Most people have never heard of Operation Frequent Wind, which ended on April 30, 1975, 33 years ago. But every American has seen pictures of it: the Marine helicopters evacuating the last U.S. personnel from the embassy in Saigon, hours before communist tanks rolled into the city. Thousands of desperate Vietnamese gathered at the embassy gate and begged to be taken with them. Others committed suicide.
Those scenes are a chilling reminder of what happens when a great power decides to cut and run. Two of the three presidential candidates are proposing to do just that in Iraq. We need to remember what happened the last time we gave up on an unpopular foreign policy, not only in humanitarian terms but in terms of American power and prestige....
#1
This week we learned the limit of a dream in American politics. At Barack Obama's darkest hour, not one prominent ally came forward to support him. Everyone abandoned Everyman.
No prominent black clergyman came forth to make even the simple point that Jeremiah Wright's notion of the "black church" is but one point on a spectrum of faith. Rev. Wright, now written off as a virtual nut case, got more support from black clergymen than did Obama.
Barack Obama was bleeding by Monday and needed cover. Where, when he could have used them, were Obama's oh-so-famous endorsers: Jesse Jackson, Ted Kennedy, Oprah, John Kerry, Chris Dodd, Patrick Leahy, Tom Daschle, Amy Klobuchar, Claire McCaskill, Jay Rockefeller, John Lewis, Toni Morrison, Roger Wilkins, Eric Holder, Robert Reich, Ted Sorenson, Alice Walker, David Wilhelm, Cornel West, Clifford Alexander, Donald McHenry, Patricia Wald, Newton Minow?
Where were all the big-city mayors who went over to the Obama camp: Chicago's Richard Daley, Cleveland's Frank Jackson, Atlanta's Shirley Franklin, Washington's Adrian Fenty, Newark's Cory Booker, Baltimore's Sheila Dixon?
It isn't hard for big names to get on talk TV to make a point. Any major op-ed page would have stopped the presses to print a statement of support from Ted Kennedy or such for the senator. None appeared. Call it profiles in gopher-holing.
How do you say "Buck-buck-braaaawk!" in Democrat?
Posted by: Mike ||
05/01/2008 6:52 Comments ||
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#2
Quite telling indeed. I suspect had OB defended Reverend Wright's comments, even moderately, his supporters sould have immediately joined him as well.
#3
The problem of goofy, afrocentric nonsense in some black churches is one that most people (the prominent supporters of Obama included) would rather pretend doesn't exist.
Its kind of like the problem of Islamic 'kill the infidel' talk. Its existence is uncomfortable.
The gloomy election-year refrain is that America is mired in Iraq, took its eye off Afghanistan, empowered Iran and is losing the war on terror. But how accurate is that pessimistic diagnosis?
First, the good news. For all the talk of a recent Tet-like offensive in Basra, the Mahdi Army of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr suffered an ignominious setback when his gunmen were routed from their enclaves. This rout helped the constitutional - and Shiite-dominated - government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki renew its authority, and has encouraged Sunnis to re-enter government. Two great threats to Iraqi autonomy - Iranian-backed Shiite militiamen and Sunni-supported al-Qaida terrorists - have both now been repulsed by an elected government and its supporters.
Our armed forces are stretched, but Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and his colonels are quietly transforming a top-heavy conventional colossus into more mobile counterinsurgency forces. Petraeus' recent nomination to Centcom commander suggests that, like the growing influence of Gens. U.S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman in 1863, or of George Marshall when he reconfigured the Army in 1940, we at last are beginning to get the right officers in the right places at the right time.
The despairing enemy seems to sense this as well. The more al-Qaida mouthpiece Ayman al-Zawahiri threatens the West, the more he sounds like Hitler's shrill propagandist Joseph Goebbels in his bunker as the Third Reich was crumbling. In his latest desperate rant, a suddenly "green" Zawahiri was reduced to appealing to environmentally conscious Muslims to fault the United States for our supposed culpability for global warming! No wonder polls across the Middle East show a sharp decline in support for his boss, Osama bin Laden.
We haven't been attacked in over six years since Sept. 11, while the FBI has arrested dozens of jihadist plotters. Our elected officials squabble over the Patriot Act, Guantanamo and the loss of constitutional liberties. Yet, the odd thing is not the nature of such a necessary debate, but the inability of critics to muster enough support to repeal post-9/11 legislation and policies -- a tacit admission that these measures have worked and saved thousands of American lives.
But is the war then nearly won? Hardly.
And that brings us to the bad news. We still censor ourselves in fears of terrorist threats, mortgaging the Enlightenment tradition of free and unfettered speech. In Europe, cartoonists, novelists, opera producers, filmmakers and even the pope are choosing their words very carefully about Islam -- in fear they will become the objects of riots and death threats. Here at home, our State Department is advising its officials to avoid perfectly descriptive terms for our enemies like "jihadist" and "Islamo-fascist" in favor of vague terms like "violent extremist" or "terrorist" -- as if we could just as easily be fighting Basque separatists.
Even more worrying, Americans cannot find a substitute for imported oil. The result is that $110-a-barrel petroleum is slowing our economy, weakening our international financial clout -- and sending billions in capital into the hands of our otherwise unproductive enemies. The way to shut down Iran's reactor or its subsidies for Hezbollah is not necessarily through bombing but by getting oil back down below $50 a barrel, which would cut the value of Iranian petroleum production by nearly $100 billion a year and weaken an already weak economy. Saudi Arabia largely ignores our pleas to help rebuild Iraq and cease its money flowing into the hands of radical Islamists. And why should they listen to us? After all, at present astronomical prices, their oil production is worth nearly half-a-trillion dollars a year - with Chinese, Europeans and Indians waiting in line to pay even more.
In all our major wars - except the present one - Americans have won through a combination of military prowess, correctly identifying the enemy and economic savvy. In the Civil War, the South was blockaded and starved of its cotton revenues, an effort that proved every bit as important as Gettysburg and Sherman's "March to the Sea." Germany was blockaded in both World Wars and cut off from precious metals, oil and food. The Soviet economy collapsed before its military could. Only in this war has our own profligacy empowered our enemies.
After years of learning how to fight an unfamiliar war in Afghanistan and Iraq, and to protect us at home, we are finally getting most things right. But if our soldiers and intelligence agencies have learned how to win, our politically correct diplomats and the American consumer haven't - and are doing as much at home to empower radical Islam as those on the front lines are to defeat it.
#1
What ever happened to the Brave New World of alternative fuels and super efficient cars that should have been here, at the latest, this year?
And I'm not talking about ethanol, what happened to the new Hydrogen fleet? The electric car that would actually run far enough to commute to work, and possibly even go the speed limit? WTF? Where are they? I'm ready.
#2
After years of learning how to fight an unfamiliar war in Afghanistan and Iraq, and to protect us at home, we are finally getting most things right. But if our soldiers and intelligence agencies have learned how to win, our politically correct diplomats and the American consumer haven't - and are doing as much at home to empower radical Islam as those on the front lines are to defeat it.
The danger is that in any successful endeavor work flows towards competency. The one branch of government that can adapt, modify, and change to fit the threat is not the one filled by politicians. That is why so much effort is made to define it 'not as a threat'. That ultimately leads to the undermining of democracy. In desperation the people will turn to those who will protect them. For the first responsibility of any government ought to be that which is unsaid but expected - to protect the lives of their citizens, their families, and their property.
#3
In his latest desperate rant, a suddenly "green" Zawahiri was reduced to appealing to environmentally conscious Muslims to fault the United States for our supposed culpability for global warming!
Just throwing a bone to his most important allies: The American "left".
#4
Americans cannot find a substitute for imported oil. "cannot" implies that a real effort has been made. Americans haven't bothered to look. I am not referring to boondoggles like hydrogen and subsidized ethanol. A first step might be to stop subsidizing parts of the economy that depend on vast quantities of cheap imported oil (such as highways, auto & air travel), but that is beyond the scope of any acceptable discussion.
"CSX Corporation says it will spend $300 million on upgrades that would allow trains with double-stacked cars to run from the East Coast to the Midwest.
For the effort to go forward, the federal government would have to provide an additional $400 million to change 70 overpasses in six states that would be too short for the double-stacked cars to pass under.
...The railroad says double-stacked trains use about the same amount of fuel to carry more freight faster." Look out for the NIMBYists and Lawfare warriors to substantially delay or kill this worthwhile initiative. You read it here first.
#7
Hydrogen requires 2-3 times the energy inputs to power a car than does electricity. Even more if the hydrogen is made by splitting water.
I think the smartest thing the US gov can do is give $2000 (i.e. the cost diff between a Honda Civic and a Civic Hydbrid) to the auto manufacturers for every American who buys a hybrid car. After 5 years of 30% improved mileage cars, the equivalent of the entire US middle east oil imports won't be needed. After 10 years, the middle east and Venezuela won't be needed. Also after 10 years, the transition to electricity dominant PHEVs will be well under way and transportation energy will shift domestic control.
Posted by: ed ||
05/01/2008 19:12 Comments ||
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I came across letters of mine to the Des Moines Register back in the 1970s, which happened to coincide with my adolescence. They are hilarious, and will no doubt see the light of day on this blog at some point in the not-too-distant future. They reminded me that when Jimmy Carter beat Gerald Ford in 1976 -- the fall of my 10th grade year -- I was miserable for days. . . . I was passionate about politics back then, meaning that I could work up a lot of joy or rage over politicians and elections.
I'll just put that out there. If Obama is done in by this whole Wright thing I am done with politics. I can't invest myself in something that is so sure to disappoint me time and time and time again...
Yeah, well, that's a pretty adolescent view of politics in a robust democracy. If your answer to losing is to declare yourself "done with politics," then you don't really have the stamina necessary to be a participating citizen. Which is just as well. Democracy requires the continuing participation of the losers, and if you do not have the stones to play the game again the next time then you are part of the problem, not part of the solution. The sooner the passionate people get disappointed and leave the government up to those of us mature enough to recover from the agony of defeat, the closer we will be to substituting casual, fun-loving partisanship for the bitter, spitting version that has dominated in the last 15 or 20 years.
Put differently, Andrew Sullivan evidently thinks it is a problem if his passionate correspondent drops out of politics, and I think we would be better off if he did. I yearn for the days when we could talk about politics over beers with people of the other wing and walk away looking forward to the next such conversation. All these passionate, easily-disappointed, thin-skinned people take all the fun out of democracy, and make the country much harder to govern besides. Good riddance to 'em.
Posted by: Mike ||
05/01/2008 10:42 ||
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#1
I'll just put that out there. If Obama is done in by this whole Wright thing I am done with politics. I can't invest myself in something that is so sure to disappoint me time and time and time again...
So why are you backing Obama?
You'll learn, kid. The first presidential candidate I ever voted for was Jimmy Carter...
#2
The American Idol generation wants their sanjay. Boo Hoo...
Posted by: M. Murcek ||
05/01/2008 15:02 Comments ||
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#3
Me too, TU3031. Damn, I regret that mistake. Republican ever since, though.
Posted by: Thaimble Scourge of the Pixies4707 ||
05/01/2008 17:44 Comments ||
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#4
My first election too, fella's. I didn't vote for Jimmuh mostly because his supporters in my fraternity were pathetic "couldn't get laid at the Mustang Ranch" dweebs.
But I didn't want "another Ford in the driveway" either. I just googled the 76 election results and can't even figure out who I threw my vote away on!
I know that I have never "covered the winner" and even if I voted for the winner, my states electorals went the loser.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.