Month: September 2004

  • Hot off the Mudville Gazette presses

    Looks like one of my favorite MilBloggers — Hell! the founder of the MilBloggers — has received the summons. Best wishes and happy hunting, Greyhawk!

    EDIT: Grayhawk needs a little help if he is to keep blogging on his “trip.”

    Update: By the way, if everyone who wanders by here would see fit to hit that paypal button for a modest (really, 5 bucks would be great) donation this site will continue to provide you with the insights and diversions that I hope are your reasons for visiting. Honestly, if not, it will likely vanish within a few short weeks. That’s not a threat, it’s just an unavoidable truth.

    And whether you contribute or not, I’ll take this time to note that if you don’t vote this year I will find you on my return to the states and personally kick your ass.

    Thanks for stopping by.

    Update 2: I would consider it a great favor if fellow bloggers would kindly link this post. Thanks.

    Update 3: I suppose I should point out I’m going on a trip (ahem) and without some proper gear will be unable to continue updating this site – just to clarify. Said gear is not cheap, (think laptop and digital camera) and I think you might be interested in my reports from my destination.

  • Latest on F9/11

    I’ll be honest: I haven’t seen Michael Moore’s movie Fahrenheit 9/11 and have felt little inclination to do so. The trailer, reviews, reports on the web and words with coworkers have so far sated any curiosity save one — I suspected but was too lazy to verify an October DVD/VHS release. Well, now I know.

    Michael Moore says he won’t submit “Fahrenheit 9/11” for consideration as best documentary at this year’s Academy Awards. Instead, he’s going for the bigger prize of best picture.

    Moore’s critically acclaimed film slams President Bush’s war on terror as ill-advised and corrupt. The movie has cheered Democrats but enraged the president’s supporters, who booed Moore when he visited the Republican National Convention last week.

    “For me the real Oscar would be Bush’s defeat on Nov. 2,” Moore told The Associated Press during a phone interview Monday from New York.

    The $6 million film has become a sensation that collected $117.3 million in the United States this summer, despite an early roadblock when the Walt Disney Co. banned its Miramax Films division from distributing the political hot-potato.

    In the midst of the presidential campaign, Moore’s announcement is a strategic move for his Oscar campaign. Documentaries and animated films have their own categories, but the conventional wisdom in Hollywood is that those niche awards can limit a film’s appeal in the overall best picture class.

    Moore said he and his producing partner, Harvey Weinstein, agreed “Fahrenheit 9/11” would stand a better chance if they focused solely on the top Oscar.

    He also said he wanted to be “supportive of my teammates in nonfiction film.”

    So many documentaries — such as the gonzo fast-food satire “Super Size Me” and the sober look at Arab television news in “Control Room” — have made the rounds in theaters recently that Moore, who won the best documentary Oscar for “Bowling for Columbine,” said he wanted to give others a chance.

    “It’s not that I want to be disrespectful and say I don’t ever want to win a (documentary) Oscar again,” Moore said. “This just seems like the right thing to do. … I don’t want to take away from the other nominees and the attention that they richly deserve.”

    Moore also hinted in a recent interview in Rolling Stone he would like the movie to play on television before the presidential election. According to the rules of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, playing on TV would invalidate its contention in the documentary category, but not for best picture. With the movie coming out on DVD Oct. 5, it’s not clear whether the TV deal would happen.

    I suspect there’s more to this than Moore’s desire for television. First, this maneuver would dodge the is-this-really-a-documentary controversy that buzzed around his award-winning Bowling for Columbine, especially important as such a controversy would dwarf the previous one. Second, win or lose, nomination or no, this allows Moore to backburner Academy Award issues to well after election day. All he has to do is ride any storm in October, doing what damage he may to the president.

  • Russia, Israel Agree on Anti-Terror Union

    Based upon the shared burden of what is increasingly, albeit belatedly, recognized as a common enemy, Russia’s foreign minister has welcomed an offer by Israel of assistance against terror. It seems, however, that Russia isn’t quite to the point of understanding the story being played out on the global stage.

    While showing willingness to work with Israel against militants, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said any counter-terrorism alliance would have to include Arab countries — in a nod to Russia’s traditional allies in the region.

    “We appreciate the very strong readiness of the Israeli people to help Russia at this hour and this will certainly strengthen the counterterrorist coalition these days,” Lavrov said.

    “We certainly are taking into account the need to be more effective,” he told reporters during a visit to President Moshe Katsav.

    In a meeting with Israeli opposition leader Shimon Peres, Lavrov said terrorism is one of the biggest challenges facing the international community.

    Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news – web sites), in a telephone call to Russian President Vladimir Putin (news – web sites) on Sunday, proposed expanded intelligence coordination between the two countries.

    However, Lavrov was careful to point out that Israel was one of several Middle Eastern countries with which Russia coordinated on security issues, including Saudi Arabia, Syria and other Arab states.

    “Terrorism doesn’t have any nationalities,” he said. “I believe the key to the solution of the problem is to bring all countries to fight terror and I can assure you that in addition to our very close counterterrorist cooperation with Israel we have similar counterterrorist cooperation with Arab countries.”

    Yes, I see some value in saying any mideast alliance would have to include Arab nations. That value would be the maintenance of Russia’s traditional regional allies, who are, unfortunately, part of the problem currently. Also, the insistence of the inclusion of an Arab state precludes the inclusion of Israel.

    I also note the “terrorism doesn’t have any nationalities” portion. While this is true, it would also be true, and in my mind crucially important, to finally admit that Islamic terrorism most assuredly has tendencies towards a small number of nationalities.

    The global war on Islamic terror is currently being fought in four theaters:

    • Israel and the Israeli-controlled regions
    • Afghanistan, involving the U.S., NATO and other allies
    • Iraq, with the U.S, British, Polish, Australian, Japanese forces, among others
    • Russia, with essentially anywhere and anyone in that vast region a potential target

    Unfortunately, short of the Afghani and Iraqi theaters, there is little if any realization that these four hotspots are related. In fact, the American and Euro left have worked feverishly to separate Iraq from the campaign against Islamic fascism. This is essentially akin to arguing that Operation Torch, the invasion of Vichy-controlled Northern Africa in 1943 was not part of WWII because Hitler was in Berlin.

    No, these four areas must certainly be linked if the radical and expansionist Islamist movement is to be stopped. In fact, future battlegrounds assuredly lurk in the near future (e.g. Sudan, Syria, Iran, heck, many, many more, potentially). The sooner the good guys (and I have zero qualms phrasing it that way) realize the scope of the situation and that we are now entering World War IV, the sooner the Allies can intertwine and bolster each other’s efforts. The more radIslam spreads, the greater the eventual bloodbath will be.

    I’d wager that even some in France realize this.

  • Avast! Get Your Grog Ready

    National Talk Like a Pirate Day is just around the corner on September 19.

  • Criticism and “Smears”

    Phil Gray over at Shades of Gray (Umbrae Canarum) has taken a lengthy look at the Kerry campaign’s stategy of shut-up-and-go-away.

    Perhaps we should go over the things that Kerry cannot be critiqued about, as it would be a “smear” or “questioning his patriotism.”

    1.) His Vietnam service (fine with me – a messy business all the way around, that)
    2.) His unique forum for protesting the war – i.e. a Senate committee
    3.) His statements in #2
    4.) Pronouncing “Ghengis” as “Jengis” (okay, okay, I doubt that the issue has come up, and it’s just a personal hang-up, so leave it to the side)
    ….

    There’s more. Go give it a gander.

  • When the Killers Come for the Kids

    Ralph Peters has published a column condemning the yesterday’s Russian school massacre and calling out Muslims to stand up and salvage the so-called “religion of peace.” (Hat-tip to lgf)

    THE mass murder of children revolts the human psyche. Herod sending his henchmen to massacre the infants of Bethlehem haunts the Gospels. Nothing in our time was crueler than what the Germans did to children during the Holocaust. Slaughtering the innocents violates a universal human taboo.

    Or a nearly universal one. Those Muslims who preach Jihad against the West decided years ago that killing Jewish or Christian children is not only acceptable, but pleasing to their god when done by “martyrs.”

    It isn’t politically correct to say this, of course. We’re supposed to pretend that Islam is a “religion of peace.” All right, then: It’s time for Muslims to stand up for the once-noble, nearly lost traditions of their faith and condemn what Arab and Chechen terrorists and blasphemers did in the Russian town of Beslan.

    If Muslim religious leaders around the world will not publicly condemn the taking of children as hostages and their subsequent slaughter — if those “men of faith” will not issue a condemnation without reservations or caveats — then no one need pretend any longer that all religions are equally sound and moral.

    Islam has been a great and humane faith in the past. Now far too many of its adherents condone, actively or passively, the mass murder of school kids. Instead of condemnations of the Muslim “Jihadis” responsible for butchering more than 200 women and children in cold blood, we will hear spiteful counter-accusations about imaginary atrocities supposedly committed by Western militaries.

    Well, the cold fact is that Western soldiers, whether Americans, Brits, Russians or Israelis, do not take hundreds of children hostage, then shoot them in cold blood while detonating bombs in their midst. The Muslim world can lie to itself, but we need lie no longer.

    Peters then goes on to tie this tragedy of innocence lost to the West’s efforts against Islamic terror.

    As they inevitably do, the terrorists reminded the world of their heartless barbarism. Even if France manages to beg the release of its kidnapped journalists in Iraq, it has begun to sense its vulnerability. And all Europeans with a vestige of sense will recognize that the school seizure in Russia could easily repeat itself in Languedoc or Umbria, Bavaria or Kent.

    An attack on children is an attack on all of humanity.

    No matter what differences Western states discover to divide them, the terrorists will bring us together in the end. Their atrocities expose all wishful thinking for what it is.

    A final thought: Did any of those protesters who came to Manhattan to denounce our liberation of 50 million Muslims stay an extra day to protest the massacre in Russia? Of course not.

    The protesters no more care for dead Russian children than they care for dead Kurds or for the hundreds of thousands of Arabs that Saddam Hussein executed. Or for the ongoing Arab-Muslim slaughter of blacks in Sudan. Nothing’s a crime to those protesters unless the deed was committed by America.

    The butchery in Russia was a crime against humanity. In every respect. Was any war ever more necessary or just than the War on Terror?

    I first came across Ralph Peters in ’93 when I read his novel The War in 2020. The book, written in 1991, has become somewhat dated by actual events since, but it is an excellent and thrilling read based on the U.S., struggling to escape a stagnation of its military, sending an expedition to assist the struggling Russians against militant Islamic invaders.

  • A Look at Bush’s Speech

    Okay, so it’s the next day. In blogging as in life, I am rarely to be considered timely.

    Bush’s speech was not a home run, not an A+, not a perfect 10, not even his best speech ever. It was, however, pretty damned good. Bush’s presence and delivery was solid, even through the enthusiasm-sucking, domestic agenda-defining first half. This part wasn’t too shabby, but it paled to Bush’s stepping into Commander-in-Chief mode in the latter part of the speech.

    The speech was well written, and I’ve gone through the transcript for the parts that jumped out at me last night.

    I believe the most solemn duty of the American president is to protect the American people.

    If America shows uncertainty or weakness in this decade, the world will drift toward tragedy.

    This will not happen on my watch.

    You want me on that wall. You need me on that wall.

    Another drag on our economy is the current tax code, which is a complicated mess, filled with special interest loopholes, saddling our people with more than 6 billion hours of paperwork and headache every year. The American people deserve — and our economic future demands — a simpler, fairer, pro-growth system.

    In a new term, I will lead a bipartisan effort to reform and simplify the federal tax code.

    Please. Pretty please.

    Anyone who wants more details on my agenda can find them online. The web address is not very imaginative, but it’s easy to remember: georgewbush.com.

    A silly line, but it was delivered well and worked.

    Wait a minute, wait a minute.

    To be fair, there are some things my opponent is for.

    He’s proposed more than $2 trillion in new federal spending so far, and that’s a lot, even for a senator from Massachusetts.

    Why zing just one Taxachusetts liberal when you can zing two?

    And I will continue to appoint federal judges who know the difference between personal opinion and the strict interpretation of the law.

    For me, this is the second most important issue in this election. Only a successful prosecution of the war on Islamic terror is paramount to who gets to fill the anticipated Supreme Court openings.

    And I faced the kind of decision that comes only to the Oval Office, a decision no president would ask for, but must be prepared to make: Do I forget the lessons of September 11th and take the word of a madman…

    AUDIENCE: No.

    BUSH: … or do I take action to defend our country?

    Faced with that choice, I will defend America every time.

    From my vantage, it wasn’t a choice. It was a strategic necessity.

    Our nation is standing with the people of Afghanistan and Iraq, because when America gives its word, America must keep its word.

    As importantly, we are serving a vital and historic cause that will make our country safer. Free societies in the Middle East will be hopeful societies which no longer feed resentments and breed violence for export. Free governments in the Middle East will fight terrorists instead of harboring them.

    And that helps us keep the peace.

    So our mission in Afghanistan and Iraq is clear. We will help new leaders to train their armies, and move toward elections, and get on the path of stability and democracy as quickly as possible. And then our troops will return home with the honor they have earned.

    This is why Iraq is essential in the war against terror. Afghanistan may have been far more integrated and affiliated with al-Queda, but Iraq had the greater resources and infrastructure in place to build a successful and sustainable democracy. A bright, shining city in the middle of Mordor. This, along with all the reasons given by the president in the past to justify the campaign, is why I supported the opening of the Iraqi theater.

    When asked to explain his vote, the senator said, “I actually did vote for the $87 billion, before I voted against it.”

    Then he said he was “proud” of his vote. Then, when pressed, he said it was a “complicated” matter.

    There’s nothing complicated about supporting our troops in combat.

    This was an effective jab.

    Also, little if any attention has been paid to Kerry’s later explanation of his vote, an explanation I find even more disgusting.

    Again, my opponent takes a different approach. In the midst of war, he has called American allies, quote, a “coalition of the coerced and the bribed.”

    That would be nations like Great Britain, Poland, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Denmark, El Salvador, Australia, and others…

    … allies that deserve the respect of all Americans, not the scorn of a politician.

    Ouch! Apparently, the Kerry brand of diplomacy means insulting current allies and, afterwards, planning to somehow entice new ones. Another effective moment for the president.

    Others understand the historic importance of our work. The terrorists know. They know that a vibrant, successful democracy at the heart of the Middle East will discredit their radical ideology of hate.

    They know that men and women with hope and purpose and dignity do not strap bombs on their bodies and kill the innocent.

    As I argued above. Second verse, same as the first.

    America has done this kind of work before, and there have always been doubters. In 1946, 18 months after the fall of Berlin to allied forces, a journalist wrote in the New York Times wrote this: “Germany is a land in an acute stage of economic, political and moral crisis. European capitals are frightened. In every military headquarters, one meets alarmed officials doing their utmost to deal with the consequences of the occupation policy that they admit has failed,” end quote.

    Maybe that same person is still around, writing editorials.

    A shot at the Times is always good for this crowd.

    In the last four years — in the last four years, you and I have come to know each other. Even when we don’t agree, at least you know what I believe and where I stand.

    You may have noticed I have a few flaws, too. People sometimes have to correct my English.

    I knew I had a problem when Arnold Schwarzenegger started doing it.

    Some folks look at me and see a certain swagger, which in Texas is called “walking.”

    As a Texan, this was my favorite line of the night. Very effective self-denigrating humor here, also.

    I have learned first-hand that ordering Americans into battle is the hardest decision even when it is right. I have returned the salute of wounded soldiers, some with a very tough road ahead, who say they were just doing their job. I’ve held the children of the fallen who are told their dad or mom is a hero, but would rather just have their dad or mom.

    I’ve met with parents and wives and husbands who have received a folded flag and said a final goodbye to a soldier they loved. I am awed that so many have used those meetings to say that I am in their prayers and to offer encouragement to me.

    Where does that strength like that come from? How can people so burdened with sorrow also feel such pride? It is because they know their loved one was last seen doing good because they know that liberty was precious to the one they lost.

    Simply powerful. The viewer could see the emotion in the heart of the president, as well.

    We see America’s character in our military, which finds a way or makes one. We see it in our veterans, who are supporting military families in their days of worry. We see it in our young people, who have found heroes once again.

    Is it any wonder why so many in the military love this man? What a man looks for in heroes speaks volumes about his own character.

    This young century will be liberty’s century.

    Selling a message, an optimistic one at that.

    Bush brought this speech home in a rousing manner. Put bluntly, whether the left likes it or believes it, this man is a leader.

    If it’s not too late, go read Stephen Green’s live blogging of the speech (46 posts, I don’t know how many drinks). I hope he does more of the same with the debates.

  • I Can’t Believe …

    I taped the RNC to watch the Aggies get absolutely spanked by Utah. Oh well, Aggie football is my albatross; choices had to be made. It’s going to be another long season for those who bleed maroon and white. Hopefully, somewhere along the way, I’ll see some signs out of this young team that we’re heading in the right direction.

    Now, I’m going to go take a look at the president.

  • Republicans Showing No Amour for France

    I was torn between using the headline of this article or substituting my own, which would’ve been “French Press Begs for GOP Reach-Around.”

    More than a year after falling out with the United States over the Iraq war, France is still a prime target for the rage of Republicans, who are not showing much amour for the longtime US ally.

    Democrat John Kerry may be enemy number one but France is a close number two at the chest-thumping Republican national convention, where the word Paris is code for weakness, indecision and international cooperation.

    “Senator Kerry has made it clear that he would use military force only if approved by the United Nations,” Senator Zell Miller said in a thundering address to the party faithful on Wednesday.

    “Kerry would let Paris decide when America needs defending. I want Bush to decide,” he said, drawing cheers from the crowd.

    As usual, the Frenchies don’t get it. The Republicans know who the enemies are — radical Islamic terrorists. Kerry is a political opponent and France is an obstacle, a target of deserved ridicule doing all it can to hamstring our efforts while doing nothing to ensure its own long-term security. Unless you count headscarves on kids.

    France helped lead opposition to the Iraq war on the UN Security Council, which set off an orgy of French-bashing nationwide last year.

    Bottles of champagne were emptied into sewers, French cheeses went unsold on store shelves and angry US politicians called to rename America’s favourite snack “Freedom Fries.”

    After it emerged during the presidential campaign that Kerry spoke the language, he reportedly stopped giving interviews with foreign media in French, for fear of giving the Bush camp more ammunition.

    The connection between anti-French anger and Kerry’s policy statements — which sometimes don’t sound much different than what comes out of the French government — has been an easy one for critics to make.

    This all makes me chuckle.

    The article then wraps up with this:

    …Italy is now one of the staunchest US allies on the war on terror, robbing Republicans of at least one European nation to target with scorn and abuse.

    But they shouldn’t worry: they’ll always have Paris.

    That’s just it — anybody can have Paris. Took about a month using WWII-era technology.

  • Syria, Syria, Syria, Syria

    Sometimes, it seems a country is just begging for attention.

    Israel rattles its saber at Syria.

    Israel ratcheted up its rhetoric against Syria today, hinting of possible military action following this week’s suicide bombing of two buses in southern Israel.

    Israeli officials repeatedly have accused Syria of backing the Hamas militants who carried out Tuesday’s attack, which killed 16 people in Beersheba, 15 miles south of the West Bank. The Hamas leadership is based in the Syrian capital of Damascus.

    “Syria is responsible for acts of terror and giving patronage to terror groups,” Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said today. “When we see Syria as responsible, it of course has to understand that this kind of thing will have very clear consequences for it.”

    Security sources said Israeli leaders have not begun discussing possible military actions against Syria and analysts said the two countries are not likely to go to war any time soon.

    But Israeli officials are warning that they might move against Hamas leaders in Syria. The Damascus-based leadership’s influence has grown following Israel’s assassination of top Hamas leaders in Gaza.

    Syria dismisses Israeli threats.

    SYRIA today rejected Israeli threats of military strikes against it and denied any involvement in deadly bomb attacks in southern Israel this week.

    “The Israeli threats against Syria are not based on any evidence and are completely lacking in credibility,” Syrian Foreign Minister Faruq al-Shara said, the official SANA news agency reported.

    The U.S. and France demand Syria butts out of Lebanon.

    The UN Security Council is due to vote on a draft resolution calling on Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon and respect Lebanese sovereignty.

    Proposed by the US and backed by France, it accuses Syria of interfering in Beirut’s internal affairs.

    Syria is pushing for an extension of President Emile Lahoud’s term, despite a constitutional bar on this.

    Syria mocks U.S. interest in Lebanon.

    Syria’s state media lashed out on Thursday at U.S. pressure for a United Nations resolution telling Damascus to stop interfering in Lebanon’s presidential election.
    .
    “No one can believe that the United States can possibly be concerned about Lebanon or any other Arab country,” an editorial in the official Tishreen newspaper said. “American policies confirm just the opposite and point out that the present U.S. administration relies on a clear method of antagonism to Arabs.”