Author: Gunner

  • Turning to the Blogroll

    I’m not in the mood to blog tonight, as should be obvious from my feeble previous post. I don’t know why — it just ain’t there.

    I have been in the mood to read and surf, however, so I’ll just poach some goodies off my blogroll.

    Let’s open with Kevin Aylward at Wizbang! as he slaps around Congressman Conyers on the Downing Street memo.

    Rep. John Conyers, as predicted here 10 days ago, will hold one of his patented “fake hearings” on the Downing Street Memo Thursday afternoon at 2:30 p.m. EST. Pay no attention to the fact that the witnesses list is lead by the same lead witness (John Bonifz) who presented at his Ohio vote-rigging “hearing,” or that Conyers will trot out Valerie Plame’s husband, Joseph Wilson, who can regale the “hearing” with tales of yellowcake and book sales. Luckily for Wilson no members of the Senate Intelligence Committee will be present to bitch-slap him again. Given the lack of reporting about his cratered credibility, Wilson probably sounded like a great witness to Conyers.

    Now let’s turn to the favorite (and deservedly so) target of the day: Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and his pathetic loss of perspective on Gitmo.

    Let’s open with Paul at Powerline:

    Scott gave me credit for “anticipat[ing] the rabid foaming at the mouth” of Durbin and his partner in defamation Senator Leahy. In fact, however, I never expected that any U.S. Senator would express such absurd sentiments. I didn’t realize that leftist fever swamp extends so profoundly into the Senate.

    Just for the record (as if that matters to the left) Rowan Scarborough in the Washington Times reminds us of the following:

    Adolf Hitler – About 9 million dead
    Soviet gulags – About 2.7 million dead
    Pol Pot – About 1.7 million dead
    Gitmo – zero dead
    Gitmo – five instances of Koran abuse by prison guards
    Gitmo-15 instances of Koran abuse by prisoners.

    Then we’ll move on to Steve Verdon at Outside the Beltway, whose headline “What a Dick” really says it all:

    Apparently Dick Durbin doesn’t think much about the Holocaust, the genocide of the Khmer Rouge and Josef Stalin and its victims. Calling the detention center at Guantanamo Bay a death camp is just stupid.

    Chad at In the Bullpen chimes in with “Another Day, Another Nazi Comparison“:

    Over 13 million people died in the above mentioned camps throughout the years. The majority of those held in those camps were innocent whereas the vast majority of detainees in Guantanamo were found on the battlefields of Afghanistan. Can Senator Durbin not tell the difference?

    In an update, Chad turns his aim to liberal blogger Markos Moulitsas ‘Kos’ Zunigas and his site The Daily Kos (lack of link intentional). Dr. Rusty Shackleford of the Jawa Report comes out guns a-blazin’ at Kos (emphasis in original, and you should consider yourself warned that he really means it).

    You, Kos, are a certifiable idiot whose blind partisanship is disgusting and unethical.

    Warning: Graphic images follow.

    Speaking of Gitmo, Ace explains at length the justifiability and reasoning behind the detentions there. I particularly liked this nugget (emphasis again in the original):

    Okay. Let’s take you at your word.

    Given the fact that by your own admission that not only is the Global War on Terrorism not over, but we are actually losing this war, why the f*** are you constantly agitating to release enemy combatants so that they may rejoin their allies and kill more of our soldiers and citizens?

    Leaving Gitmo, over at Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave (great banners, by the way), our caped crusader Eric has apparently found an arch-nemesis and has been waging a oneman war. For a moment, he almost seems to lose his edge, but not quite:

    I realize that I have gotten a bit personal with some on the left lately and have attacked them directly. If that offends anyone, I’m sorry you’re offended. But I’m not sorry for what I’ve said.

    In fact, Eric decides to adapt to the enemy’s tactics (EDIT: I doubt Eric will actually change course; he seems quite happy having actual facts on his side):

    Yep, just like the Left, I’m just going to make crap up out of thin air, allege that I have evidence to prove it, promise to tell you at some undetermined date in the future what my evidence is and insist that it’s worth “checking out”.

    Fight the good fight, Eric.

    Above all these important issues, you can never beat Scott at The Fat Guy for some good ol’ Texas-style common sense.

    Man, I do love my Blogroll so.

  • Boys Trafficked for Human Sacrifices

    Barbaric.

    The leaked report also reveals countless examples of African children killed after being identified as “witches” by church pastors.

    Primitive.

    The leaked report is quoted as saying: “People who are desperate will seek out witchcraft experts to cast spells for them.

    “Members of the workshops state that for a spell to be powerful it required a sacrifice involving a male child unblemished by circumcision.

    Disturbing.

    The girl, an orphaned refugee from war-torn Angola, was stabbed, kicked, beaten, had chilli peppers rubbed in her eyes and was forced into a laundry bag and threatened with drowning in a river.

    Horrifying.

    It emerged that 300 had vanished, 299 from Africa and one from the Caribbean.

    The true figure for missing boys and girls is feared to be several thousand a year.

    Where is this happening?

    London.

    Somebody please tell me again why multiculturalism is such a plus and assimilation of immigrants into Western civilization is such an incorrect notion these days.

  • Australian Hostage Rescued by US-Iraqi Troops

    I wanted to blog about this story, the tale of the rescue of a hostage in Iraq.

    US and Iraqi forces rescued an Australian hostage in Baghdad while the death toll continued to rise across the country with suicide bombers killing 26 soldiers and eight policemen.

    Douglas Wood, a 64-year-old engineer, had been held for 47 days in Ghazaliyah, a western suburb of the capital. His kidnappers had demanded that the Australian government withdraw its 1,400 troops from Iraq and pay a substantial ransom.

    I wanted to blog about it, but was unhappy with the information currently available about what I’m certain was a quite dramatic event. I shrugged it off until I found the following glimpse at Mr. Wood, post-rescue.

    Freed hostage craves beer and football results

    Freed after being held for 47 days by Iraqi insurgents, Douglas Wood just wanted a beer and to know how his favorite Australian Rules Football team was faring.

    Wood has not lived in Australia for years — he’s a U.S. resident married to a Californian woman — but he has not lost his typically Australian love of beer or his team from the southern city of Geelong where he grew up.

    At an emotional news conference in Canberra, two of his brothers, Malcolm and Vernon, recalled Thursday their first telephone conversations with their older brother since his dramatic rescue Wednesday from the clutches of Iraqi insurgents.

    “Doug sounded remarkably composed,” Malcolm Wood, 57, told reporters. “He asked me whether the Geelong Cats would win the premiership this year.”

    Wood, a 64-year-old engineer, is recovering in Baghdad after being held for more than six weeks by insurgents who kicked him in the head, shaved off his hair and demanded Australia remove its 1,400 troops from Iraq.

    One of his first questions to Australia’s counterterrorism chief Nick Warner, who headed Australia’s six-week quest to secure the engineer’s release, was whether he had any beer.

    Granted, he’s talking about soccer, but substitute any sport I really care for, keep the beer aspect, and I’d safely say we’re talking about a man I view as a kindred spirit. Here’s a tip of the brew to Douglas Wood.

    I’ll keep hunting for details on the actual rescue mission.

    EDIT: I stand corrected. As JohnL of TexasBestGrok pointed out in the comment section, the Geelong Cats are not a soccer team. Apparently, Douglas Wood is a huge fan of Aussie rules football, a very cool sport I used to be able to watch in the early days of ESPN. All the more reason to celebrate Mr. Wood’s rescue.

  • Spain Claims Terror Pipeline to Iraq Cut

    It was certainly bad enough that, through a bloody terror strike, al Queda was able to gut Spain, affecting the country’s elections and precipitating an early withdrawal of Spanish forces from the Iraqi theater. Adding insult to injury, the terror network continued to abuse the nation, using it as a conduit to move jihadists into the same battleground Spain had fled. Now, Spain has made a move to cut the terror flow through its nation.

    The Spanish Interior Ministry said Wednesday that the police had arrested 16 people on charges of involvement with Islamic terrorism, including 11 men suspected by the police of having worked for a network that provided recruits for the insurgency in Iraq.

    Spain, which is described by terrorism experts here as a major logistical center for Al Qaeda and its affiliates in Europe, was not thought to be a significant supplier of fighters for the Iraq insurgency.

    But the announcement on Wednesday suggests that the flow through Spain of recruits to Iraq may be heavier than previously estimated, at least publicly.

    The Interior Ministry said in a statement that the 11 men, most of them Moroccans and Algerians, had recruited Islamic fighters for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the militant leader who is America’s most wanted man in Iraq, and for Ansar al-Islam, a group of mostly Kurdish guerrillas who are suspected of collaborating with Zarqawi.

    “The activities of this Islamist network centered on the recruitment and sending of jihadists to Iraq with the goal of committing suicide terrorist activities against the coalition forces,” the ministry statement said.

    Officials asserted that the network appeared to have been directed from Syria, although its activities were largely financed locally through drug trafficking, document fraud and robbery.

    The ministry also announced Wednesday that the police had arrested five more suspects in the 2004 train bombings in Madrid that killed 191 people and wounded at least 1,000. That attack, which Spanish investigators say was carried out by Islamic militants with ties to Al Qaeda, has led to the arrests of more than 100 people and the jailing of about 25.

    This is a possibly significant achievement, especially if Spain follows up the arrests with a successful haul of intelligence. I would like to point out, however, that the success probably is not nearly grand as it sounds — the country is merely treating symptoms of the Islamist movement within its borders, having already run away from the attempt in Iraq to provide an alternative to the Arab world, a possible last ditch to salvage a huge chunk of the world’s population from falling hopelessly into sheer barbarism and madness.

    This kind of success, while dramatic and helpful, is fleeting. Al Queda will find other ways to move its jihadists, much as the human nervous system can sometimes find alternate routes when nerve pathways are severed. Unfortunately for Spain and the rest of Europe, other paths already exist and this one will be replaced, thus making it obvious that simply treating local symptoms of radical Islam while ignoring the global disease is not enough. That, and it may eventually be painful and deadly to those only trying to police the waypoints of jihad within their borders, as the article points out ominously.

    In describing the men suspected of ties with the insurgency in Iraq, the Interior Ministry’s statement said that several had already vowed to carry out suicide attacks in the name of Islam, a fact that “highlights the extreme radicalism and the danger of most of those arrested in this operation.”

    The statement also suggested that the men were prepared to carry out attacks before reaching Iraq, and perhaps even before leaving Spain. “Several members,” it said, were “willing to commit a suicide terrorist act as soon as the leaders of the organization ordered it.”

    Pain and blood will come again to Europe via the Islamists. I hold it as a certainty. This is not a game where the sidelines are safe. This is not a game at all.

    Chad has more at In the Bullpen.

  • Disorder Across the Border

    I suppose you could say that everyone has an El Guapo. For some, shyness may be an El Guapo. For others, lack of education may be an El Guapo. But for us, El Guapo is a large ugly man who wants to kill us!

    —Lucky Day

    Troops patrolling lawless Mexican city

    US deplores border ‘corruption’

    Two more deaths in Mexican town despite effort to curb violence

    All 700 officers to be interrogated in crackdown on drug violence

    US tourists desert town in Mexico drug war

    Mexico’s Death City Police Ambush Their Own Agents

    Wait for it … wait … okay, now:

    Quagmire!!!

  • PA claims Israel Selling ‘Carcinogenic’ Juice

    We ain’t talking Jesus juice here.

    Israel has been flooding the Palestinian market with carcinogenic juice and “suspicious” computers used by its Defense Ministry, the Palestinian Authority claimed Tuesday.

    Such allegations, which were common under Yasser Arafat’s rule, have resurfaced in recent weeks in the Palestinian media.

    PA officials have also accused Israel of dumping toxic chemical waste in some areas in the West Bank with the intention of causing severe damage to the health of Palestinians.

    Last month, PA-controlled newspapers claimed that Israel was using wild pigs to destroy crops and agricultural farms in the West Bank. The papers claimed that settlers and IDF soldiers were seen setting loose many wild pigs near Palestinian villages as part of a campaign designed to destroy the Palestinian economy.

    A senior official in the [Israeli] Prime Minister’s Office said that with these types of allegations, the PA was resorting “to the same types of lies Yasser Arafat used to spread.”

    According to this official, the allegations represented a pandering to the radical elements on the Palestinian street and not much attention should be paid to them.

    At the same time, he said that if the PA was being dragged along by the radical elements, then “the Palestinians are not on the way to a state, but rather to another intifada.”

    […]

    The latest charge was made by Dr. Youssef Abu Safiyeh, chairman of the PA’s Environment Authority, who told Palestinian legislators in Ramallah that the PA security forces had recently seized a number of shipments from Israel that included canned juice containing a carcinogenic substance.

    “These drinks are specifically produced for Palestinian consumers in the Gaza Strip,” Abu Safiyeh said.

    He also claimed that the Egyptian authorities last March intercepted two Israeli trucks carrying children’s toys that included carcinogenic and radioactive substances. The trucks were seized at the Rafah border crossing, he added.

    […]

    Over the past few years, PA officials have repeatedly claimed that Israel was distributing corrupt food in Palestinian cities. They were quoted in the Palestinian media as saying that the Israeli government was selling expired food products to Palestinians with the intention of spreading various diseases among them.

    In 2001, the PA claimed that Israel was responsible for poisoned chocolates and explosive toys, pens and radios that appeared in markets in the Gaza Strip.

    Doctors at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City said then that they had treated several children who were allegedly poisoned after touching candy bars.

    I would venture that the only verifiable poisoning being practiced on Palestinian children is the poisoning of their young minds by Palestinian society.

    Second verse, same as the first.

  • Palestinian Militants: Resistance or Thugs?

    You make the (obvious) call.

    Palestinian Authority ‘won’t disarm militants’

    The Palestinian Authority will not disarm militants until Israel ends its occupation of the West Bank and Gaza as stated in a U.S.-backed peace plan, Foreign Minister Nasser al-Kidwa said on Monday.

    “Under international law, the Palestinian people have the right to resist this occupation and defend themselves,” Kidwa, the former Palestinian envoy to the United Nations, told Reuters in an interview.

    “When occupation ends, it becomes a different matter. It would have to come to a national position to start disarming everybody, everybody but the security apparatus,” he said, referring to Palestinian Authority security forces.

    A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who declared a ceasefire with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in February, could not be reached for comment on whether the Palestinian leader agreed with Kidwa’s remarks.

    When lawlessness gets the upper hand

    At long last A. managed to bring his nephews from Jenin to Ramallah for one weekend. He had hoped to restore to them, if only for two days, the taste of their childhood that was buried under the Israeli bulldozers, tanks and missiles. On Friday he took them to the play center in Ramallah. They had not yet begun to enjoy themselves when an argument erupted between a mother and the owner of the place. She called in a relative, a member of one of the security organizations. He came and contributed his part to the argument – shots fired into the air from his pistol, in the closed space full of children.

    The children and the parents huddled in alarm and did not calm down until armed police showed up. Instead of stopping the shooting, they too opened fire.

    On that same street, about a kilometer northward, passersby found themselves in the midst of exchanges of gunfire between armed men wearing civilian clothes. “Jews,” said 5-year-old T. to his mother as they hid behind the shelves of the grocery store. “No, they’re ours, safeguarding our security,” she replied with cynicism beyond his ken.

    Feel free to read them both and decide.

  • France Refuses to Explain Hostage Release

    Ah, the French. Why do they, as a nation, make it so easy to question their fortitude?

    France, which denied it paid a ransom to win the release of French journalist held in Iraq, refused Monday to give any details that led to winning freedom for the reporter and her Iraqi guide after five months of captivity.

    Florence Aubenas and Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi, who were freed Sunday, had been missing since Jan. 5, when they were seen leaving Aubenas’ hotel in Baghdad. French officials have never identified the kidnappers, although authorities in both France and Iraq suggested they were probably seeking money rather than pressing a political agenda.

    Despite mounting calls for the government to explain how the releases were achieved, Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy refused to identify the captors, because he said they are still holding other people.

    “I can say absolutely nothing about that,” Douste-Blazy said on RTL radio. “There are still some hostages in the place of detention where Florence and Hussein were a few hours ago.”

    Government spokesman Jean-Francois Cope said France paid no ransom.

    “There was absolutely no request for money,” Cope said on Europe-1 radio. “No ransom was paid.”

    Former Foreign Minister Michel Barnier, who worked the case until leaving the government this month, also said there was no ransom.

    But questions persisted.

    “Now the time of joy is over, the time for explanations has come,” said Annick Lepetit, a spokeswoman for the main opposition Socialist Party. “The public authorities, the president, the government must explain themselves.”

    If there are legitimate questions, they deserve to be answered. Note I said if. There is nothing in this article, other than a lack of forthcoming, that suggests the French government would acquiesce to a foe. There is, however, history.

    The article does go on to allow Aubenas to be praised to a silly degree.

    Liberation director Serge July, in an editorial Monday, called the captors “professionals in kidnapping, who hold an important – if not central – role in the atrocious market for hostages” in Iraq. He did not elaborate.

    July, a Liberation co-founder who shuttled to and from the Middle East during the hostage crisis, joined many others in praising Aubenas’ tenacity.

    Aubenas, 44, is “an incredible fighter, with a considerable psychological resistance, who in many ways simply didn’t crack,” he said on France-Inter radio.

    The kidnappers had their biggest prize since the lying Sgrena. Just how the hell was Aubenas, a career-long reporter for France’s “leading left-wing tabloid,” going to crack? By promising to write a story denouncing American efforts … again?!!