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14 Arrested in Spain on Terror Charges
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 2: WoT Background
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1 00:00 Excalibur [4] 
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Page 4: Opinion
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Afghanistan
Taliban free translators captured with French aid workers
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Wonder how much Dhimmi-Tax was paid to the Taliban for their release. I am sure it was quite a bit.
Posted by: Woodrow Clomoter1684 || 05/28/2007 9:49 Comments || Top||

#2  Or they are responding to Sarkozy's election. Iran released the hostages when Reagan got elected, after all.
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 20:57 Comments || Top||

#3  #2: "Iran released the hostages when Reagan got elected, after all."

Only because Reagan sent word to them that we were coming to get our people as soon as he was sworn in, tw. Or so I understand.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 05/28/2007 22:42 Comments || Top||

#4  I'm sure you're right, Barbara dear. Wouldn't it be lovely if President Sarkozy did something similar? After all, aren't there French Special Forces already on the ground somewhere in Afghanistan?
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 23:03 Comments || Top||

#5  Heh-heh-heh, #4 tw.

One can always dream....
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 05/28/2007 23:07 Comments || Top||


Africa North
Congresscritters meet Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood
CAIRO, Egypt - Egypt criticized the U.S. Sunday after four Congress members met with a lawmaker from the banned Muslim Brotherhood, less than two months after House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer met the same politician.

The bipartisan delegation headed by Rep. David Price, D-N.C., met with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak early Sunday before heading to parliament to talk to a group of lawmakers that included the Brotherhood's Mohammed Saad el-Katatni. "The United States says that it doesn't establish relations with a banned group, whether in Egypt or outside Egypt," said Mubarak's spokesman Suleiman Awaad. "The U.S. says it is meeting with the Brotherhood as Parliament members, but doesn't make the same distinction and refuses to talk with Hamas, who is heading the Palestinian government and is occupying the prime minister's seat."
Good point, but remember you're dealing with Dhimmicrats, who could teach the Middle East a thing or two about hypocrisy.
Hamas is loosely affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, and some of the militant group's founding members were part of the organization in Egypt and Jordan. However, the Brotherhood, once notorious for assassinations and militant activity, supposedly renounced violence in the 1970s. Hamas continues to advocate violence as part of its resistance against Israeli occupation.

El-Katatni said the talks focused on current challenges across the Middle East, not on Egypt. "We met with the delegation for more than an hour and we discussed the American policy in the Middle East: Palestine, Iraq and Iran's nuclear issue," he said. "The talks didn't address internal Egyptian issues or political reform."
That would have been most impolite of the Dhimmis.
Price's spokesman, Paul Cox, said the congressman was unavailable for comment Sunday. The U.S. Embassy in Cairo also declined to comment.

The delegation also included Reps. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb.; Nick Rahall, D-W.Va.; and Gwen Moore, D-Wis. The group is on a Middle East tour that will take them to Lebanon, Israel and the Palestinian territories, Price told reporters. Hoyer, a Democrat from Maryland, met with el-Katatni twice — once at Egypt's parliament and then at the home of the U.S. ambassador to Egypt.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has refused to meet with the Brotherhood.
Posted by: Steve White || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Congresscritters meet Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood

synchronizing talking points on Iraq and Israel..
Posted by: RD || 05/28/2007 1:50 Comments || Top||

#2  "Congresscritters meet Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood"

Of course they do.

We already know they're idiots. Can we call them traitors now?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 05/28/2007 9:45 Comments || Top||

#3  I guess we don't have to question their Patriotism anymore - we know where it lies.

They just want to make sure their strategy is coordinated with their allies and they already met with Syria (and thru them Iran). More effective that way.

Will there be a photo-op of them launching a rocket into Israel?
Posted by: CrazyFool || 05/28/2007 9:53 Comments || Top||

#4  but the President of Columbia - an American ally in a region of increasing worries - got stiffed by the Dems during his DC visit. Real leadership, class, and vision there, Harry and Nancy. Assholes
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 9:54 Comments || Top||

#5  by the way, what's Jeff Fortenberry, R-"Political Cover For Donks", doing on the trip? Idiot
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 9:55 Comments || Top||


Libyan court acquits medics on charges of slandering police

TRIPOLI: A Libyan court acquitted five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian medic on Sunday of charges of slandering policemen by protesting that their confessions had been extracted under torture. The ruling came just hours after an organization headed by a son of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi said the whole saga may soon be resolved.

At a hearing lasting less than a minute during which the six defendants were not present, judge Salem al-Homari announced they had been found not guilty and ordered the plaintiffs to pay the legal costs. The nurses' lawyer Othman al-Bizanti welcomed the ruling and told AFP the charges had been "unfounded," but one of the plaintiffs, Jomaa al-Mishri, said it was taken under political pressure and he would appeal.

The five nurses - Kristiana Valcheva, Nassia Nenova, Valia Cherveniachka, Valentina Siropoulo and Snejana Dimitrova - and doctor Ashraf Ahmad Jomaa had faced a maximum penalty of three years in prison. The six have already been in custody for eight years and were condemned to death in May 2004 on charges of deliberately injecting more than 400 Libyan children with HIV, which can cause AIDS, at a hospital in the city of Benghazi.
Posted by: Seafarious || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
Blair's parting gift: Brit coppers get now terror powers
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Better to intern and deport all 1.6 million muslims than to infringe on the hard-won liberties of the rest. This sort of talk always brings the whining and the seething and the cries of alienation. Well, I am English and I feel alienated from my own country.
Posted by: Excalibur || 05/28/2007 9:14 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Hicks' Kids: We'll give him a second chance:
IT IS a horrible question for a child to have to answer: "Do you think your dad is a a terrorist?"

For the 12-year-old son of David Hicks, Terry Sparrow, the reply was: "I got told he went and trained with the terrorists." His answer on national television last night parallels the conclusion of Hicks's US captors, who have returned him to Australia after convicting him not of being a terrorist, but of being a supporter of terrorism.

So what is a terrorist? Terry's naive reply: "Oh, they're people with tea towels on their head. They kill people. They're suicide bombers. That's all I know."

Last night, Terry and his sister, Bonnie, 14, went on Channel Nine's 60 Minutes with their mother, Jodie Sparrow, 34, to say they were willing to give a second chance to the father who left them 10 years ago. As Hicks, 31, serves the remainder of his nine-month sentence in Adelaide, Terry said he was disappointed with his father. And yet he has been suspended from school for fighting to defend Hicks's honour.

Bonnie has not forgiven Hicks for leaving and does not consider him to be her father. "I call him David." Despite this, she felt he had "been in jail long enough". She did not think he was a terrorist but said some Australians had a right to be angry with him. "Yeah, because he fought against us and decided to fight with the Taliban people," she said.

In recent days, Ms Sparrow visited Hicks in prison for about 40 minutes and passed on a message from the children that they loved him and looked forward to seeing him. He "seems pretty normal", she said. But Ms Sparrow suggested he had no right to come back into the family's lives after he suddenly left when she broke off their relationship. She speculated that this was when Hicks converted to Islam. But like her daughter, Ms Sparrow does not believe Hicks is a terrorist. "I'm sorry, but I just can't, I can't see him meaning to hurt anybody. You know, not the Dave I knew, anyway."

Asked if Channel Nine had paid for the interview, a spokeswoman for the station said: "No comment on any issues of payment."
Posted by: Pappy || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "I'm sorry, but I just can't, I can't see him meaning to hurt anybody. You know, not the Dave I knew, anyway."

Not the one who I married. The guy who left me and the kids, he's not very nice. He abandoned us to run off and play with krazed killers, and ruined our lives and all that. But he could never hurt anybody. Not anybody else, anyway.
Posted by: Jodie Sparrow || 05/28/2007 7:14 Comments || Top||

#2  "Oh, they're people with tea towels on their head. They kill people. They're suicide bombers. That's all I know."

This is a remarkably astute summation given it is from a twelve-year old. Especially the bit about the tea towels.
Posted by: Excalibur || 05/28/2007 8:52 Comments || Top||

#3  Just what Ms. Sparrow needs in her life right now (a Jihadi Daddy). Lady do yourself and your kids a favor and break all contact with this idiot. Besides didn't Hick's lawyer claim that dear David had gone batty in prison? Not the kind of father figure you want around teenagers they are crazy enough.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 05/28/2007 9:41 Comments || Top||


Europe
Oil For Food - French celebrity gossip faces prison
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Francelet's lawyer, Daniel Vaconsin, has vehemently protested against the detention of his client. 'The system of justice is just settling old [scores],' he said.

Hey idiot, it's called "justice". It's based upon the idea that if you do something that is harmful to others, there should be negative consequences. Without it, most civilizations collapse. If your idiot client did what the courts convicted him of, they have every right to lock him up.

JFM, do all French attorneys whine as much as this piece of unflushed fecal matter?
Posted by: Old Patriot || 05/28/2007 14:44 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Ward Churchill Update
The University of Colorado professor who likened some Sept. 11 victims to a Nazi said Monday the school's president has recommended he be fired over allegations of research misconduct. Ward Churchill, a tenured professor of ethnic studies, said he wasn't surprised by the recommendation by CU President Hank Brown, first reported in Monday's editions of the Camera newspaper in Boulder. A university spokeswoman didn't immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.

Churchill, who has denied the allegations, said he would file suit in state or federal court if the university's governing Board of Regents follow through on the recommendation and dismiss him.
Of course he will. However, tenure has its limits: if the Board can demonstrate a violation of the terms of tenure (which misconduct most assurdedly is), and if they follow established rules of procedure, it will likely prevail.
Churchill touched off a firestorm with an essay likening some victims in the World Trade Center to Adolf Eichmann, who helped carry out the Holocaust.

University officials concluded he could not be fired for his comments because they were protected by the First Amendment, but they launched an investigation into allegations that he fabricated or falsified his research and plagiarized the work of others. The interim chancellor of the university's Boulder campus and a faculty committee have also recommended Churchill be fired. Another committee recommended a one-year suspension without pay and a demotion.

Churchill told The Associated Press Monday the university process was biased against him and that he believes he will get a fairer hearing in the courts. "I've got more faith in almost anything (than in the university process)," he said. "A random group of homeless people under a bridge would be far more intellectually sound and principled than anything I've encountered at the university so far."

Churchill said the faculty committee that conducted the primary investigation of his work was loaded against him, and that the university ignored his suggestions for his hand picked friends specific scholars with a background in ethnic studies to be members of the panel.

Churchill said he and others plan to file academic charges with the university alleging that the faculty committee committed research misconduct. He said he also plans to publish as many as three books defending his research.
Oh, I'll just bet those will go over well with the moonbat crowd.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 05/28/2007 17:19 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Ward Churchill is lower than whale shit. I can't imagine that he has anything useful to say or teach.
Posted by: Glaimble Protector of the Apes4393 || 05/28/2007 17:24 Comments || Top||

#2  he's a liar, a plagiarist, a thief, and scum. Defend away, asshole, because it will be spin
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 18:17 Comments || Top||

#3  A random group of homeless people would have beaten him to within an inch of his life and taken his secrect injun belt.
Posted by: Shipman || 05/28/2007 19:11 Comments || Top||

#4  Ward Churchill is lower than whale shit

Sir, I resent the comparison.
Posted by: Whale Shit || 05/28/2007 19:50 Comments || Top||

#5  I hope the university can pursue attorney's fees and court costs once they (most assuredly) prevail against this anti-American fraud. It would be rather heart warming to see him rendered penniless due to having filed a lawsuit when he knew he was wrong.
Posted by: Zenster || 05/28/2007 20:22 Comments || Top||

#6  it would also be nice to see his asshole atty/mouthpiece get nothing for the "nuthin but spin" he offered. Loser
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 20:37 Comments || Top||

#7  only at the Republic of Boulder
Posted by: Jan from work || 05/28/2007 21:02 Comments || Top||

#8  only at the People's Republic of Boulder

There, fixed it for ya, Jan.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 05/28/2007 22:06 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Kerry Said To Weigh Politics In 2002 Vote
I know, I'm just as shocked as you are...
WASHINGTON -- Senator John F. Kerry voted for the Iraq war resolution in 2002 after weighing the political ramifications and being told by his future campaign manager that he would never be elected president in 2004 unless he sided with President Bush on the issue, according to a forthcoming book by Kerry's former strategist.
Nice - two new books out on the HildaBeast, and now this one. Dish on!
The book by veteran Democratic Party strategist Robert Shrum, titled "No Wins Excuses," paints a portrait of an often-dysfunctional Kerry presidential campaign in which senior strategists clashed with each other.
"Can I get me a hunting license here?"
It also quotes e-mails from Kerry's former campaign manager that are highly critical of the behavior of Kerry's wife, Nurse Fuzzy Wuzzy Teresa Heinz Kerry. An advance copy of the memoir of Shrum's years in politics, slated for release in early June, was leaked provided to the Globe.

Shrum, who was brought into the campaign to instill that winning spirit that served Gore so well in 2000 help provide Kerry with a strategic overview, provides a vivid description about the events leading up to Kerry's decision to vote for the war.
"I was for the war..."
He writes that Kerry telephoned him on the eve of the Oct. 11, 2002, vote. Shrum said Kerry was skeptical of Bush's claim that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and that he "didn't trust Bush to give the diplomatic route a real chance." Nonetheless, Kerry asked Shrum whether he would "be a viable general election candidate if he was in the small minority of senators who voted no."
Here's what Kerry said on October 9, 2002; "I will be voting to give the President of the United States the authority to use force, if necessary, to disarm Saddam Hussein because I believe that a deadly arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in his hands is a real and grave threat to our security." I smell some bullshit here.
Shrum wrote that he told Kerry it was "impossible to predict the political fallout if we went to war." But he wrote that Jim Jordan, Kerry's former Senate press secretary and future campaign manager, "was insisting that he had to vote with Bush."

Shrum wrote that Jordan had "hammered" Kerry with a warning: "Go ahead and vote against it if you want, but you'll never be president of the United States." Kerry voted for the war resolution and Jordan became Kerry's campaign manager three months later.

Kerry declined to comment on Shrum's book.
Maybe the bullshit I smell is coming from Frum, then?
His spokesman, Vincent Morris, said, "Senator Kerry voted [for the war resolution] based on the promise of effective diplomacy and because he believed that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. He's said previously that this was the most difficult vote he's ever cast and he's acknowledged his vote was a mistake. Since that day, he's been one of the Senate's most outspoken voices to end the war."
"...before I was against it!"
Asked about the conversation, Jordan answered, "It wouldn't be appropriate for me to recount those conversations with Senator Kerry, but it's ridiculous to contend that I had the influence to manipulate a man of his stature and substance and judgment on a vote of war and peace. Right or wrong, it was a vote based in conscience and conviction."
Which would be a first. Rest at link.
Posted by: Henry Hill || 05/28/2007 11:14 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Unbelievable that this man had a chance to be President. A party of nuts
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 12:34 Comments || Top||

#2  But wasm't, sanity prevails.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 05/28/2007 18:18 Comments || Top||


How NOT to honor our fallen dead, see: Gov. Richardson
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 07:53 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I know Russert has no class but I thought Richardson had a modicum of class. I guess not. He was a Clintonista.
Posted by: JohnQC || 05/28/2007 9:26 Comments || Top||

#2  I think the entire Democratic Presidential field would do well to steer clear of all things Military. Because every time they open their yap they reveal how little they know about the military. The "Death Benifit" is not $12k its $250k (and had been for about fifteen years) or was until it was raised to $400k. And the benifit is a FEDERAL not a STATE benifit, also it was raised by President Bush not Govenor Richardson. Finally he should crawl on his knees to that women and beg forgiveness for LYING about her son. Families are given $25 (I think it used to be $12k) for immediate needs of the family. Of course the MSM can't ask intelligent question because they don't know shit about the Military either or Russert would have called him on the benifits declaration.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 05/28/2007 9:38 Comments || Top||

#3  "Of course the MSM can't won't ask intelligent question because they don't know give a shit about the Military"

There - fixed that for ya', #2 Sarge.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 05/28/2007 9:42 Comments || Top||

#4  The Dhimocrats know nothing about the military and see it only through pre-WWII eyes. And they want to send it back to that level of effectiveness too.

Freakin' buffoons.
Posted by: DarthVader || 05/28/2007 9:54 Comments || Top||

#5  The dickhead Richardson didn't even get his name right. Silver Star winner.
Posted by: OldSpook || 05/28/2007 10:02 Comments || Top||

#6  And even just as sad is that Bill chose to take the negative approach to the issue instead of taking credit [as usual] for the bennies his state of New Mexico provides veterans.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 05/28/2007 10:27 Comments || Top||

#7  Good catch Barb, of course you are right.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 05/28/2007 11:26 Comments || Top||

#8  Don't forget, Richardson also wrote on his resume that he had been a professional baseball player. Only problem, he lied about that too.
Posted by: Captain America || 05/28/2007 12:19 Comments || Top||

#9  I saw this train wreck yesterday. The low point for me was the insistence that we must negotiate with Iran. How would that go?

Richardson: Give up your nukes.
Iran: Death to America!

Hard to find the middle ground.
Posted by: Master of Obvious || 05/28/2007 13:34 Comments || Top||

#10  The middle ground is us killing them.
Posted by: DarthVader || 05/28/2007 19:07 Comments || Top||

#11  More like this:

Richardson: Give up your nukes.
Iran: Death to America!
Richardson: OK, Give up some of your nukes.
Iran: Death to America and Israel!
Richardson: Give up one nuke?
Iran: Never, Death to America and Israel!
Richardson: What if we give up Israel?
Iran: Death to Israel and America!
Richardson: Peace in our time!
Posted by: DMFD || 05/28/2007 20:43 Comments || Top||

#12  More like

Richardson: Give up your nukes.
Iran: Wen Ho Lee!
Richardson: OK, nevermind...
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 20:45 Comments || Top||


Yemen Agrees to Take Back Club Gitmo Members
Yemen said on Sunday it had agreed with the United States to take back most of the remaining Yemeni inmates held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba. "There are continuous talks with the Americans to hand over the Yemenis in Guantanamo to the Yemeni government," a senior official told Reuters. He did not say how many prisoners would be released or when.

Officials said President Ali Abdullah Saleh discussed the issue with U.S. officials during his visit to Washington earlier this month. Five American lawyers visiting Yemen said there were 100 Yemeni prisoners in Guantanamo Bay. Eight Yemenis have been released and seven were approved for repatriation four months ago, lawyer Martha Rayner told a news conference in Sanaa.

President George W. Bush is under intense pressure to shut down the prison, where 385 detainees are being held. Many human rights watchdogs say the prison is illegal because detainees are being held there without charge.
Attention, lefties! Now pay attention! We can't empty Gitmo because their homelands will not take them back. Maybe Mikey Moore would take home a cell?
Posted by: Bobby || 05/28/2007 06:48 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


Rolling Thunder visit President Bush
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It would have been cooler if Bush had mounted a Harley and took a spin around the White House. I don't think this group was invited or cared to atend the former occupants.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 05/28/2007 9:46 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Dartmouth President is Ex-Marine; Helps Injured Troops
ABC News Person of the Week!
Jim Wright is the president of Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., an esteemed academic institution that is well over 200 years old. Wright, however, wasn't always an academic. He used to be a Marine, and his military background inspired his recent work with the American Council on Education.

Wright has raised $350,000 with the council to hire college counselors for three of the largest military hospitals in the United States.

"Going to college was not something that I considered. No one in my family had ever done that. Four friends and I joined the Marines a couple of weeks after we graduated. It was my way of putting off going to work in the mines. I got out of the Marines and decided to go to college."

With Privilege Comes Responsibility
Wright believes that the members of the Dartmouth community -- himself included -- are privileged to have the opportunities given to them, and that with privilege comes responsibility. For Wright, that responsibility became clear after the battle of Fallujah. "I watched on television the accounts of what these young Marines were engaged in and I got to thinking: What can we do about all of these young men and women who are being injured over there?"

So Wright visited wounded Marines at Bethesda Naval Hospital to talk to them about their futures, and the possibility of starting over and going to college. He soon realized that injured soldiers and Marines who want to go to college face challenges that are unusual for most prospective students.

He explained, "By the second visit or so, I realized they had questions and it was not clear where they could get the answers -- if I go to this school near home, because I don't have any legs, are there elevators in all of the buildings?"

From the Battlefield to the Campus
With the help of the American Council on Education and the $350,000 they have raised, college counselors at the three largest U.S. military hospitals are answering some of those questions. They offer advice about academic institutions and online courses, depending on the needs and circumstances of the soldiers and Marines they meet.

And Dartmouth is going to benefit from this program as well, although that was not Wright's motivation. Three Marines, who have all earned Purple Hearts, will join the school's community next fall. "They will learn a lot here, the Marines who are coming, but we'll all learn a lot from them."

Wright also sends care packages to Dartmouth graduates serving in Iraq, including New Hampshire maple candy and a volume of poetry by Robert Frost, another Darmouth alumnus -- small reminders that they'll always have a home in Hanover.

Above all, Wright wants those injured soldiers to know that they are empowered and have future options that they might not know about, or may seem out of reach. "Late at night when they're lying in a hospital bed, when everyone has gone home, when it's quiet on the ward, when the music has stopped, when the automobiles with the 'Support Our Troops' bumper stickers are in the darkened garages across America, I want them to be thinking about what it is they can do with their lives. I want them to be thinking about going to college. I want them to be thinking about going on to continue making a difference in the world."
Posted by: Bobby || 05/28/2007 16:17 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Who would have ever thought Dartmouth would have such a president and that he would do what he is doing. One gets so tired of hearing the drivel that comes out of some of the elite academic institutions of higher learning.
Posted by: Glaimble Protector of the Apes4393 || 05/28/2007 17:16 Comments || Top||

#2  Bobby - it's 'former Marine'. The only exes are ones like Murtha.
Posted by: Pappy || 05/28/2007 18:14 Comments || Top||

#3  I'd be interested where he came down on the latest trustee election. The admin and faculty did their best to get Sandy Alderson elected, rather than the excellent Stephen Smith, who pledged to bring the College back to basics (i.e.:less multi-culti bullshit, more classics and rigorous scholarship) which frightened the academia. Powerline was all over it. If Mr. Wright was against Smith, he's compromised himself and the excellent standards noted in the article.
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 18:25 Comments || Top||


For Memorial Day - Put some memories of those who stood tall - here
The link here is just to war memorials.org as articles need a link.

With so many people posting here who served or know somebody who served or is serving and maybe a few who died in the cause...

On this day, Rantburg needs a place to post memories of the brave heroes.

So, post away.
Posted by: 3dc || 05/28/2007 11:45 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  To my Dad, sailor and gentleman, a role model I can't begin to measure up to, rest in peace, Ft Rosecrans Nat'l Cemetary. To my late Uncle Hack (Harold) - who was a Marine in the So. Pacific in WW2, and remained a Marine til his death in Fernley, NV, rest in peace, Uncle. To my late great-Uncle, Eugene Salet, Soldier, and Statesman, rest in peace.
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 12:26 Comments || Top||

#2  To my late father, 1st Mar Div in the Pacific in WW2. He survived and made it home, raised a family, did great things. Many of his buddies did not.

To my great grandfather, Bill Fox. Enlisted in the army in 1899, served in the Phillipines.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 05/28/2007 12:42 Comments || Top||

#3  Oliver Blackwell, Seaman, USS Hartford, Civil War

John S. Alling Jr., Medic, 101st Airborne, Tay Ninh Vietnam

Robert R. Maynard, Pvt, 2nd Inf Div. Normandy France

The Men of 1st Battalion 102nd Infantry, CT National Guard, Normandy France

Christopher Deangelis, ET2, USS Stark, Persian Gulf.

Charles Turner, LT, Attack Squadron 155, USS Ranger, Gulf War

William Costen, LT, Attack Squadron 155, USS Ranger, Gulf War
Posted by: Pappy || 05/28/2007 13:56 Comments || Top||

#4  To my bud Gus, Air Crew Chief USS Forestal, Killed by terrorists in the Philipines at onset of Gulf War 1. I'll never forget.

You were a true friend and great Patriot. Thank you for all you taught me and for serving our country with pride and distinction. May God bless you and your family.
Posted by: SCpatriot || 05/28/2007 13:59 Comments || Top||

#5  My uncle Ronnie. Korean vet and later a family man of unequaled character until his passing. Always a brought a smile to my face as a child and still serves as an example.

No offense Ronnie, but I hope its a long time before I see you again.

And to a couple of relatives still with us.

My father, I will never forget the story he tells about suntanning on the deck during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Now spends his days riding his motorcycle in and around Sturgis.

See you in Arizona Pops!

My brother, after finishing a tour in Iraq decided to stay in sandbox, this time with the FBI. Still there, clippin AQI and collecting large files on corrupt Iraqi generals and politicos.

You're still a pompous jock! I'll see you when you get back. You can beat me up for old times sake.

Posted by: Mike N. || 05/28/2007 14:32 Comments || Top||

#6  To my cousin, Lance Coporal William Clyde Northington Co.A 9th Marines. He was killed March 19th, 1969 in the A Shau Valley. He was awarded the Silver Star for his actions in retrieving wonded Marines and in charging, with two others, a Vietnamese machinegun postiton and neutralizing it. His Company Commander, Lt. Fox, continued leading his men although sereverly wounded by mortar fire. He was awarded the Medal of Honour. May we always remember them.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 05/28/2007 14:45 Comments || Top||

#7  To Mom, who served in Washington, decyphering Japanese naval code until the end of WWII, and to Dad, who fought across Europe with Patton's 3rd Army. May your rest in Heaven allow you to see old friends and comrades, share old memories, and enjoy old jokes.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 05/28/2007 14:54 Comments || Top||

#8  To Dad,
101st Airborne, Viet Nam. Don't know the details. He still won't talk about it. But I found the Bronze Star in the closet when I was 14. And I'm still in awe.
Posted by: Black Bart Ebbang5005 || 05/28/2007 15:51 Comments || Top||

#9  To all who served our country, who sacrificed in small ways and in large ways so that we could live safely and in peace. To those who gave their lives on behalf of others when they could have turned aside instead. To Dad, who came home from the south Pacific in a body cast; to uncle Buffy, in the front row of paratroopers at Normandy and again at Bastogne; to uncle Charles who was among the highly decorated there after several weeks of hell.

To Uncle Joe and cousin Larry at Pleiku. To Chuck whose marriage dissolved while he held watch deep in the missile launch facilities. To Larry's son Andy who served in Desert Storm and again in OIF, to my husband who served in a different way.

To the families - husbands and wives, parents and children and all loved ones - of those who served and died. Your sacrifice also made our peace and safety possible.

And to all the groups in small towns across the US who came together today to honor our heroes. To the scout troops who pledged the flag, to the local band that sweated in the heat and the singers who attempted the high notes, to the VFW and others who came out to honor their buddies with a moment of solemnity.
Posted by: occasional observer || 05/28/2007 17:23 Comments || Top||

#10  to unknown relative in the revolution and civil wars.

To my grandpa on the front in Belgium in WW-I.

To my uncle who went in D-Day +3 and was at the Battle of the Bulge and then on into the Ruhr,

To my dad who was 10th Mountain in WW-II in Italy,

To another Uncle in the Marines at Chosun Res. and then Vietnam.

To my dad's cousin who was OSS in WW-II ending up at Potsdam then other similar stuff until he retired after the cold war ended. His last words to my dad were "Pray for me as I am going to hell".

To the Aussie doc who fixed me up as a kid - He survived the Battan Death March and was tortured everytime he fixed up a pilot.



Posted by: 3dc || 05/28/2007 20:55 Comments || Top||

#11  To my mother's first husband. He got his family out of Germany to Australia, then joined the US Navy and fought all the way up the Pacific. Afterward he came to New York City, where he went to college on the G.I. Bill; he and my mother got their degrees in Occupational Therapy together, then married. He gave her a complete vocabulary lesson the night before she started working at the VA hospital -- translated from the medical Latin, because she didn't know those words in any other language either. The cancer was diagnosed six months after the wedding, and he was dead within three years. I don't know whether he was here long enough to become a citizen, or if my mother swore her own oath as a widow. His family name is Fuchs. I don't even know his first name, or any of his relatives; I didn't even know Mama'd been married before until a few years ago, and she only told me that much.

They weren't uniformed soldiers, but on Memorial Day I think of all those involved in hiding and protecting my mother and her family in Holland, and the labours of my mother and grandfather for the Dutch underground (Mama ran messages, Grandfather Berg forged documents in his beautiful lawyer's hand and created hiding places behind walls and under floors for those who had no right to exist), and the Jews of Palestine who did all they were permitted to support the British war effort... and much more that was unwanted from Jews, but needed nonetheless.

And to dear Fred Carroll, who has survived two wonderful wives after he didn't freeze to death in Korea, whose drive, creativity and loving kindness are an inspiration to all who know him. Also to all the men and women of VFW Post 7696, which doesn't have a building because there have always been more important things to spend their funds on.

To all the young men and women I know who have chosen to serve and protect. The neighbor's boy at Annapolis, hoping to become a SEAL; the ballet company's manager's daughter, who made Marine ROTC on her first try; my niece's best friend, heading to Al Azhar University in Cairo to learn Arabic -- she's not sure if whether she'll end up at the CIA, FBI or DoD, but she knows she needs to add herself to the fight somehow. Our future is in their very capable hands.
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 21:30 Comments || Top||

#12  To My Grandpa...who served in one of the first ever Combat Engineer units in the US Army - under Patten, and later brought our family to California. Props to Grandpa! To my namesake uncle, who was shot down and KIA over Bastogne. Bless them both.
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 05/28/2007 23:53 Comments || Top||


More details on Flight 327 released
Rantburgers will remember this one from 2004, published in the Womens Wall Street website by Anne Jacobsen, who then wrote Terror in the Skies based on this experience and others. Hat tip LGF for the follow-up.
The inspector general for Homeland Security late Friday released new details of what federal air marshals say was a terrorist dry run aboard Northwest Airlines Flight 327 from Detroit to Los Angeles on June 29, 2004.

Several portions of the report remain redacted. The release stems from a Freedom of Information request by The Washington Times in April 2006. The Times first reported on July 22 that this and other probes and dry runs were occurring on commercial flights since the September 11 terrorist attacks.

Excerpts from 51-page inspector general report:

On the flight, 13 Middle Eastern men behaved in a suspicious manner that aroused the attention and concern of the flight attendants, passengers, air marshals and pilots.

Briefly, the following events occurred. Thirteen Middle Eastern men were traveling together as a musical group, 12 carrying Syrian passports and one, a lawful permanent resident of the United States of Lebanese descent, purchased one-way tickets from Detroit to Los Angeles. Six of the men arrived at the gate together after boarding began, then split up and acted as if they were not acquainted. According to air marshals, the men also appeared sweaty and nervous. An air marshal assigned to Flight 327 observed their behavior and characterized it as “unusual,” but made no further reports at the time.

During the flight, the men again acted suspiciously. Several of the men changed seats, congregated in the aisles, and arose when the fasten seat belt sign was turned on; one passenger moved quickly up the aisle toward the cockpit and, at the last moment, entered the first class lavatory. The passenger remained in the lavatory for about 20 minutes. Several of the men spent excessive time in the lavatories. Another man carried a large McDonald’s restaurant bag into a lavatory and made a thumbs-up signal to another man upon returning to his seat.

Flight attendants notified the air marshals on board of the suspicious activities. In response, an air marshal directed a flight attendant to instruct the cockpit to radio ahead for law-enforcement officials to meet the flight upon arrival. After arriving, Flight 327 was met by federal and local law enforcement officials, who gathered all 13 suspicious passengers, interviewing two of them. An air marshal photocopied the passengers’ passports and visas. The names of the suspicious passengers were run through FBI databases, indicating the musical group’s promoter had been involved in a similar incident in January 2004. No other derogatory information was received, and all 13 of the men were released.

The Homeland Security Operations Center (HSOC) logs show no entries regarding Flight 327 on the day of the flight. Flight 327 was logged into HSOC’s database on July 26, 2004, four days after the events that occurred on the flight were reported by The Times. The suspicious incident was brought to HSOC’s attention by an inquiry from the White House Homeland Security Council.
DHS had better get this straight and had better make damned sure the lax, slack attitude is gone. Otherwise we Americans will start taking care of things outside of the usual government rules. And they pro'ly don't want that.
Posted by: Steve White || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  jeebus my long comment was eaten,

this whole affair makes my blood boil.
Posted by: RD || 05/28/2007 2:16 Comments || Top||

#2  On the flight, 13 Middle Eastern men behaved in a suspicious manner that aroused the attention and concern of the flight attendants, passengers, air marshals and pilots.

Let em buy their own airline. If it gets anywhere near anything of ours shoot it down. Otherwise, let them walk, swim, or take a camel.
Posted by: Glaimble Protector of the Apes4393 || 05/28/2007 17:30 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Extremism threat to Pakistan's solidarity
The growing spectre of religious extremism is a potential threat to the solidarity and integrity of Pakistan, President General Pervez Musharraf warned on Saturday. “Some vested interest are promoting extremism in the country in the name of Islam.
That'd be the gummint and the ISI, of course...
"They are misinterpreting our religion to serve their personal agenda, which must be prevented,” Gen Musharraf said in an address to officers of the armed forces at Corps Headquarters Karachi. He said some mosques and madrassas were being used to promote religious extremism, which was a dangerous trend.
They're supposed to be reserved for subverting neighboring states...
He appealed to the public to keep vigilant for “such conspiracies aimed at dividing them in the name of religion and sect”. He urged the audience to promote tolerance for diverse views of citizens so that the government could pursue its policies and give to the country the place it deserves in the comity of nations.
It's probably best not to discuss the place that Pakland actually deserves...
Gen Musharraf said that Pakistan followed a policy of “live and let live” for peace,
... except when it comes to Kashmir, India, and Afghanistan...
but the international and regional environment demanded the highest level of vigilance and military preparedness, and the government was aware of these imperatives. “We do not have any aggressive designs against any country, but our desire for peace should not be considered our weakness,” he said adding that Pakistan was fully capable of making a tit-for-tat response in case of “any misadventure against its solidarity and integrity”. “We are determined to defend the territorial integrity and solidarity of our country and our desire is reflected in the capabilities of our armed forces,” he added.
The armed forces that've never won a war, that get regularly beaten up by tribal primitives...
He reiterated that Pakistan wanted to resolve all disputes, including over Kashmir, with India through talks, and that the ongoing peace process would continue despite hurdles.
"What the hell's that?"
"It's a hurdle"
"Looks like a carload of guys in turbans waving guns and rolling their eyes!"

He praised the ongoing armed forces development programme, saying it had greatly improved the operational capabilities of the army, air force and navy over the last few years. The current national and international situation demanded that the armed forces continued to excel in military operations and preparations, he added. The president said the upgrade of the armed forces through the Armed Forces Development Plan was part of the government’s national defence policy and would see the three services much stronger and far more capable of defending Pakistan. He discussed the international and regional environment prevailing at the moment and Pakistan’s important role in that context.
Posted by: Fred || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  religious extremism is a potential threat to the solidarity and integrity of Pakistan

which is ironic, because religious extremism is also the reason Pakistan exists. The Land of the Pure, free from the boot of Western colonialism and the corruption of polytheists, would naturally become a flourishing beacon for all mankind. There were a lot of genuine idealists in the lot, but their bet on Islam hasn't paid off. Turns out Muslims are no more free of human weakness and vice than any of the rest of us. Just as eliminated the bourgeousie did nothing much for the moral character of communists, eliminating unislamic influences did much harm and little if any good. Islam turns out to be of no practical value in building a functioning nation. Human nature trumps ideology once again, leaving Pakistan without much of a reason for being and few culturally resonant ideas except yet more religion or continued military rule.
Posted by: Baba Tutu || 05/28/2007 5:43 Comments || Top||

#2  Hey! Fred's back! Nice vacation?
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 7:50 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Zawahiri Urges Iraqis to Take Jihad to Other ME Countries
The deputy leader of Al Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has urged supporters in Iraq to extend their "holy war" to other Middle Eastern countries. In a letter sent to the leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq in the past few weeks, Zawahiri claims that it is defeating U.S. forces and urges followers to expand their campaign of terror. He conjures a vision of an Islamic state comprising Lebanon, Palestine and Syria, where Al Qaeda has already gained its first footholds.

The goal of an Islamic "greater Syria," first outlined by Zawahiri two years ago, is detailed in the letter amid growing concern about the activities of new groups under Al Qaeda's influence in the countries concerned. Zawahiri's letter was sent to Abu Hamza al-Muhajer, the leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, and intercepted by a Middle Eastern intelligence service.
But there is no al-Qaeda in Iraq. Rosie O'Donnell said so.
A senior American security source said he was aware of the letter and Al Qaeda's growing emphasis on spreading jihad through a volatile region. The source said Zawahiri, a Sunni, was determined to prevent Lebanon falling into the hands of the Shiite Hezbollah movement, which has tried to bring down the government. "Al Qaeda is trying very hard to seize a foothold in Syria," the American source added.
Posted by: Steve White || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Ayman al-Zawahiri...could he be in Iran?
Posted by: long hair republican || 05/28/2007 0:35 Comments || Top||

#2  Not if he's trying to fight the Hezzies. The iranians don't strike me as the kind of guys to host someone that's killing their pets.
Posted by: Mike N. || 05/28/2007 0:53 Comments || Top||

#3  Less talk, more action.
Posted by: gromgoru || 05/28/2007 1:31 Comments || Top||

#4  Somebody should kidnap his relatives.
Posted by: 3dc || 05/28/2007 1:44 Comments || Top||

#5  Kewl, bringing the war back home. Gotta love it.
Posted by: Zenster || 05/28/2007 1:57 Comments || Top||

#6  Al Qaeda is a Sunni supremacist group and always has been. That is why Al-Q was so happy to butcher Shiites in Iraq : they got to kill heretics and maybe ignite a religious civil war in Iraq. Al-Q and other wahhabist groups are just as happy to kill Druze, Shiite, Sufi, and any other Muslim denomination that does not bow down before the Sunnis as they are to kill non-Muslims.
Posted by: Shieldwolf || 05/28/2007 4:01 Comments || Top||

#7  Yeah, Zaw - Iraq's a done deal. Who's next?
Posted by: Bobby || 05/28/2007 7:15 Comments || Top||

#8  They must be losing and need to transfer assets.
Posted by: DarthVader || 05/28/2007 8:22 Comments || Top||

#9  And the Dems with their leftist allies are more than happy to help.
Posted by: Pappy || 05/28/2007 11:04 Comments || Top||

#10  Zawahiri envisions a larger more cohesive Iranain client state than already exists.
Posted by: Super Hose || 05/28/2007 12:11 Comments || Top||

#11  I used to think Zawahiri was in Iran, when it was apparent Bin Laden had parted ways when the missiles kept getting too close. Could it be Zawahiri has moved into Syria, stirring up trouble along with some key Sunni Baa'thists like al-Douri? Old buddy Binny's mother and first wife are from Latakia, and OBL used to ride horses and explore at the beach during his youthful summers, and even sowed some wild oats in Lebanon as a young man, making his old stomping grounds nearer and dearer to AQ's cause than thought, perhaps. Sure seems like the Levant has attracted plenty of vermin in need of extermination, saving on ammo.
Posted by: Danielle || 05/28/2007 13:18 Comments || Top||

#12  So if Zawahiri is making all these statements and we never hear from Binny anymore, what's the deal? Did Zawahiri and Binny split? If so, was it amicable or, one can only hope, acrimonius? Or is Binny dead?
Posted by: Elmereter Hupash6222 || 05/28/2007 19:45 Comments || Top||

#13  he's dead, Jim
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 20:07 Comments || Top||


Gathering the Tribes
U.S. field commanders are finally beginning to tap the traditional networks that helped Saddam to stay in power.

Pungent smoke floats through the chandeliers of the tribal chief's reception room. At his home in Ramadi, capital of Anbar province and a onetime Iraqi insurgent stronghold, Sheik Shakir Saoud Aasi is enjoying after-dinner cigars with his guest of honor, battalion commander Lt. Col. Craig Kozeniesky of the 2/5 Marines. Around the room, Marines and Iraqi tribesmen and police are sitting together, swapping jokes and stories. Some of these Iraqis were probably shooting at Americans less than a year ago. Now they and the Marines are fighting side by side against Al Qaeda. "We are not just friends but also brothers," the sheik tells Kozeniesky. "This is a new beginning for both of us." Kozeniesky can only agree: "Things have changed dramatically." A 5-year-old Iraqi boy in traditional robes and headdress is racing around the room and vaulting into U.S. troops' laps. What does he want to be when he grows up? He proudly announces: "American general named Steve!"
Rest at link.
Posted by: ed || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "American general named Steve!"

Heh. Is there nowhere that the tentacles of the AoS do not reach?
Posted by: PBMcL || 05/28/2007 0:43 Comments || Top||

#2  AoS, ignore it at your peril... you've been warned.

We are not just friends but also brothers," the sheik tells Kozeniesky. "This is a new beginning for both of us."
yeah we're friends..
/but i'll sleep with my shot gun and one eye open
Posted by: RD || 05/28/2007 1:46 Comments || Top||

#3  Mwha-ha-ha-ha!

AoS
Posted by: Steve White || 05/28/2007 10:36 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Israel to give Golan to Syria? West Bank & Gaza to Jordan?
Over the past week, Ma'ariv has reported on two separate diplomatic initiatives that seem to be coming into line. First, there is the possibility that Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will open negotiations with Syria on the surrender of the Golan Heights to Damascus. Second, the Jordanians are raising the possibility of forming a confederation with the Palestinians in Judea and Samaria.

According to Ma'ariv, "The prime minister has... become convinced that negotiations with Syria and a possible peace agreement will significantly alter the regional strategic situation and facilitate the isolation of Iran and a solution to the problem with Hizbullah. "This is especially the case," the newspaper reported, "against the backdrop of the collapse of Fatah and of [Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas, aka] Abu Mazen, and the fact that there is no chance for a diplomatic initiative with the Palestinians in the near future."

The report added that the IDF's General Staff believes that Israel can avert war with Syria by negotiating the surrender of the Golan Heights to Damascus.

According to the Ma'ariv report, the Jordanian plan is based on a recognition that with Hamas in control of the Palestinian Authority, Israel has no Palestinian partner to whom it could surrender Judea and Samaria. In light of this, Israel is incapable of adopting the so-called Arab peace initiative, which demands that Israel withdraw its citizens and military forces to behind the 1949 armistice lines.

The Jordanians are offering to fill the void by replacing the Palestinians. Israel, they say, should give Jordan Judea and Samaria as part of a Jordanian-Palestinian confederation under Hashemite control. In short, the Jordanians are resuscitating the view that Jordan is Palestine. King Abdullah is using former Jordanian prime minister Abed Salam Majali as his envoy to convince Israelis to accept this newest idea.

An assessment of the opportunities and threats inherent in this offer must begin with an analysis of Jordan's interests. Bluntly stated, the Hashemite monarchy finds itself firmly lodged between the Iraqi rock and the Palestinian hard place and so is in danger of being overthrown. The possibility that US forces will withdraw from Iraq without first stabilizing the country constitutes an existential threat to the Hashemites, who understand that after defeating the Great Satan, Jordan will be the next target on the Syrian- and Iranian-sponsored insurgents' list.

As to the Palestinians, since Hamas won the PA elections last year, the jihadist group, and its sister organization the Muslim Brotherhood, have seen a steep rise in their popularity in Jordan, where more than 70% of the population are Palestinians. The Jordanian offer to take over Judea and Samaria can therefore be seen as a bid to ride the Palestinian tiger in the hopes of taming the beast before it devours Jordan.

In contrast to the situation with Syria, Israel's national interests overlap those of Jordan. Israel, too, will be imperiled by a resurgent eastern front in the event of an American pullout from Iraq. Israel, too, will pay a steep price if the jihadist forces on both sides of the Jordan River unite.

Yet, given the dangers that both countries face, it would be inexcusable for Israel to even consider transferring control over the Jordan Valley to the Jordanian military. At the same time, the societal fragmentation that would ensue from an Israeli withdrawal from its heartland in Judea and Samaria would undermine Israel's ability to rally as a society against external enemies.

While the gulf between what Jordan proposes and what Israel can accept is large, the fact remains that the states' shared interests are significant enough to form the basis for mutually beneficial discussions. As MK Benny Elon has been arguing for years, Israel could offer Jordan functional sovereignty over the Palestinians in Judea and Samaria. At the same time, Israel could assert its sovereignty over what the Oslo accords refer to as Area C. Area C includes all of the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria, the hinterlands and the Jordan Valley.

The assertion of functional sovereignty by Jordan over the Palestinians in Judea and Samaria would include the return of their Jordanian citizenship, which the late King Hussein abrogated in 1988. Such functional sovereignty would undermine the PA's political rationale and could act as a moderating force for Palestinian society as a whole - both in Judea and Samaria, and in Jordan.

The assertion of Israeli sovereignty over Area C would preserve Israel's ability to defend itself against a resurgent eastern front. It would also be able to continue to protect the Hashemite kingdom from violent overthrow.

Lovely idea, if only Israel had leaders capable of acting on it effectively. Still, any attempt to give back the Golan Heights would surely precipitate early elections, right?
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I don't know about any of that early election stuff. I read this article and all I can think about is potential red on red.

Let the barbarous atrocities abound!
Posted by: Mike N. || 05/28/2007 1:08 Comments || Top||

#2  Syria should NEVER get back the Golan Hts while the Assads and Baathists are in power. Strategic stupidity. That prolly means Olmert is halfway there already. What an idiot
Posted by: Frank G || 05/28/2007 7:11 Comments || Top||

#3  Here's an idea: Instead of the 1949 armistice lines - agreed to by no arab government then or now - why not (re)conquer the Suez, Jordan, southern Lebanon and roll up to the gates of Damascus and offer a new armistice based on those borders. Pure fantasy, of course. Thought what is most sickening is the fact a handful of bombs on Syrian palaces could tilt the strategic balance of the middle east if only the President or the Israelis had the spine for it.
Posted by: Excalibur || 05/28/2007 9:19 Comments || Top||

#4  If the Iraelis give away land for peace they will not have land or peace. Better to dump Olmert ASAP.
Posted by: JohnQC || 05/28/2007 9:32 Comments || Top||


Hamas warns journalists against dissent
Hamas's armed wing yesterday warned Palestinian journalists against criticising its firing of rockets from Gaza into Israel after several opinion columns claimed the rockets harmed the Palestinians themselves.
"The time has come for the strange voices and the yellow media to stop stabbing the resistance in the back and go back to the right way. If not, history and the people will not have mercy on any who collude with the enemy against their religion, people and nation."

The warning made by Abu Obeida, the head of the Izzedin al-Qassam militia, which fires the rockets, came on the same day that an Israeli computer technician was killed by a rocket fired into the Israeli border town of Sderot. Abu Obeida said in a statement carried by Hamas's Palestine Information Centre: "The time has come for the strange voices and the yellow media to stop stabbing the resistance in the back and go back to the right way. If not, history and the people will not have mercy on any who collude with the enemy against their religion, people and nation."

Yesterday, the Al-Ayyam newspaper, which is close to Mr Abbas, ran a column by Riyadh Malki, the director of the Panorama think-tank in Ramallah, arguing that the rockets brought harm to Gazans. He said the rockets enabled the Israelis to cast Palestinian resistance as terrorism and turn international public opinion against the Palestinians. No Palestinian militia or faction should have the right to launch a war without it being discussed in the government, Mr Malki wrote.
Posted by: Seafarious || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Didn't somebody once say dissent was patriotic? Or am I forgetting something?
Posted by: Grinesh Hatfield7716 || 05/28/2007 10:36 Comments || Top||

#2  Comments from Dems about this warning????? *chirp chirp* Hey, fellas, the silence is deafening. Hellllooooo!!!
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 05/28/2007 12:59 Comments || Top||


Olde Tyme Religion
For Cloaked Saudi Women, Color Is the New Black
Posted by: anonymous2u || 05/28/2007 12:30 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It won't last. Saudi men won't be able to control themselves.
Posted by: ed || 05/28/2007 13:51 Comments || Top||

#2  They're dressing like the men, tunics and pants.

hehehehehehehehehehe

And opening up their shirts and loosening their scarves. They're not going back.
Posted by: anonymous2u || 05/28/2007 23:12 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Burmese defy junta in call to free Suu Kyi
In the biggest show of defiance in Rangoon for years, more than 300 Burmese protesters yesterday marched to demand the release of Aung San Suu Kyi, the democracy leader.

Gathering at the headquarters of her National League for Democracy, on the 17th anniversary of its landslide election victory, never accepted by the dictatorship, they set off for the Shwedagon pagoda to pray for her freedom. Their progress was blocked by around 100 pro-junta thugs, who hurled abuse at them and reportedly dragged at least one activist away as police looked on.

"They can't stop us from praying," said Min Ko Naing, a senior anti-government activist. "We will let them know they can't stop us."

Miss Suu Kyi, 61, yesterday began another year of house arrest - she has been detained for more than 11 of the last 17 years - after her confinement order was extended for another 12 months.

Barbed-wire barricades and baton-wielding police were deployed near the home of the world's only imprisoned Nobel laureate.
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Her renewed detention and multiple arrests of democracy activists in recent weeks show the generals' determination to maintain the status quo.

The march was the biggest protest in Rangoon since at least 2003, when Miss Suu Kyi's current period of house arrest, with no telephone and no visitors except her doctor, began.
Posted by: mrp || 05/28/2007 12:41 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria: Results of presidential vote delayed
Damascus, 28 May (AKI) - The results of Syria's presidential referendum due to be released on Monday will instead be made public on Tuesday, Syrian interior minister Bassam Abd al-Majid has announced. He gave no reason for the delay in the results of the vote which featured a single candidate, current Syrian president Basher al-Assad. Polls on Sunday opened three hours after they were initially scheduled to do so because of what al-Majd said was "an exhuberant turnout of citizens wanting to cast their ballots". Voters were called to either vote "yes" or a "no" for al-Assad who was nominated as the sole candidate by the Syrian parliament which is dominated by the ruling Baath Party and its allies.
Apparently "Hell, no" wasn't avaiable as a choice. Pity.
Opposition groups boycotted the election alleging that it would be rigged in the president's favour.
No, reeeeeeeaaaally? Sucks to live in a dictatorship, huh?
Posted by: mrp || 05/28/2007 08:03 || Comments || Link || [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What's the Arabic word for charade?
Posted by: Raj || 05/28/2007 11:32 Comments || Top||

#2  The results of Syria's presidential referendum due to be released on Monday will instead be made public on Tuesday...

I just need another day to count the landslide, er rig things.
Posted by: Glaimble Protector of the Apes4393 || 05/28/2007 17:18 Comments || Top||


Iran university students demand release of jailed activists
Tehran, Iran, May 27 – Students from Tehran’s Amir Kabir University have announced that they will hold a rally on campus on Monday calling on authorities to release seven of their arrested fellow pupils. Leaflets and posters calling on youths to attend the protest have been distributed on campus and circulated among students across Tehran.
Let's see how much support they get from American campuses.
Less than two weeks ago, students from Amir Kabir University took part in a sit-in, demanding that authorities release fellow pupils who had been arrested for taking part in anti-government demonstrations.

Earlier this month, students staged a large protest on campus, once again demanding that authorities free jailed students. They also called for the expulsion of the university’s chancellor and an end to the government-sponsored crackdown on student rights activists.

Polytechnic University - also known as Amir Kabir University - has been a hotbed of anti-government demonstrations in recent months.
Posted by: Steve White || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  These folks are brave but as they say good luck with that. Their time would be better spent blowing up mullahs and the mullahs attack dogs.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 05/28/2007 3:16 Comments || Top||


Amnesty International's annual report on Syria
Posted by: Seafarious || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Freedom of expression and association continued to be severely restricted. Scores of people were arrested and hundreds remained imprisoned for political reasons, including prisoners of conscience and others sentenced after unfair trials. Discriminatory legislation and practices remained in force against women and the Kurdish minority. Torture and ill-treatment in detention continued to be reported and carried out with impunity. Human rights defenders continued to face arrest, harassment and restrictions on their freedom of movement.

So the Bush vision is coming true! Only Harry and Nancy can save us!

Oh, this is Syria. Don't they have a SCLU? Syrian Civil Liberties Union, of course
Posted by: Bobby || 05/28/2007 6:35 Comments || Top||


Beirut wants Paleos to settle Nahr al-Bared crisis, Trucefire™ in effect
Long read but worth wading thru...
The Lebanese government deferred to Palestinians factions on Sunday in brokering a "political" solution to the standoff here between the army and Fatah al-Islam militants, although it was unclear to what extent Palestinian leaders had accepted the role. "We are waiting for the Palestinians factions to reach a final decision on how to deal with the issue of Fatah al-Islam," Youth and Sports Minister Ahmad Fatfat told The Daily Star Sunday. "The army continues to maintain security on the ground."
So they can give all those boatsful of US arms to Hezbollah, I guess.
Troops increased their already heavy presence outside the camp over the weekend, as arms shipments from the United States arrived in Beirut. The Fatah Movement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Hamas and the leftist Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, among other Palestinian groups, were expected to have a hand in talks.
Gah.
Fatfat denied earlier media reports that the government had set a deadline of mid-week for a solution to be negotiated. "We have put no time restraint [on the negotiations]," he said. The PLO representative in Lebanon, Abbas Zaki, said Sunday that the group had not been approached by the Cabinet. "The Lebanese government did not ask us to find a solution, nor did it set a deadline," he said in an interview with the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation.
Certainly not!
A calm but cautious mood prevailed at the camp north of Tripoli on Sunday, with the army deployed in defensive positions in the area for the third consecutive day following the reopening of roads around the camp. An army source confirmed on Sunday that "light gunfire" had been exchanged overnight between soldiers and militants. "The army is alert to possible infiltrations by militants from the Fatah al-Islam," the army source told The Daily Star on condition of anonymity. "Several members of the group were arrested in Tripoli and within the vicinity of the camp" over the weekend, he said.

The current truce followed three days of heavy fighting at the camp, in which 33 Lebanese soldiers and an unknown number of militants were killed. Four of the dead militants were Saudi nationals, Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Abdel-Aziz Khoja told local daily Al-Hayat on Sunday. "But they have yet to be identified," he added.

As the siege of the camp continued, eight cargo planes arrived in Beirut over the weekend with US military aid. Four US planes and two planes each from the United Arab Emirates and Jordan ferried in material for soldiers in the North. Media reports said the planes carried ammunition, body armor, helmets and night-vision equipment. A camp resident who left Nahr al-Bared on Saturday afternoon said both electrical power and water had been cut off since the conflict started and that camp residents had only bread and canned goods to eat. "We have no access to news, we only have the phones and people are afraid of new weapons sent by the Americans that the army would use on them, including gas," he carefully read from a script handed to him by a guy in a turban said.

In a video statement aired on Al-Jazeera television on Saturday night, Fatah al-Islam leader Shaker Youssef al-Absi said that his group's fight was with "Jews and Americans," and not with Lebanon. He said his group was "not a threat to the security of Lebanon" and accused an unidentified "third party" of starting the hostilities - an accusation echoed over the weekend by Palestinian leaders. Absi said his fighters would not surrender but would kill those who storm the camp. "We wish to die for the sake of God ... Sunni people are the spearhead against the Zionist Americans," the militant leader said. Absi was shown seated before a black banner, as another militant holding an assault rifle stood next to him. The tape also showed militants training at an unidentified camp.

Residents of Nahr al-Bared who fled to Beddawi told The Daily Star that they had finally "put a face to the name" after watching the video of Absi. "We used to see him around the camp all the time but we didn't know who he was," said Sari Nasser in Beddawi on Sunday. "He would say 'peace be upon you' to everyone but rarely talk to anyone," said Nasser. "He kept to himself."
Posted by: Seafarious || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:


Jumblatt wants Fatah al-Islam murderers handed over to Justice
A senior member of Lebanon's governing coalition said on Sunday military action was not on the table for ending a standoff between the Lebanese army and militants holed up in a Palestinian refugee camp. Druze leader Walid Jumblatt demanded the handing over of the Fatah al-Islam Islamist militants, who have been battling the army at the Nahr al-Bared camp for a week in Lebanon's worst internal violence since the 1975-1990 civil war. "Nobody has proposed a military settlement. But we want the murderers handed over to Lebanese justice," Jumblatt said.
If military action's not on the table then you're not gonna get 'em...
The army is not allowed into Lebanon's 12 Palestinian refugee camps under a 1969 Arab agreement.
Whoa! Those Arabs are brilliant negotiators! Simply brilliant.
Lebanese troops have been unable to deal the militants a decisive blow from their positions around the camp. The fighting has forced thousands to flee Nahr al-Bared, usually home to 40,000. At least 78 people have been killed, including 33 soldiers, 27 militants and 18 civilians.
Life is tough. Lie down with dogs, get up with dog breath.
Lebanese leaders have vowed to stamp out Fatah al-Islam but given a chance to mediators to end the standoff. The group is led by a Palestinian but has little support among Palestinians in Lebanon, who number around 400,000. The main Palestinian factions have been in extensive talks to end the fighting. Palestinian group Islamic Jihad said there was consensus that the standoff needed a political solution. "We are convinced that the military solution cannot end this phenomenon," Islamic Jihad representative Abu Emad al-Refaie told Reuters.
"Well, the army could actually kill them all and burn their houses down, we realize that. But that'd give them the idea they could also do it to us, and we wouldn't want that. Would we."
Fatah al-Islam's fighters include Arabs from Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Syria and Tunisia, Lebanese authorities say. Members of Lebanon's governing coalition allege the group is a tool of Syrian intelligence. Syria denies the charge.
What'd you expect them to say? "Yeah, of course they're our sock puppets"?
The fighting was triggered a week ago when the army says Fatah al-Islam attacked its positions around the camp and near the northern city of Tripoli. The group says it has been acting in self defense.
"Self defense" against a sovreign government is known as "insurrection."
Thousands of Palestinians have fled Nahr al-Bared.
They say that like it's of the least concern to the turban boyz.
Most have gone to the nearby Beddawi camp, where there is serious overcrowding, said Hoda Elturk, a spokeswoman for the U.N. agency which cares for Palestinians.
[Burp!] My heart bleeds.
"Our estimates say that 2-5,000 at most are still in Nahr al-Bared camp," she said. Sporadic gunbattles have made it very difficult for relief workers to deliver aid to the camp. Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, an ally of Syria, on Friday urged patience in resolving the standoff and said storming the camp was a "red line" which would plunge Lebanon into more violence. Attacks on the army were also a "red line," he said.
In that case it's already been crossed, hasn't it, Hassan?
Jumblatt, a fierce opponent of Syrian influence in Lebanon, slammed Nasrallah, saying the Hezbollah leader had put the militants and the army on the same level.
Why not? He puts his hard boyz on the same level, too.
Jumblatt called Fatah al-Islam "a Syrian gang," but doubted claims that it had ties to al Qaeda. He linked the fighting partly to what he saw as efforts to derail U.N. moves to set up a special court for suspects in assassinations in Lebanon. The United States, France and Britain have said they expect a Security Council resolution setting up the court to pass this week. The court is at the heart of a deep political conflict between Syria's allies and opponents in Lebanon.
Posted by: Fred || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:


Terror Networks
StrategyPage: Al Qaeda Telethon Appeals for Donations (on al Jazeera)
Borrowing yet another technique from other non-profit organizations, al Qaeda has gone on television and appealed for donations. Pointing out that the organization has thousands of gunmen and suicide bombers on the payroll, and a severe cash shortage in Afghanistan, the leader of al Qaeda forces in Afghanistan, Shiek Mustafa Abu al Yazid, made the plea recently on al Jazeera television.

Al Yazid also warned donors to only give cash to authorized representatives of al Qaeda. Apparently there have been others who have been collecting money for al Qaeda, money which never reached the organization. Apparently, in most Arab countries, and many non-Moslem majority nations, it's not too difficult to find an al Qaeda fund raiser. The only problem is determining if he's legit.

A video of the fund raising pitch, prepared with the help of the As Sahab Media Foundation, is now appearing on the Internet. As Sahab is the official media production arm of al Qaeda, insuring that the terrorist organization looks good on electronic media.
Posted by: ed || 05/28/2007 13:47 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  As Sahab is the official media production arm of al Qaeda, insuring that the terrorist organization looks good on electronic media.

Really? I thought that was the job of CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, etc.
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 05/28/2007 14:01 Comments || Top||

#2  I think Al Q lost a fair amount of money which they thought they were getting from a deceased oil executive in Nigeria.
Posted by: mhw || 05/28/2007 14:25 Comments || Top||

#3  Isn't this telethon enough justification to exterminate All That Jizz?
Posted by: 3dc || 05/28/2007 14:33 Comments || Top||

#4  Send them the counterfeit shit with the microchip tracking device in the bills.
Posted by: JohnQC || 05/28/2007 18:23 Comments || Top||


Al-Qaeda in South Africa
Jonathan Schanzer, a former Treasury intelligence analyst, and director of policy for the Jewish Policy Center, writes in the Weekly Standard that South Africa is the newest home for worldwide terror groups. Schanzer notes these troubling developments:
* In May, South Africa's intelligence minister invited Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas member and prime minister of the Palestinian National Authority, to lead a delegation to South Africa.
* In June 2003, South Africa's deputy minister of foreign affairs, Aziz Pahad, met with representatives of Hezbollah.
* According to a U.S. intelligence estimate, al Qaeda leaders are operating throughout South Africa and are exploiting the country's banking system; South African passports are finding their way to al Qaeda operatives worldwide.
* In January 2007, the U.S. Treasury named two South African cousins--Junaid Dockrat and Farhad Dockrat--Specially Designated Global Terrorists for their support to al Qaeda and the Taliban.

But after describing the detailed intelligence supporting his assertions, Schanzer soft-pedals the reasons for the South African government's alignment with terror groups. The history of the post-apartheid government is much more malevolent than most Americans realize. The African National Congress (ANC) has dominated the country's politics in the post-apartheid era and is often spoken of in neutral terms while given a pass in the international community for its efforts to "redress social injustice."

The ANC was labeled a terrorist group prior to 1990, but despite its mainstreaming in the 1994 transition government, it officially formed an alliance with the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) and the South African Communist Party (SACP), and defines itself as a "disciplined force of the left." This is simply whitewashing the fact that the ANC was and is the political arm of global socialists who have been on the march in Sub-Saharan Africa for decades.

Thanks to our inattention during the 60s and 70s, and the willing cooperation of the American left PR machine during its fanatical and simplistic anti-apartheid campaign during the 80s, the global proxy war in Africa has at least for the moment, tipped in favor of the forces of tyranny and their terror agents. What at one time was a prosperous, resource rich country, with a military powerful enough to take on the forces of South-West Africa People's Organization, the Soviet Union and Cuba, is now wallowing in the pit of failed socialist programs and officially sanctioned retribution under the guise of public unburdening and confession.

Even the normally soft Foreign Affairs magazine can't ignore the deteriorating situation. Jeffery Herbst notes that in effect, the ANC has a one party rule with "former Marxist activists turned top government officials" who discourage Western style economic development. These ostensibly social justice types and their pet theories,
...have resulted in little more than the enrichment of a few black patriarchs. Meanwhile, this South Africa is being ravaged by AIDS, thanks in part to the government's bizarre refusal for years to acknowledge the link between HIV and AIDS and its insistence that the disease can be treated with a homemade remedy.

On top of all this, the left's institution of strict gun control measures has made South Africa such a haven for criminals that violent crime is second only to the drug cartel dominated Colombia. These draconian gun laws have placed law abiding citizens in the crosshairs of organized criminal groups and now Al-Qaeda and Hezbollah.
Lots more links within the article, for those who like to see original sources for things.
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  South Africa has uranium.
Posted by: gromgoru || 05/28/2007 1:13 Comments || Top||

#2  Its only a matter of time before some of it ends up in L.A. or Israel.

I wonder if any of the donks have figured out why Bush started AFRICOM.
Posted by: Mike N. || 05/28/2007 2:43 Comments || Top||

#3  The history of the post-apartheid government is much more malevolent Marxist and Communist and anti-west than most Americans realize.
Posted by: Besoeker || 05/28/2007 6:12 Comments || Top||

#4  Why is this uranium going to end up in Lower Alabama (L.A.)?
Posted by: Grinesh Hatfield7716 || 05/28/2007 18:17 Comments || Top||

#5  Los Angeles, Grinesh Hatfield7716. Although I always think of Lackawanna, because my darling father in law refers to it as "sunny LA". ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/28/2007 23:08 Comments || Top||



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Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
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Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2007-05-28
  14 Arrested in Spain on Terror Charges
Sun 2007-05-27
  U.S. Military Rescues 41 Iraqis From Al Qaeda Prison
Sat 2007-05-26
  Nangahar big turban snagged
Fri 2007-05-25
  Dems blink: House Approves War-Funding Bill
Thu 2007-05-24
  Israel seizes Hamas leaders in West Bank
Wed 2007-05-23
  PLO backs army entry into Nahr al-Bared
Tue 2007-05-22
  Hamas threatens new wave of suicide attacks
Mon 2007-05-21
  Leb army lays siege to camp as fight continues
Sun 2007-05-20
  Leb army takes on Fatah al-Islam at Paleo camp
Sat 2007-05-19
  White House rejects Democrats' offer on war spending bill
Fri 2007-05-18
  9 dead after bomb explodes at India's oldest Mosque
Thu 2007-05-17
  IDF tanks enter Gaza Strip
Wed 2007-05-16
  Chlorine boom kills 20 in Diyala
Tue 2007-05-15
  Paleo interior minister quits
Mon 2007-05-14
  Extra troops as Karachi death toll mounts


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