Category: War on Terror

  • Senate Dems: Hissy Fit on a National Stage

    First, there’s this story, essentially a delaying rear-guard action against Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito.

    Democrats push to delay Alito hearings

    Senate Democrats pushed on Tuesday for a 2006 date for hearings on Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito, challenging President Bush’s call for confirmation by year’s end.

    “There’s no way you can do an honest hearing by the end of December, or a fair hearing,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the senior Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    In a jab at the White House and the Senate Republican leadership, Leahy said he and the panel’s chairman, Sen. Arlen Specter could likely agree on a date for confirmation hearings if left to themselves.

    Specter, R-Pa., was noncommittal on timing for hearings for Alito, a judge on the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “This is a swing vote on the Supreme Court…. I don’t know enough yet to say whether it’s realistic by the end of the year,” he said.

    […]

    Conservatives in and out of the Senate have greeted Alito’s nomination warmly, many saying they hoped he would move the court to the right if confirmed for O’Connor’s seat.

    Liberals, pointing to rulings on abortion, gun control, the death penalty and other issues, have already raised the threat of a filibuster, an attempt to deny Alito a yes-or-no vote by the Senate. Republicans hold 55 seats in the Senate, and while confirmation requires a simple majority, it takes 60 votes to overcome a filibuster.

    Republicans have responded to the threat by saying they would seek a vote to abolish the filibuster in cases of Supreme Court and federal appeals court nominations.

    A showdown over that issue was narrowly averted last spring when seven lawmakers from each party brokered a compromise. But already, two of the seven Republicans involved in that compromise – Sens. Mike DeWine of Ohio and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina – have indicated they would side with their leadership this time. That suggests Democrats would lose a showdown if it went that far.

    Actually, compared to their other major Senate maneuver of the day, I find this development fairly mild, just a postponing of what currently seems a strong likelihood. I would actually welcome an opportunity for the over-threatened judicial filibuster to be broken, but I don’t think the Dem leadership wants to sacrifice that hole card on a losing hand. Rather, I suspect they would settle for drawing out the confirmation, hoping for an unforeseen development while denying the president and his nominee as easy a process as Chief Justice John Roberts experienced. It’s not an action for the betterment of the republic, but instead one to prevent the leader of that republic’s executive branch from scoring any easy political points.

    Now, on to the despicable.

    Democrats force Senate into rare closed session

    Democrats forced the Senate into a rare secret session Tuesday to demand that the Republican majority further investigate the Bush administration’s handling of intelligence related to the war in Iraq.

    The surprise maneuver, exploiting last week’s indictment of Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff in the CIA leak case, caught Republicans flatfooted and shifted attention back to the increasingly unpopular war and away from President Bush’s day-old Supreme Court nomination.

    After a testy showdown that lasted more than two hours behind closed doors, Senate Republicans agreed to restart an inquiry into the administration’s use of intelligence.

    Still, furious Republicans called the move a “stunt” and a “scare tactic” designed to score partisan political points.

    At issue was a long-standing promise by intelligence committee Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kan., to broaden the panel’s investigation into how intelligence was used to go to war. The committee concluded last year that the intelligence was erroneous, but Democrats wanted the inquiry to determine whether it had been intentionally misused to justify the war.

    Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada renewed his call Tuesday for that portion of the investigation, invoking Friday’s indictment of Cheney’s aide I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby on charges that he lied to a grand jury about his role in leaking classified information about a war critic’s wife.

    “The Libby indictment provides a window into what this is really all about, how this administration manufactured and manipulated intelligence in order to sell the war in Iraq and attempted to destroy those who dared challenge its actions,” Reid said, moments before springing the secret session.

    I’d like to point out at this time that Friday’s indictments [covered here] in absolutely no way whatso-freakin’-ever supported any stance that the administration massaged data. The indictments point not toward any criminal behaviour preceding or during the time of the supposed leak, but rather possible crimes during the investigation. That the Dems are trying to expand this into a dark cloud over our entire pre-war process is almost as disgusting as the media’s willingness to not question their spew.

    A visibly angry Bill Frist, the Senate’s normally unflappable Republican leader, immediately lashed back, noting that most previous closed sessions have been called by joint agreement of both party leaders. What especially annoyed Frist was that Reid acted without consulting him.

    “This is an affront to me personally,” said Frist, of Tennessee. “It’s an affront to our leadership. It’s an affront to the United States of America. And it is wrong.”

    Under Senate rules, the Senate can go into closed session at the request of one senator, provided another senator seconds the motion. Since 1929, when the Senate first allowed treaties and nominations to be discussed in public, the Senate has held 53 secret sessions, most involving discussion of classified materials. Six of the most recent closed sessions occurred during the impeachment trial of President Clinton.

    The Democrats’ move had clear political motivations. The war in Iraq is driving down President Bush’s approval ratings and putting Republicans on the defensive. Democrats tried Friday and throughout the weekend to link the Libby indictment to Bush’s overall war policy.

    But Bush changed the subject Monday by nominating Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court. The nomination thrilled conservatives, angered liberals and turned public attention away from Iraq. Senate Democrats pulled it back Tuesday.

    Frist has every right to be angry, not only at his Democrat colleagues but also at himself. How many times must he be caught off-guard, expecting today’s Dems to play by established decorum instead of seeking newer lows to which they can stoop for political gain over national good?

    Ace at Ace of Spades shares the anger and is ready for an equal response.

    It’s time for a political advertisement knitting together Clinton’s, Gore’s, Hillary!’s, Rockefeller’s, Kerry’s, etc.’s various statements over the years warning against Saddam’s bio, chem, and nuclear programs.

    And f***ing blitz it. I’m sick of this. And I’m angry at the stupid fucking GOP for not doing its f***ing job and ridiculing these people the way they should be ridiculed.

    Unsurprisingly, Captain Ed over at Captain’s Quarters looks at the matter a little more calmly.

    This shows the emptiness of Democrats, both in head and heart. As Bill Frist said afterwards, the minority party proves it has nothing to contribute except cheap political stunts. They know that the Fitzgerald investigation came up with next to nothing on the Plame leak — because it didn’t constitute a crime under US statute. Despite having a prosecutor independent of the Bush administration run wild for almost two years and exceed the original boundaries of his mandate, the only indictment he could muster was one in which a very stupid and probably criminal act by a single person could be verified — and that just had to do with the investigation and grand jury itself, not with the Plame leak.

    Reid says that the Wilson/Plame brouhaha proves that the Bush administration lied about the war. This was practically the entire Democratic Party platform last year — and it lost them the White House and four seats in the Senate. One would think that going back to the well a year later would be stupid beyond belief, but apparently Reid forgot about that big poll taken last November. He also forgot about this bipartisan report from the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which outlines exactly how Wilson’s report in fact bolstered the case that Iraq still wanted to get material for nuclear weapons — and that Wilson had lied about it in leaks to the New York Times, the Washington Post, and then in his own editorial and book.

    Please see the Captain’s post for the supporting links to which he referred.

    What are my thoughts? The Dems are using mere illusion and misdirection, smoke and mirrors, to make political hay of something that isn’t really there. They have cast aside precedent of senatorial behaviour in favor of undermining the president, cheaply used revisionism to cast a pall upon our arguments for opening the Iraqi theater, and made common use of exaggeration and outright falsehood to politically cripple our international efforts for possible cheap domestic gain. Should they succeed, score an assist to the mainstream media, who have seemingly been quite content to carry the water and Dem talking points, when unbiased reporting would have presented the American people with the truth behind the Dem stunts, gotchas and lies.

    All this while we have troops on the ground in Iraq. Facing what should be our true enemies.

    No amount of Pepto could deal with this torrent of bile.

  • A Focused Look at Utah Guard Re-enlistment

    While this is an interesting examination at life today’s National Guard and retention issues, I encourage the reader to continue to the very end. There is an absolute gem of a quote there by 1LT Bishop, a firefighter in the real world. Here’s a hint: I generally approve of reasonings that take into account “candy-asses” and the world in which we live. Hooah, sir!

  • Nationwide Events Being Planned for 2,000 Death

    Disgusting … but not at all surprising.

    The anti-war group American Friends Service Committe is planning hundreds of event across the U.S. to mark the pending passing of the 2,000th death by American service personnel in the Iraqi theater (hat tips to LGF and General Quarters). Details about the events can be found on the AFSC site.

    Soon we’ll be reaching another horrific milestone in the war in Iraq – the death of the 2,000th U.S. service member. AFSC, Military Families Speak Out, Gold Star Families for Peace, and Iraq Veterans Against the War are calling for people across the U.S. to stand up and say that the needless killing of U.S. troops and Iraqis must stop and that the resources funding this war are needed for other things.

    The AFSC is calling for candlelight vigils and public actions. While I disagree with LGF’s characterization of these as parties, I must agree to referring to those participating as ghouls. For those who superficially claim to support the troops, these anti-war elements are quick to jump on any allegation, supported or completely imaginary, against our troops and quite eager to use any nice round casualty figure to their advantage. In short, these people, as a group, sicken me.

    Here is a list of planned event locations, including a dozen sites in Texas. If anyone is interested in a counter-demonstration at a DFW-area location, send me an email. Time is short, as CNN currently shows American military deaths in Iraq at 1,993, as of this writing.

    Meanwhile, Wikipedia currently has the death toll at 2,108, as of this writing, for the one-day battle of Antietam. Oh yeah, that’s just for the Union side. Just a little perspective for ya.

  • War Leaves Guard Short on Critical Equipment

    The National Guard has been forced to go hat in hand before Congress as overseas deployments have taken a hit on equipment stocks.

    The Army National Guard has lost so much critical equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan that its ability to respond to a national emergency could be severely hampered, says a government report released Thursday.

    Lt. Gen. H. Steven Blum, chief of the National Guard Bureau, told the House Government Reform Committee that the Guard needs $1.3 billion to replace or upgrade radios, helicopters, tactical vehicles, heavy engineering equipment, chemical detection gear and night-vision goggles, which are essential to responding to national emergencies such as the recent Gulf Coast hurricanes and terrorist attacks.

    Blum’s testimony, along with that of other top National Guard and military officials and the governors of Idaho and Pennsylvania, coincided with the release of a new Government Accountability Office report, which says the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have left many Army National Guard units dangerously short of critical equipment. The shortages threaten the National Guard’s ability to prepare its forces for future missions at home and overseas, the auditors found.

    “The bottom line is that our inventory is now at 34 percent” of what it should be, Blum said.

    The article cites three key reasons for the equipment shortcomings, which may have an impact on the Guard’s ability to fulfill stateside emergency responsibilites.

    • The largest reliance upon Guard forces since World War II
    • Stocking of Guard equipment at 70 percent of actual allocation under the assumption that, if activated and deployed overseas, “they would have time to obtain the rest before deployment”
    • Unprecedented demands for key items by current deployment stresses

    On the bright side, there are signals of relief coming from Capitol Hill.

    Government Reform Committee Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., said he and Sen. Christopher Bond, R-Mo., are working to ensure that the National Guard gets the $1.3 billion it needs in the next supplemental spending bill.

    “Quite simply, we are robbing the nondeployed Peter to pay the deployed Paul,” he said. “I understand the need to prioritize, but this shouldn’t have to be a zero-sum game.”

    That is good to hear. Whatever one’s views on the current overseas military efforts, the idea that those operations should be allowed to affect the Guard’s stateside responsibilities is, in my view, indefensible.

  • Iraqis Nab Alleged Top Terror Financier

    Like father, like son.

    Iraqi police on Wednesday arrested Saddam Hussein’s nephew in Baghdad, charging that he served as the top financier of Iraq’s rampant insurgency, senior Iraqi security officials said.

    Yasir Sabhawi Ibrahim, son of Saddam’s half brother Sabhawi Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti, was arrested in a Baghdad apartment, several days after Syrian authorities forced him to return to Iraq, the officials told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Cairo. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to deal with the media.

    One of the officials, who works as a coordinator between Iraqi authorities and U.S. military intelligence, described the purported financier as the most dangerous man in the urgency. The other official, who is a senior member of the Iraqi Defense Ministry, said the arrest was a serious blow to terrorist networks.

    Both officials said Syrian authorities “pushed” Ibrahim into Iraq but did not hand him over to authorities.

    The Syrians were aware of his whereabouts in Baghdad and informed U.S. authorities, who then passed the information to Iraq security forces who carried out a “fast, easy” raid on the fugitive’s apartment, the Defense Ministry official said.

    Chad Evans at In the Bullpen looks at the news as possible good turn in Syrian policy.

    Is this a possible sign Syria may be starting to turn the corner from allowing terrorists and Saddam-linked insurgents to operate freely from their soil? Let us hope.

    Sorry, Chad, but it’s no change from less than eight months ago when, on Feb. 27, the Syrians actually handed over Ibrahim’s daddy to Iraqi authorities. At that time, I harbored the same hope about the Syrians. Nope, they haven’t changed much yet.

  • Russia’s Islamic Revolt is Spreading

    There was a startling and disturbing revelation today concerning the recent Islamist attack in southern Russia — the perpetrators were mainly locals, not Chechen as initially suspected.

    The diehard gang of Muslim extremists responsible for last week’s attack on the southern Russian city of Nalchik consisted mainly of local militants intent on creating a strict Islamic state independent of Moscow, according to security sources in the region.

    The disclosure that the gunmen were not sent from the war-torn republic of Chechnya but belonged to a group from Kabardino-Balkaria, the Russian republic of which Nalchik is the capital, will be of great concern to the Kremlin.

    It provides alarming evidence that far from dying down — as claimed by President Vladimir Putin — the bloody Chechen conflict is spreading.

    “Most of the militants who were killed and those caught alive are local,” said an officer with the Nalchik anti-terrorism police unit. “ The ferocity of the attacks has shocked the city.”

    The onslaught, which turned the town of 280,000 into a war zone, was the most daring raid by pro-Chechen Islamic militants since last year’s Beslan school siege in which 330 hostages were killed. It came less than a month before parliamentary elections in Chechnya, hailed by Putin as evidence that the region is becoming stable.

    The 24 hours of gun battles in which several police stations and other security forces buildings were attacked left at least 108 dead, including more than 60 militants. Nearly 30 others were detained.

    Most of the gunmen were thought to be members of Yarmuk, a homegrown fundamentalist group that the local authorities twice claimed to have destroyed.

    Go read for a detailed look at the attack.

    UPDATE: Mac Powell at In the Bullpen has more on the story, including a link to an interview with a hostage that gives an insight into the chilling mindset of the Islamist terrorists.

  • U.S., Britain, Iran Trade Charges over Attacks

    Bomb attacks hit Iran over the weekend, and Iran responded by pointing an accusing finger at the Brits.

    Yo, Iran: Pot, kettle, black.

    Iran’s president accused Britain on Sunday of being behind deadly weekend bomb attacks in Iran, sharply escalating tension after the United States and Britain charged Iran was involved in insurgent attacks in Iraq.

    “We are very suspicious about the role of British forces in perpetrating such terrorist acts,” the ISNA student news agency quoted Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as saying of twin bombings that killed five people in southwest Iran on Saturday.

    “Our people are used to these kind of incidents, and our intelligence agents found the footprints of Britain in the same incidents before,” Ahmadinejad said during a cabinet meeting.

    […]

    Britain, which has more than 8,000 troops in southern Iraq, has denied any link with the two bombs in the oil city Ahvaz, which injured more than 80, and with the string of attacks this year in Khuzestan province, the center of Iran’s oil industry.

    No one has claimed responsibility for the homemade bombs, planted in garbage bins and detonated a few minutes apart.

    Ahmadinejad’s remarks raised tension between Tehran and London to new heights. Relations were already sensitive because talks between Iran and Britain, France and Germany on Iran’s controversial nuclear program broke down in August.

    Britain and the United States have accused Iran or the Tehran-backed Lebanese group Hizbollah of providing military expertise to Iraqi insurgents behind attacks on British troops in southern Iraq.

    Iran denies meddling in Iraq and says the accusations against it are psychological warfare tied to efforts by Washington and London to report Tehran to the U.N. Security Council for possible sanctions over its nuclear program.

    Frankly, I wouldn’t be surprised if these attacks were a home-grown problem from a vary sizable portion of the Iranian population growing ever more restless for freedom and democracy. Likewise, I wouldn’t mind a bit if the U.S. or our allies were working to foment any such restlessness.

  • Iraq Constitution Appears Likely to Pass Referendum

    With official returns some days away, signs are already positive the the Iraqi people, who turned out in large numbers to the polls Saturday, will likely approve their constitutional referendum.

    Local election officials in Diyala province say 70 percent of the 400,000 people who voted there in Saturday’s referendum said “yes” to the draft constitution. Twenty-percent rejected it and 10 percent of the ballots were rejected as being irregular.

    Sunni Arabs, who largely reject the constitution because they believe it gives too much power and oil wealth to rival Shi’ites and Kurds, form a majority in Diyala, Salahaddin and Nineveh provinces. But all three provinces have sizable populations of Shi’ites and Kurds, who mostly favor the constitution.

    Without Diyala, Sunni Arabs now have a more difficult task reaching the two-thirds “no” vote in three provinces that would be required to nullify the constitution. That has raised concern that Sunni dissatisfaction over the charter could deepen sectarian and ethnic tension in Iraq, and strengthen the Sunni-led insurgency.

    Sunni Arabs lost power and have felt marginalized since U.S.-led forces deposed Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein. Many Sunnis boycotted elections in January in protest, which brought Iraq’s long-oppressed Shi’ites and Kurds to power.

    Sunnis charge the country’s new powerbrokers drew up the constitution with the intention of ignoring the Sunni people, and looking out only for their own communities. Sunni Arabs say that is a recipe for starting a civil war.

    VOA spoke to about a dozen Sunni Arab residents who took part in Saturday’s vote. Most said that they participated because they regretted boycotting January elections, and needed to feel politically relevant again.

    The heavy turnout gave hope to some that enough Sunni Arabs voted “no” to defeat the constitution. Others said that they voted with the hope that their involvement in the political process will help undercut support for foreign Sunni extremists, like al-Qaida terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and bring stability to Iraq.

    […]

    If the constitution passes, Sunni Arabs have a chance to request changes in the charter after elections in December. The challenge of Sunni leaders now is to calm their followers, and focus on generating a huge turnout of voters in December, which will then allow Sunni Arabs to form a political bloc to be reckoned with.

    Once again, the terrorists failed to stop the Iraqis from voting in large numbers and failed to make the streets run with blood. Maybe, just maybe, they’re not the great and popular force that some seem to believe.

    Also, with each election, democracy becomes more ingrained in Iraqi society.

  • Baghdad Blackout Caused by Sabotage

    On the eve of the balloting on their constitutional referendum, many Iraqis are having to endure the night that the lights went out in Baghdad.

    Insurgents sabotaged power lines, knocking out electricity across Baghdad area Friday and plunging the capital into darkness on the eve of a landmark vote on a constitution aimed at defining democracy in a nation once ruled by Saddam Hussein.

    For most of the day, Iraqis were hunkered down in their homes, with the streets of the Iraqi capital almost empty hours before a 10 p.m. curfew and the country sealed off from the outside world as borders and airports were closed for Saturday’s referendum.

    […]

    Although there has been a lull so far this month in major insurgent attacks in Baghdad, the U.S. military has warned of an upsurge in violence to coincide with the vote.

    Mahmoud al-Saaedi, an Electricity Ministry spokesman, said power lines were sabotaged between the northern towns of Kirkuk and Beiji leading to the Baghdad region. He did not specify how insurgents damaged the lines, but militants in the past have used bombs to hit infrastructure.

    The lights went out soon after sundown, when Muslims break their daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan, and power was still off more than two hours later.

    Baghdad’s skyline was black except for pinpoints of light from private generators. The blackout appeared to have affected much of Baghdad province, an area of 2,250 square miles.

    Tens of thousands of Iraqi army troops and policemen, meanwhile, formed security rings around the nation’s estimated 6,000 polling stations and set up checkpoints on highways and inside cities.

    Tomorrow could be a very interesting news day, although it will be some time before results are known.

    As to the referendum, there are two ways in which it could fail to pass.

    Ratification of the constitution requires approval by a majority of voters nationwide.

    However, if two-thirds of voters in any three of Iraq’s 18 provinces vote “no,” the constitution will be defeated and Sunni Arab opponents have a chance of swinging the ballot in four volatile provinces – Anbar, Nineveh, Salahuddin and Diyala.

    Should the constitution be shot down, it would be a blow to the governmental time tables. It should not be considered devastating to our overall goals, though that is how I fully expect our media to trumpet the story.

  • Al-Qaida: US faked al-Zawahiri letter

    There’s no great surprise here, as al Jazeera happily pimps for al Queda and its response to a key intelligence release by the U.S.

    A purported al-Qaida web posting has charged the United States with fabricating a letter in which the group’s No 2 allegedly wrote to its leader in Iraq asking for money and laying out the group’s plans for the Middle East.

    “We in al-Qaida declare that there is no truth to these claims, and they are baseless, except in the imagination of the politicians of the Black (White) House,” according to the statement on a web site known as a clearing house for al-Qaida material.

    The statement was signed by Abu Maysara, who claims to be spokesman for al-Qaida in Iraq. It could not be authenticated.

    “We call on Muslims not to pay attention to this cheap propaganda and to remember that the media will always be the infidels’ sole weapon until the end of the battle,” the statement said.

    Further evidence of U.S. trickery is that Ayman al-Zawahiri always signs his letters to Abu al-Zarqawi with “Hugs and kisses.”

    I put forth my brief analysis of the letter here, but I’d also like to point you towards the Indepundit‘s inciteful look at the revealing communique.

    Kudos also to commenter SPC Richardson for pointing me to CentCom’s examination.