Author: Gunner

  • Happy Blogiversary

    Eric, a fellow Texan and Aggie, at the Fire Ant Gazette is celebrating his blog’s third-year mark. Hey, that’s old by blogosphere standards, and he insists on doing it unpaid. Go drop by and wish him well.

  • Project Valour-IT Drive Continues

    Currently, the Army is in the lead in the little inter-service rivalry for an extremely worthy cause. The drive will continue until this Friday, Veterans Day ’05.

    As of this writing, over $44,000 has been raised between the four branches and their supporters to assist injured troopers communicate with the world. Hooah! Please give the Army way, via Blackfive, or the link below:


    Heck, give through the branch of your choice. Just please give. I have. Will you support our injured troops?

  • French Islamic Riots Link Dump, 7 NOV 05

    I’ve long said that Europe is a tinderbox, with its increasing Islamic pockets serving as the fuel waiting to ignite. I had thought that the Paris riots would have settled by now, and still think they will, but that has yet to be the case. In fact, the situation is worsening as blood has been drawn and the mayhem has crossed borders.

    French integration model fails, no back-up in sight

    With every night of violent rioting that scars France’s rundown suburbs, more and more French say their distinctive model of integration, based on the revolutionary ideal of equality for all, has failed.

    But President Jacques Chirac and his conservative allies are unlikely to join the critics, as that would mean accepting the approach France considers superior is no better than integration policies abroad.

    Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy is the only top politician saying France’s “republican model” falls short and that the U.S. or British “melting pot” approach could help break the cycle of minority exclusion, unemployment and revolt.

    […]

    Michel Wieviorka, a leading sociologist, said the recent riots indicated “the decline — perhaps historic — of the so-called French model of republican integration”.

    “This is a total crisis,” he said at the weekend. “They (the riots) tell us we cannot continue with politicians who tell us to carry on with an exhausted model.”

    Take note, multiculturalists, stability of liberty and society lies not in steadfast maintenence and seperation of individual cultures. Rather, a solid future lies in the old American integration model — accepting the strengths (and selective delicious dishes) of immigrant cultures into the overall society while that members of that said immigrant culture adapt to the overall nature of the pre-existing society.

    Leaders fiddle as France burns

    France was struggling to overcome one of its gravest post-war crises last night as every major city faced the threat of fierce rioting that began 12 nights ago and now seems to have spun out of control.

    Despite an assurance from Philippe Douste Blazy, the foreign minister, that France was “not a dangerous country”, the spread of violence prompted the Foreign Office in London to warn travellers that trouble could break out “almost anywhere”.

    […]

    Although the disorder began on the intimidating sink estates of Paris’s northern suburbs, trouble had been reported yesterday in the early hours from most regions of the country. Even areas such as Brittany, the Loire and Bordeaux, favoured by British holidaymakers and second- home hunters, have now been drawn into the worst wave of unrest in France since the spring revolt of 1968 set in motion the downfall of Gen Charles de Gaulle.

    Yesterday the violence also claimed its first life. A 61-year-old man died in hospital three days after being beaten unconscious when he left his home in a northern Paris suburb intending to stop rubbish bins being set on fire.

    Blood, and yet the French leadership dither. Yet again, and within only months, Chirac faces the ghost of de Gaulle’s downfall.

    France set to use curfews to halt riots

    France will impose curfews “wherever it is necessary” and call up police reservists to stop rioting that has spread out of its suburbs, the prime minister said today, calling a return to order “our No. 1 responsibility”.

    […]

    Asked on TF1 television whether the army should be brought in, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin said “we are not at that point”.

    But “at each step, we will take the necessary measures to re-establish order very quickly throughout France,” he said. “That is our prime duty: ensuring everyone’s protection.”

    The new measures followed the worst overnight violence so far on Sunday-Monday. Foreign governments warned their citizens to be careful in France.

    Apparent copycat attacks also spread outside France, with five cars torched outside the main train station in Brussels, Belgium. German police were investigating the burning of five cars in Berlin.

    Belgium? Possibly Germany? Looks like that is the case. Heck, in case you haven’t heard, and Lex doubts you have, Islamic riots have even reached Denmark.

    Hey, Doll, how ’bout we scratch Europe off the list of possible honeymoon sites?

  • Pentagon: Iraq Troop Rotation to Shrink

    Initial U.S. troop rotation plans for Iraq have been released for the two-year period starting in mid-2006.

    The Pentagon announced Monday that more than 92,000 troops will be in the next rotation of U.S. forces in Iraq, and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said its exact size will not be decided until after the Dec. 15 election of a new Iraqi government.

    The Pentagon said it has identified some of the major combat units that will deploy, starting in mid-2006 as part of a rotation that will run through mid-2008, including a National Guard brigade from Minnesota.

    It said the identified units will total about 92,000 troops, but Rumsfeld said that should not be taken as the final figure. The usual troop level this year has been about 138,000, although that has been strengthened to about 160,000 this fall out of concern for extra violence during voting in October and December.

    The number of troops in future rotations will depend on conditions, including the severity of the insurgency and the strength of Iraqi security forces, as well as the recommendations of U.S. commanders, Rumsfeld said.

    “We know we’re going to bulk up for the elections, and we know we’re going to go back down to some level after the elections,” Rumsfeld said in a telephone call to The Associated Press. During the call, Rumsfeld complained that an AP report gave the mistaken impression that the Pentagon has already decided to reduce troop levels below 138,000 next year.

    Key to this potential reduction is repeated relative stability during high-stress periods, such as elections, and continuing growth in the size and proficiency of the fledling Iraqi democracy’s domestic security forces.

    Separately, a senior Army general said there is a growing momentum in the training of Iraqi security forces, which now total about 100,000 army soldiers and about 111,000 police forces. In a detailed briefing before a group organized by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank, Lt. Gen. David Petraeus said the goal is to have a combined total of 230,00 army and police by the December election.

    Petraeus left Iraq last summer after a year in command of training programs for the Iraqi security forces. His briefing charts said training and equipping of the Iraqi army should be done by January 2007, and by March 2007 for the Iraqi police services. The total number of forces is to reach 325,000 by July 2007.

    The Pentagon hopes to be able to reduce U.S. troop levels as Iraqi security forces become more capable of defending their own country, but it is unclear when that point will be reached.

    Obviously, with the situation on the ground unfortunately but necessarily considered fluid, all troop level plans have to be viewed as subject to change, especially around eight months ahead of deployment. Rumsfeld stressed this, though I would suspect it fell on deaf ears in the media. More than likely, any potential increase will be trumpeted as further evidence of quagmire rather than a flexible force able to adapt situationally.

    Rumsfeld, appearing before reporters with British Defense Minister John Reid prior to announcing the troop rotation details, stressed that conditions on the ground in the months ahead will determine any changes in U.S. force levels.

    “We’re aware of the interest in the press in the mid-to-longer-term levels of U.S. forces and coalition forces in Iraq, but I would caution that it would be a mistake to draw conclusions about such matters when reviewing the force rotation announcements that will be made later today,” Rumsfeld said.

    “We continue to transition and transfer additional responsibilities to the Iraqi security forces, and the people of Iraq continue to meet the political milestones that they have established,” he added. “As these and other conditions are met, Gen. (George) Casey will continue to assess the capabilities that he believes he will need and make recommendations as to the levels he believes will be needed in the period over the coming months.”

    According to the article, the following units have already been tabbed as part of the 2006-2008 rotation:

    • 1st Brigade, 34th Infantry Division, Minnesota Army National Guard.
    • 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, Schweinfert, Germany.
    • 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Wash.
    • 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.
    • 3rd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.
    • 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, Fort Drum, N.Y.
    • 13th Corps Support Command, Fort Hood, Texas.
    • Division headquarters, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

    Happy hunting, troops, and my best wishes to those you’ll leave on the home front.

  • French Rioters Fire on Police, Wounding 10

    While I was away travelling, the Islamic riots in the Paris suburbs expanded to the city’s interior and other parts of the country. Now, it seems that expansion is giving way to escalation.

    In what has grown into a national crisis and continues to escalate, rioters in France fired on police officers during an 11th night of destruction, wounding 10 officers.

    About 200 youths were throwing stones and other projectiles at police in Grigny, south of Paris, on Sunday, police said.

    Some of the rioters then fired at officers with shotguns. Two of the 10 injured officers were seriously hurt.

    The incident came just hours after French President Jacques Chirac made his first public address since the riots began. He said restoring order was “an absolute priority” as the violence reached central Paris for the first time.

    “The law must have the last word,” Chirac said Sunday, pledging that security measures would be reinforced. Those sowing “violence or fear” will be “arrested, judged and punished.”

    Chirac made the statement after a security meeting of his top ministers. He has come under pressure by opposition politicians who accuse him of failing to intervene publicly.

    But police have already made hundreds of arrests, and rioters continue to ignore Chirac’s warnings as gangs of youths rampage the city.

    On Sunday some business owners called on Chirac to summon the military to stamp out the riots and calm the city, before arsonists begin to attack buildings as well.

    […]

    While the riots began in the suburbs outside Paris, Sunday was the first time the destruction reached into the heart of the city. Nationwide, police made 349 arrests.

    The violence was originally concentrated in neighbourhoods with large immigrant populations.

    However, the violence has spread out across the country to include Normandy in the west and southern cities on the Mediterranean such as Nice and Cannes.

    “All these hoodlums see others setting fires and say they can do it, too,” said national police spokesman Patrick Hamon.

    According to the article, an announcement of further security measures are expected in the next day or two from Chirac. True to his character to date, Chirac has been one for neither quick nor decisive reaction to the obvious expansionist Islamic problem. I guess points could be awarded for consistency.

    I’m not necessarily trying to be smug about the matter — the growing problem of radicalism in the pockets of Islamic populations in many European countries is no secret. For the future of the continent, someone has to put their foot down, and that foot is not Jacques.

    Meanwhile, just to plug a couple of members from my blogroll, I’ll be catching up on the weekend’s developments in France by perusing the coverage of the wonderfully, rationally hard-edged Ace of Spades and the link-heavy Gateway Pundit. I’d recommend y’all keep up with those two on a daily basis.

  • Quote of the Week, 6 NOV 05

    Vietnam was the first war ever fought without any censorship. Without censorship, things can get terribly confused in the public mind.

    —General William Westmoreland

  • Aggie Football: In a Hole

    … and still digging.

    I’m just back from my weekend in Lubbock. Even more embarrassing than the Ags’ 56-17 loss to Texas Tech is the fact that I almost took solace that the Ags were able to hang with the Red Raiders for the first half, trailing 14-10 as the teams went to the break.

    My, how my beloved Aggies, a once powerful and proud program not many years ago, have truly fallen. After so much pre-season hope, the team now needs a major upset in one of its remaining games (at Oklahoma and home against rival Texas) to even achieve a winning season.

  • Project Valour-IT Drive Update

    Yeah, the inter-service rivalry is meant as a motivation. But c’mon, folks, we’re talking about getting voice-assisted laptops for wounded troopers who could use them to keep in touch with loved ones and hold onto their grasp of the world. Do you really need motivation to give?

    Well, if so, here’s a little bit of the reality faced by those whom you could help, courtesy the Gun Line (hat tip to the Gunn Nutt):

    Take a look at your hands… Go ahead, take a look…

    You can do some amazing things with this construct of four fingers and a thumb:

    You can:

    1. Pick your nose.
    2. Scratch an itch.
    3. Communicate (on L.A. highways it can be done with one digit.)
    4. Scritch the cat, dog, ferret, ect. behind the ears…
    5. Pat your loved one on the derriere.
    6. Caress your loved one’s… (well, you get the picture…)
    7. Shoot a pistol.
    8. Throw your kid a baseball (your accuracy varies…)
    9. Write a letter.

    Let’s write a letter, shall we?

    First you have to clear off a place at the dining room table or your desk. Then you have to figure out where the kids hid all of the pens. Then you have to find a sheet of paper that hasn’t been scribbled on. Then you have to kick the cat off of the chair. Then you have to get up and find your address book. Then you have to kick the cat off of the chair (again.) Then you take pen in hand, shoo away the cat who has migrated from the floor to the tabletop and wants to help check your spelling.

    And then you can actually start writing.

    Takes – what?- about ten minutes…

    Now let’s write a letter after being hit with an IED…

    Go read the rest. And then give. Please. You can give at Blackfive, who is heading up the efforts of the Army branch.

    You can give here at Target Centermass, also supporting the Army branch:


    You can also visit a centralized listing of the blogs involved by branch, and the opportunity to see the latest donation totals and to give your share to any branch you wish. It may be a rivalry, but it’s all for the same team in the end.

    As of this writing, over $14,000 has been raised between the four branches in a little over a day. Hooah! But there’s still a ways to go — the drive will continue until Veteran’s Day, Nov. 11.

  • News Link Dump, 3 NOV 05

    Okay, I’m busy packing for a weekend journey to “scenic” Lubbock, Texas, to watch my Aggies square off on the gridiron against my fiancee’s Tech Red Raiders. I’m not expecting a good game, but it has become an annual trip for us, be it Lubbock or dear ol’ College Station.

    And now the news and views.

    The good news from Iraq is not fit to print

    No question: If you think that defeating Islamofascism, extending liberty, and transforming the Middle East are important, it’s safe to say you saw the ratification of the new constitution as the Iraqi news story of the week [emphasis in original].

    But that isn’t how the mainstream media saw it.

    Consider The Washington Post. On the morning after the results of the Iraqi referendum were announced, the Post’s front page was dominated by a photograph, stretched across four columns, of three daughters at the funeral of their father, Lieutenant Colonel Leon James II, who had died from injuries suffered during a Sept. 26 bombing in Baghdad. Two accompanying stories, both above the fold, were headlined ”Military Has Lost 2,000 in Iraq” and ”Bigger, Stronger, Homemade Bombs Now to Blame for Half of US Deaths.” A nearby graphic — ”The Toll” — divided the 2,000 deaths by type of military service — active duty, National Guard, and Reserves.

    I’ve said it before and, unfortunately, I’m quite certain I’ll have to say it again — our media’s handling of this war absolutely disgusts me. Oh, I’m not just talking about the Iraqi theater, though that has certainly been the lowlight of their performance, but also their coverage dating back to the opening of the Afghan campaign (a theater now seemingly all but forgotten in their eyes). I’ll again quote Power Line‘s Paul Mirengoff, who blogged the following:

    Have you ever read a history of war that focused almost entirely on casualty figures (with an occasional torture story and grieving parent thrown in), to the exclusion of any real discussion of tactics, operations, and actual battles? I haven’t. But that’s what our self-proclaimed “rough drafters” of history are serving up with respect to Iraq.

    It’s almost become a cliche, but I honestly feel we could not have successfully prosecuted World War II with today’s media.

    Chertoff says US wants to “gain control” of borders

    President George W. Bush’s domestic security chief vowed on Wednesday to “gain control” of U.S. borders, prompting ridicule from immigration control activists who have taken the matter into their own hands.

    Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said the administration aims to improve ways to keep illegal migrants out and to deport those already in the United States.

    “Simply stated, our goal is to gain control of our borders,” Chertoff said in a speech organized by the Houston Forum, a nonprofit educational group.

    “I define control to mean that we will have an extremely high probability of detecting, responding to and interdicting illegal crossings of our borders.”

    I’ll wait until I actually see something of substance. Our borders have been far too freakin’ porous for far, far too long.

    Crisis as Paris burns for another night

    France’s government was under mounting pressure yesterday to regain control of the situation around Paris as youths opened fire on police and set 300 cars ablaze in overnight rioting in what is now a week of serious disorder.

    Dominique de Villepin, the prime minister, held a series of crisis meetings yesterday amid increasing criticism of the government for its failure to control the escalating violence which began last Thursday in the northern suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois after two teenagers of North African origin were electrocuted in an electricity sub-station. The violence has since spread to at least 20 impoverished suburbs around the capital.

    I expect this matter to calm soon. That said, I don’t expect the actual problem to go away. This story is an excellent example of why: note the subdued description of the rioters and the troublesome neighborhoods. It isn’t until the 21st of 24 paragraphs until one can find the only mention of the religion involved. Of course, I’m talking about Islam.

    Al-Qaida Claims Downing of U.S. Helicopter

    Al-Qaida in Iraq claimed Thursday it shot down a U.S. attack helicopter that crashed, killing two Marines, and a U.S. general said witnesses saw the aircraft take ground fire and break up in the air.

    The AH-1W Super Cobra crashed Wednesday near Ramadi during daylong fighting in the insurgent stronghold 70 miles west of Baghdad. In addition to the two crewmen, an American lieutenant died when a bomb exploded as he was rushing to the crash site.

    Another U.S. soldier died Thursday in a roadside bombing northeast of Baghdad, the military said.

    My best wishes to the families of the troops involved.

    A nuclear surge to follow Iran’s diplomatic purge

    Iran announced yesterday that it was removing 40 ambassadors from their posts abroad and indicated a further hardening of the regime’s policies by preparing a new phase in its nuclear programme.

    A day after The Times revealed that senior envoys were being purged from Iran’s diplomatic service, Manoucher Mottaki, the Foreign Minister, told the parliament in Tehran that “the missions of more than 40 ambassadors and heads of Iranian diplomatic missions abroad will expire” by March 20. He described the drastic changes, affecting nearly half of Iran’s foreign posts, as normal and insisted that many envoys were close to retirement.

    His assurances failed to silence critics, both in Iran and abroad, who insisted that key envoys were being dismissed because they were moderates closely identified with the reformist policies of previous administrations.

    As Iran shifts back towards the hard line in its efforts to thrust itself into the leadership of the Islamic world, they run the risk of solidifying opposition other than the U.S. and Israel. After seeing trouble within their own borders and hearing the all-too-familiar threats, threats that ring out in an echo of the 1930s, some eyes in continental Europe seem to be opening to a growing danger.

    Assassination probe finds a trail of suspects

    It reads like a spy novel, laying out an elaborate web of phone calls, surveillance and even a fake assassin intended to throw investigators off the trail.

    The United Nations report on the Feb. 14 assassination of former Leba-nese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri details months of plotting by top Syrian and Lebanese security officials.

    The report, which was released Oct. 20, implicates about a dozen men who are now the focus of the U.N. investigation.

    In the coming weeks, the fate of these men could provoke a showdown between Syria and the international community. Armed with the chilling 54-page report, the United States, France and Britain lobbied for a U.N. resolution that threatened Syria with sanctions unless it cooperates fully with the U.N. probe.

    The resolution, which was unanimously approved by the Security Council on Monday, requires Syria to detain any Syrian official or civilian deemed by U.N. investigators as a suspect in Hariri’s killing.

    This story could be dangerous. Still, it could also be grab-the-popcorn entertaining as Syria finds itself suddenly struggling like a fish on a hook.

  • Riots Continue in France

    Here’s a special hat tip for blog quote of the day to John Little at Blogs of War , who scored the following little snark:

    Of course one can expect a few hiccups as France transitions to an Islamic state[.]

    Priceless, yet sadly too close to the truth. John carries on his coverage as the riots stretch into yet another night.