Author: Gunner

  • En Fuego: Eric’s Grumbles

    Having made my position our media repeatedly clear, I’ll let Eric hammer on them for their current sins of omission.

    First, he tags them with a left hook for some blatant amnesia about Clinton-era concerns about Iraq:

    For more than two years now we have continuously had it pounded into our heads that there was no real linkage between al-Qaeda and Iraq, that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, that Osama bin Laden detested secular Iraq and would never work with them. What you may not know, even though it is in the 9/11 Commission’s report, is that Richard Clarke, the top counter-terrorism official in the later years of the Clinton Administration, didn’t agree with that point of view. And that there is reasonable evidence to support Clarke’s point of view.

    Read it. Then Eric throws a right cross at poll-number coverage:

    So, why isn’t the media, generally, telling the story that has existed at least since August? Yes, the President’s poll numbers are low, but so is the entire mainstream political structure. Now, why do you suppose the media isn’t pointing that out every time they run a story on the poll numbers? The fact is, people are disgusted with everybody in Washington. But, interestingly, they aren’t as disgusted with the President as the Congress and the political parties. That, of course, doesn’t fit the meme being pushed by certain quarters.

    Go let Eric grumble at ya.

  • Zarqawi: Amman Bombs Weren’t Aimed at Muslims

    Hey, just because he’s a bloodthirsty, murderous terrorist, that doesn’t make him a bad Moslem, right?

    The leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi, said in an Internet audiotape on Friday the group had not meant to blow up Muslims in their deadly bomb attacks in Jordan.

    Suicide bombings killed 54 people in Amman hotels last week, provoking outrage in Jordan despite the high level of support in the country for the activities of the Jordanian-born Zarqawi in Iraq. Most victims were Muslim Jordanians at wedding parties.

    In the tape, posted on an Islamist Web site often used by insurgent groups in Iraq, Zarqawi defended the suicide blasts on three hotels saying al Qaeda had inside information that they were used by U.S., Israeli and Jordanian intelligence agencies.

    “We ask God to have mercy on the Muslims, who we did not intend to target, even if they were in hotels which are centers of immorality,” the voice on the tape said.

    “The idea that they blew up inside wedding ceremonies is a lie by the Jordanian regime … the target was a meeting of intelligence agencies, but a roof collapsed on a wedding party from the blast,” he said.

    […]

    Al Qaeda in Iraq had already claimed responsibility for the blasts and named the attackers as four Iraqis including a woman. She failed to blow herself up, confessing on Jordanian television last week that she had tried.

    […]

    Indicating there might be further attacks, Zarqawi warned ordinary Jordanians to avoid large hotels, military installations and embassies of countries involved in the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

    Dear Jordanian hotel employees,
    As you are being blown to shreds, please realize you are not targets.
    Love,
    Abu

    Of course, you believe Zarqawi, right? But we already know that Zarqawi has stated that the murder of innocent Moslems is okay in attacks on infidels, even if no infidels are present. One should note, the absence of infidels is quite commonly the case in the murder of an individual Moslem or bombings at mosques.

  • Vote for the Best Blog Post Ever

    The Politburo Diktat‘s commisar is having a little competition and is giving you, the reader, the opportunity to decide the greatest blog post written to date. The ten finalists have been named, so go, judge and vote. In the end, there can be only one.

  • Smoke ’em if You’ve Got ’em

    I worried, but the Cigar Factory New Orleans is most assuredly still around and in business, thanks to the following update on its website:

    WE SURVIVED KATRINA AND ARE ACCEPTING PHONE ORDERS. PLEASE CALL 1-800-550-0775

    100% Hand Rolled

    Personnally, I’m fond of the Churchills.

    Also, since I’m discussing N’Awlins businesses that survived Katrina and are worth your hard-earned buck, the pralines at Aunt Sally’s are amazing. Hey, I don’t get a single shiny penny for these endorsements — they’re from the heart. Enjoy.

  • Send in the Clowns

    In case you hadn’t noticed, Jeff at Beautiful Atrocities is back to blogging. The cause of his absence has been unexplained in any believable manner, but I suspect some sort of secretive martial training, a la Batman Begins, was involved.

    I highly recommend this or this as an intro to all that is atrocious.

  • Minister: Minorities Key to France Terror Fight

    At least one member of the French government is wide awake to the danger his country faces.

    France must better integrate its minorities and combat religious extremism if it is to foil the threat of terrorist attacks by Islamist militants, Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy said on Thursday.

    France must fight the root cause of frustrations which Islamist fundamentalists have already exploited to recruit French nationals, he told a conference on “France and Terrorism”.

    […]

    “The threat that weighs on us comes from movements or groups based abroad … but we must not hide from the fact that it also comes from people living here, recruited by Salafist groups, trained in schools in the Middle and Far East and who, when they return here, pose a threat,” Sarkozy said.

    He pointed out Salafists.

    International cooperation was important, but robust action at home was also essential, he said.

    “Communities turning inwards, problems integrating into society and religious excesses must be tackled,” he said. “Our immediate operational priority remains the administrative and judicial neutralisation of Islamist networks and activists.”

    He pointed out Islamists. Look, this man, a French politician, is speaking more bluntly than our media is generally willing to report. Sarkozy is making a list and checking it twice, and we’re talking about the naughty here.

    French intelligence says six French nationals have been killed fighting in Iraq since 2003 and around 10 others are believed to be currently fighting alongside rebels.

    Officials say Iraq veterans would pose a real threat to domestic security if they returned to France.

    Okay, the problem is legitimate, it’s gone abroad and will almost certainly try to bring the bloodshed home to France. Sarkozy knows and is willing to name the threat within his own society — good, one Frenchie down, 60.5 million to go.

    Still, does Sarkozy know the solution?

    Sarkozy has led a lone fight for a measure of positive discrimination in favour of France’s ethnic minorities, arguing their exclusion from mainstream society only feeds extremism and the frustrations that helped spark recent rioting.

    But he has coupled that with a tough law and order message.

    Yeah, the tough law and order part is right, but that’s easy. That’s like being given eleven bunnies, being told to count them and then teach them to run the wishbone. Well, the counting part’s pretty easy. A precisely-executed triple option … well … not so much.

    I’m not willing to say that governmentally-enforced reverse discrimination is a good long-term policy. Though it may have a healthy effect in the short run, a government social program is a rather insidious beast, once in place. As a D.C. saying goes, there’s nothing so permanent as a temporary government agency. In this case, we’re also talking about one that could have a popular backlash that could actually impair assimilation. Other less-intrusive ideas might include regulations enforcing non-discrimination, which the libertarian in me would still chafe at, and a stab at assimilating the youth with forced bussing to integrated public schools, but one must note that militant Islamists and busses aren’t always a good mix unless one is fond of twisted, smoking, bloody wreckage.

    Yes, France has allowed itself to manuever into quite a conundrum. Besides the law and order aspect, the steps that are absolutely obvious and long overdue to be addressed are the nation’s immigration policies and labor policies, long perverted by a willingness to knuckle under to French unions and French society’s demands for the easy life. Well, life can be rough and this is war, folks.

    In related news, the French are saying that, after three weeks of Moslem rioting, violence has fallen to “normal” levels.

  • A Must-Read 2

    A week ago, I tried to steer y’all toward this insightful essay by Vodkapundit‘s Stephen Green on the decisive role the media will play in maintaining or defeating our efforts against expansionsionist radical Islam. I still heartily recommend the piece, though I cannot say it leaves one exacty in the whistling-cheerful-tunes mode.

    Steven Den Beste, formerly of USS Clueless and one of my inspirations to begin blogging, has posted a follow-on piece to Mr. Green’s essay over at Red State.org. In it, he agrees that the decisive arm of our global battle is the media, but that is also a double-edged sword for the terrorists.

    But for the terrorists and Islamists, there’s a distinct drawback in this kind of war: headline fatigue. Even given that the western press tends to be more sympathetic to the terrorists than to western governments in the war, an ongoing campaign of car bombings in Iraq eventually becomes boring and gets consigned to the rear pages of the newspaper.

    That means that the terrorists have to come up with increasingly spectacular escapades in order to maintain the attention of the western press. A couple of years ago the new innovation was video decapitations, but eventually the novelty wore off.

    But the other side of the coin of headline fatigue is revulsion. Increasingly spectacular escapades become increasingly vile atrocities. They get the headlines, alright, but repel more people than they attract.

    Go. Read. It’s a bit tighter in scope than the Martini Guy’s, and a bit more hopeful as well, but all in all an essential companion piece. Together, they make a solid one-two combination from two of the best in the blogging business.

  • The Commonwealth Preps for Afghan Burden

    They are the scum of the earth. English soldiers are fellows who have enlisted for drink, that is the plain fact; they have all enlisted for drink.

    —Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington

    Well, that may have once been the case, but it looks like they’re headed for a dry and dangerous place.

    After NATO refused to participate in an plan to engage the alliance in counterinsurgency efforts in Afghanistan, Britain is preparing to step up to the plate.

    Questions the Army must ask before going into Afghanistan

    Small Army reconnaissance teams have already deployed to Helmand, Afghanistan’s most dangerous province in the south to study the situation before a major deployment of an estimated 2,000 British troops takes place there in the spring. Another 1,500-2,000 troops will be deployed elsewhere.

    Although the British deployment is fraught with risks, it is deemed necessary to stem a growing Taliban insurgency now spreading to urban areas and to deal with a burgeoning drugs trade that is providing new funds and resources to al-Qa’eda and the Taliban in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. However, before any deployment, it is essential that the British high command demand and receive certain binding assurances from Whitehall and the Afghan government.

    Next spring, more than 1,000 British troops, backed by civilian engineers and other experts and diplomats, will form a provincial reconstruction team (PRT) under Nato command to speed up reconstruction efforts and combat the opium trade from a base in Lashkagarh, capital of Helmand.

    Another 1,000 troops, backed by Apache helicopters, will deploy at a separate base in Helmand as a fighting force under the American-led coalition to combat the Taliban insurgency in the south. Another 500-800 troops will deploy at Kandahar to beef up the main command centre of coalition forces in southern Afghanistan, while roughly the same number will deploy to Kabul as Britain takes over command of the Nato lead peacekeeping force in the capital.

    The British deployment has now become much more serious and critical to stability in Afghanistan, after the US Defence Department announced that it would be withdrawing 4,000 troops from southern Afghanistan next spring. The 20,000-strong US force that does the bulk of the fighting against the Taliban is preparing more withdrawals later in the year and Washington is insisting that Nato take over more responsibility for fighting the Taliban – something few countries are prepared to do.

    The American withdrawal has now forced London to seek a wider coalition with other Commonwealth countries to plug the gap left by the Americans, after European countries refused to join either the British-led PRT or the fighting force in Helmand.

    Britain is the first country since the American deployment after the defeat of the Taliban to be both providing a PRT as well as a fighting force in the same region. Britain will also have the single largest PRT in the country. Almost all of the 22 PRTs scattered around the country are 100-150 strong and their effectiveness has been seriously questioned: each country sets its own rules.

    No PRT is combating the drugs trade or doing large scale reconstruction work. Other caveats set by individual governments have been crippling. The Spanish PRT has not left its compound after six months in the country, while the German PRT allows only German troops to travel in its helicopters.

    An ambitious Britain is trying to kill two birds with stone. Establish a PRT large enough to provide real security for aid agencies and the Afghan government to do long-term reconstruction projects and provide alternative crops to farmers to help eradicate opium, while also providing a fighting force to take on the Taliban and glean better intelligence about al-Qa’eda leadership.

    Heading into the deployment, the Telegraph is properly asking for clear lines in what is expected of British troops. Tranparent rules of conduct and engagement are indeed reasonable ground to cover.

    However British troops must have an unequivocal mandate for what they will do and not do. Downing Street is adamant that the Army help Kabul interdict drug convoys and traffickers, even if British troops do not actually get involved in eradication of the poppy crop on the ground.

    The Army has been resisting, saying even interdiction could create enormous resentment among the Afghan population. A similar battle is being waged in Washington, where the US army has been resisting the State Department’s overtures to carry out interdiction. Helmand is the centre of the opium trade in Afghanistan. Helmand’s drug mafia exports farmers, poppy seed and expertise to warlords in other Afghan provinces.

    It is also vital that Britain establish clear ground rules with President Hamid Karzai’s government. The British PRT is expected to work with the local governor, police chief, administration and militia forces in Helmand, but they are deeply corrupt and also involved in the drugs trade. Karzai has to be forcefully told to get rid of several leading Afghan figures in Helmand who are drugs-tainted.

    A major role for the PRT would be to train local Afghan security forces and help build a local bureaucracy that could sustain reconstruction in the future. It would be an exercise in futility if British troops captured drugs traffickers and then handed them over to Afghan officials who were themselves drug traffickers.

    British troops also have to be clear as to how far they can operate. Helmand is the gateway for Taliban and al-Qa’eda leaders travelling between Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan, and is also the main exit point for the new line of communication with Iraq. Several Taliban commanders have trained with Iraqi insurgents and have brought their new skills home.

    It is expected that the Brits will turn to the Commonwealth to assist where NATO feared to tread, and at least Australia is readying for the mission.

    Aussie troops in line for Afghanistan

    Britain is expected to hold talks with Australia, Canada, New Zealand and other countries early next month about forming a force to replace the reducing United States presence early next year.

    A commitment by Australia would put Australian troops amidst a volatile situation in Afghanistan as it seeks to stabilise the nation in the post-Taliban period.

    “The debate is not whether, but to what extent these troops will get into counter-insurgency and counter-narcotics,” a British military source was quoted to say in The Guardian.

    “We are not talking war fighting.

    “But there is potential for armed conflict in some areas.

    “The reality is that there are warlords, drug traffickers, al-Qaeda, al-Qaeda wannabes and Taliban.

    “It could take longer to crack than Iraq. It could take ten years.”

    Australia was already involved in talks with Britain about committing some troops to southern Afghanistan, pending cabinet approval.

    Are there any doubts that America’s strongest allies in the war against radical Islamist terror and, to be honest, just about any other threat, are the Brits and Aussies? Oh, don’t get me wrong, other countries are extremely deserving of consideration, especially Poland. It’s also long past due that we realize that Russia is facing the same foe, radical and expansionist Islamic scum, that we are currently squaring off against.

    Oh yeah, maybe, just maybe, the need for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization has run its course. If France can militarily bow out during the heart of the Cold War and the remaining bulk of its membership is happily willing to duck any serious danger in the one country the U.S. supposedly went into non-unilaterally post-9/11, does the alliance really serve any current purpose other than sustaining a rotating presence in Bosnia? Bosnia — talk about your previously-checked countries on the needing-an-exit-strategy list.