War on Terror
The wrong way to fight radical Islam Print E-mail
Written by Cisco   
Wednesday, 06 August 2008


English translation - "No Surrender"

The Sarasota Herald-Tribune has an article titled, "Wrong way on terrorism". This article discusses a recent Rand Corporation report that says, "the government should reconsider the use of the term 'war on terror."

I fully agree with the Rand Corporation. I disagree with the rational in the column as to why we need to use different terms to describe the global war the United States and our allies are fighting.

The United States is not fighting a war on terror. We are fighting a "global war against radical Islam".

Terror is a military tactic. Great nations do not fight wars against military tactics. They fight wars, spill blood and expend national treasure to fight ideologies that are incompatible with their own. During the twentieth century the United States fought wars against Imperial Germany, Nazism, Fascism, Imperial Japan, and Communism. Each of these ideologies has fallen. They have fallen because the United States successfully used our military, political, and economic power to defeat, unconditionally, the enemy. The will of the American people prevailed, despite the cost in blood and treasure.

Today we face a new and much more dangerous enemy who is seeking access to weapons of mass destruction, access to our schools, to our financial institutions and our way of life. Their intent is simple - destroy the West.

We are facing nation states like Syria and Iran seeking nuclear weapons. Iran has the clear intention to use those weapons on the West. We have Saudi Arabia exporting its wahhabist ideas globally. We face a clear and present danger in our homeland from the gradual infiltration of radical beliefs, radicalized individuals, and terrorist groups willing to attack the very country that gives them food, shelter, safety, and comfort.

Newt Gingrich says it best in this compelling video, go here to view it.

In the homeland we must effectively use all the powers available to us to protect ourselves from attack. Attacks will be both overt and covert. An attack may be another 9/11 or worse. It may take the form of silencing those who speak out against radical Imams in local mosques for fear of being called an "Islamophobe" or fear of a law suit. It may be the establishment of an Islamist charter school that teaches hate of other religions or beliefs. It may be a sleeper cell in our own back yard waiting to strike our homeland.

The right way to fight radical Islam is first to recognize the threat. Europe ignored the threat and tried to appease Nazi Germany and we had WWII. The anti-war movement tried to appease the USSR and we got the Korean and Vietnam wars. Since the mid 1980s we tried to appease the radical Islamists and got 9/11, the Kobar tower attack, and the London, Madrid and Bali bombings. Israel tried to appease Arafat and got the intifada.

The right way to fight radical Islam is with every every fiber of our bodies, and every ounce of our will. To do otherwise is to capitulate. Insah'Allah!
Last Updated ( Saturday, 09 August 2008 )
 
Blackwater: a great American company Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Thursday, 24 July 2008

Rethinking security by eliminating it!

The Sarasota Herald-Tribune attacks one of the most successful private security companies America has ever produced in their editorial, "Rethinking security contracts".

The company they attack is Blackwater Worldwide. Why would the Sarasota Herald-Tribune and Democrat Senator Jim Webb want to force the Defense Department to "review of the use of private contractors like Blackwater Worldwide to provide training for combat and security?"

It is simple. Blackwater was founded by Erik Prince, a former Navy SEAL, who attended the Naval Academy, graduated from Hillsdale College, and was an intern in George H.W. Bush's White House. Prince is a major financial supporter of Republican Party causes and candidates. Blackwater's president, Gary Jackson, is also a former Navy SEAL. For work in Iraq, Blackwater draws contractors from their international pool of professionals, a database containing "21,000 former Special Forces operatives, soldiers, and retired law enforcement agents".

There you have it. You have a young Navy SEAL who took an inheritance and in 1997 formed a security company that has grown into the largest and best in the world. They have never lost a client, diplomat or member of Congress they have guarded. They are a highly successful entrepreneurial business, made up of former military men, and they are conservatives. A perfect target for Democrats and editorial boards like the Sarasota Herald-Tribune.

The Sarasota Herald-Tribune is quick to note the September 16, 2007 incident where Blackwater employees in Nisour Square, Baghdad shot and killed 17 Iraqi civilians, at least 14 of whom were killed "without cause" according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. No charges have been laid.

However, they fail to mention the March 31, 2004 incident where four Blackwater Security Consulting (BSC) employees were ambushed and killed in Fallujah, and their bodies were hung on a bridge to cheering Iraqi crowds.

The SH-T also does not tell you Blackwater was hired during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina by the Department of Homeland Security, as well as by private clients, including communications, petrochemical and insurance companies.

Dear Secretary Gates, Senator Webb and Tom Tryon: Blackwater does the work that others can't or won't do. That is why they are so successful. Let them do what they do best. Protect and defend those most vulnerable.

We need our troops to fight the radical Islamists, not guard diplomats, visiting dignitaries, State Department workers, and other civilian employees in Iraq. Our military troops are not police or security guards, they are war fighters and guardians of our liberty. In the homeland private security is second nature. Blackwater is doing great things in America and worldwide to protect those people and things that need protecting.

What we need to investigate is all the investigations that Congress requires of our war fighters and those that support them. It seems the Democrat Congress with a 9% approval rating and the SH-T losing readership daily would focus on something more important than a great company like Blackwater and the heroes that own and work for it.

A good friend of mine, Dr. Terri K. Wonder is going to Iraq to work for the U.S. Army's Human Terrain System. She will be conducting "needs assessments in various tribal areas about what the beleaguered victims of criminals, terrorists, and sectarian insurgents require in order to improve their lives in the aftermath of the bloodbaths, middle-class exodus, crop, and livestock destruction they experienced".

I have the greatest respect for women like Terri who will forgo personal safety for a higher calling, in this case the welfare of the Iraqi people. Terri is a true patriot. When she returns safely from Iraq we will welcome her home as a fellow "combat veteran". I hope that God and Blackwater watch over her.

I said to Terri when I last talked with her Insha'Allah, with God's help all will be well.
 
Victory in Iraq! One step at a time. Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Thursday, 17 July 2008

Another winning issue

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By FREDERICK W. KAGAN, KIMBERLY KAGAN AND JACK KEANE

All of the most important objectives of the surge have been accomplished in Iraq. The sectarian civil war is ended; al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) has been dealt a devastating blow; and the Sadrist militia and other Iranian-backed militant groups have been disrupted.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi government has accomplished almost all of the legislative benchmarks set by the U.S. Congress and the Bush administration. More important, it is gaining wider legitimacy among the population. The attention of Iraqis across the country is focused on the upcoming provincial elections, which will be a pivotal moment in Iraq's development.

The result is that we have an extraordinary – but fleeting – opportunity to advance America's security and the stability of a vital region of the world.

As far as the civil war is concerned, there have been virtually no sectarian killings recorded for the past 10 weeks. Violence is still perpetrated by organized groups, but AQI, the remnant Sunni insurgents and Shiite fighters are now focused on attacking their own members who have defected to our side. This is a measure of their weakness. The Iraqi population is increasingly mobilizing against the perpetrators of violence, flooding American and Iraqi forces with tips about the locations of weapons caches and key militant leaders – Sunnis turning in Sunnis and Shia turning in Shia.

The fighters have not simply hidden their weapons and gone to ground to await the next opportunity to kill each other. The Sunni insurgency, as well as AQI, has been severely disrupted. Coalition and Iraqi forces have killed or detained many key leaders, driven the militants out of every one of Iraq's major cities (including Mosul), and are pursuing the remnants vigorously in rural areas and the desert.

The Shiite militias have also been broken apart, sending thousands of their leaders scurrying for safety in Iran. Iraqi forces continue to hammer Iranian-backed Special Groups and elements of the Sadrist Jaysh al Mahdi that have been fighting with them in Sadr City, Maysan Province and elsewhere. At this time, none of these networks can conduct operations that could seriously destabilize the Iraqi government. But both al Qaeda and the Iranians are working hard to refit their networks.

The larger strategic meaning of these military and political advances must be kept clearly in mind. Iraq remains a critical front in al Qaeda's war against the U.S.

Discussions in the American media about whether AQI is "really" al Qaeda are puerile. AQI's leadership, largely foreign, is part of the global al Qaeda network operating in support of Osama bin Laden. Bin Laden and his lieutenants in Pakistan and around the world send support (including foreign fighters) to Iraq and closely follow the situation there, as their repeated public pronouncements show no less than their actions. Al Qaeda's central leadership is not prepared to lose in Iraq, and has been seeking ways to regain lost ground.

Within Iraq, AQI operatives are still seeking aggressively to re-establish bases from which they can launch more substantial operations in the future. They are failing because of the continuous pressure American and Iraqi forces are putting on them from Baghdad to Mosul. If that pressure is relaxed, they will begin to succeed again.

The Iranian leaders responsible for Iranian policy in Iraq – principally Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and Brigadier General Qassim Soleimani, commander of the Qods Force – also remain determined. They are retraining and re-equipping thousands of fighters who fled the most recent Iraqi and Coalition operations in Basra, Baghdad, and Maysan Provinces.

Past patterns suggest those fighters will return to Iraq and attempt to restart attacks against Coalition Forces in time to disrupt Iraqi elections and to affect America's voting. Their attacks are likely to be more spectacular, but less effective at disrupting Iraqi government and society.

If America remains firm in its commitment to success in Iraq, success is very likely. The AQI and Shiite militias at present do not have the capacity to drive Iraq off course – unless both the U.S. and the Iraqi government make a number of serious mistakes.

The most serious error would be to withdraw American forces too rapidly. That would strengthen the resolve of both al Qaeda and Iran to persevere in their efforts to disrupt the young Iraqi state and weaken the resolve of those Iraqis, particularly in the Iraqi Security Forces, who are betting their lives on continued American assistance.

The blunt fact is this. In Iraq, al Qaeda is on the ropes, and the Shiite militias are badly off-balance. Now is exactly the time to continue the pressure to keep them from regaining their equilibrium. It need not, and probably will not, require large numbers of American casualties to keep this pressure on. But it will require a considerable number of American troops through 2009.

Recent suggestions in Washington that reductions could begin sooner or proceed more rapidly are premature. The current force levels will be needed through the Iraqi provincial elections later this year, and consideration of force reductions makes sense only after those elections are over and the incoming commander in Iraq, Gen. Ray Odierno, has evaluated the new situation.

The benefits to the U.S. from seeing the fight through to the end far outweigh the likely costs. For one thing, Iraqis have shown their determination to increase their oil output, currently averaging 2.5 million barrels a day, as fast as they can – something that can only happen if their country is secure.

Far more important is the opportunity in our hands today to work with a Muslim country in the heart of the Arab world to inflict the most visible and humiliating defeat possible on al Qaeda. Success in Iraq also makes it possible to establish a strategic partnership with a legitimate, democratic majority-Shia state that is aligned with the U.S. against Iran.

Recent comments by some Iraqi leaders about the current negotiations for a status-of-force agreement – made in the context of an increasingly heated election season in Iraq, and with the desire to improve Iraq's bargaining position in the negotiations – do not call the U.S. partnership into question. As we recently found in Baghdad, even the most outspoken advocates of rapid American force reductions strongly insist on a strategic partnership with America that helps Iraq stand up to Iran. Most of Iraq's military leaders are unequivocal about the need for a continued U.S. force presence.

The Iraqi government and people – whose surging anti-Persian feeling is more obvious every day – have already shown their willingness to push back against Iranian intervention. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's attack on Iranian-backed forces in Basra, followed by Iraqi-led operations in Baghdad, central Iraq and Maysan, is proof of Baghdad's willingness. Helping Iraq to succeed is our best hope of finding a way of resolving our differences with Iran over the long term without coming to blows.

It is time for Americans to recognize it's a whole new ballgame in Iraq. The civil war is over, American troops are not an "irritant" fueling the unrest, and far from becoming dependent upon us, the Iraqi government and the army show more determination every day to run their country and to protect it. But they continue to want and need our assistance.

While victory in war is never certain until the war is over, the odds are strongly with us for once – provided we do the right thing. That is to stand by our best ally in the war against al Qaeda, and the struggle to contain Iran.

Mr. Kagan is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Ms. Kagan is president of the Institute for the Study of War. Mr. Keane is a former vice chief of staff of the U.S. Army. All have just returned from their most recent visit to Iraq

 
Keep it simple, stupid! Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Monday, 14 July 2008

Senator McCain needs to focus like a laser on four issues!

According to Victor Davis Hanson of Pajamas Media Senator McCain needs to focus on four issues and use the keep it simple stupid method of delivery. I agree. Here are the four issues:

The War: Our aims are victory, and we will leave each region of Iraq as our victory on the ground allows us to turn another province over to Iraqi security forces. While my opponent Senator Obama flips and flops to match the polls, I am constant in my views—Iraq is winnable and the surge is working to an astonishing degree. That’s why the Iraqi democracy is stabilizing and reclaiming control from the terrorists. My opponent wanted all US troops out by March 2008 which would have led to our defeat five months ago and the victory of al Qaeda.

Money: Tax cuts led to greater aggregate revenues. Deficits grew due to uncontrolled federal spending. I’ll keep the money-earning tax stimuli and cut spending; my opponent will raise taxes that will stifle economic growth and cut our income, and yet spend even more money on dubious expanded federal entitlements, as our deficits grow even larger.

Energy: I’m as much for wind, solar, and conservation as Barack Obama. But for now at present rates of consumption and production, we will go bankrupt in the transition to green energy. So I will drill off the coast, develop tar sands and shale, use clean coal, and build more refineries and nuclear power plants to ensure that we don’t keep sending trillions to our enemies, that we don’t leave our poor without transportation and heating, that we don’t allow sloppy foreign state energy companies to pollute the planet, and that we don’t bankrupt our treasury. My opponent is captive to radical environmentalists whose restrictive policies helped to get us into this mess; he’ll talk about green power, as we go broke and run out fuel listening.

Illegal Immigration: We can talk all we want about “comprehensive immigration reform” but it won’t matter if we don’t close the border—now. I will; my opponent won’t. Close the border now, and all the contentious issues—amnesty, guest workers, fines and deportation—can be dealt with as the pool of illegal aliens shrinks rather grows.

Last Updated ( Monday, 14 July 2008 )
 
Saving lives on the battlefield. Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Saturday, 12 July 2008

When is it permissible to torture?

Larry Evan's in his column, "Laws governing warfare: Coercive but not "Communist", discusses torture and its application. Larry has written about torture before and is clearly against any form of "coercion".

Larry's column is interesting because he spends almost the entire article talking about the "Binderman Chart of Coercion". He tries to link Binderman, a sociologist working for the U.S. Air Force, and communism. A stretch at best. Studying the enemies coercion techniques is most useful and common place. The military have been doing this for centuries. Is Larry surprised by this?

Of course Larry takes the usual swipe at America by stating, "Here is the story in a nutshell: Chinese Communist techniques that don't work and that are morally repugnant and against American values were used by Americans on prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and in Afghanistan."

What Larry does not want to address are two fundamental questions: When is torture permissible? And is it effective in certain circumstances? The answer to the first question is "to save lives". The answer to the second questions is yes!

Let's take a look back at some discussions on the use of torture. On November 5, 2001, Jonathan Alter wrote an article for Newsweek titled, "Time to think about torture". In the article Jonathan said, "In this autumn of anger, even a liberal can find his thoughts turning to ... torture. OK, not cattle prods or rubber hoses, at least not here in the United States, but something to jump-start the stalled investigation of the greatest crime in American history. Right now, four key hijacking suspects aren’t talking at all."

Jonathan pointed out that, "For more than 20 years Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz has argued to the Israelis that this [policy of Israeli police to use torture] is terribly unfair to the members of the security services. In a forthcoming book, “Shouting Fire,” he makes the case for what he calls a “torture warrant,” where judges would balance competing claims and make the call, as they do in issuing search warrants. Dershowitz says that as long as the fruits of such interrogation are used for investigation, not to convict the detainee (a violation of the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination), it could be constitutional here, too. “I’m not in favor of torture, but if you’re going to have it, it should damn well have court approval,” Dershowitz says.

Jonathan states, "Some torture clearly works. Jordan broke the most notorious terrorist of the 1980s, Abu Nidal, by threatening his family. Philippine police reportedly helped crack the 1993 World Trade Center bombings (plus a plot to crash 11 U.S. airliners and kill the pope) by convincing a suspect that they were about to turn him over to the Israelis. Then there’s painful Islamic justice, which has the added benefit of greater acceptance among Muslims."

Jonathan concludes, "We can’t legalize physical torture; it’s contrary to American values. But even as we continue to speak out against human-rights abuses around the world, we need to keep an open mind about certain measures to fight terrorism, like court-sanctioned psychological interrogation. And we’ll have to think about transferring some suspects to our less squeamish allies, even if that’s hypocritical. Nobody said this was going to be pretty."

In a November 6, 2001 New York Times article by Jim Rutenberg he writes, "The historian Jay Winik, in an opinion article on Oct. 23 [2001] in The Wall Street Journal, detailed the reported torture in 1995 of the convicted terrorist plotter Abdul Hakim Murad by the Philippine authorities that led to the foiling of a plot to crash nearly a dozen U.S. commercial aircraft into the Pacific and another into CIA headquarters in Virginia.

Mr. Winik went on to write: "One wonders, of course, what would have happened if Murad had been in American custody?" He did not, however, endorse the use of torture but suggested that the United States might have to significantly curtail civil liberties, as it had done in past wars.

Mr. Alter said he was surprised that his column did not provoke a big flood of e-mail messages or letters. And perhaps even more surprising, he said, was that he had been approached by "people who might be described as being on the left whispering, 'I agree with you.'"

If only we had listened to and taken seriously the plot outlined by convicted terrorist plotter Abdul Hakim Murad in 1995 about crashing planes into the CIA building. Could we have learned more about 9/11 by continuing to use "coercive techniques" on him?

I pointed out in previous articles here and here that key Democrat leaders in Congress in 2002 had knowledge of CIA interrogation techniques (including waterboarding) and asked if they were harsh enough. Some questioned if we should be doing more. In these same articles I pointed out that the 5 1/2 minutes that we spent waterboarding three top Al Qaeda terrorists was time well spent.

I believe that using "coercive techniques" to save lives is both moral and logical. America cannot be defenseless when dealing with such a vicious enemy. History also tells us that in certain circumstances "coercive techniques" are in fact effective.

The President of the United States must have this option on the table. As former Chief Justice Robert Jackson said, ”The Constitution is not a suicide pact”. On this issue I disagree with Larry, Senator McCain and Senator Obama.
 
Victory is the only option! Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Saturday, 12 July 2008

The Twelve Myths about War by Ralph Peters

The following are excerpts from a November 2007 article in the American Legion Magazine by Ralph Peters, a retired Army officer, military expert and writer. He lists the twelve myths about war. It is time to re-read what Colonel Peters said then and apply his wisdom to today's reality of victory over Al Qaeda in Iraq. For the full article go here.

Myth No. 1: War doesn't change anything. This campus slogan contradicts all of human history ...We need not agree in our politics or on the manner in which a given war is prosecuted, but we can't pretend that if only we laid down our arms all others would do the same. Wars, in fact, often change everything. Who would argue that the American Revolution, our Civil War or World War II changed nothing? Would the world be better today if we had been pacifists in the face of Nazi Germany and imperial Japan?...But of one thing we may be certain: a U.S. defeat in any war is a defeat not only for freedom, but for civilization. Our enemies believe that war can change the world. And they won't be deterred by bumper stickers.

Myth No. 2: Victory is impossible today. Victory is always possible, if our nation is willing to do what it takes to win. But victory is, indeed, impossible if U.S. troops are placed under impossible restrictions, if their leaders refuse to act boldly, if every target must be approved by lawyers, and if the American people are disheartened by a constant barrage of negativity from the media...In the timeless words of Nathan Bedford Forrest, "War means fighting, and fighting means killing." And in the words of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, "It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it."

Myth No. 3: Insurgencies can never be defeated. Historically, fewer than one in 20 major insurgencies succeeded. Virtually no minor ones survived...The good news is that in over 3,000 years of recorded history, insurgencies motivated by faith and blood overwhelmingly failed. The bad news is that they had to be put down with remorseless bloodshed.

Myth No. 4: There's no military solution; only negotiations can solve our problems. In most cases, the reverse is true. Negotiations solve nothing until a military decision has been reached and one side recognizes a peace agreement as its only hope of survival. It would be a welcome development if negotiations fixed the problems we face in Iraq, but we're the only side interested in a negotiated solution. Every other faction - the terrorists, Sunni insurgents, Shia militias, Iran and Syria - is convinced it can win. The only negotiations that produce lasting results are those conducted from positions of indisputable strength.

Myth No. 5: When we fight back, we only provoke our enemies. When dealing with bullies, either in the schoolyard or in a global war, the opposite is true: if you don't fight back, you encourage your enemy to behave more viciously. Passive resistance only works when directed against rule-of-law states, such as the core English-speaking nations. It doesn't work where silent protest is answered with a bayonet in the belly or a one-way trip to a political prison. We've allowed far too many myths about the "innate goodness of humanity" to creep up on us. Certainly, many humans would rather be good than bad. But if we're unwilling to fight the fraction of humanity that's evil, armed and determined to subjugate the rest, we'll face even grimmer conflicts.

Myth No. 6: Killing terrorists only turns them into martyrs. It's an anomaly of today's Western world that privileged individuals feel more sympathy for dictators, mass murderers and terrorists - consider the irrational protests against Guantanamo - than they do for their victims...Want to make a terrorist a martyr? Just lock him up. Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they're dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don't kill.

Myth No. 7: If we fight as fiercely as our enemies, we're no better than them. Did the bombing campaign against Germany turn us into Nazis? Did dropping atomic bombs on Japan to end the war and save hundreds of thousands of American lives, as well as millions of Japanese lives, turn us into the beasts who conducted the Bataan Death March? The greatest immorality is for the United States to lose a war.

Myth No. 8: The United States is more hated today than ever before. Those who served in Europe during the Cold War remember enormous, often-violent protests against U.S. policy that dwarfed today's let's-have-fun-on-a-Sunday-afternoon rallies. Older readers recall the huge ban-the-bomb, pro-communist demonstrations of the 1950s and the vast seas of demonstrators filling the streets of Paris, Rome and Berlin to protest our commitment to Vietnam. Imagine if we'd had 24/7 news coverage of those rallies. I well remember serving in Germany in the wake of our withdrawal from Saigon, when U.S. soldiers were despised by the locals - who nonetheless were willing to take our money - and terrorists tried to assassinate U.S. generals. The fashionable anti-Americanism of the chattering classes hasn't stopped the world from seeking one big green card. As I've traveled around the globe since 9/11, I've found that below the government-spokesman/professional-radical level, the United States remains the great dream for university graduates from Berlin to Bangalore to Bogota. On the domestic front, we hear ludicrous claims that our country has never been so divided. Well, that leaves out our Civil War. Our historical amnesia also erases the violent protests of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the mass confrontations, rioting and deaths. Is today's America really more fractured than it was in 1968?

Myth No. 9: Our invasion of Iraq created our terrorist problems. This claim rearranges the order of events, as if the attacks of 9/11 happened after Baghdad fell. Our terrorist problems have been created by the catastrophic failure of Middle Eastern civilization to compete on any front and were exacerbated by the determination of successive U.S. administrations, Democrat and Republican, to pretend that Islamist terrorism was a brief aberration.

Myth No. 10: If we just leave, the Iraqis will patch up their differences on their own. The point may come at which we have to accept that Iraqis are so determined to destroy their own future that there's nothing more we can do. But we're not there yet, and leaving immediately would guarantee not just one massacre but a series of slaughters and the delivery of a massive victory to the forces of terrorism.

Myth No. 11: It's all Israel's fault. Or the popular Washington corollary: "The Saudis are our friends." Israel is the Muslim world's excuse for failure, not a reason for it...Even if we didn't support Israel, Islamist extremists would blame us for countless other imagined wrongs, since they fear our freedoms and our culture even more than they do our military.

Myth No. 12: The Middle East's problems are all America's fault. Muslim extremists would like everyone to believe this, but it just isn't true. The collapse of once great Middle Eastern civilizations has been under way for more than five centuries, and the region became a backwater before the United States became a country...And we need to work within our community and state education systems to return balanced, comprehensive history programs to our schools. The unprecedented wealth and power of the United States allows us to afford many things denied to human beings throughout history. But we, the people, cannot afford ignorance.

Ralph Peters is a retired Army Lieutenant Colonel, strategist and author of 22 books, including the recent "Wars of Blood and Faith: The Conflicts That Will Shape the 21st Century.
 
Good news! Keep on reading. Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Thursday, 03 July 2008

President Bush's approval rating more than twice that of Congress! Iraqi government making great progress, given satisfactory on 15 of 18 benchmarks!

You won't see these headlines in the main stream media. Both, however, are true and the public should be told about each. The main stream media won't so we will. Read on.

Let's start with the first headline, "President Bush's approval rating more than twice that of Congress". Strategic Vision did a poll based on telephone interviews with 1200 likely voters in Florida, aged 18+, and conducted from June 27-29, 2008. The margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points. Here are the questions they asked:

Do you approve or disapprove of President Bush's overall job performance?
Approve 34%
Disapprove 57%
Undecided 9%

Do you approve or disapprove of the way Congress is performing its job?
Approve 14%
Disapprove 71%
Undecided 15%

Here is an extra bit of good news for Florida Republicans from this same survey:

If the election for President were held today would you support John McCain, the Republican, Barack Obama, the Democrat, or Bob Barr, the Libertarian?
John McCain 49%
Barack Obama 41%
Bob Barr 1%
Undecided 9%

Now for the second headline, "Iraqi government making great progress, given satisfactory on 15 of 18 benchmarks!" Not heard about this? No wonder, none of the major news outlets or newspapers, with the exception of Fox News even ran the story.

According to the Washington Post, "Iraq has met all but three of 18 original benchmarks set by Congress last year to measure security, political and economic progress, according to a report by the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad."

The Post states, "The embassy judged that the only remaining shortfalls were the Baghdad government's failure to enact and implement laws governing the oil industry and the disarmament of militia and insurgent groups, and continuing problems with the professionalism of the Iraqi police. All other goals -- including preparations for upcoming elections, reform of de-Baathification and disarmament laws, progress on enacting and spending Iraq's budget, and the capabilities of the Iraqi army -- were rated "satisfactory."

"The embassy cited progress toward increasing the number of Iraqi security force units capable of independent operations. Although it says that the overall number of units that can operate independently has increased "marginally," it concludes that "70% of all formed units can now conduct [counter-insurgency] operations with or without Coalition support." says the Post article.

Finally, from the earlier mentioned survey by Strategic Vision are these two questions asked of Florida voters:

Do you favor an immediate withdrawal of the United States military forces from Iraq, within the next six months?
Yes 42%
No 44%
Undecided 14%

Do you approve or disapprove of President Bush's handling of the war on terrorism?
Approve 55%
Disapprove 40%
Undecided 5%

Good news. Something that is sorely lacking in the main stream media.
 
Should The President of the United States Talk to Ahmadinejad? Print E-mail
Written by Cisco   
Thursday, 03 July 2008
Image Patrick O'Brian wrote a series of twenty-one novels that are set in the Napoleonic wars and that have Captain Jack Aubrey and Dr. Stephen Maturin as the protagonists. Aubrey is an English naval captain who always sails with Maturin as his ship's surgeon. If you are not familiar with the O'Brian novels, perhaps you will recall a movie, Master and Commander of the Far Side of the World, which was loosely based upon these novels and starred Russell Crowe as Captain Aubrey. The eighth novel in this series is called The Ionian Mission, and it has Aubrey and Maturin sailing to Greece in order to fight the French.

 

At the time of the Napoleonic wars, Greece was part of the Muslim Ottoman Turk empire. In The Ionian Mission, the French have taken possession of the fictional city Marga, and it is Captain Aubrey's responsibility to negotiate with the Muslim beys (tribal chieftains) in the area in order to most effectively accomplish the removal of the French troops from the Grecian peninsula. There are three Muslim beys who are vying for power in the region, and the one factor that will tip the balance of power is the guns that the English are willing to provide to whichever bey is most willing to assist the English in fighting the French.

 

Jack Aubrey meets with each of the beys, and in the final bey that he meets with, he finds a kindred spirit. This bey, Sciahan by name, is “much more what Jack had expected of a Turk: a plain man, and one that he could trust.” Jack unilaterally determines that he will support Sciahan and tells him that he will immediately send a ship to bring the guns that Sciahan desires.

 

Captain Aubrey makes his decision about which bey he will support without consulting with the politico who accompanied him, a Professor Graham. When Professor Graham realizes what Captain Aubrey has agreed to, he becomes irate and begins berating Captain Aubrey for being so naïve. Professor Graham insists that “In all negotiation, and a fortiori, all Oriental negotiation, each side was expected to extract all possible profit from the balance of forces: if either did not do so, it was because there was some hidden weakness – a plain unconditional acquiescence in a demand must be taken as the greatest proof of weakness.” Professor Graham goes on to say that Captain Aubrey should have insisted on taking as hostage one of Sciahan's nephews, and should have held the nephew until Sciahan had indeed fulfilled his verbal commitment. Professor Graham goes so far as to intimate that Captain Aubrey was not fully committed by the words that he had spoken to Sciahan, and that he could renege on his commitment by begging a misunderstanding. Captain Aubrey “replied coldly that he regarded his words as wholly binding, that he was convinced that he and Sciahan understood one another.”

 

Captain Jack Aubrey personifies the English and American spirit. We people of the Western world, especially those of us who are American, are very much attached to the idea that if we can sit down with a person, look that person in the eye, and discuss a mutually beneficial relationship, then we tend to believe that the person into whose eye we are looking will fulfill their end of any agreement that is reached. You may call it American naiveté or English gullibility, but we people of the Western world tend to trust verbal, personal commitments. If we make an agreement without extracting the last ounce of blood from the other agreeing party, we do not care if we are are perceived as being weak for doing so. We tend to accept people at their word, rather than taking their family members as hostage in order to ensure that they will fulfill their word.

Last Updated ( Friday, 04 July 2008 )
 
Democrats, Radical Islam and Communists an unholy alliance! Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Rich Swier   
Sunday, 29 June 2008

The Democratic Party has hired a group named Voting is Power (VIP) to register voters for the upcoming Presidential election. Voting is Power is under investigation by the Louisiana Secretary of State Jay Dardenne for voter fraud. So who is Voting is Power and why does that mean anything?

VIP is actually a Muslim American Society (MAS) organization. So who is the Muslim American Society?

The Muslim American Society is a front group for the Muslim Brotherhood whose militant credo states: "God is our objective, the Koran is our Constitution, the Prophet is our leader, struggle is our way, and death for the sake of God is the highest of our aspirations"

In May 2005, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross reported in The Weekly Standard that [the Muslim American Society] MAS is a U.S. front group for the Muslim Brotherhood -- a claim supported by a September 19, 2004 Chicago Tribune story -- and, as such, wishes to see the United States governed by sharia, or Islamic law. "The message that all countries should be ruled by Islamic law," writes Gartenstein-Ross, "is echoed throughout MAS's membership curriculum. For example, MAS requires all its adjunct members to read Fathi Yakun's book To Be a Muslim. In that volume, Yakun spells out his expansive agenda: 'Until the nations of the world have functionally Islamic governments, every individual who is careless or lazy in working for Islam is sinful.'"

Closely linked to MAS is the Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation, whose Executive Director is Mahdi Bray, a former Students for a Democratic Society activist now affiliated with International ANSWER, an anti-war front group for the Communist World Workers Party. "Our mission," Bray has written, "is to build an integrated empowerment process for the American Muslim community." Toward this end, Bray and MAS have been involved in a voter-registration drive and an effort to train 1,000 "activists" in the "skills necessary for effective activism."

MAS also has close ties to Islamic American University, an unaccredited university in the Detroit suburb of Southfield, which teaches Islamic law and other subjects. (One IAU faculty member is Sheikh Yousef Al-Qaradhawi, who until at least June 2003 was also the Chairman -- in abstentia -- of the university's Board of Trustees. )

In addition, MAS operates programs for educating the young, providing fellowship for Muslim youth, creating its own network of Islamic schools, and sustaining a nationwide Council of Imams.

MAS was a signatory to a February 20, 2002 document, composed by the radical group Refuse & Resist, condemning military tribunals and the detention of immigrants apprehended in connection with post-9/11 terrorism investigations.

MAS strongly opposes the Patriot Act, which it says “strips away the fundamental checks and balances that safeguard many of our basic civil liberties,” and has “drastically infringed upon every American's rights by giving the government expanded powers to invade privacy, imprison and deport people without due process, and punish political dissent.”

Last Updated ( Sunday, 29 June 2008 )
 
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