Archive for the 'Israel' Category

December 30th 2008

(Some) IDF Battle Videos On YouTube

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he Israeli Defense Forces are learning from the media-savvy Palestinians – they’ve created their own page on YouTube – IDF Spokesperson’s Unit – and filled it with videos showing the pin-point accuracy of their attacks and their targeting of terrorists.  Here’s video of the destruction of Hamas’ HQ:

And in a deft PR move, here’s a clip of an Israeli aid shipment to Gaza:

Unfortunately, the most popular clip – on that shows Hamas as the terrorists they are, and worthy of attack – was removed by YouTube.  Here’s Noah Pollak at Consensus:

[Showing] Israeli humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza and airstrikes that prevented terrorists from firing rockets at Israeli civilians … was apparently too much for YouTube, which moments ago removed several videos from the IDF’s channel, including the most-watched video, which showed a group of Hamas goons being blown up in an air strike as they loaded Katyusha missiles onto a truck. The point of such footage, as if it needed to be said, is not to revel in violence — it is to show the legitimacy of Israeli self-defense.

The rank double-standard that YouTube has applied to Israel is disturbing. YouTube hosts all manner of similar footage — much of it far more gory than the grainy infrared images posted by the IDF — of U.S. air strikes. Why is YouTube capitulating to those who do not wish for Israel to be able to tell its side of the story?

Why indeed?

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December 28th 2008

Sunday Scan: Almost A New Year Edition

South Ossentia: It’s Just More Russia

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t’s been six months since Russia pried South Ossentia out of Georgia’s hands, supposedly out of grave concern for the well-being of the South Ossentians. So, as Dr. Phil would say, how’s that workin’ for ya?

Not too good, according to Spiegel.

Besides Russia, so far only Nicaragua has recognized the separatist republic. Foreign journalists are only permitted to travel in the tiny country when accompanied by officials from the foreign ministry in Moscow. Even the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the European Union, which brokered the cease-fire between Russia and Georgia, are being denied entry by the South Ossetians and their protective power, Russia. For this reason, very little reliable information makes it out of the region.

This makes what recently appeared in Russian newspapers all the more surprising: that the republic is on the brink of social unrest, just as winter is beginning, because the government has allegedly embezzled Russian reconstruction aid funds, as the former South Ossetian defense minister and head of the security council, a Russian lieutenant general, explained; or that South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity fled spinelessly during the war; and that millions of rubles deposited in the safes at the national bank in Tskhinvali had gone missing and that Russian businesspeople are refusing to invest in South Ossetia while its brawny separatist leader remains in power.

In South Ossentia, any controversy is squelched by “state secrets.”  Any homes that are rebuilt are rebuilt through EU or American efforts, not Russian.  Money disappears.  Leaders flake.

In other words, Russia happens. Continue Reading »

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December 27th 2008

Israel Attacks Hamas; MSM Attack Israel

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ince November, Hamas rockets have slammed into Israel. Israel countered with diplomacy and incursions into Palestinian territory, but still the rockets came. Today, Israel responded with massive airstrikes, raining tons of explosives on Hamas security facilities. This much the Mainly Marginalized Media can report pretty decently. Then the pro-Palestinian fun begins: Here’s the decidedly anti-Israel NYT, in paragraph three of its report story:

A military operation against Hamas, the militant group that controls Gaza, had been forecast and demanded by Israeli officials for weeks, ever since a rocky cease-fire between Israel and Hamas broke down completely in early November and rocket attacks began in large numbers against Israel. Still, there was a shocking quality to Saturday’s attacks, in broad daylight on about 100 sites, as police cadets were graduating, women were shopping at the outdoor market and children were emerging from school.

Just another day in Palestinian, with those nice Palestinians doing what nice people do – supporting a government that just can’t stop itself from lobbing rockets into Israeli towns. Meanwhile, at AP, it’s much the same: A couple introductory paragraphs do a good job of establishing that Palestinian rocket fire is legitimately the reason for the attack, but then takes off on Palestinian sympathy, which is necessarily anti-Israeli:

The strikes caused widespread panic and confusion in Gaza, as black clouds of smoke rose above the territory, ruled by Hamas for the past 18 months.

Some of the Israeli missiles struck in densely populated areas as children were leaving school, and women rushed into the streets frantically looking for their children. Most of those killed were security men, but civilians were among the dead.

Said Masri sat in the middle of a Gaza City street, close to a security compound, alternately slapping his face and covering his head with dust from the bombed-out building. “My son is gone, my son is gone,” wailed Masri, 57.

The shopkeeper said he sent his 9-year-old son out to purchase cigarettes minutes before the airstrikes began and now could not find him. “May I burn like the cigarettes, may Israel burn,” Masri moaned.

And how about Hamas, Masri? Should Hamas burn for refusing to allow Israel to exist, for firing off rockets that led directly to the loss of your son?

Nope. Fawzi Barhoum, the Palestinian spokesman, said Hamas will “continue resistance until the last drop of blood,” a position dutifully reported, saying the Palestinians “retaliated” for the air strikes with more rockets.

A more straightforward report would have said that despite the air strikes, Hamas stubbornly continued firing rockets into Israel. In paragraph 15, AP gets around to telling us over 200 mortars and rockets have struck Israel from Hamas territory in the last week – part of 3,000 such attacks in the last year … “according to the military’s count.”

After dutifully reporting the outrage from Lebanon, Jordan and other locales noted for their openness and tolerance, the stories wrap up. Another military vicory for the Israelis; another media victory for Hamas.

Photos: Top AP, Middle Reuters

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October 18th 2008

What Happened To Iran’s Radiation Ship?

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ere’s NATO’s most recent update on Somali pirating from the NATO shipping Web site. Look at the last block of type to the right of the map: Vessels Released – Iran Deyanat.

C-SM readers know that the Iran Deyanat contains a cargo so toxic it allegedly killed off many of the pirates who boarded it, and that the Russians believe it is a uraniaum-laden dirty bomb bound for Israel.

But now it’s gone.

I’ve poked around the internet yesterday and today and can find nothing about the ship, its cargo, its ransoming or its new destination. It is known that the ship was being closely monitored by the U.S. Navy. Could we have ransomed it, taken it to sea and sunk it? Possible. Could the Iranians have ransomed it and sent it on its merry way? Unlikely.

Will Iran and China – where the uranium-laden sand reportedly was loaded into the Iran Deyanat’s hold – ever have to answer tough questions about what they were up to. Oh, come on!

hat-tip: Jim

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October 12th 2008

Sunday Scan – 10/12/2008

Global Warming Update

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e haven’t been hearing much about global warming lately – economic reality vs. bogeyman theories, you know – so I thought it a good time to provide an update on just how the nasty warming of our planet is going:

Big snow flakes fell early Friday evening, turning Downtown Boise into a giant snow globe for people on their way home from work. The snow caught many people off guard, including this bicyclist heading down Idaho Street between 8th and 9th around 5:45 p.m. Across the Treasure Valley, tree branches heavy with wet, snow-covered leaves fell on power lines, causing scattered power outages.

This is the earliest measurable snowfall in Boise since recordkeeping began in 1898, according to the National Weather Service. At 10 p.m., the Weather Service said 1.7 inches of snow had fallen. The previous earliest recorded snowfall was Oct. 12, 1969, when a little more than an inch fell.

Pesky reality, dropping like thick, wet snow all over their lovely computer models.

Hat-tip: Jim

Continue Reading »

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October 6th 2008

Obama Supporters Fake Israeli Support

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enior Israeli military leaders from across the political spectrum talk their country’s security needs and the upcoming US election,” says the title slide on a video from The Jewish Council for  Education and Research.

The group needs to change its name to The Obama Council for Misinformation and Dirty Politics, because a number of the Israeli leaders say their words were taken out of context and the intent of the film was misrepresented to them.  (Log onto the group’s Web site and note the festooning of Obama photos and buttons proclaiming “Why Obama?” and “Jews Vote!” – letting you know the sort of education Manchurian brainwashing they’re pursing.)

Of the Council’s video, former deputy chief of General Staff Maj.-Gen. (res.) Uzi Dayan told The Jerusalem Post:

“It’s not only misleading, it was an interview about what the next president was going to have to deal with.  And to know that they used this interview and took five seconds, and put me in a list of people praising Barack Obama…

“It wasn’t about the campaign, it was about the political and security issues of the Middle East that the next president should be involved in.  Nothing was said about Obama or [Republican

presidential candidate John] McCain.”

Former Mossad chief Ephraim Halevy told a similar story:

“I was interviewed for a documentary dealing with what issues the new American president must deal with regarding the Middle East. … I was asked about the candidates, and was complimentary to both.”

But when asked about his opinion on who was more qualified to be president, Halevy said that he had rejected the question.

“I said that I thought it was inappropriate for an Israeli to advise Americans on who they should vote for, as it would be for them to advise Israelis on who they should vote for prime minister,” he said.

The film’s producers, Revised Films (what a perfect name!), said the Obama campaign was not involved in the film.  The Jewish Council for Education and Research refused to comment.  And the film is now out there, no doubt being played by Obama operatives to Jewish audiences in important states like Florida, with no disclaimer attached.

The JPost article includes the clip; feel free to view it there. I’m not going to waste valuable electrons on it.

hat-tip: Jim

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July 9th 2008

Peace Signals From Iran … Not

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ow would we feel as a nation if one of our top military officers was General Salami? Poor Iran; the head of the air force branch of its Revolutionary Guard is Gen. Hoseyn Salami. Remember “Salami, Salami, Baloney?”

Having to deal with Gen. Salami jokes alone might explain why Iran is acting like a bully, or a bull in a china closet. Or it might be because they’ve named their recent war games Great Prophet III. And here I thought there was only one Mohammed (which my spell checker jively tells me should be spelled “Mo hammed.” Right.)

[Mini-update: I'm pleased to report that C-SM did not run the photo faked by the Revolutionary Guard, like the NYT, LAT and other major pubs did. Here's what the other CSM has to say about that.] Whatever the reason, the Iranians tested several rockets earlier today as part of Great Prophet III, including a new version of their Shahab-3 capable of reaching that pesky nation they want to rub off the map. The Shahab-3, you may recall, is just a re-badged North Korean missile with the studly name No-dong (nickname “Bobbitt”).

Anyway, said General Baloney Salami:

“Our missiles are ready for shooting at any place and any time, quickly and with accuracy.

“The enemy must not repeat its mistakes. The enemy targets are under surveillance.” (BBC)

“Our hands are always on the trigger and our missiles are ready for launch.” (USA Today)

Seems like Western calls for Iran to behave itself are being ignored. Shocker. How much more bluster can it muster? Iran’s leaders appear to be marching the country towards the edge of the cliff, or in this case, the edge of the Gulf, with the only outrage left being an attempt to close off the Straits of Hormouz. That’s an act of war in most people’s book, although Al Gore might see it as a brave move against global warming.

On a more reasonable note, let’s remember that the Israelis just staged their own war games that looked an awful lot like a planning session for an aerial raid on a country about as far away as, oh, Iran. So for Iran to come back with a Shahab-3 test launch is at one level a quo for the Israeli’s quid.

At another level, it’s just more evidence that there’s a bunch of crazed, last-days theocrats running a country that’s rushing towards getting something fissionable to cap off their No-dongs. And Obama, who can’t even find the magic words to convince us he’s not rushing to the middle, wants us to put his diplomacy skills up as our defense against these guys.

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June 23rd 2008

Catching Fireballs

The U.N. press pool includes reporters from papers that don’t even bother pretending to be sources of objective news, which results in some interesting questions at the daily press briefing at Turtle Bay. When the subject turns to Israel, the questions can be quite enlightening, as seen during today’s UN press daily briefing:

Question: Does the Secretary-General subscribe to the point of view of Mr. ElBaradei that any threat by Israel to Iran could really bring about a fireball in the whole region?

Spokesperson: I don’t have any information about that. The Secretary-General is certainly aware of what Mr. ElBaradei has been saying, but I don’t have any specific statement to make at this point.

The spokesperson might want to consider this alternative response:

Fantasy Spokesperson: Please explain what you mean by “a fireball.” My understanding is that Iran has threatened to place nuclear fireballs throughout Israel so as to, in Mr. Ahmedinejad’s own words, wipe Israel off the map. Are you talking about those threatened fireballs or some other fireballs?

We continue with the Q&A from the briefing:

Question: Why is the Secretary-General always slow to react to any threats by Israel?

Spokesperson: Well, we don’t react to threats; there are so many of them all around the world and all over the planet. If we reacted to threats and not to actual, physical, proven danger, I think the Secretary-General would be busy 24 hours a day issuing statements.

You know, I think ol’ Spokesperson could have done better. How about:

Fantasy Spokesperson: It could be because then, in all fairness, he would have to respond to threats to Israel. Do you really want him to get into all the surrounding nations and entities that have called for the elimination of Israel’s right to exist? Would you like him to discuss the threat of the proposed genocide of the Israeli people?

OK now, last question! Let’s see if Spokesperson learned from the valued free coaching:

Question: But here you have a situation that is really escalating, especially on the vocal level. And the Middle East is not just any area. It is a very inflammable area, as we all know. Does that not concern Mr. Ban Ki-moon?

Spokesperson: It concerns him, definitely. It does concern him. Several times he has appealed for calm and for people to refrain from threats.

Will the need for coaching ever end?

Fantasy Spokesperson: It concerns him, definitely. It does concern him. He would particularly like to see the day when the inflammatory anti-Israel media decide to cool down the rhetoric, stop running every trumped-up Palestinian charge verbatim, and also stop ignoring Israel’s position in its entirety. But Mr. Ki-moon is a realist and he understand there’s about as much a chance of that as there is a free and fair election under Robert Mugabe or the free practice of religion in China.

I remain, as always, available to the U.N. staff to help them with their messaging and media training.

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May 18th 2008

Sunday Scan

Who You Gonna Mourn To?

China, an atheist regime that forces “religion” into a state-run box and prosecutes practitioners of serious religion, has called for three days of mourning for the tens of thousands of victims of last week’s devastating earthquake.

Who will the country mourn to? A vacuum? The spirit of Mao, who, decomposed as he is, does not offer much eternal hope?

The answer is in the heart of those that suffer, as this AP story reveals:

Dozens of students were buried in new graves dotting a green hillside overlooking the rubble, the small mounds of dirt failing to block the pungent smell of decay wafting from the ground. Most graves were unmarked, though several had wooden markers with names scribbled on them.

Zhou Bencen, 36, said he raced to the town’s middle school after the earthquake, where relatives who arrived earlier had dug out the body of his 13-year-old daughter, Zhou Xiao, crushed on the first floor.

Zhou cradled his wife in his arms, holding her hand and stroking her back while she sobbed hysterically. “Oh God, oh God, why is life so bitter?”

Oh God, give them comfort. The state certainly can’t.

Moral Relativism Alert!

Before straying too far from AP, let’s turn our attention to a story filed by Terence Hunt earlier this morning about Prez Bush’s address to assembled Arab leaders in Egypt. Hunt tells us:

Winding up a five-day trip to the region, Bush took a strikingly tougher tone with Arab nations than he did with Israel in a speech Thursday to the Knesset. Israel received effusive praise from the president while Arab nations heard a litany of U.S. criticisms mixed with some compliments.

Gosh. I wonder why the tone would be different.

One of the rules of thumb I teach my employees is that when your opposition is lying, distorting or just being ignorant, use their own words against them. That would apply with Hunt’s story. Let’s look at Hunt’s reporting on what Bush said to the Arab leaders and see if there’s a reason for the contrasting tones, shall we?

“Too often in the Middle East, politics has consisted of one leader in power and the opposition in jail,” Bush said …

Israeli Arabs have the right to vote and are represented in government. On the other side, there’s Mubarik, Assad and a host of other power-barons who have jailed or suppressed their opposition, and not one functioning democracy save the nascent one in Iraq and the crumbling one in Lebanon. Point Bush.

“America is deeply concerned about the plight of political prisoners in this region, as well as democratic activists who are intimidated or repressed, newspapers and civil society organizations that are shut down and dissidents whose voices are stifled …”

Israel’s’ “political prisoners” are people who have carried out or planned violent attacks with real weapons against Israel. In the rest of the region, jails are full of people whose only weapon is the pen or the tongue. Freedom of speech in Israel, repression in all the Arab lands leads to point Bush.

“I call on all nations in this region to release their prisoners of conscience, open up their political debate and trust their people to chart their future …”

Israel has no prisoners of conscience, just prisoners of action. It has an open political debate, and it trusts its future to its people. Anyone want to speak from the Arab side? Anyone? Anyone?

Point, game and match Bush.

On The Wrong Foot

The EU asked Interpol to look into the state of Islamist terror in Europe. Interpol found that it’s bad and getting worse … and it blamed England.

Britain’s controversial foreign and military policy has made UK the hub of Islamic terrorism across Europe, and turned the country into a fertile ground for jihadist recruiters, a report by the EU warned.

The EU Terrorism Situation and Trend Report revealed that British foreign policy presented critical dangers for all Europe: “The conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq have a large impact on the security environment of the EU.” (Source)

So the problem isn’t the EU’s policy of appeasing radical Islamists who promote race hatred under the protection of the EU’s tolerance laws? And it’s not Islam itself and its long history of violent jihad, sharpened in recent years by the phenomena of international migration, the Internet and Saudi-funded radical education?

The EU study may be worlds off in its finger-pointing, but it’s probably right about this: It predicts more terror attacks in Europe from a “rejuvenated” al-Qaeda.

Where are we fighting al-Qaeda? Well, we and the Brits are fighting them in Afghanistan and Iraq. Where aren’t we fighting them? Europe.

Big News From The Nanosphere

Advances in nanotechnology appear poised to dramatically increase the efficiency of thin film solar cells. As in from a theoretical cap of 31% efficiency all the way up to 45% efficiency.

Put on your techie hat and read about it here.

Anthropomorphic Hucksterism

More indications that the global warming debate is anything but over:

The Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine (OISM) will announce [Monday] that more than 31,000 scientists have signed a petition rejecting claims of human-caused global warming. The purpose of OISM’s Petition Project is to demonstrate that the claim of “settled science” and an overwhelming “consensus” in favor of the hypothesis of human-caused global warming and consequent climate damage is wrong. No such consensus or settled science exists. As indicated by the petition text and signatory list, a very large number of American scientists reject this hypothesis. (source, via ICECAP)

The OISM list doesn’t focus on climatologists, so the Warmies will discount the announcement. But all have university degrees in science and over 9,000 of them have PhD’s so we can postulate that they know the difference between good and bad research methods, and the difference between evidence and proof.

Meanwhile, as we look at ten years of global cooling having no effect whatsoever on the prognostications and pontifications of our electeds, Richard Rahn writes in WashTimes that global warming constitutes the greatest intelligence failure of our era, concluding:

You may wonder — if the data from the last decade show the Earth is not getting warmer, and the climate models have been making incorrect predictions — why are so many in the political and media classes continuing to shout about the dangers of global warming and insisting the “science” is settled when the opposite is true. (You may recall that Copernicus and Galileo had certain problems going against the conventional wisdom of their time.)

The reason people like Al Gore and many others are in denial is explained by cognitive dissonance. This occurs when evidence increasingly contradicts a strongly held belief. Rather than accept the new evidence and change their minds, some people will become even more insistent on the “truth” of the discredited belief, and attack those who present the new evidence — again an “intelligence” failure.

Finally, many people directly benefit from government funding global warming programs and care more about their own pocketbooks than the plight of the world’s poor who are paying more for food. This is not an “intelligence” but an “integrity” failure.

This One’s A Stand-Alone


SF Readies For Big Gay Bucks

While the 60-plus percent of us in CA who voted that marriage in our state is between a man and a woman are unhappy with this week’s CA supreme court decision overturning our will, tourism officials in San Francisco are decidedly … uh, gayer.

San Francisco’s tourist industry is betting that gay marriage will lead to a boon in same-sex wedding and honeymoon packages.

Nationally, gay tourism amounts to a $60 billion-a-year industry. Thanks to Thursday’s ruling by the state Supreme Court striking down the ban on same-sex marriage, California stands to become a destination spot for gay and lesbian couples from around the world who want to get hitched.

And San Francisco is hoping for the biggest slice of the wedding cake.

No sooner did the court decision come down than the San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau fired off a release to the gay press, inviting couples to get married in the city where “lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender history continues to be made.” (source)

If the ruling stands, gays from any state will be able to wed in California, unlike Massachusetts, which only lets its own gays marry.

Cue up quickly, my friends. A constitutional amendment is likely to cut your fun short soon enough. Had gays gone the legislative route, they very well might have secured the right to marry in California, but as long as they rely on courts stripping the majority of the sanctity of their vote, the majority will stand together against gay marriage — because they support the sanctity of a democratic, free vote, not necessarily because they support the sanctity of marriage.

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May 17th 2008

Time To Remember The "Global" In The War On Terror

Mark Steyn does it again, summarizing all I’ve thought about Obama’s snitty response to Bush’s Knesset (not Parliament) speech, and getting it just right:

Yes, there are plenty of Democrats who are in favor of negotiating with our enemies, and a few Republicans, too – President Bush’s pal James Baker, whose Iraq Study Group was full of proposals to barter with Iran and Syria and everybody else. But that general line is also taken by at least three of Tony Blair’s former Cabinet ministers and his senior policy adviser, and by the leader of Canada’s New Democratic Party and by a whole bunch of bigshot Europeans. It’s not a Democrat election policy, it’s an entire worldview. Even Barack Obama can’t be so vain as to think his fly-me-to-[insert name of enemy here] concept is an original idea.

Increasingly, the Western world has attitudes rather than policies. It’s one thing to talk as a means to an end. But these days, for most midlevel powers, talks are the end, talks without end. Because that’s what civilized nations like doing – chit-chatting, shooting the breeze, having tea and crumpets, talking talking talking. Uncivilized nations like torturing dissidents, killing civilians, bombing villages, doing doing doing. It’s easier to get the doers to pass themselves off as talkers then to get the talkers to rouse themselves to do anything.

And those well-crafted words brings me to what I feel, increasingly, is wrong with our position in Iraq.

I read of the Druze “300″ valiantly standing between the ambitions of Syria and Iran to overwhelm Lebanon in order to assume a power position over Israel and give Syria a port for transshipment of weapons from Iran and NoKo, and I think, why aren’t we fighting alongside the Druze?

Why don’t we have an adequate force on the ground with air support, to stop the advance of the Hezbollah – Syria – Iran front? Why aren’t we using our military assets to give Lebanon breathing room?

We’re not fighting this short war because we are tied up with the long war. There are similar opportunities in Africa, Indonesia, the Philippines and the Gulf — like precise attacks on Iran Revolutionary Guard facilities near the Iranian border — but the long war is limiting our options.

I’m reading Doug Fieth’s War and Decision, and going back to the first days after 9/11, we see these bursts of short wars to very much be in the initial response planning. Remember, we are supposed to be fighting terror and those who support terror, not just al-Qaeda. The Pentagon planners envisioned military actions in Africa, Asia and even South America to take out terrorists and their support network.

Then Iraq and Afghanistan turned into long wars.

The fact that they did turn into long wars maybe shows that the short war option may not be viable. Can we strike here and there and change things? If we support the Druze, can we save Lebanon, or will saving Lebanon require another long war?

A good question, for sure, but perhaps the best way to answer it is to try the short war option. Seize the ship with the weapons. Knock out the training camp. Close the bank account. Stop the next Janjaweed attack in Darfur. Capture the terror-king and his henchmen and transport them to some unknown prison for a friendly debriefing.

Do. Do. Do. We are doing a lot in Iraq and Afghanistan; we are converting whole societies bit by bit, allowing them to taste freedom from extremism and tyranny. It’s time to do more elsewhere. I don’t hear any presidential candidates talking about this, but as we draw down our troops in Iraq over the next few years, transferring authority to a more stable Iraqi government and a better trained Iraqi army and police force, we need to consider “where next?” for our hegemonic military.

We can go anywhere and do just about anything, so let’s do hurry up with getting a few tens of thousands of troops available to support freedom and trounce terror in theaters around the globe.

This is not going to be the Global War on Terror until we take it to the terrorists globally.

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With Obama winning the presidency by seven percent, we can't blame the media. Their laudatory coverage and refusal to extensively probe into Obama's background and [lack of] experience was at best responsible for five percent of his vote, the pundits tell us. Here is a compilation of over 100 significant instances of pro-Obama/anti-McCain bias during the 2008 campaign.

For all 'Media Bias 2008' – Click Here