Category: War on Terror

  • Cindy Sheehan: Fighting for a Sixteenth Minute

    My last blogging on Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan ended with a look at the time remaining for her relevance:

    Tick … tick … tick … tick …

    Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, the very publicly grieving and liberally financed mother of fallen Casey Sheehan, is on the verge of wrapping up a 25-state tour against American involvement in the Iraqi theater. Haven’t heard much about it? Well, that’s because August is over and the media has a new flavor-of-the-month by the name of Katrina, in turn now on the clock.

    Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, however, refuses to go softly into that good night of anonymity. After a failed NYC rally, Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan has decided to go whining into that good night with a claim of injury.

    Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan said Tuesday she was hurt slightly in a scuffle that erupted when police broke up a rally as she was at the microphone.

    An organizer was arrested for using amplification without a permit.

    “I was speaking and someone grabbed my backpack and pulled me back pretty roughly,” Sheehan said in a telephone interview Tuesday, referring to the rally Monday in Union Square.

    “I think their use of force was pretty excessive for someone that didn’t have a permit,” said Sheehan, who said she was not roughed up directly by police but was jostled when officers broke up the rally and arrested organizer Paul Zulkowitz.

    “I was shoved around,” said Sheehan, the grieving mother whose 26-day vigil near President Bush’s Texas ranch sparked anti-war protests around the country.

    Zulkowitz was released after being given a summons for charges of unauthorized use of a sound device and disorderly conduct.

    Paul Browne, the chief police spokesman, said Sheehan had finished speaking when officers arrested Zulkowitz, who had been repeatedly warned that he didn’t have a permit.

    Meanwhile, Bob Owens of Confederate Yankee has decided to try to slam the door on the legend of Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan with a one-two combination.

    First, the left hook, a potentially premature look at the rally in question and its ramifications:

    Do not be overly surprised if history decides that September 19, 2005, was the day that the anti-war movement died in the United States.

    In a true-blue New York Metropolitan area of 22 million people, the anti-war movement’s greatest star, a woman with “absolute” moral authority according to the NY Times own Maureen Dowd and branded the “Rosa Parks of the anti-war movement” by hopeful liberals, Cindy Sheehan managed to draw just 150 supporters, or 0.00068-percent of the tri-state metro area, to her well-advertised speech in Hyde Park.

    Then the right cross, an actual comparison of Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan to Rosa Parks:

    Rosa Parks… was the figurehead of a cause that fought to free an entire race who were being oppressed in their own country.
    Cindy Sheehan… was the figurehead of a cause that fights to defeat one man.

    Rosa Parks… fought the system to obtain constitutional rights.
    Cindy Sheehan… says our constitution isn’t worth fighting for.

    Rosa Parks… was “tired of giving in.”
    Cindy Sheehan… wants for nothing more than for the United States to give in.

    Mr. Owens has more, so go give him a gander. Meanwhile, my lingering question about Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan is this: Is there some sort of methadone equivalent for limelight addiction?

    Tick … tick … tick … tick …

    Related — Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan blogging:

  • Bishops Suggest Apology for War

    A group of bishops from the Church of England have issued a report suggesting the need for a chorus of mea culpas and heart-tugging regrets over the Iraqi theater in the war against Islamist terror. They also want to top that off with a possible group hug.

    Church of England bishops have suggested Christian leaders apologise to Muslim leaders for the war in Iraq.

    A report from a working group of bishops says the war was one of a “long litany of errors” relating to Iraq.

    As the government is unlikely to offer an apology, a meeting of religious leaders would provide a “public act of institutional repentance”, it said.

    It urges a “truth and reconciliation” meeting, but acknowledges that arranging it could be difficult.

    The report, entitled Countering Terrorism: Power, Violence and Democracy Post 9/11, was written by a working group of the Church of England’s House of Bishops.

    It suggests the meeting would be an opportunity to apologise for the way the West has contributed to the situation in Iraq, including the war.

    The Church of England has criticised the war, saying it was not a “just war”.

    But a dilemma now exists for those within the Church – to pull out of Iraq without a stable democracy in place would be irresponsible, but to stay suggests collusion with a “gravely mistaken” war, the bishops said.

    But if collusion was a necessary evil, the report says, there needs to be a degree of public recognition of the West’s responsibility for the present situation.

    “It might be possible for there to be a public gathering…at which Christian leaders meet with religious leaders of other, mainly Muslim, traditions, on the basis of truth and reconciliation, at which there would be a public recognition of at least some of the factors mentioned [in the report].”

    One of the co-authors of the report, Bishop Richard Harries, explains his thoughts on the report in this column. Sifting through, I found the following gem:

    Our report deals not only with the threat of terrorism but with American power, perceived by many Muslims and others to be the major threat to world order today. While US power is a reality that has to be frankly faced, its mixture of deluded self-righteousness and genuine altruism make it ambiguous.

    As is well known, President Bush gets much of his support from a particular Christian constituency with a distinctive slant on what’s happening in the world today, based on biblical prophecy.

    I support President Bush in our anti-Islamist efforts. I am also an atheist with strong libertarian leanings who did not vote for Bush in 2000. I wonder what broad brush the dear bishop would choose to paint over my stance of the Iraqi theater, as I’m obviously harboring no hopes for Crusade or Judgement Day.

    Normally, I would love to fisk this piece and the article on the bishops’ report. Bishop Harries’ thoughts on Just War and wars of intervention are just ripe for the picking. However, in this particular case, I’ll leave it to the Brits themselves. First, here’s a Daily Telegraph editorial.

    A sorry body of bishops

    Western Christians should show “institutional repentance” – should apologise – for the Iraq war, according to a working group of Church of England bishops led by the Rt Rev Richard Harries, the Bishop of Oxford. Just to make it clear what they mean, the bishops suggest a public meeting where Christian leaders would acknowledge, in front of “mainly Muslim” leaders, the wrongs done by the West.

    The bishops predict that such an event will be “dismissed as a cheap gesture”. In reality it would be a very expensive gesture, for a reason that seems to have escaped the bishops in their 101-page document, called without conscious irony Countering Terrorism. First, no one – a zero percentage in statistical terms – in the Muslim world is going to read the 101 pages of nuanced, Englishly civilised, but mostly political rumination. So that would leave Muslims with the impression conveyed by a public act of apology.

    The impression given to the Islamic world by such an act, or even its proposal, is that the bishops of England had confirmed that the war against Iraq was a Christian crusade against Muslims. That is not what the bishops mean to say. They opposed the war. They think it was mostly about oil and American power. The inflammatory consequences of reinforcing the erroneous notion of a war against Islam could be far more horrific than anything yet seen, even in Iraq.

    Meanwhile, Stephen Pollard comes out with guns blazing in defense of Americans.

    Sorry we liberated you guys

    Forget all the sophistic arguments about the war acting as a recruiting ground for terror or concern about the terrorists’ victims. The real problem is the very fact of “deeply flawed” Western democracies (as they put it) taking action against tyranny.

    Worse still — yes, you knew it was coming, and here it is — it was America that led the way. So consumed are they with hatred for America that they consider Saddam to be preferable to democracy, if it has been facilitated by America. In a passage of breathtakingly blinkered bigotry, we are told that “what distinguishes it (the US) from many other empires in history is its strong sense of moral righteousness”.

    No. What distinguishes America is that when it fights it does so not to impose tyranny but to promote freedom and the stable democracy of which the bishops are so contemptuous. Without America sending its sons to fight for liberty, we would be speaking German.

    While I like the gist of Pollard’s column, I don’t want anyone to think I support the American government in any attempt to spread or defend democracy from a purely altruistic position. In fact, I don’t want the U.S. government ever doing anything out of altruism — that is not its role. The actions of the U.S. government and military should always be directly or indirectly of benefit to the people of the United States. Let private entities, such as religious bodies, caring groups or heartfelt individuals, act out of selflessness. I do not support our military’s efforts in Iraq for the sheer good of the Iraqi people and the hope for their self-determination. Rather, I view those as aims that may eventually contribute towards the security of my own civilization. Bully for them, bully for us. But I won’t lie, it’s the “bully for us” portion that matters first and foremost to me.

  • War on Terror Update, 18 SEP 05

    I just wanted to take a moment to highlight three stories from today that deserve far more attention than they are receiving from our wonderful media.

    First, there was an absolutely gigantic story in the Afghani theater, as terrorists and Taliban holdouts again failed to keep the Afghan people from the polls.

    Polls close in Afghanistan parliament elections

    Polls closed in Afghanistan’s first parliament elections in more than 30 years, with millions of people casting their ballots in defiance of last-ditch attempts by Taliban rebels to derail the vote.

    Violence marred the start of polling, with nine people killed including a French soldier, while rockets were fired on a UN warehouse in Kabul and two would-be suicide bombers were wounded as they tried to attack a voting centre.

    But as the polls closed officials said a high proportion of the nearly 12.5 mln eligible voters had cast their ballots, signaling another step on a difficult path to democracy launched after the Taliban regime fell in 2001.

    ‘The voting started relatively slowly but after the morning it has seriously picked up all over Afghanistan,’ Peter Erben of the UN-Afghan Joint Electoral Management Board told reporters.

    ‘I believe a high number of Afghans have turned out to vote.’

    I wish I could tell you why this monumental occurrence isn’t being trumpeted as loudly as any single car bomb in Baghdad.

    Speaking of Iraq, I’m certain my readers know of the troubled writing of the proposed constitution. Did you know that the version to be voted on had been finalized? Probably not, especially if you relied on the televised media to bring you the goings-on of the world.

    Iraq approves definitive draft of new constitution

    Iraq’s parliament approved a final draft of a new constitution on Sunday and submitted it to the United Nations, which will print five million copies and distribute it around the country.

    Hussain al-Shahristani, the deputy speaker of parliament, told reporters it was an absolute final draft of the constitution before it is put to a referendum on Oct. 15.

    The document has been held up repeatedly in recent weeks by several last-minute amendments, mainly due to objections by the country’s Sunni Arab minority.

    “There is no way there will be any changes now,” Shahristani said. “The draft is being submitted to the United Nations and will be presented to the Iraqi people soon.”

    Speaking of Iraq, it’s nice to know that some allies aren’t willing to cut and run. In fact, some even express a willingness to prolong or increase missions as needed. Developments don’t quite gather the number of international headlines as announced withdrawals, but such is the media our military and diplomatic efforts must overcome.

    UK says to boost troop numbers in Iraq if needed

    Britain said on Sunday it would if necessary increase the number of troops in Iraq as fears mount that the country is sliding toward civil war.

    Britain, the main ally of the United States in Iraq, has about 8,500 soldiers deployed there and has frequently said its soldiers will stay until the Iraqi government asks them to leave.

    “We don’t need them (more troops) at the moment, if that’s necessary, of course we would do that,” British Defense Minister John Reid told ITV’s Jonathan Dimbleby’s show.

    “There’s no quitting and running, we’re there until the job is done.

    I first started blogging because of my life-long love of journalism and my disgust with today’s media. I may be enduring a little bit of “hobby burnout” lately, but at least the latter motivation is still there, constant and appalling.

  • Iraq Government Addresses Fears from Offensive

    The political fallout in Iraq from the Tal Afar offensive, now wrapping up, is just beginning. The issue remains as to whether the questioning will carry any weight with a populace growing sick of terror in its midst.

    Sunni Arab leaders in Iraq are criticizing the Iraqi government’s three day-old military operation against Sunni insurgents and foreign fighters in the northern Iraqi city of Tal Afar.

    Since the military operation in the predominantly Sunni city of Tal Afar began on Saturday, the government has been reassuring the Iraqi public that the offensive, near the Syrian border, was launched only after residents there begged the government to rid Tal Afar of Iraqi Sunni extremists and foreign fighters, who had turned the city into a terrorist haven.

    Still, several prominent Sunni Arab groups and leaders on Tuesday said that they deplored the use of force in Tal Afar.

    Contrary to the beliefs of some, terrorists do not respond positively to group hugs.

    Former interim Iraqi Interior Minister Falah al-Naqib criticized what he said was the government’s failure to seek a political dialogue with Sunni leaders in Tal Afar before opting for a military solution.

    “Definitely, there should have been a better solution than a major military operation,” he said. “I don’t encourage any military operations against civilians. I’ve been told that there are quite a number of innocent people being killed during this operation. I’ve been told that the humanitarian situation is very bad in Tal Afar.”

    Yeah? Well, I’ve been told of 10K dead in N’awlins. First reports have a tendency towards exaggeration, but that obvious truth holds little value when political interests are at stake. The Iraqi government must immediately and persuasively address any such issues in the local rumor mill.

    Iraq’s Shi’ite-dominated interim government says those reports are not true. It insists most residents had already fled Tal Afar before the offensive began and those who remained were evacuated and given tents, food, water and medical care. Iraqi leaders add that millions of dollars have been put aside to fund the rebuilding of the city.

    The government says that all Iraqis should be proud of the Tal Afar operation because it marked the first time that U.S.-trained Iraqi security forces had taken the lead in a major military sweep. Eleven battalions of the Iraqi army, three battalions of Iraqi police force and one special police commando unit are said to have taken part in the fight in Tal Afar, with a much smaller number of U.S. troops providing back-up support.

    Here’s the true story of the Tal Afar campaign — Iraqi forces overwhelmingly carried the water. This is the first step towards an actually viable and sustainable self-determination for the peoples of Iraq.

    Meanwhile, as Tal Afar winds down for now, Chad at In the Bullpen talks of a new sweep in the town of Haditha and includes some of the disgusting, though not unbelievable, tactics of our terrorist enemies.

  • Europeans Balking at New Afghan Role

    War without allies is bad enough, with allies it is hell!

    —Marshal of the RAF Sir John C. Slessor

    And today we have another reminder of the veracity of Sir John’s statement.

    Germany, France, Britain and other European countries said Tuesday that they strongly opposed an American plan for NATO to become involved in counterinsurgency operations in Afghanistan.

    Meeting with NATO defense ministers here at the start of a two-day conference, the U.S. defense secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, said he would urge the military alliance to expand its role beyond security and peacekeeping and consider joining combat operations against the Taliban-led insurgency.

    Although Rumsfeld emphasized that the 20,000 American troops would continue to handle the counterinsurgency mission “for a time,” he said NATO should consider deploying troops to Afghanistan’s eastern border region, where much of the fighting is occurring.

    He added, “Over time, it would be nice if NATO developed counterterrorism capabilities, which don’t exist at the present time.”

    Well, now would certainly seem an opportune time for NATO to begin building cooperative counterterrorism units and methodologies, and Afghanistan certainly seems the best available testing ground. That is, unless we’re still clutching the fear that the Red Horde is going to come storming through the Fulda Gap.

    The Pentagon would like to draw down the presence of American troops, who have come under increasing attack from insurgents since the spring.

    Germany’s defense minister, Peter Struck, said on German radio and television that merging NATO’s peacekeeping mission with the American combat operation would fundamentally change NATO’s role in Afghanistan and “would make the situation for our soldiers doubly dangerous and worsen the current climate in Afghanistan.”

    Yes, Mr. Struck, putting troops into combat would increase the danger that they face, but thank you, sir, as it’s truly crucial that the obvious be stated costumed as enlightening. Now, if only you would elaborate on how sharing a role in a mission already taking place would change Afghanistan’s climate, then maybe you would actually be saying something of value.

    Britain, too, is reluctant to merge the two missions. John Reid, the British defense secretary, supported a “synergy” in which the missions would complement each other. A British defense official said the real issue was “about NATO’s long-term role and how it can adapt to the needs of the 21st century and the new threats.”

    France, which has special forces soldiers working alongside U.S. troops in Afghanistan, said Tuesday that it opposed merging the two missions.

    A French Defense Ministry official, who like the British official insisted on anonymity because of the delicacy of the discussions, said “the two missions were completely different.”

    He added: “If you suddenly merge special forces or heavy counterterrorism units with stabilizing forces, which is NATO’s role in Afghanistan, then you completely undermine NATO’s role.”

    One issue with both the British and French statement’s here — a merger of the two missions is not actually being proposed with the exception of the very top level of command, as we’ll soon see. The mingling of stabilization and counterterror forces is not being proposed.

    NATO took command of the International Security Assistance Force in August 2003, the first time that the U.S.-led military alliance took on a mission away from its traditional base of Europe. Its primary role has been to maintain security, expand the authority of President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan outside the capital of Kabul and assist in the reconstruction of the country.

    Meanwhile, American troops have maintained a separate operation with 20,000 troops aimed mainly at defeating Al Qaeda and Taliban insurgents, chiefly in the south and east of the country.

    With NATO’s mandate scheduled to expire next spring, American officials are urging the alliance to expand its role, in part because of the urge to reduce the U.S. troop presence.

    At least initially, Rumsfeld told reporters traveling with him, NATO would not replace American troops in a combat role, but handle security and other noncombat duties, as it does elsewhere in the country. Then he added that he hoped NATO would develop counterterrorism capabilities similar to the Americans’.

    A senior Defense Department official declined to provide the Americans’ preferred timetable for NATO to take over the Afghan operation. But this week’s meetings in Berlin are aimed at overcoming resistance about taking on a combat role in Afghanistan.

    American military officials say they envision a joint NATO command structure in which countries willing to contribute troops to the counterinsurgency mission would be under one commander, while allies that prefer to continue to conduct peacekeeping and other noncombat roles would fall under a separate officer.

    This is not allies expressing differences; rather, this is mere quibbling to cover a fear of potentially entering counterterror operations. While one could argue that a unified command structure in the theater simply makes sense in the coordination of efforts, I would be quite willing for the U.S. to give in this area. However, I think the true issue is not this small protestation but rather the reluctance to actually play an offensive role in the Afghanistan arena.

    Both operations would fall under a single NATO commander in charge of all operations in Afghanistan, the officials said.

    Officials of several NATO countries said they assumed that the United States would want an American in that role.

    Judging by the current political leadership of NATO countries, I certainly wouldn’t want a French or German in that role. As I said, I would be willing, albeit reluctantly as I feel it makes sense, give up the unified command concept. Also, I would happily accept a non-American commander take the reins, depending upon the commander and the political backing (read spine) of his countrymen.

    German Defense Ministry officials said Struck’s comments had nothing to do with Germany’s federal election that takes place on Sunday. The radical Left Party of former East German Communists and former members of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder’s Social Democratic Party have called for the withdrawal of all German troops from Afghanistan and other countries. Germany has 1,816 soldiers in Afghanistan.

    Struck’s position was clear. “NATO is not equipped for counterterrorism operations” he said. “That is not what it is supposed to do.”

    No, counterterrorism was not the original envisionment of NATO. It was formed as a Cold War alliance, a counterweight to the threat from the Soviet Union and its satellites. Should the alliance continue to serve any purpose, however, it must recognize today’s actual threat — the radical Islamist expansionism that is clear to see around the globe. For the foreseeable future, that most assuredly exclusively means counterterrorism efforts, as the jihadists are not in a position to form up as a replacement to the Warsaw Pact forces. If the nations of NATO refuse to face this danger in its current state, I see little need for it to continue as a military alliance. It can be reformed in a number of decades out of the nations that haven’t rotted from within from their already troublesome pockets of Islamist immigrants when there actually is a horde to be faced at the border. Alas! I doubt that enemy will bring the rational behaviour that often seemed to keep the Soviets in check.

  • Remembering 9/11

    [Originally posted on Sept. 11, 2004]

    I recommend this:
    9/11

    I also prefer to remember this, my alma mater’s first home game post-9/11. The color-coordinated shirts were the idea and hard work of a small handful of students. Thousands of dollars were raised for victims’ charities.
    Red, White and Blue-Out at Kyle Field, 9/22/01
    (image from the Houston Chronicle)

  • General: Iraq Hurt Katrina Response

    Though notably hedging on any actual impact, the commander of the National Guard Bureau has said that overseas deployments may have impaired the Guard’s reaction to Hurricane Katrina.

    The deployment of thousands of National Guard troops from Mississippi and Louisiana in Iraq when Hurricane Katrina struck hindered those states’ initial storm response, military and civilian officials said Friday.

    Lt. Gen. Steven Blum, chief of the National Guard Bureau, said that “arguably” a day or so of response time was lost due to the absence of the Mississippi National Guard’s 155th Infantry Brigade and Louisiana’s 256th Infantry Brigade, each with thousands of troops in Iraq [emphasis added].

    “Had that brigade been at home and not in Iraq, their expertise and capabilities could have been brought to bear,” said Blum.

    Blum said that to replace those units’ command and control equipment, he dispatched personnel from Guard division headquarters from Kansas and Minnesota shortly after the storm struck.

    I could also “arguably” say that this is a rather poor excuse. Obviously, sufficient Guard units were available in nearby states. If these were needed earlier than they arrived, then they were not mobilized quickly enough. Beyond that, any possible loss of a day on the scene and able to contribute by out-of-state units may also have occurred had the Louisiana and Mississippi units been home, as the storm has caused an estimated $1 billion damage to military installations in its path and wreaked havoc on transportation and local communication.

    Blum went on to elaborate on planning for potential Guard deployment related to Katrina.

    Blum also said that in a worst-case scenario up to 50,000 additional Guardsmen per month will be needed in Louisiana or Mississippi over the next four months to continue providing relief, law enforcement and other post-hurricane services.

    Those 200,000 troops, if needed, would represent nearly two-thirds of the approximately 319,000 Guard troops available nationwide.

    Blum said his staff has almost completed a plan for 30-day rotations of Guard units so that no one will have to serve in the Gulf Coast for more than a month.

    In this matter, I do agree that the stress of overseas deployments will only compound the strain demanded by Katrina.

    There are about 30,000 Guardsmen in Iraq and a smaller number in Afghanistan, Kosovo and elsewhere overseas.

    Out of curiousity, when was the last time you heard a demand for an exit strategy from Kosovo?

  • Tribes. Go. Read.

    Should Blue vs. Red be replaced by Pink vs. Gray?

    Bill Whittle of Eject! Eject! Eject!, the first blog to ever catch my fancy and a major inspiration towards my Target Centermass endeavor, has resurfaced with a must-read essay inspired by the recent tumultuous news out of Katrina-stricken N’awlins.

    Well … what’re ya waiting for? Read it already.

  • Iraq News o’ the Day

    As a tribute to this weekend’s start of 2005 college football season, despite a not-so-pretty start for my Aggies, I’d like to look at two stories from Iraq in football terms. Specifically, we’ve had a couple of hard hits and a handoff.

    U.S. jets attack bridges near Syria to halt Iraqi insurgents

    U.S. marine jets attacked two bridges across the Euphrates River near the Syrian border on Tuesday to prevent insurgents from moving foreign fighters and munitions toward Baghdad and other cities, the U.S. command said.

    A marine statement also said U.S. and Iraqi forces destroyed a “foreign fighter safe house,” killed two foreigners and arrested three others during a Tuesday raid in the same area as the bridge attack.

    […]

    A marine statement said F/A-18 jets dropped bombs shortly after midnight on two light bridges near Karabilah, about 300 kilometres west of Baghdad.

    “The purpose of the strike was to prevent ‘al-Qaida in Iraq’ terrorists from using the structures for vehicular traffic to conduct attacks,” the U.S. statement said. “The munitions used in the strike were designed to crater the bridges, rendering them inoperable but not destroying them.”

    The clash at the safe house occurred when U.S. and Iraqi troops came under fire by foreign fighters occupying the building, the marines said.

    “Multinational forces personnel returned fire and assaulted the building, suffering one friendly casualty when a Multinational Force soldier was wounded,” the statement said without citing the soldier’s nationality.

    Troops called in aircraft to destroy the building, which was being used as an operational headquarters, the statement added.

    Karabilah is one of a cluster of towns near the Syrian border, a major infiltration route for foreign fighters heading for Baghdad and other major cities. Iraqi officials say “al-Qaida in Iraq,” led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, has taken over parts of the area after residents fled fighting between tribes supporting and opposing the insurgents.

    If I was asked to name items that I felt were legitimate issues concerning the Iraqi campaign, the failure to move more quickly to adequately control the nation’s borders with Syria and Iran would be very high on the list. I understand the extensive borders cannot realistically be sealed; however, I feel that much more could have been done to reduce outside influence among our enemies.

    Holy city handed to Iraqi forces

    US troops have officially handed over military control of the southern city of Najaf to Iraqi forces.

    It is the first of a planned series of security transfers across Iraq, paving the way for an eventual withdrawal of foreign forces from the country.

    Iraq’s army is “capable of responding to all security needs… we are now here in a strictly advisory mode,” said US commander Lt-Col James Oliver.

    This is good news, though some aspects are somewhat disturbing.

    Iraqi troops chanted slogans in support of local Shia Muslim religious leaders.

    “Long live Sistani,” the 1,500 soldiers shouted, referring to Najaf-based cleric Ayatollah Ali Sistani.

    Still, it’s a handoff, a small step that will hopefully prove to be one of many steps as Iraqi forces increase their numbers and abilities. Any area where the Iraqis have control of their security is a building block for the fledgling democracy. Meanwhile, the more that American forces are reduced from day-to-day security roles is the more that they can focus on trouble spots and the borders. Each step towards eventual stability is a step closer to a diminishing need for a heavy presence of coalition forces.

    As an added bonus, I received a letter from Iraq this weekend. It seems my ol’ tank crewmate and dear friend Bill, who I’ve written about here and here, is doing well, despite a recent IED close call. The letter also included 355 dinar, though the Saddam portraits on the bills lead me to think that I am not suddenly a wealthy man. Interestingly, when last I heard of Bill, his unit was operating in the vicinity of Najaf. I do hope that today’s handoff bodes well for him and his safe return. After all, his presence is expected at a pending wedding.

  • Sheehan Departs Crawford, Vows Something

    Gold Star mother and leftist flavor-of-the-month Cindy Sheehan has left her ’60s reenactment in Crawford, Texas, hitting the road in an effort get the U.S. out of Iraq, meet (again) with the president, cry in front of more cameras and generally meander her way towards either a future as an obscure answer in a future Trivial Pursuit question or a train wreck before the public eye. In my opinion, had the journalistic treatment of the Sheehan matter been handled in a professional and balanced manner, the latter would have already taken place.

    Sheehan, war protesters leave Texas camp

    After a 26-day vigil that ignited the anti-war movement, Cindy Sheehan took her protest on the road Wednesday, while a handful of veterans pledged to continue camping off the road leading to President Bush’s ranch until the war in Iraq ends.

    Rather than heading home to California, the mother of a 24-year-old soldier who died in Iraq boarded one of three buses heading out on tour to spread her message.

    “This is where I’m going to spend every August from now on,” Sheehan said as she smiled and waved through a bus window, after hugging dozens of fellow protesters.

    The group plans to stop in 25 states during the next three weeks, then take Sheehan’s “Bring Them Home Now Tour” to the nation’s capital for a Sept. 24 anti-war march.

    It should be noted that, among these many stops, Cindy’s presence is expected at a protest of the Navy’s Blue Angels in Maine, a protest with the ridiculous theme “Stop the Worship of the Gods of War!”

    to protest the false god idolatry of the Blue Angels Air Show, whose “ooh-&-aah”performances have one purpose: to promote badly-lagging military recruitment to protest the obscene waste of American tax dollars to stage these Blue Angels’ multi-million dollar extravaganzas [bolded text marked in original by underline]

    No explanation of performances by the Blue Angels during healthy recruiting periods is given, nor the fact that the Navy is not suffering in enlistment numbers. Apparently, worshiping at the altar of Ares is reason enough to hate an air show.

    Also, a poll has been released that shows the American public mildly supports the supposed cause of Cindy Sheehan, a meeting with the president.

    Poll: Bush, protester should meet on war

    Slightly more than half of the country says President Bush should meet with Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a soldier killed last year in Iraq, who is leading a protest against the war outside Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.

    The survey found that 52 percent of the public says Bush should talk to Sheehan, who has repeatedly asked for a meeting with the president, while 46 percent said he should not. Fifty-three percent support what she is doing while 42 percent oppose her actions, according to the poll.

    […]

    But the survey also suggests Sheehan’s anti-war vigil has done as much to drive up support for the war as ignite opponents.

    Given my already stated belief that the mainstream media has generally failed drastically in its coverage of Cindy’s circus, I would like to see a poll with the following questions:

    • Should President Bush meet with Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan?
    • Are you aware that President Bush has already met with Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan?
    • Are you aware that Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan has lied by giving two irreconcilable versions of that meeting?
    • Are you aware that Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan apparently lied about the original contents of an email she wrote to ABC News?
    • Are you familiar with any statements by Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan regarding Israel?
    • Should our foreign policy be decided by a vote of all Gold Star parents, including Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, a.k.a. Mother Sheehan?
    • Does the phrase “Able Danger” ring any bells?

    Meanwhile, here’s a column that demonstrates that not all in the journalism field have been chugging the Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan-flavored Kool-Aid and that her fifteen minutes may be about gone. I particularly liked the following:

    When Cindy Sheehan knelt to place flowers on her son’s grave, alone with her pain, she was a sympathetic character whose loss would break a million hearts. When Cindy Sheehan knelt to place flowers next to a stage-prop cross erected for Nikons and networks in Crawford, she was an actress studiously performing for an audience that may easily find other places for their sympathies to repose.

    Her supporting cast did her no favors by layering cliches onto what already was becoming a tired script, beginning with–fire up your bongs–Joan Baez.

    Having Baez show up for a war protest is like having Oprah show up at a Weight Watchers meeting. You get instant bona fides along with your gratification. With Baez, you get to bask in the real thing–a been-there, done-that star straight from the annals of anger. Speaking to a crowd of about 500, Baez said: “It was the final tear for the overflow and you can’t stop running water. Cindy’s was the final tear.”

    Whatever that means. I think something sad and poignant. In any case, Baez’s folk singerese seems an improvement over her declamations at a concert last year in Charlottesville, Va., where Baez revealed that she has “multiple personalities,” including a 15-year-old poor black girl named Alice from Turkey Scratch, Ark.

    Tick … tick … tick … tick …