still fight Al Qaeda there. If you believe there is no hope of winning in Iraq, or that the costs of victory there are not worth it, then you should be for complete withdrawal as soon as possible.

There is another irony here as well.

For most of the past four years, under Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, the United States did not try to establish basic security in Iraq. Rather than deploying enough troops necessary to protect the Iraqi people, the focus of our military has been on training and equipping Iraqi forces, protecting our own forces, and conducting targeted sweeps and raids—in other words, the very same missions proposed by the proponents of the legislation before us.

That strategy failed—and we know why it failed. It failed because we didn’t have enough troops to ensure security, which in turn created an opening for Al Qaeda and its allies to exploit. They stepped into this security vacuum and, through horrific violence, created a climate of fear and insecurity in which political and economic progress became impossible.

For years, many members of Congress recognized this. We talked about this. We called for more troops, and a new strategy, and—for that matter—a new secretary of defense.

And yet, now, just as President Bush has come around—just as he has recognized the mistakes his administration has made, and the need to focus on basic security in Iraq, and to install a new secretary of defense and a new commander in Iraq—now his critics in Congress have changed their minds and decided that the old, failed strategy wasn’t so bad after all.

What is going on here? What has changed so that the strategy that we criticized and rejected in 2006 suddenly makes sense in 2007?

The second element in the plan outlined by the Majority Leader on Monday is “the phased redeployment of our troops no later than October 1, 2007.”

Let us be absolutely clear what this means. This legislation would impose a binding deadline for U.S. troops to begin retreating from Iraq. This withdrawal would happen regardless of conditions on the ground, regardless of the recommendations of General Petraeus, in short regardless of reality on October 1, 2007.

As far as I can tell, none of the supporters of withdrawal have attempted to explain why October 1 is the magic date—what strategic or military significance this holds. Why not September 1? Or January 1? This is a date as arbitrary as it is inflexible—a deadline for defeat.

How do proponents of this deadline defend it? On Monday, Senator Reid gave several reasons. First, he said, a date for withdrawal puts “pressure on the Iraqis to make the desperately needed political compromises.”

But will it? According to the legislation now before us, the withdrawal will happen regardless of what the Iraqi government does.

How, then, if you are an Iraqi government official, does this give you any incentive to make the right choices?

On the contrary, there is compelling reason to think a legislatively directed withdrawal of American troops will have exactly the opposite effect than its Senate sponsors intend.

This, in fact, is exactly what the most recent National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq predicted. A withdrawal of U.S. troops in the months ahead, it said, would “almost certainly lead to a significant increase in the scale and scope of sectarian conflict, intensify Sunni resistance, and have adverse effects on national reconciliation.”

Second, the Majority Leader said that withdrawing our troops, and again I quote, will “reduce the specter of the U.S. occupation which gives fuel to the insurgency.”

My colleague from Nevada, in other words, is suggesting that the insurgency is being provoked by the very presence of American troops. By diminishing that presence, then, he believes the insurgency will diminish.

But I ask my colleagues—where is the evidence to support this theory? Since 2003, and before General Petraeus took command, U.S. forces were ordered on several occasions to pull back from Iraqi cities and regions, including Mosul and Fallujah and Tel’Afar and Baghdad. And what happened in these places? Did they stabilize when American troops left? Did the insurgency go away?

On the contrary—in each of these places where U.S. forces pulled back, Al Qaeda rushed in. Rather than becoming islands of peace, they became safe havens for terrorists, islands of fear and violence.

So I ask advocates of withdrawal: on what evidence, on what data, have you concluded that pulling U.S. troops out will weaken the insurgency, when every single experience we have had since 2003 suggests that this legislation will strengthen it?

Consider the words of Sheikh Abdul Sattar, one of the leading Sunni tribal leaders in Anbar province who is now fighting on our side against Al Qaeda. This is what he told the New York Times when asked last month what would happen if U.S. troops withdraw. “In my personal opinion, and in the opinion of most of the wise men of Anbar,” he said, “if the American forces leave right now, there will be civil war and the area will fall into total chaos.”

This is a man whose father was killed by Al Qaeda, who is risking his life every day to work with us—a man who was described by one Army officer as “the most effective local leader in Ramadi I believe the coalition has worked with… in Anbar [since] 2003.”

In his remarks earlier this week, the Majority Leader observed that there is “a large and growing population of millions—who sit precariously on the fence. They will either condemn or contribute to terrorism in the years ahead. We must convince them of the goodness of America and Americans. We must win them over.”

On this, I completely agree with my friend from Nevada. My question to him, however, and to the supporters of this legislation, is this: how does the strategy you propose in this bill possibly help win over this population of millions in Iraq, who sit precariously on the fence?

What message, I ask, does this legislation announce to those people in Iraq? How will they respond when we tell them that we will no longer make any effort to protect them against insurgents and death squads? How will they respond when we declare that we will be withdrawing our forces—regardless of whether they make progress in the next six months towards political reconciliation? Where will their hopes for a better life be when we withdraw the troops that are the necessary precondition for the security and stability they yearn for?

Do my friends really believe that this is the way to convince Iraqis, and the world, of the goodness of America and Americans? Does anyone in this chamber really believe that, by announcing a date certain for withdrawal, we will empower Iraqi moderates, or enable Iraq’s reconstruction, or open more schools for their children, or more hospitals for their families, or freedom for everyone?

Mr. President, with all due respect, this is fantasy.

The third step the Majority Leader proposes is to impose “tangible, measurable, and achievable benchmarks on the Iraqi government.”

I am all for such benchmarks. In fact, Senator McCain and I were among the first to propose legislation to apply such benchmarks on the Iraqi government.

But I don’t see how this plan will encourage Iraqis to meet these or any other benchmarks, given its ironclad commitment to abandon them—regardless of how they behave.

We should of course be making every effort to encourage reconciliation in Iraq and the development of a decent political order that Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds can agree on.

But even if today that political solution was found, we cannot rationally think that our terrorist enemies like Al Qaeda in Iraq will simply vanish.

Al Qaeda is not mass murdering civilians on the streets of Baghdad because it wants a more equitable distribution of oil revenues. Its aim in Iraq is not to get a seat at the political table.

It wants to blow up the table—along with everyone seated at it. Al Qaeda wants to destroy any prospect for democracy in Iraq, and it will not be negotiated or reasoned out of existence. It must be fought and defeated through force of arms. And there can be no withdrawal, no redeployment from this reality.

The fourth step that the Majority Leader proposed on Monday is a “diplomatic, economic, and political offensive… starting with a regional conference working toward a long-term framework for stability in the region.”

I understand why we are tempted by these ideas. All of us are aware of the justified frustration, fatigue, and disappointment of the American people. And all of us would like to believe that there is a quick and easy solution to the challenges we face in Iraq.

But none of this gives us an excuse to paper over hard truths. We delude ourselves if we think we can wave a legislative wand and suddenly our troops in the field will be able to distinguish between Al Qaeda terrorism and sectarian violence, or that Iraqis will suddenly settle their political differences because our troops are leaving, or that sweet reason alone will suddenly convince Iran and Syria to stop destabilizing Iraq.

Mr. President, what we need now is a sober assessment of the progress we have made and a recognition of the challenges we face. There are still many uncertainties before us, many complexities. Barely half of the new troops that General Petraeus has requested have even arrived in Iraq, and, as we heard from him yesterday, it will still be months before we will know just how effective his new strategy is.

In following General Petraeus’ path, there is no guarantee of success—but there is hope, and a new plan, for success.

The plan embedded in this legislation, on the other hand, contains no such hope. It is a strategy of catchphrases and bromides, rather than military realities in Iraq. It does not learn from the many mistakes we have made in Iraq. Rather, it promises to repeat them.

Let me be absolutely clear: In my opinion, Iraq is not yet lost—but if we follow this plan, it will be. And so, I fear, much of our hope for stability in the Middle East and security from terrorism here at home.

I yield the floor.” 

What Saudis teach Their Children

May 22, 2006 Leave a comment

An article in the Washington Post  by Nina Shea blows the cover on Saudi Arabia’s claim that it has cleaned up its school textbooks.  Various parents and teachers in Saudi slipped out the supposedly now tolerant texts and the writer cites what Muslim kids all around the world are learning courtesy of our friends the Saudis. 

This is a Saudi textbook. (After the intolerance was removed.)

Saudi Arabia’s public schools have long been cited for demonizing the West as well as Christians, Jews and other "unbelievers." But after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 — in which 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis — that was all supposed to change.

[snip]

The passages below — drawn from the same set of Saudi texts proudly cited in the new 74-page review of curriculum reform now being distributed by the Saudi Embassy — are shaping the views of the next generation of Saudis and Muslims worldwide. Unchanged, they will only harden and deepen hatred, intolerance and violence toward other faiths and cultures. Is this what Riyadh calls reform?

FIRST GRADE


" Every religion other than Islam is false."

"Fill in the blanks with the appropriate words (Islam, hellfire): Every religion other than ______________ is false. Whoever dies outside of Islam enters ____________."

FOURTH GRADE


"True belief means . . . that you hate the polytheists and infidels but do not treat them unjustly."

FIFTH GRADE


"Whoever obeys the Prophet and accepts the oneness of God cannot maintain a loyal friendship with those who oppose God and His Prophet, even if they are his closest relatives."  "It is forbidden for a Muslim to be a loyal friend to someone who does not believe in God and His Prophet, or someone who fights the religion of Islam."             "A Muslim, even if he lives far away, is your brother in religion. Someone who opposes God, even if he is your brother by family tie, is your enemy in religion."

SIXTH GRADE


"Just as Muslims were successful in the past when they came together in a sincere endeavor to evict the Christian crusaders from Palestine, so will the Arabs and Muslims emerge victorious, God willing, against the Jews and their allies if they stand together and fight a true jihad for God, for this is within God’s power."

EIGHTH GRADE


"As cited in Ibn Abbas: The apes are Jews, the people of the Sabbath; while the swine are the Christians, the infidels of the communion of Jesus."

"God told His Prophet, Muhammad, about the Jews, who learned from parts of God’s book [the Torah and the Gospels] that God alone is worthy of worship. Despite this, they espouse falsehood through idol-worship, soothsaying, and sorcery. In doing so, they obey the devil. They prefer the people of falsehood to the people of the truth out of envy and hostility. This earns them condemnation and is a warning to us not to do as they did."

"They are the Jews, whom God has cursed and with whom He is so angry that He will never again be satisfied [with them]."  "Some of the people of the Sabbath were punished by being turned into apes and swine. Some of them were made to worship the devil, and not God, through consecration, sacrifice, prayer, appeals for help, and other types of worship. Some of the Jews worship the devil. Likewise, some members of this nation worship the devil, and not God."

"Activity: The student writes a composition on the danger of imitating the infidels."

NINTH GRADE


"The clash between this [Muslim] community (umma) and the Jews and Christians has endured, and it will continue as long as God wills."  "It is part of God’s wisdom that the struggle between the Muslim and the Jews should continue until the hour [of judgment]."   "Muslims will triumph because they are right. He who is right is always victorious, even if most people are against him."

TENTH GRADE


The 10th-grade text on jurisprudence teaches that life for non-Muslims (as well as women, and, by implication, slaves) is worth a fraction of that of a "free Muslim male." Blood money is retribution paid to the victim or the victim’s heirs for murder or injury:

"Blood money for a free infidel. [Its quantity] is half of the blood money for a male Muslim, whether or not he is ‘of the book’ or not ‘of the book’ (such as a pagan, Zoroastrian, etc.).

"Blood money for a woman: Half of the blood money for a man, in accordance with his religion. The blood money for a Muslim woman is half of the blood money for a male Muslim, and the blood money for an infidel woman is half of the blood money for a male infidel."

ELEVENTH GRADE


"The greeting ‘Peace be upon you’ is specifically for believers. It cannot be said to others."  "If one comes to a place where there is a mixture of Muslims and infidels, one should offer a greeting intended for the Muslims."

"Do not yield to them [Christians and Jews] on a narrow road out of honor and respect."

TWELFTH GRADE


"Jihad in the path of God — which consists of battling against unbelief, oppression, injustice, and those who perpetrate it — is the summit of Islam. This religion arose through jihad and through jihad was its banner raised high. It is one of the noblest acts, which brings one closer to God, and one of the most magnificent acts of obedience to God."

Nina Shea is director of the Center for Religious Freedom at Freedom House.

Julia  H/T Stanley Kurtz at National Review On-LIne

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Priest busted in Saudi Arabia

April 12, 2006 Leave a comment

Asia News reports that a Catholic priest has been expelled from Saudi Arabia for the crime of saying Mass in a private home.  As you probably know, Saudi Arabia provides the financial wherewithal to build many of the mosques in the U.S.   These are our friends?

10 April, 2006

SAUDI ARABIA

Catholic priest arrested and expelled from Riyadh

He was caught unawares while celebrating mass in a private apartment. He was visiting Catholic Indians in the country. Like all other non-Muslims, pastoral care is denied them. There are around one million Catholics in Saudi Arabia.

Riyadh (AsiaNews) – A Catholic Indian priest was yesterday forced to leave Saudi Arabia. He was discovered by the religious police as he organized a prayer meeting in the lead-up to Easter. Arrested on 5 April, he remained in police custody for four days and on Saturday 8th April he left for India. The practice of any religion other than Islam is forbidden in Saudi Arabia. Meetings held privately in people’s homes, among friends, are also banned.

The priest, Fr George Joshua, belongs to the Malankara rite of Kerala (India). His visit to Catholic Indians in the Saudi Kingdom was planned with his bishop’s permission.

On 5 April, Fr George had just celebrated mass in a private house when seven religious policemen (muttawa) broke into the house together with two ordinary policemen. The police arrested the priest and another person.

The Saudi religious police are well known for their ruthlessness; they often torture believers of other religions who are arrested.

AsiaNews sources said there were around 400,000 Indian Catholics in Saudi Arabia who were denied pastoral care. Catholic foreigners in the country number at least one million: none of them can participate in mass while they are in Saudi Arabia. Catechism for their children – nearly 100,000 – is banned.

Often, for feasts like Easter and Christmas, Catholics plan holidays in the Emirates, Bahrain or Abu Dhabi, where at least for once, they are free to attend mass.

Julia

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Oil Peak???

March 13, 2006 Leave a comment

Are we going to run out of oil any time soon???  I think not.  But many people do.  Today in TCS Daily there is a good article about oil.  I believe that we are always going to finds new and innovative ways to extract oil from the Earth, and we will not run out of oil for a long time.  I also believe that when we evetually run out of oil, we will already have new technologoes in place to take the place of oil.  Right now we have Nuclear power, and we have cars that run on corn based gas.  So I do not think that all of the doom and gloom will come about because of peak oil as many believe.

Running Out of Oil? History, Technology and Abundance

By Max Schulz : BIO | 13 Mar 2006

Are we running out of oil? That’s what the doomsayers say. We are past our (Hubbert’s) peak and it’s downhill from here. War, famine, pestilence, perhaps even extinction – those are the apocalyptic scenarios posited by folks predicting the oil age is over and the era of stringency is nigh.

Whether we are running out of oil or not, one thing we’re certainly not short of is people who claim that we are. The good news about this bad news is that, historically, the doomsayers have always been wrong.

Almost since the first discoveries of oil in the U.S. in 1859, people have been saying we’re running out. In 1874, the state geologist of the nation’s leading oil producer, Pennsylvania, warned the U.S. had enough oil to last just four years. In 1914, the federal government said we had a ten-year supply. The government announced in 1940 that reserves would be depleted within a decade and a half. The Club of Rome made similar claims in the 1970s. President Carter famously predicted in 1977 that unless we made drastic cuts in our oil consumption, "Within ten years we would not be able to import enough oil — from any country, at any acceptable price." And so it goes today, where a slew of books and Web sites make fantastic claims about dwindling supplies of crude.

read the rest here.

Stix

Good News from saudi Arabia

February 24, 2006 Leave a comment

Here is some good news from Saudi Arabia.  Guards at a Saudi oil processing planet stopped a suicide bombing. 

By SALAH NASRAWI

CAIRO, Egypt

Suicide bombers in explosives-laden cars attempted to attack an oil processing facility that handles about two-thirds of Saudi Arabia’s petroleum output on Friday, but were stopped when guards opened fire on them, causing the cars to explode, officials said.

The Saudi oil minister said the blast "did not affect operations" at the Abqayq facility, denying an earlier report on Al-Arabiya television that the flow of oil was halted briefly.

The facility "continued to operate normally. Export operations continued in full," the minister, Ali Naimi, said in a statement.

The price of oil jumped by more than $1.20 on world markets as they heard of the attack. The April delivery price of Nymex sweet light crude, the U.S. benchmark, rose $1.26 to $61.80. The European benchmark, Brent crude, leaped $1.21 to $61.75 for April delivery.

The huge Abqaiq processing facility, also known as Buqayq, handles around two-thirds or so of Saudi Arabia’s oil output, according to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Intelligence Agency.

H/T to Ace

Stix

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