Day: July 7, 2005

  • Taliban Threatens to Kill U.S. Commando Hostage

    This is certainly a wait, hope and see kind of story, at least for those of us on the home front.

    The U.S. commando missing in Afghanistan is being held by the Taliban who have decided to kill him, a purported spokesman for the group said Thursday, but offered no proof for the claim he has made earlier.

    The commando is the last of a four-member U.S. Navy SEAL team missing for 10 days in Kunar province, near the Pakistani border. One of the men was rescued and the other two have been found dead.

    About 300 troops and several aircraft are searching for the U.S. Navy SEAL in the rugged mountains in eastern Afghanistan, American military spokeswoman, Lt. Cindy Moore said.

    “We hope he is not in harm’s way,” Ms. Moore said.

    The Taliban spokesman, Mullah Latif Hakimi, has said previously that the Taliban are holding the commando, who has been missing in Afghanistan for 10 days. But his information has in the past frequently proven exaggerated or untrue, and his exact tie to the Taliban leadership cannot be independently verified.

    “This American will never be forgiven. Definitely he will be killed,” Mr. Hakimi said. He said the group would release a video after the man’s death.

    While we may be stuck fretting and wishing, I’m quite certain the troops in-country are doing all they reasonably can for this SEAL. However, should harm befall the American at the hand of captors, I look forward for a comparison of detainee treatment by Sen. Dick Durbin.

    In all due seriousness to the matter at hand, my best wishes for this man and his family.

  • Kidnapped Egyptian Diplomat Killed in Iraq

    The terrorists in Iraq continued their violent hatred of defenseless fellow Moslems, this time killing the top Egyptian diplomat in the country.

    Gunmen have killed the head of Egypt’s diplomatic mission in Baghdad, Cairo said on Thursday. The Al Qaeda group said it executed him because he represented a “tyrannical” government allied to Jews and Christians.

    The envoy, ambassador Ihab al-Sherif, was abducted near his home in Baghdad last Saturday about one month after taking up his post as one of the highest ranking Arab diplomats in Iraq.

    A former diplomat in Tel Aviv, Sherif appears to have fallen foul of a conflict between insurgents and the U.S.-backed rulers in Baghdad over Arab recognition of the government.

    The Iraqi government had said Egypt planned to upgrade its representation in Baghdad to full ambassador level. Egypt said that although Sherif has the civil service rank of ambassador, his title remained head of the diplomatic mission in Iraq.

    The Al Qaeda group in Iraq announced his death on Thursday in an Internet statement posted on an Islamist Web site.

    “We al Qaeda in Iraq announce that the judgment of God has been implemented against the ambassador of the infidels, the ambassador of Egypt. Oh enemy of God, Ihab el-Sherif, this is your punishment in this life,” the statement said.

    The group, led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, posted a video showing the hostage speaking but not the actual killing.

    The Egyptian presidency confirmed that Sherif was dead, saying in a statement that the envoy had “lost his life at the hands of terrorism which trades in Islam.”

    “The Egyptian Foreign Ministry … has received with deep pain and sadness the news of the martyrdom of Ambassador Dr. Ihab al-Sherif,” added a Foreign Ministry statement.

    An Egyptian diplomatic source said Egypt had confirmation of the killing “through multiple contacts” but had not received decisive evidence from the Iraqi government and did not know where Sherif’s body might be.

    The killing surprised the Egyptian government, which earlier on Thursday was saying that it remained in contact with all Iraqi groups and hoped to secure his release.

    Despite the surprise, Egypt immediately took bold measures.

    Egypt will close its mission in Baghdad and withdraw its staff after al-Qaida’s wing in Iraq said it had killed an abducted top Egyptian envoy, an Iraqi official said Thursday.

    Run away!

  • London Calling

    (c) FreeFoto.com

    The perpetrators of today’s attacks are intent on destroying human life. The terrorists will not succeed. Today’s bombings will not weaken in any way our resolve to uphold the most deeply held principles of our societies and to defeat those who impose their fanaticism and extremism on all of us.

    We shall prevail and they shall not.

    —Tony Blair, July 7, 2005

    You ask, what is our policy? I say it is to wage war by land, sea, and air. War with all our might and with all the strength God has given us, and to wage war against a monstrous tyranny never surpassed in the dark and lamentable catalogue of human crime. That is our policy.

    You ask, what is our aim? I can answer in one word. It is victory. Victory at all costs – Victory in spite of all terrors – Victory, however long and hard the road may be, for without victory there is no survival.

    Let that be realized. No survival for the British Empire, no survival for all that the British Empire has stood for, no survival for the urge, the impulse of the ages, that mankind shall move forward toward his goal.

    I take up my task in buoyancy and hope. I feel sure that our cause will not be suffered to fail among men. I feel entitled at this juncture, at this time, to claim the aid of all and to say, “Come then, let us go forward together with our united strength.

    —Winston Churchill, May 13, 1940

    More on the tragic and barbaric attack later but, for now, let it suffice that my thoughts and hopes are with America’s truest friend and ally.

    (Image supplied by FreeFoto.com)

  • Boxer Criticizes Iraq War in SF Speech

    Ah, Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Lalaland), once again stands forth in her self-annointed role as useful idiot. My apologies if this is long, but Barbie makes it easy at every turn.

    Sen. Barbara Boxer offered a major foreign policy speech on the war in Iraq before hundreds of her constituents in San Francisco today.

    The situation in Iraq is spiraling out of control, she said, and the pool of people willing to fight in the insurgency against American troop presence there seems bottomless.

    She described herself as “distressed, angry and frustrated” over the continuing unrest in Iraq and the mounting death toll with no apparent end in sight.

    “Iraq was a war of choice, not a war of necessity,” she said.

    “We have no idea, none, how long the administration plans to be in Iraq,” she said.

    We do actually have a vague idea — we will leave when we have succeeded. That is a solid plan. As to a specific exit date, I would think that the only people more disappointed than Boxer that one hasn’t been set are the terrorists opposing us. Umm … senator, in all your studies of history, can you name a single successful war in which a withdrawal date was set before actual victory had been achieved? Or do you consider an unstable but progressing Iraq a victory to walk away from, rather than just a step to a possible success?

    “When we see this next generation coming along … we owe them everything that we have in us to leave them a better world,” Boxer said.

    She cited the latest American soldier death count of 1,749, 13,336 wounded and at least 8,000 dead Iraqis as proof positive that a clear mission and foreign policy shift are in order.

    “Our troops deserve more than they are getting, they deserve more than the status quo,” she said.

    This is, unsurprisingly, a rather weak statement. The argument is fairly bankrupt when the only evidence against the current strategy consists of an emotional plea and casualty figures, casualty figures that are dwarfed by practically all those in the history of warfare.

    President George Bush’s administration “took its eye off the ball” when it shifted its focus from finding Osama bin Laden to waging a pre-emptive war against Iraq, she said.

    Pray tell, just how has the troop level in Afghanistan changed after that “eye off the ball” thing happened? Seriously, I guess I lied when I said the 2004 election was finally over — Boxer is still reading verbatim from John Kerry campaign speeches.

    As Bush’s reasons for the war have changed, the mission has become ever more ambiguous, she said.

    Reasons haven’t changed. Mission hasn’t changed. Boxer’s sniping attacks haven’t changed. Well, I guess we can celebrate consistency.

    “That mission is a guarantee of a never-ending cycle of violence,” she said, as America’s military presence there seems to be a magnet for recruits for the insurgency.

    Just as in 1993 and 2001, the World Trade Center towers were a magnet for terror. Still, senator, I’d rather we at least try shooting the Islamist bastards to pieces over there than picking up the pieces over here.

    The insurgency now numbers anywhere from 12,000 to 50,000 fighters, she said.

    “The insurgents are winning the propaganda wars now,” she said.

    If the terrorists are winning the propaganda wars now, it’s no great surprise — they’ve got Sens. Boxer, Ted Kennedy and Dick Durbin manning the front lines with poisonous swill being lapped up by al-Jazeera.

    “Terrorism is a result of this war,” Boxer said, amid applause at the Commonwealth Club of California-sponsored speech at the Renaissance Parc 55 Hotel.

    Aye, lassie, and terrorism is also the cause of this war. Don’t ye forget. Ever.

    The mission, she said, should be security for Iraqis by Iraqis.

    “It takes a long time to get a perfect democracy — ours certainly did,” Boxer said, citing the Supreme Court’s involvement in the 2000 presidential election as evidence that even America’s democracy has yet to reach perfection.

    “Give us a mission that can succeed,” she said. “Give us a mission that makes sense.”

    As those are the goals of the current strategy you despise, give us a feasible alternative. Or shut up with the al-Jazeera-headline-making, terrorist-encouraging, GI-endangering political hack job.

    Boxer described her speech as the culmination of her thoughts and comments she’s made on the war in Iraq, since the war began in March 2003.

    I agree with Boxer here, as the speech is a culmination of her thoughts and comments — no ideas, no alternatives, plenty of attacks on our efforts, plenty of quotes for our enemies to use. Yup, that’s Boxer in a nutshell.

    Like I said, so easy at every turn. Damn it feels good to be a blogger.