Month: October 2005

  • Happy Blogroll Blogiversaries

    Belated? You betcha, but that ain’t my fault.

    JohnL at TexasBestGrok didn’t realize until today that his blog had turned two years old.

    Meanwhile, Eric at Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave seems to have overlooked his first blogiversary altogether. It must be confusion after his flight from Blogger to MuNuviana.

  • Carnival of Liberty XIV

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community‘s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

    For the record, I’d like to send along a special thanks to Eric, the founder of the LLP community.

  • U.S. Uses ‘Iron Fist’ in Iraq

    The U.S. is conducting an offensive against the terrorists in Iraq. I find Canada’s Globe and Mail coverage of the effort to be amazingly negative in story and poor in detail, even for our supposed allies to the north.

    A U.S. offensive aimed at al-Qaeda in Iraq insurgents in western Iraq entered its third day Monday, with air strikes in a town on the banks of the Euphrates River, witnesses said. At least 36 militants have died since the fighting began, officials said.

    No serious U.S. casualties have been reported in the “Iron Fist” offensive by 1,000 Marines, soldiers and sailors near the Syrian border.

    Well, so far, so bland. That must stop. So, too, must actual reporting of the offensive, as the story turns now towards negative news elsewhere in Iraq. Hey, the alleged point of the story got over sixty words — time to shift to unrelated gloom-and-doom.

    In Baghdad, Iraq’s oil minister narrowly survived an assassination attempt when a roadside bomb blasted his seven-car convoy, killing three of his escorts, officials said.

    Elsewhere, roadside bombs and fighting between insurgents and Iraqi forces on Monday wounded at least seven Iraqis in Ramadi, a militant stronghold west of the capital, police and hospital officials said.

    Insurgents wearing black hoods were seen carrying machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades in the city’s streets, and Iraqi civilians gathered around two burning Iraqi army pickup trucks. Some of the civilians celebrated the destruction by carrying Iraqi military helmets and a uniform that appeared to have been pulled from the burning Iraqi vehicles.

    In the northern city of Mosul, a drive-by shooting killed Nafi’a Aziz, a female member of Ninevah’s provincial council, and her son, said police spokesman Brig. Saeed Ahmed. Mr. Aziz was in charge of the council’s human rights committee and a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, the party of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani.

    The offensive and street fighting come less than two weeks before the national referendum on a new Iraqi constitution. Al-Qaeda in Iraq and other groups in the Sunni-led insurgency have killed at least 207 people over the past eight days in a bid to wreck the vote.

    On Sunday, Al-Qaeda in Iraq claimed to have taken two U.S. Marines captive during the fighting and threatened to kill them within 24 hours unless all female Sunni detainees are released from U.S. and Iraqi prisons in the country. The U.S. military said the claim appeared false but that it was conducting checks “to verify that all Marines are accounted for.”

    Well, that should be enough to quash any optimism about the offensive. Let’s actually return to that offensive, shall we?

    The offensive in western Iraq by 1,000 Marines, soldiers and sailors began early Saturday in the village of Sadah and has since spread to Karabilah and Rumana, two nearby towns on the banks of the Euphrates River. On Monday, witnesses told The Associated Press that helicopter attacks on Rumana were sending up clouds of black smoke.

    No casualties were immediately reported in Monday’s fighting by the witnesses, who spoke on condition of anonymity out of concern for their own safety, or by the U.S. military command center in Baghdad.

    The military says al-Qaeda in Iraq, the country’s most feared insurgent group, has turned the area near Iraq’s border into a “sanctuary” and a way-station for foreign fighters entering from Syria.

    In Karabilah, Marines clashed with insurgents who opened fire from a building on Sunday in a firefight that killed eight militants, the military said.

    Most of the militants appeared to have slipped out of Sadah before the force moved in, and hundreds of the village’s residents fled into Syria ahead of the assault.

    There was “virtually no opposition” in Sadah, the Marine commander in western Anbar province, Col. Stephen W. Davis said.

    At least 28 militants were killed in fighting Sunday, Davis said, bringing the two-day toll among insurgents to 36. There have been no serious U.S. casualties in the operation, he said.

    Okay, the American offensive appears to be going well, time to cast a pall on that.

    On Monday, a CNN journalist embedded with Marines in eastern Karabilah filed video showing the attack. About 20 Iraqi civilians fled the fighting, and the wounded included an Iraqi mother, father and their child, who were bleeding after being hit by flying pieces of concrete.

    Oh holy crap! Civilians in a combat zone were injured by flying bits of building! Oh the humanity! Damn, but large portions of Canada really need wake up, crawl out from under the blanket of protection their southerly neighbors have afforded them for apparently far too long, and actually come face-to-face with a real threat. I doubt their grandfathers on D-Day fretted overly much about bystanders being stung by inadvertant debris.

    The rest of the story ignores the offensive and returns to the negative stories covered earlier. It’s almost like the author wants the reader to know a successful operation is underway, but doesn’t want that news to bring any good vibes. On the other hand, for balance’s sake, the article does wrap up with a slightly positive tidbit, again unrelated to the offensive.

    Elsewhere, Shiite militiamen released the recently kidnapped brother of Iraq’s interior minister, the freed man, Abdul-Jabbar Jabr said.

    Well, there, that’s fair coverage of a friend’s successful venture, wouldn’t you say?

    Meanwhile, Chad over at In the Bullpen has a rather speculative story that al Queda in Iraq may be considering bailing on, well, Iraq as a base of operations. Continued offensives like those barely covered above would certainly play a role in such a maneuver. Chad goes on to ponder about possible new sites for the terrorist base of operations.

    Where would they move? The Sinai is the first place I’d look for any reemergence, but there’s also Northern Africa and the Horn of Africa to consider.

    As I’ve noted before, the U.S. military is already planning for such a relocation.

  • Clash ‘Humiliates’ Palestinian Police

    Gaza moves ever closer to the world of Mad Max, as police react angrily to their own inability to enforce a Palestinian Authority attempt at militant arms control.

    Two dozen policemen last night stormed the Palestinian parliament building, firing in the air to protest against their humiliation by Hamas militants following the worst clash between the factions in a decade.

    This followed running gun battles on Sunday between police and Hamas gunmen in the Gaza Strip, raising fears of a civil war.

    Three people were killed – including Shati refugee camp deputy police commander Ali Makawi – and more than 50 wounded as the Palestinian Authority attempted to enforce its authority by confiscating weapons from Hamas operatives in Gaza.

    The clashes raged for about six hours and subsided only about midnight on Sunday local time, after Egyptian mediators stepped in. It was the fiercest internal fighting since 1996.

    “Yesterday, we did not have enough bullets,” said one of the protesting policemen last night.

    “We had nothing to protect ourselves. Give us at least bullets to protect people and to protect our stations. Our commander died in front of us and we were running out of bullets.”

    The “you can have my AK-47 when you pry it from my cold, dead, Palestinian fingers” reaction by Hamas to the PA effort is, to say the least, unsurprising.

    The clash was triggered when police stopped a car in Gaza City containing four armed Hamas operatives and demanded that they hand over their weapons.

    One of the four was Mohammed Rantisi, the son of the former Hamas leader in Gaza, Abdel Aziz Rantisi, who was assassinated last year by Israel. He refused the demand and when he attempted to drive off the police fired at the car’s tyres.

    Hamas operatives living in the area soon joined in the fight while members of the Fatah movement, headed by PA President Mahmoud Abbas, joined in on the side of the policemen. The fighting spread to other neighbourhoods and the Shati refugee camp, at the edge of Gaza City.

    The clashes came amid the growing tension that followed the PA’s announcement four days earlier that it would no longer allow arms to be carried in the streets by militants. Hamas officials said they had no intention of abiding by that order.

    Ah, the smell of Gaza sans Israeli settlers. It smells like … civil war.

    A senior Hamas official in Damascus, Mohammed Nazel, accused the PA of trying to liquidate Hamas, which is challenging Fatah’s control of the PA by fielding candidates in the coming legislative elections.

    “There is a faction of the Palestinian Authority trying to eradicate Hamas and it plans a widespread conflict in the West Bank,” Mr Nazel said. “The hands of this faction, which is backed by Washington and London, are stained with Palestinian blood, and Hamas will confront it, even at the price of civil war.”

    The PA’s Interior Ministry issued a similarly militant announcement.

    “Hamas bears full responsibility for this crude violation of the law and the games it is playing with Palestinian blood,” it said. “We are determined to enforce the law and no one is above it.”

    For its part, Israel currently seems quite content to sit back and watch the developments, happy for the meantime to not be a target of Palestinian bloodthirst.

  • Afghan Troops Kill ’31 Taleban’

    As expected, anti-terror efforts continue in the fledgling democracy of Afghanistan. Also as expect, those efforts go bloody but bloody well.

    At least 31 suspected Taleban militants have been killed in clashes with government troops in south-east Afghanistan, officials say.

    Defence Ministry spokesman Gen Mohammed Zaher Azimi said fighting erupted after insurgents attacked an Afghan army post near Angore Adda in Paktika province.

    At least four government troops were injured in the battle near the Pakistan border, which lasted over four hours.

    It was the heaviest reported fighting since elections two weeks ago.

    Gen Azimi said 28 militants had been killed in fighting on Sunday night. Three others were killed in a separate clash in the province earlier in the day.

    […]

    The US military, which has a base in the area, said US troops had not been involved in the fighting.

    More than 1,000 people have been killed in violence linked to militancy in Afghanistan this year.

    Most of those killed have been suspected militants, but more than 80 US troops have also died, about 50 of them in hostile fire.

    A number of civilians and election candidates and workers have also been killed.

    […]

    Afghanistan’s parliamentary and provincial elections on 18 September were hailed as a landmark in the process to bring democracy after years of war.

    The counting of votes is still continuing.

    The repeated inability of the Taliban and al Queda terrorists to disrupt national elections, coupled with their demonstrated ability to die in sizable numbers at the hands of both American and native forces, has to be held as good news for the Afghan theater.

  • Bush Announces Supreme Court Pick

    And the lucky nominee is … White House counsel Harriet Miers.

    I have little to say at this time about the selection as I know little to nothing about Ms. Miers. Actually, prior to today, I knew absolutely nothing about her.

    Just judging by the scattershot headlines, it seems the media is perplexed about how to approach the story.

    Reaction around the blogosphere also appears to be a mix of condemnation, acclaim and confusion, along with a healthy dosage of withholding of judgement. Collections of blogger responses can be found at the following:

  • Astros Clinch Wild Card

    All but written off after a horrendous 15-30 start, the Houston Astros wrapped up the National League wild card spot on the last day of the season.

    Once again, the Houston Astros waited to the final day. And once again, they’re going to the playoffs.

    “That’s the Astros’ way,” Craig Biggio said, “The only way we know how to get it done.”

    Roy Oswalt got his 20th win to lead the Astros over the Chicago Cubs 6-4 Sunday, clinching the NL wild-card berth and capping a historic comeback.

    Houston started the season 15-30 and became the first team to make the postseason after falling 15 games under .500 since the 1914 Boston Braves.

    I remember in late May as DFW sports radio swarmed with debates about the Texas Rangers going after the pitching staff of the disappointing Astros. My, how times have changed.

    The ‘Stros have a tough road ahead of them. If they are to hold onto any hopes for a playoff run, they can turn to their own season-saving resiliency, the return of Jeff Bagwell and especially one of the best three-man rotations in baseball behind Roy Oswalt, Andy Pettitte and the seemingly ageless Roger Clemens for inspiration.

  • Quote of the Week, 2 OCT 05

    If we have an arms control agreement, the Russians will cheat. If we have an arms race, we will win.

    —General Earle Wheeler

  • Almost EmBearrassed!

    When does a victory feel like a kick-in-the-gut defeat?

    Texas A&M faced the Baylor Bears at home today, and the Ags came from behind to barely eke it out in overtime 16-13.

    Still, a win is a win, but this Aggie team has mucho work to do.