Category: War on Terror

  • Police: Plot to Blow up Aircraft Foiled

    Well, the big story today obviously the uncovering of a plan to bring terror once again to the friendly skies.

    British police say they have arrested 21 people in connection with a terrorist plot to blow up aircraft flying from the United Kingdom to the United States.

    The plot was “intended to be mass murder on an unimaginable scale,” Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner Paul Stephenson said. The UK’s threat warning level has been raised to “critical” — meaning “an attack is expected imminently.”

    […]

    The plot involved hiding liquid explosives in carry-on luggage, and six to 10 flights would have been targeted, U.S. officials said.

    A senior U.S. congressional source said it is believed the plotters were to carry a “British version of Gatorade” onto the planes and then mix it with a gel-like substance. The explosives were to be triggered by an iPod or a cell phone, the source said.

    Some flights would have been heading from the UK to New York, Washington D.C. and California, the officials said.

    The plot involved Continental, United, and American Airlines, according to an administration official who noted that the list was not exclusive.

    The intelligence that uncovered the plot “makes very strong links to al Qaeda,” a senior U.S. administration official told CNN. The official said it is believed the plot was close to being operational.

    Later, CNN updated the number arrested to 24 and credits the information that led to the raids to infiltration by an undercover agent.

    British and Pakistani authorities teamed up to thwart the attacks, and 24 men were arrested in overnight raids in Britain, authorities said.

    An undercover British agent infiltrated the group, giving the authorities intelligence on the alleged plan, several U.S. government officials said.

    The men had not bought plane tickets, the officials said, but they were in the process of perusing the Internet to find flights to various cities that had similar departure times.

    If you’re playing catch up this story, I’d recommend starting at Outside the Beltway, where James Joyner has put together a wealth of reports, links, videos and updates.

    After that, I’d suggest Texas Rainmaker, where Jason has done some interesting pondering in a one-man attempt to connect some possibly-related dots.

  • Tonight’s Good Reads

    We’re Losing World War IV

    The Shiite mullahs who rule Iran and have seized the leadership of the Islamofascist war against us are as dangerous an enemy as America has ever faced. Although we have chosen to be deaf to them, their war aims have never been secret. They have been shouting them out on the world stage to a billion listening Muslims, ever since they handed us the first of many humiliating defeats in 1979. These Persian mullahs and their followers aim to restore Islamic supremacy in the 21st century by leading all Muslims everywhere to victory in a great global jihad against America, Israel, and what is left of the free world. In the time since their first act of war against us — invading our sovereign embassy territory in Tehran and holding our people hostage for 444 agonizing days — they have made enormous progress towards their goal, despite the double handicap of belonging to a minority Muslim sect and a non-Arab ethnic group.

    In the 1980s, Iran’s mullahs created Hezbollah, a Shiite Arab terrorist group in Lebanon, and used it to drive us from that country the way they drove us from Iran, but this time, they didn’t just humiliate us and mock our impotence; they tortured and murdered our embassy people in Beirut, and blew up 241 of our marines. In the 1990s, Iran’s mullahs took control of Syria, turning it into a puppet terror state and transit hub, and transformed Hezbollah from a purely local terrorist army into a sophisticated global terrorist network. In this decade, these Shiite mullahs reached across the great Sunni-Shia religious divide, establishing close ties with Sunni terrorist groups like al Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood; took control of the Brotherhood’s Palestinian branch, Hamas; and reached across the world to forge close military ties with nuclear-armed Asian states like North Korea and oil-rich enemies to our south like Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela. Along the way, they pioneered the terrorist arts of airplane hijacking and suicide bombing.

    And all this time, the Iranians — and their ever-growing legion of followers and fans — have been waging an increasingly successful propaganda war against America, Israel, and the West, among Muslims in the Middle East and far beyond it.

    Average Americans — if they remember them at all — consider the series of American defeats chronicled above and a host of others as an unconnected jumble of unfortunate events.

    It’s easy to do: Our media treats them that way. Muslim media do not.

    […]

    Today, Iran’s emboldened mullahs are on a triumphant roll, waging a bloody, three-front proxy war against us, using the Mahdi army to assassinate dreams of peace and democracy in Iraq, using Hezbollah to blow up those same dreams in Lebanon, again, and using Hamas to make a grotesque mockery of them in the Holy Land. Now they threaten to activate Hezbollah terror cells, here in America and throughout the world, to kill and maim us at home and inflict more carnage on our allies. This week, they mocked our efforts to prevent them from becoming a nuclear power, announcing that nothing we do — in the U.N. or elsewhere — will stop them from going nuclear, and sharing their WMDs with other rogue states and Islamofascist terror groups at will. More ominous yet, they threaten to unleash an apocalyptic surprise on us on August 22, the night they believe Mohammed lit up the skies by ascending to heaven from the Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem.

    Despite all this and more, we have yet to admit that Iran is at war with us, or to seriously consider striking back at her, and, in speaking of our own war aims, we never dare use the v-word — victory — anymore.

    Go read the whole thing. In case one is confused by the title, many people, myself included, often choose now to refer to the Cold War and its many, smaller hot wars (e.g. Korea, Viet Nam and Afghanistan) as World War III.

    Where Are We Going?

    I suspect that we will one day speak of the war in Iraq the way we speak of the Spanish Civil War — that is, rarely by comparison to the greater war that followed it. Peace is not in the cards. Things are going to get worse.

    Normally I would refrain from quoting someone’s closing thoughts in this manner, but the meat of Grim’s piece is in his short-term predictions for the Iraqi theater and his anticipation for the wider war that is bearing down on its heels.

    Hezbollah’s Army Revisited

    We began discussing Hezbollah’s military capabilities on July 21, after it became clear during the ambush of the Golani Brigade forced the unit to retreat near Maroun al-Ras that Hezbollah was not your average militia. On that date we noted “Hezbollah also possesses mortars, RPGs, anti-tank and anti-personnel mines, anti-tank missiles and possibly surface to air missiles…. Hezbollah is using infantry tactics and fighting at the squad and platoon level.” The IDF’s slow advance (over two days) into Bint Jubayl and the ambush on a tank unit were clear indications of Hezbollah’s abilities to stand up to the IDF as well as the IDF’s cautious nature on the battlefield. Yesterday we confirmed Hezbollah is fighting at the company level, has specialized units (mortars, antitank, logistics, etc.) in its combat units and is using sophisticated communications equipment, body armor and other gear.

    This is not to say the IDF cannot defeat Hezbollah’s army on the battlefield; the IDF can, and has done so at Maroun al-Ras, Bint Jubayl and elsewhere. But this comes at a cost in casualties, a cost the Israeli government seems unwilling to pay.

    Hezbollah’s actions on the battlefields of southern Lebanon should give the Israelis, the West and neighboring Arab governments reason to worry.

    Are we looking at the next evolution in the conflict with Iran and its proxies? Are we now on the verge of actually seeing somewhat of a stand-up fight or is Hezbollah’s limited degree of success (read success as avoiding crushing defeat) more a matter of Israel’s electing to fight this with practically both hands tied behind its back? My suspicions lean toward the latter, as Israel is hoping for a more lasting victory by slowly wearing down the enemy while focusing tremendous efforts to keeping world opinion and condemnation at bay by minimizing collateral damage.

  • Sheehan Returns to Crawford

    Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, never one to miss an photo-op, is back in the Lone Star state for a sequel to last year’s vigil in the Crawford heat.

    A year after her first war protest in President Bush’s adopted hometown attracted thousands and reinvigorated the nation’s peace movement, Cindy Sheehan resumed her vigil Sunday.

    Under the blazing Texas sun, Sheehan and more than 50 demonstrators again marched a mile and a half toward Bush’s ranch, stopping at a roadblock. As Secret Service agents stood silently, Sheehan held up her California driver’s license and said she wanted to meet with the president.

    ”It doesn’t say my new address, but I do live here now,” said Sheehan, who lives in Berkeley, Calif., and recently bought land in Crawford for war protests. ”My name is Cindy and Bush killed my son.”

    White House spokesman Tony Snow has said that neither Bush nor his staff plan to meet with Sheehan. ”I would advise her to bring water, Gatorade or both,” he said. ”Honestly, when you’re talking about the kind of issues that we’re talking about, Cindy Sheehan hasn’t risen to the level of staff meetings.”

    Well, I sincerely doubt this year’s attempt for Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan to talk to the president a second time — you see, what is rarely mentioned in the vigil coverage is that she actually did already meet with President Bush — will match the size and scope of last year’s sun-baked attempt. Still, I thought I’d point you to my little photoblogging of what the scene looked like in 2005.

    Other previous Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan blogging:

  • Releases from CENTCOM

    First Dance

    As I’ve pointed out many times, it is my opinion that the mainstream media has had a tremendous downward effect on public support for our military’s efforts in the Iraqi and Afghan theaters. The problem stems from an old journalism adage that a building that does not burn is not news. Okay, there have been many instances of misrepresentations, of usage of stringers far too friendly to the terrorists, and of negatively spinning positives when they are actually reported. The real problem, however, has been the willingness to repeatedly bang the drum of bad news while selectively cherry-picking or completely ignoring any stories of progress.

    It’s not that the military hasn’t tried to put out news of progress — indeed, U.S. Central Command has issued press release after press release that has been ignored by the media. So desperate is CENTCOM to get out the good word that several months ago they began contacting bloggers asking for links and offering press releases. Well, I gave them the link in my sidebar, but now it is time to help them spread the word of their successes. Don’t worry, I won’t publish every one, but I will be far more receptive to their accomplishments than the New York Times.

    Today’s stories are as follows:

    Iraqi Army captures four terrorists, weapons

    MultiNational Division, Baghdad captures four suspected kidnappers

    Hooah!

  • Iraqi Cadre to Begin Training Enlisted

    There’s been a remarkable step in the development of the self-sustainability of Iraq’s new security forces — the Iraqis have taken over the training of their NCOs.

    The latest cycle of Iraqi troops graduated from the Iraqi Army Noncommissioned Officer Academy here, about 45 miles south of Mosul on July 25.

    The class was the last of a series taught by U.S. instructors from the 11th Field Artillery Regiment.

    The latest Iraqi NCOs will now return to their units as trained leaders, while Iraqi cadre at the academy prepare to take full responsibility for future training here.

    “The (Iraqi) cadre … are charged with training Iraqi NCOs in the new millennium and beyond,” said Staff Sgt. Edwin R. Sanchez, who has taught at the Academy with his fellow Soldiers for the past year.

    The instructors, including four Iraqi cadre members, taught a three-week leadership development course which included traffic control point procedures, clearing buildings, drill and ceremony, physical fitness training, hand-to-hand combat, ethics and other skills similar to what American Soldiers learn in their courses.

    Sgt. Maj. Walter Murrell, a member of the U.S. training team, gave his last graduation remarks as commandant of the NCO Academy.

    “Teamwork is fundamental to what this country is trying hard to achieve,” he told the graduates.

    Murrell asked the Iraqi Soldiers to remember and apply what they learned, especially when leading a team of Iraqi Soldiers into a dangerous area.

    “You are the lifeblood of your nation, and you must never forget that,” said Murrell.

    “It was an honor to serve side by side with you. When the history books are written, you will be the heroes of the republic.”

    Sgt. Maj. Farhan, the new Iraqi commandant with the 2nd Iraqi Army Division, said the graduates will be the foundation from which to protect Iraq’s democracy and freedom. He also thanked the academy’s instructors for their work.

    “The role of the instructors is clear as sunshine … By doing a great job to train these Soldiers, the instructors deserve to be known as the heroes of the academy,” said Farhan.

    Hat tip to CDR Salamander, who chimes in with the following:

    You want a sign of success and hope? This is it. A professional NCO corps is the bedrock to any successful military. Even more than solid Senior Officers, without professional NCOs, you have nothing.

    Yes, this truly is a good signal of progress. In the past, I have been one of many who have complained that the good news from Iraq and Afghanistan gets ignored by the mainstream media while any bad news is heralded with a clarion call and then drilled into the public with a repeated dirge of failure. One cannot really blame the military, as they try to get the news out to the world. This should be a big story — ’tis a shame once again that, to date, the media have collectively elected to ignore it.

  • Brit Takes Control of Nato Troops against Taliban

    Our NATO allies have stepped up to the plate, unsurprisingly led by one of our staunchest allies, the British.

    A British general took command of an expanded Nato force in Afghanistan today, vowing to “strike ruthlessly” against the Taliban as the west’s military alliance prepared to conduct land combat operations for the first time in its 57-year history.

    Lieutenant General David Richards, commander of Nato’s international security assistance force, Isaf, based in Kabul, took over a multinational force in southern Afghanistan where British, US, Canadian, Dutch, and other troops face a dangerous mix of Taliban fighters, corrupt officials, opium farmers and drug dealers.

    Of course, NATO has had a presence in Afghanistan for some time; the significance of this development, the approval of which I discussed last December, is huge — our allies in the Cold War-era alliance are finally expanding from the relatively safe peacekeeping role into some of the more dangerous Afghan regions.

    The importance of this endeavor, both historically and as a test of NATO, should not be understated.

    Gen Richards, a veteran of successful peacemaking missions in Sierra Leone and East Timor, is the first British officer to command American troops in ground operations since the second world war. Nato officials have described his task as a vital test, to demonstrate the continuing relevance of an organisation set up in 1949 to fight the cold war.

    “We will retain the capability and will to strike ruthlessly at the enemies of Afghanistan when required,” the British general said.

    Nato forces are now deployed in northern, western, and southern Afghanistan. By the end of the year, the US wants Nato troops to take over from American ground forces now deployed in the east of the country. That would leave the US in command of its continuing Operation Enduring Freedom, with its special forces and aircraft trying to track down al-Qaida remnants in the mountains bordering Pakistan.

    Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the Nato secretary general, said yesterday: “This is one of the most challenging tasks Nato has ever taken on, but it is a critical contribution to international security, and a demonstration of our commitment to the people of Afghanistan.”

    On this blog, I have also repeatedly question the relevance of NATO in post-Cold War times. Believe me, I would be quite happy were my concerns to be laid to rest.

    Gen Richards said his new command was “in one sense historic”. He added: “Also it is important for the world that Afghanistan is not allowed to be tipped back to its pre-9/11 state and allow a Taliban lookalike government with its sympathies to come back into power.”

    The general continued: “Nato is here for the long term, for as long as the government and people of Afghanistan require our assistance. We are committed to Afghanistan and its future.” He referred to malign forces “perpetuating a cycle of oppression, murder and poverty”.

    Gen Richards has not been afraid to speak his mind in the past, notably over arguments between competing foreign agencies in Afghanistan and the role of private security companies. He has also made it clear that Nato forces are short of equipment, including helicopters and medical support.

    He will command some 18,000 Nato troops in Afghanistan, including 4,500 British soldiers based in Helmand province, a centre of opium poppy cultivation where the writ of President Hamid Karzai’s central government scarcely runs.

    The general’s priority will be to set up “secure zones” in southern Afghanistan and build up the local infrastructure – measures designed to show the local population that Nato troops are improving their life in practical ways, for example through building roads and irrigation schemes.

    Luckily, it seems like Gen. Richards is the sort that just may lead NATO to answer at least some of my concerns.

    It should be noted that the British, fighting along side the Americans, already seeming to perform well against the Taliban enemy.

    Over recent weeks US and British troops, mainly from Third Battalion, the Parachute Regiment, have confronted Taliban fighters and their supporters in a surge of violence that has killed an estimated 700 militants and 19 western troops, including six British soldiers. British commanders have been surprised by what they refer to as the “virulence” of Taliban fighters. They have also expressed concern about their soldiers being overextended in forward bases.

    The troops may or may not be overextended. The Taliban may or may not be virulent. One thing is certain: 700-19 is one heck of dominant scoreboard tally.

    UPDATE: In the comments, Damian Brooks of Babbling Brooks seemed to believe that I felt that the NATO allies had, to date, not been contributing. That was not at all the impression I meant to convey. I know that NATO has played a large role in the security of the Kandahar area and the training of the forces for the new Afghan government.

    No, my post was not meant to ignore previous efforts by our allies; instead, I wanted to point out the historical significance of a Brit being the first to command American forces since WWII and give a blog-pat on the back to NATO for stepping into the fight as an organization. In no way did I mean to short-shrift our allies that were already contributing with precious blood and sweat. Indeed, when the U.S. first proposed an expansion of NATO’s role in Afghanistan to the more dangerous southern regions, I would like to point out to Damian that I blogged that it was several European members that balked at the idea, and I later blogged that it was Britain, Australia and other nations of the Commonwealth, including and Canada, that shortly afterwards proudly stepped forth in NATO’s period of hesitation.

    I am glad that NATO has decided to carry a greater burden, but that in no way means I devalue the sacrifices of our friends who don’t need a NATO banner above them to prove their worth.

  • Not-Quite-Back-Yet Link Dump

    Okay, call it a Maui honeymoon hangover, but I’m not really back to the blogging yet. I’ll try to put up a few things, but I doubt I’ll get too serious until I’ve finished moving in with my new bride and setting up my new Fortress of Solitude in the upstairs office. Oh yeah, some time in the near future I hope to have some pictures for y’all of the joyous nuptials of Mr. and Mrs. Gunner.

    Still, I don’t want to leave you empty-handed tonight, so heres a few links worth your time.

    The Troops Have Moved On

    Neither party expected for the war the magnitude or the duration which it has already attained. Neither anticipated that the cause of the conflict might cease with or even before the conflict itself should cease.”

    So said Abraham Lincoln in his second inaugural address, describing a war that put 11 percent of our citizens in uniform and had by that point killed nearly one of out every seven soldiers. That his words are relevant again now is a troubling indicator of our national endurance.

    We are at the outset of a long war, and not just in Iraq. Yet it is being led politically by the short-sighted, from both sides of the aisle. The deterioration of American support for the mission in Iraq is indicative not so much of our military conduct there, where real gains are coming slowly but steadily, but of chaotic leadership.

    Somehow Operation Iraqi Freedom, not a large war by America’s historical standards, has blossomed into a crisis of expectations that threatens our ability to react to future threats with a fist instead of five fingers. Instead of rallying we are squabbling, even as the slow fuse burns.

    […]

    This confusion, in turn, affects our warriors, who are frustrated by the country’s lack of cohesion and the depiction of their war. Iraq hasn’t been easy on the military, either. But the strength of our warriors is their ability to adapt.

    […]

    Soldiers are sick of apologizing for a sliver of malcontents who are not at all representative of the new breed. But they are also sick of being pitied. Our warriors are the hunters, not the hunted, and we should celebrate them as we did in the past, for while our tastes have changed, warfare — and the need to cultivate national guardians — has not. As Kipling wrote, “The strength of the pack is the wolf.”

    Go read the whole thing. Hat tip to Blackfive.

    Final Salute

    A flag-draped casket.
    Rifle volleys.
    Taps.

    These are the images of war that many have seen since the beginning of the war.

    There are many more images that haven’t been seen before.

    For Marines stationed at Buckley Air Force Base and the families they touch, the images are unforgettable. According to Maj. Steve Beck, they should be.

    This is a stirring presentation that shows how the American military honors its fallen and helps their families take the beginning steps down the road to healing. The Rocky Mountain News put it together for last Veterans Day, and I’ll send a hat tip to Florida Cracker for linking it on Memorial Day. Today may seem a day late to bring it to your attention, but I don’t feel that it is — our military pays such tribute and shows such care any day of the year.

    New-to-me Blog: History Post

    Welcome to Anthony Tully’s Online Discussion log of various musings regarding history, political science, current events, and fields of expertise like Naval and Romano-Byzantine History. Be sure to visit our website for a look at some of my Pacific War articles and information on just published full study of the Battle of Midway.

    If the name Anthony Tully doesn’t ring a bell, please review this post where I asked Santa for a copy of the new book Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway. Santa may not have come through for me in this case, but critics and historians have voiced much love for work of co-authors Jonathan Parshall and, yes, Anthony Tully. Hat tip to Frankenstein at General Quarters. In the interest of full disclosure, I’ve e-known both Mr. Tully and Frank for several years on my favorite discussion forum and have long valued their thoughts on history, religion, military and political matters.

  • Six Arrested in Minn. Antiwar Rally

    Okay, I lied. One more post before I call it a computing night. Sorry, but I’m motivated by disgust.

    I told y’all about the vandalism done to ROTC buildings at two N.C. universities this week. Well, now a recruiting office in Minnesota has fallen prey to paint and protest.

    Six people, including a man who allegedly splashed paint on a recruiting station, were arrested Friday following a rally of area high school and college students at the University of Minnesota to protest the war in Iraq.

    Police estimated the crowd at more than 200 people, who chanted and listened to nearly a dozen speakers for about an hour.

    […]

    When it came time for a march downtown, organizers changed course and went to a U.S. Army and Navy recruiting station near Washington Avenue and SE. Oak Street.

    One person, with face covered and dressed in all black, splashed a bucket of red paint on the station’s windows. Other protesters pounded the windows and scribbled messages including a peace sign over a sticker of the American flag.

    “They’re exercising their rights,” said Army Capt. Val Bernat, adding that campus police alerted the office days earlier of a potential incident. “However, we don’t appreciate the vandalism.”

    The protest group then dispersed at the nearby Coffman Memorial Union, where police arrested the man who apparently threw the paint, according to campus police Deputy Chief Steve Johnson. Five others also were cited for disorderly conduct and released, Johnson said.

    As military workers began cleanup outside the rented storefront, a group of students pitched in.

    “They disgraced our country and our military,” Ole Hovde, 19, a freshman, said as he wiped down the windows.

    Hat tip to Michelle Malkin, who adds the following:

    This is not “freedom of speech.” This is vandalism. It is a crime. The punks responsible for destroying property and trying to intimidate our volunteer military and potential recruits need to be punished to the fullest extent of the law.

    OpFor‘s Charlie Munn looks at one of the story’s pictures and questions the imagery entailed.

    For the life of me, I don’t understand this. From the picture, I get the symbolism: red paint=blood, but the peace signs? What this image shows me is the inherent fallacy of the “peace” movement. These protestors, who advocate a “peace” in our time, are actually demanding inaction in the face of genocide, murder, and ethnic cleansing. Millions of people should be allowed to die, according to this logic, but if one US combat brigade moves to stop it (and heaven forbid if it lines up with US national interest) then the only recourse can be “No Blood For Oil.”

    This picture shows me that the modern peace movement has blood on their hands. They have blood on their hands from the deaths of thousands of South Vietnamese that we didn’t help after our withdrawal. They have blood on their hands from the genocide in Cambodia that occurred when the “Domino Theory” came to fruition and Pol Pot got to enact his crazed thesis of societal equalization and wealth distribution (communism carried to its ultimate end state, where children killed their parents with machetes at the behest of the government).

    Mr. Munn goes on, citing more blood to date and potential blood to come. He’s right.

    I look at the picture, though, and I see shades of future dhimmitude brought on by misplaced and misdirected idealism. It is not the radical Islamist enemies fighting to destroy our civilization that sacrifice for these protestors’ freedom, but those enemies would quite happily bring the the peace of slavery or death to these idiots stained literally in paint and actually in blood.

  • Betrayal Within

    Cal Thomas opines very strongly on the developing Mary McCarthy leak story.

    What do you call someone who, in violation of her oath, reveals government secrets to a reporter, who then prints them and exposes a clandestine operation designed to get information from suspected terrorists that could save American lives?

    Here is what one dictionary says about that word: “One who betrays another’s trust or is false to an obligation or duty.” The word so defined is traitor.

    Ah, the dreaded T-word.

    All too often it has been bandied about, usually of late in the form of pre-emptive defensiveness much like unfounded claims of attacks on the patriotism of leftists and defeatists. Still, though facts may eventually show otherwise as much is yet to be known, it really is probably time for the T-word to at least enter into the media dialogue, as everything revealed so far seems to paint the picture of at least one rogue individual in our intelligence community, perhaps for personal or political reasons, deciding unilaterally and without legal authority what classified material should be exposed.

    If the accusations are shown to be true, the T-word is accurate and the actions are criminal. Mr. Thomas presents the key question.

    The Washington Post’s Dana Priest won the Pulitzer Prize for printing secrets allegedly leaked to her by Mrs. McCarthy. Miss Priest also won a George Polk Award and a prize from the Overseas Press Club. Leonard Downie Jr., The Post’s executive editor, said people who provide citizens the information they need to hold their government accountable should not “come to harm for that.”

    Would Mr. Downie have felt the same if Americans were leaking information to the Nazis or the Japanese during World War II? Imagine this scenario: A terrorist has information that, if revealed, could save tens of thousands of American lives. But interrogators cannot question him because leaks to the media prevent them from engaging in practices that would pry loose the critical information. Would Mr. Downie be defending the “right” of government employees to undermine the security of his country in the aftermath of a preventable attack?

    Former CIA operative Aldrich Ames went to prison for selling American secrets to the Soviet Union. Mrs. McCarthy allegedly gave hers away. If she is prosecuted and found guilty, her fate should be no less severe.

    This isn’t a political game in which a Clinton administration official serves as a mole for the Democrats within a Republican administration and then leaks information that may benefit her party; this is potentially harmful to the nation.

    Has politics come to this: that the national security of this country can be compromised for political gain?

    In-freakin’-deed.

    If you didn’t catch the McCarthy story at the beginning, feel free to go here for links to an intro and some advanced coverage.

  • Vandals Hit UNC, N.C. State ROTC Buildings

    EagleSpeak brings us the story and images of cowardice and criminality in North Carolina. As Eagle1 acknowledges, this one strikes at his heart for a reason.

    Over the decades, thousands of outstanding young men and women have passed through the doors of the ROTC buildings at Chapel Hill and in Raleigh. Men and women of character, courage and conviction. The slimeballs who marred the exterior of those buildings will never be able to lay claim to any of those honorable adjectives.

    And, yes, I have a personal stake. I graduated from the UNC Naval ROTC program in 1971 and my older son graduated from the UNC Naval ROTC unit in 2001. And we were just part of the long Carolina blue line.

    Go see the images [UNC images courtesy of Blackfive] and realize that our military, serving honorably and professionally on a scale unprecedented in military history and policing its own members who fail to do so, is already enduring the acts of a disgusting campaign against it at home.