President Obama speech Defense


The below article was a comment placed on Tom Ricks' blog, The Best Defense, which took Ricks to task for his misunderstood and unappreciative review of the President's speech. I can only hope I'd been able to respond as well as kunino.



Hard to believe Ricks saw the speech

I suggest, Mr Ricks, you take another quick look at the Obama speech -- it's there at whitehouse.gov -- and withdraw your careless remark that "[i]t was addressed to those who, like him, really didn't want to send more troops to Afghanistan". The president was looking into the eyes of a hallful of young men and women in the nation's uniform, some of whom will be sent to Afghanistan in the next year or two. Such are the ambitions of young officer cadets, we can be satisfied that many in that hall were eager to get out their in the field in Afghanistan. Do you suggest the president didn't know that?

You don't seem to have taken the president seriously. Evidently, the cadets did. Although this part of the event wasn't televised, the president mingled post-speech with some of those cadets, and answered their questions.

What WAS missing from this particular presidential war speech was the recently familiar Bush-era prancing of bemedaled heads of the military services, men too old and too senior to go to war, leaping to their feet and applauding enthusiastically, and it was all the better for that.

I also challenge your remark that the president's speech "was an ode to ambivalence, an aria of ambiguity, a rasher of reluctance". In my view,it was a sensible account of what can reasonably be expected to achieve in Afghanistan. None of the smirking, vague Bush rhetoric. Whether you respect Obama or do not, you have to admit that he's no blowhard. Makes a nice change. And his pointing to the importance of the financial cost of war was an honorable part of the history of martial understanding that goes all the way back to Sun Tzu. The Bush line seems to have been spend to the last dollar, protect the rich from taxes needed to pay for this, and fight on the borrowed Chinese dime.

Afghanistan "War" Perspective

I hope that everyone has an opinion on our adventure in Afghanistan, but that it is an opinion based on factual knowledge, sound reasoning, and through a thoughtful process. Here is what I believe.

I'll call our adventure in Afghanistan a "conflict" for easy reference because I believe "wars" are between nations; neither Al Qaeda nor the Taliban are nations. In Afghanistan (and Pakistan) we are pursuing international criminals who have, and still are, committing crimes against humanity. We need to continue this conflict and enhance/increase our efforts toward the annihilation of Al Qaeda and the demise of the Taliban.

We, with our allies, must continue the pursuit of Al Qaeda-Taliban (AQ-T) until there is no longer an AQ-T or it is no longer a presence of consequence. If that requires us going into Pakistan to "acquire" AQ-T then so be it. Certainly, Pakistan's agreement and assistance in acquiring AQ-T is highly desirable--but not absolutely necessary; we must be rid of AQ-T.

How will we know when AQ-T is no longer a presence of consequence? Obviously there is no objective way to know this (a certain period of time without an incident is not absolute evidence of none or a reduced presence of AQ-T) but a strong subjective human intelligence of empirical evidence of demise or deminishment would or could lead to a positive assessment.

President Obama has laid out a strong plan, a firm enabling policy, to end our Afghanistan presence. This plan is essentially a continuance of President Bush's surge initiative but with the addition of a plan segment to increase Afghan security through the training of increased numbers military and police. When the Afghan are prepared to defend their country and protect the continuance of the Afghan government then we should, and must, leave.

Military Tribunals or Federal Court--Continued

I am just hung up on the rationale (such as it is) being used to decide the court in which to try terrorists. My thinking goes like this: A military tribunal should have jurisdiction over military people and their superiors or non-military entities who have allegedly committed war crimes or crimes against humanity. So, those who would be under the jurisdiction of a military tribunal would not actually be tried by the tribunal just because they are captured on the "battlefield" or are POW, they would have had to be charged with committing war crimes or crimes against humanity.

The International Military Tribunal (IMT) holds that crimes against humanity can be tried by a military tribunal (The IMT used the category of crimes against humanity as the basis for convicting war criminals). The IMT defines the perpetrators of crimes against humanity as "murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts committed against any civilian population, before or during the war; or persecution on political, racial, or religious grounds in execution of or in connection with any crime within the jurisdiction of the tribunal, whether or not in violation of the domestic law of the country where perpetrated." Also, crimes against humanity, as opposed to war crimes, were also defined as criminal acts committed against a population at any time---during times of war, and during times of peace. Well, the perpetrators, including planners, of 9/11 certainly seem to fit in the category of crimes against humanity.

However, every so-called terrorist picked up on the "battlefield" does not warrant being tried as a war criminal or for crimes against humanity; association with a so-called militant entity or being a soldier for a sovereign nation at war does not a war criminal make--crimes must be shown to have actually been committed.

Definitions of war crimes (From US CODE: Title 18, para. 2441):

(A) Torture.— The act of a person who commits, or conspires or attempts to commit, an act specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person within his custody or physical control for the purpose of obtaining information or a confession, punishment, intimidation, coercion, or any reason based on discrimination of any kind.
(B) Cruel or inhuman treatment.— The act of a person who commits, or conspires or attempts to commit, an act intended to inflict severe or serious physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions), including serious physical abuse, upon another within his custody or control.
(C) Performing biological experiments.— The act of a person who subjects, or conspires or attempts to subject, one or more persons within his custody or physical control to biological experiments without a legitimate medical or dental purpose and in so doing endangers the body or health of such person or persons.
(D) Murder.— The act of a person who intentionally kills, or conspires or attempts to kill, or kills whether intentionally or unintentionally in the course of committing any other offense under this subsection, one or more persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including those placed out of combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause.
(E) Mutilation or maiming.— The act of a person who intentionally injures, or conspires or attempts to injure, or injures whether intentionally or unintentionally in the course of committing any other offense under this subsection, one or more persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including those placed out of combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause, by disfiguring the person or persons by any mutilation thereof or by permanently disabling any member, limb, or organ of his body, without any legitimate medical or dental purpose.
(F) Intentionally causing serious bodily injury.— The act of a person who intentionally causes, or conspires or attempts to cause, serious bodily injury to one or more persons, including lawful combatants, in violation of the law of war.
(G) Rape.— The act of a person who forcibly or with coercion or threat of force wrongfully invades, or conspires or attempts to invade, the body of a person by penetrating, however slightly, the anal or genital opening of the victim with any part of the body of the accused, or with any foreign object.
(H) Sexual assault or abuse.— The act of a person who forcibly or with coercion or threat of force engages, or conspires or attempts to engage, in sexual contact with one or more persons, or causes, or conspires or attempts to cause, one or more persons to engage in sexual contact.
(I) Taking hostages.— The act of a person who, having knowingly seized or detained one or more persons, threatens to kill, injure, or continue to detain such person or persons with the intent of compelling any nation, person other than the hostage, or group of persons to act or refrain from acting as an explicit or implicit condition for the safety or release of such person or persons.




Military Tribunals or Federal Court


Act of War

I am having trouble getting a good grip on this question: Who should have jurisdiction over perpetrators of violence against the United States, a Military Tribunal or a Federal Court? Perhaps a corollary question might be, what is an "Act of war?"

I have no problem with a military tribunal having jurisdiction over the perpetrator of violence against the United States when the violence is an act of war. The crux then becomes, what is an "act of war?" And, must the U.S. actually declare war against the perpetrator(s) in order to try the perpetrator(s) in a military tribunal? So, if that be true, then if the violence is not determined to be an act of war it must just be a criminal act and hence be tried in a Federal Court. Now, if only Congress can pass a Declaration of War, does it also follow that it must be Congress who decides if the violence is or is not an "act of war?" In that, I believe so.

So, just what constitutes an act of war? Was the bombing of the Murrah building (Oklahoma City) by an American citizen an act of war? I'd think not. It was an individual committing a criminal act--wasn't it? Was there ever any conjecture over it not being a criminal act? Don't think so. And of course McVeigh was tried in a Federal Court. But, was flying airplanes into the Twin Towers in New York City, also by individuals, albeit not U.S. citizens, but individuals who were citizens(?) of a foreign country (They were Arabs but did not attack the U.S. under auspices of Saudi Arabia), a criminal act or an act of war? Now, they were associated with a cohesive group, a named entity not specifically identified with or representing any country. Can an individual(s) not acting under the auspices of an autonomous, sovereign country commit a bonafide "act of war" against a sovereign nation? Now, the bombing of Pearl Harbor most certainly was an act of war, Congress said so--it was a heinous act by one nation against another--and it led to a Declaration of War. So, say this, was 9/11 an act of war or just another criminal act; a heinous act of terror either way? Hmmm, did the U.S. declare "war" on Al Qaeda? Or just terrorists, or terrorism? Can you actually declare war on an individual or a group of individuals? Just how would you be able to tell a terrorist (or a "terrorism"?) from someone else? How can you tell the difference between one who is "in" Al Qaeda from some nondescript muslim (Arab) bricklayer?

Or can we, as a nation, just dance along the yellow brick road making decisions this way, that way, as we feel the wont at any time? I think we should first qualify an act of violence as the first order of business. Is it an act of war or is it a criminal act? Let Congress pass judgement and the rest is easy. You then define, deleniate the parameters of the enemy and then go get him, it.

Comments would be appreciated.

War and/or Peace (Stratfor article)

This article expresses my views and sentiments, not exactly, but pretty close to it.


The BMD Decision and the Global System

September 21, 2009


By George Friedman

The United States announced late Sept. 17 that it would abandon a plan for placing ballistic missile defense (BMD) installations in Poland and the Czech Republic. Instead of the planned system, which was intended to defend primarily against a potential crude intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) threat from Iran against the United States, the administration chose a restructured system that will begin by providing some protection to Europe using U.S. Navy ships based on either the North or Mediterranean seas. The Obama administration has argued that this system will be online sooner than the previously planned system and that follow-on systems will protect the United States. It was also revealed that the latest National Intelligence Estimate finds that Iran is further away from having a true intercontinental missile capability than previously thought, meaning protecting Europe is a more pressing concern than protecting the United States.

Poland and the Czech Republic responded with a sense of U.S. betrayal, while Russia expressed its satisfaction with the decision. Russian envoy to NATO Dmitri Rogozin said Moscow welcomes the decision and sees it as an appropriate response to Russia’s offer to allow U.S. supplies to flow into Afghanistan through Russia. Later, the Russians added another reward: They tentatively announced the cancellation of plans to deploy short-range ballistic missiles in Kaliningrad, which they previously had planned as a response to the components of the U.S. BMD system planned for Poland and the Czech Republic.

Polish Despair and Russian Delight

Polish despair (and Warsaw seemed far more upset than Prague) and Russian satisfaction must be explained to begin to understand the global implications. To do this, we must begin with an odd fact: The planned BMD system did not in and of itself enhance Polish national security in any way even if missiles had actually targeted Warsaw, since the long-range interceptors in Poland were positioned there to protect the continental United States; missiles falling on Poland would likely be outside the engagement envelope of the original Ground-based Midcourse Defense interceptors. The system was designed to handle very few missiles originating from the Middle East, and the Russians obviously have more than a few missiles.

Given that even small numbers of missiles easily could overwhelm the system, the BMD system in no way directly affected Russian national security: The Russian strike capability — against both Poland and the continental United States — was not affected at all. Indeed, placing the system on ships is no less threatening than placing them on land. So, if it was the BMD system the Russians were upset with, they should be no less upset by the redeployment at sea. Yet Moscow is pleased by what has happened — which means the BMD system was not really the issue.

For Poland, the BMD system was of little importance. What was important was that in placing the system in Poland, the United States obviously was prepared to defend the system from all threats. Since the system could not be protected without also protecting Poland, the BMD installation — and the troops and defensive systems that would accompany it — was seen as a U.S. guarantee on Polish national security even though the system itself was irrelevant to Polish security.

The Russians took the same view. They cared little about the BMD system itself; what they objected to was the presence of a U.S. strategic capability in Poland because this represented an American assertion that Poland was actively under the defense of the United States. Of particular note from the Russian point of view was that such a guarantee would be independent of NATO. The NATO alliance has seen better days, and the Russians (and Poles) perceive an implicit American security guarantee as more threatening than an explicit one from NATO.

This whole chain of events was an exercise in the workings of the Post-Post-Cold War World, in which Russia is a strong regional power seeking to protect its influence in the former Soviet Union (FSU) and to guarantee its frontiers as well — something that in the West has often been misinterpreted as a neurotic need for respect. Poland is the traditional route through which Russia is invaded, and the Russian view is that governments and intentions change but capabilities do not. Whatever Washington intends now, it is asserting dominance in a region that has been the route for three invasions over the last two centuries. By the Russian logic, if the United States has no interest in participating in such an invasion, it should not be interested in Poland. If the United States chooses Poland of all places to deploy its BMD when so many other locations were willing and possible, the Russians are not prepared to regard this choice as merely coincidence.

Overall, the Russians desire a new map of the region, one with two layers. First, Russia must be recognized as the dominant power in the former Soviet Union. The United States and Europe must shape bilateral relations with other former Soviet states within the framework of this understanding. Second, Central Europe — and particularly Poland — must not become a base for U.S. power. The United States and Europe must accept that Russia has no aggressive intent, but more to the point, Poland in particular must become a neutral buffer zone between Russia and Germany. It can sign whatever treaties it wants, attend whatever meetings it wishes and so forth, but major military formations of other great powers must remain out of Poland. Russia sees the BMD system as the first step in militarizing Poland, and the Russians have acted accordingly.

From the standpoint of the Bush administration and the Obama administration early on, the Russian claims to great power status, rights in the former Soviet Union and interests in Poland represented a massive overreach. The perception of both administrations derived from an image developed in the 1990s of Russia as crippled. The idea of Russia as a robust regional power, albeit with significant economic problems, simply didn’t register. There were two generations at work. The older Cold War generation did not trust Russian intentions and wanted to create a cordon around Russia — including countries like Georgia, Ukraine and, most important, Poland — because Russia could become a global threat again. The newer post-Cold War generation — which cut its teeth in the 1990s — wanted to ignore Russia and do what it wished both in Central Europe and the former Soviet Union because Russia was no longer a significant power, and the generation saw the need to develop a new system of relationships. In the end, all this congealed in the deployments in Poland and the Czech Republic.

For Russia, Poland mattered in ways the United States could not grasp given its analytic framework. But the United States had its own strategic obsession: Iran.

Iran: The U.S. Strategic Obsession

The Islamic world has been the focus of the United States since 9/11. In this context, the development of an Iranian nuclear capability was seen as a fundamental threat to U.S. national interests. The obvious response was a military strike to destroy Iranian power, but both the Bush and Obama administrations hesitated to take the step.

First, a strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities would be no one-day affair. Intelligence on precise locations had uncertainty built into it, and any strike would consist of multiple phases: destroying Iran’s air force and navy, destroying Iran’s anti-aircraft capability to guarantee total command of the skies, the attacks on the nuclear facilities themselves, analysis of the damage, perhaps a second wave, and of course additional attacks to deal with any attempted Iranian retaliation. The target set would be considerable, and would extend well beyond the targets directly related to the nuclear program, making such an operation no simple matter.

Second, Iran has the ability to respond in a number of ways. One is unleashing terrorist attacks worldwide via Hezbollah. But the most significant response would be blocking the Strait of Hormuz using either anti-ship missiles or naval mines. The latter are more threatening largely because the clearing operation could take a considerable period and it would be difficult to know when you had cleared all of the mines. Tankers and their loads are worth about $170 million at current prices, and that uncertainty could cause owners to refuse the trip. Oil exports could fall dramatically, and the effect on the global economy — particularly now amid the global financial crisis — could be absolutely devastating. Attacking Iran would be an air-sea battle, and could even include limited ground forces inserted to ensure that the nuclear facilities were destroyed.

The country most concerned with all of this is Israel. The Iranians had given every indication that they plan to build a nuclear capability and use it against Israel. Israel’s vulnerability to such a strike is enormous, and there are serious questions about Israel’s ability to use the threat of a counterstrike as a deterrent to such a strike. In our view, Iran is merely creating a system to guarantee regime survival, but given the tenor of Tehran’s statements, Israel cannot afford to take this view complacently.

Israel could unilaterally draw the United States into an airstrike on Iran. Were Israel to strike Iran by any means, it most likely would lack the ability to conduct an extended air campaign. And the United States could not suffer the consequences of airstrikes without the benefits of taking out Iran’s nuclear program. Apart from the political consequences, the U.S. Navy would be drawn into the suppression of Iranian naval capabilities in the Persian Gulf whether it wanted to or not simply to keep the Strait of Hormuz open. Even if Iran didn’t act to close off the strait, Washington would have to assume that it might, an eventuality it could not afford. So an Israeli attack would likely draw in the United States against Iran one way or another. The United States has had no appetite for such an eventuality, particularly since it considers a deliverable Iranian nuclear weapon a ways off. The U.S. alternative — in both administrations — was diplomatic.

Israel and Complications to the Diplomatic Alternative

Washington wanted to create a coalition of powers able to impose sanctions on Iran. At meetings over the summer, the Obama administration appears to have promised Israel “crippling” sanctions to prevent any unilateral Israel action. At an April G-8 meeting, it was decided that Iran must engage in serious negotiations on its nuclear program prior to the next G-8 meeting — on Sept. 24 — or face these sanctions.

The crippling sanctions foreseen were some sort of interruption of the flow of gasoline into Iran, which imports 40 percent of its supply despite being a net exporter of crude. Obviously, in order for this to work, all of the G-8 nations (and others) must participate, particularly Russia. Russia has the capacity to produce and transport all of Iran’s needs, not just its import requirements. If the Russians don’t participate, there are no sanctions.

The Russians announced weeks ago that they opposed new sanctions on Iran and would not participate in them. Moreover, they seemed to flout the ineffectiveness of any U.S. sanctions. With that, the diplomatic option on Iran was off the table. Russia is not eager to see Iran develop nuclear weapons, but it sees the United States as the greater threat at the moment. Moscow’s fundamental fear is that the United States — and Israel — will dramatically strengthen Ukraine, Georgia and other states in the FSU and on its periphery, and that Russia’s strategic goal of national security through pre-eminence in the region will be lost.

From the Russian point of view, the U.S. desire for Russian help with Iran is incompatible with the U.S. desire to pursue its own course in the FSU and countries like Poland. From the U.S. point of view, these were two entirely different matters that should be handled in a different venue. But Washington didn’t get to choose in this matter. This was a Russian decision. The Russians faced what they saw as an existential threat, believing that the U.S. strategy threatened the long-term survival of the Russian Federation. The Russians were not prepared to support a U.S. solution for Iran without American support on Russian concerns. The Americans ultimately did not understand that the Russians had shifted out of the era in which the United States could simply dictate to them. Now, the United States had to negotiate with the Russians on terms Moscow set, or the United States would have to become more directly threatening to Russia. Becoming more threatening was not an option with U.S. forces scattered all over the Middle East. Therefore, the United States had to decide what it wanted.

American attention in the run-up to the Oct. 1 talks with Iran was focused by Israel. The Obama administration had adopted an interesting two-tier position on Israel. On the one hand, it was confronting Israel on halting settlement activity in the West Bank; on the other hand, it was making promises to Israel on Iran. The sense in Israel was that the Obama administration was altering Washington’s traditional support for Israel. Since Iran was a critical threat to Israel, and since Israel might not have a better chance to strike than now, the Obama administration began to realize that its diplomatic option had failed, and that the decision on war and peace with Iran was not in its hands but in Israel’s, since Israel was prepared to act unilaterally and draw the United States into a war. Given that the Obama diplomatic initiative had failed and that the administration’s pressure on Israel had created a sense of isolation in Israel, the situation could now well spiral out of control.

Although all of these things operated in different bureaucratic silos in Washington, and participants in each silo could suffer under the illusion that the issues were unrelated, the matters converged hurriedly last week. Uncertain what leverage it had over Israel, the United States decided to reach out to the Russians. Washington sought a way to indicate to the Russians that it was prepared to deal with Russia in a different way while simultaneously giving away as little as possible. That little was the redeployment of BMD components originally planned for Poland and the Czech Republic to ships. (Money already has been allocated to upgrade additional Atlantic-based Aegis warships to BMD capability.) Whatever the military and engineering issues involved, whatever the desire not to conflate U.S. strategic relations with Israel with pressure on the settlement issue, whatever the desire to “reset” relations without actually giving the Russians anything, the silos collapsed and a gesture was made.

From the Russian point of view, the gesture is welcome but insufficient. They are not going to solve a major strategic problem for the United States simply in return for moving the BMD. For that, the United States got access to Afghanistan through Russia if desired, and the removal of missiles in Kaliningrad. The Americans also got a different atmosphere at meetings between U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev at the United Nations next week. But the sine qua non for Russian help on Iran is Russia’s sphere of influence in the FSU. The public relations aspect of how this sphere is announced is not critical. That the U.S. agrees to it is.

This is the foreign policy test all U.S. presidents face. Obama now has three choices.

  1. He can make the deal with Russia. But every day that passes, Russia is creating the reality of domination in the FSU, so its price for a deal will continue to rise from simply recognizing their sphere of influence to extending it to neutralizing Poland.
  2. He can select the military option of an air campaign against Iran. But this means accepting the risk to maritime traffic in the Persian Gulf and the potentially devastating impact on the global economy if oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz are impacted significantly.
  3. He can wait to see how things unfold, and place overwhelming pressure on Israel not to attack. But this means finding a way to place the pressure: Israel in 2009 does not have the dependence on the United States it had in 1973.

The Importance of Poland

Ultimately, the question of Iran is secondary. The question of U.S.-Russian relations is now paramount. And ultimately, policymakers don’t really have as much freedom to make choices as they would like. Under any of these scenarios, the United States doesn’t have the power to stop Russian dominance in the FSU, but it does have the ability to block further Russian expansion on the North European Plain. Preventing an amalgamation between Russia and Europe is a fundamental interest to the United States; neutralizing Poland and depending on Germany as the Russian-European frontier is not inviting — especially as Germany has no interest in reprising the role it played from 1945 to 1991.

The United States has an Iran crisis, but it is not its fundamental geopolitical problem. Interestingly, the Iran crisis is highlighting the real issue, which is Russia. It is Russia that is blocking a solution to Iran because Russian and American interests have profoundly diverged. What is emerging from Iran is the issue of Russia. And obviously, when Russia becomes an issue, so does Poland. If the United States acts to limit Russia, it will act in Poland, and not with BMD systems.

The Obama administration’s decision to withdraw BMD is insufficient to entice Russia into assisting with Iran. An agreement to respect Russian rights in the FSU would be sufficient (and in a way would merely recognize what is already in place). Obama might quietly give that assurance. But if he does, the United States will not add Poland to the pile of concessions. The greater the concessions in the FSU, the more important Poland becomes. The idea of conceding both Russian hegemony in the FSU and the neutralization of Poland in exchange for Russian pressure on Iran is utterly disproportionate.

The United States has already completed delivery of 48 late-model F-16C/Ds with advanced offensive capabilities to Poland. That matters far more to Polish national security than BMD. In the U.S. tradition with allies — particularly allies with strong lobbies in the United States, where the Polish lobby is immense — disappointment on one weapon system usually results in generosity with other, more important systems (something the Poles must learn).

As the United States has a strong military option in Iran, redrawing the map of Europe to avoid using that option — regardless of Polish fears at the moment — is unlikely. Moreover, Washington also could decide to live with an Iranian nuclear capability without redrawing the map of Europe. Ultimately, the United States has made a gesture with little content and great symbolic meaning. It is hoping that the Russians are overwhelmed by the symbolism. They won’t be.

For their part, the Russians are hoping the Americans panic over Iran. The fact is that while Russia is a great regional power, it is not that great, and its region is not that critical. The Russians may be betting that Obama will fold. They made the same bet on John F. Kennedy. Obama reads the same reports that we do about how the Russians believe him to be weak and indecisive. And that is a formula for decisive — if imprudent — action.

Adventures in Australia--Vicky

Vicky Bergmann, my daughter-in-law's sister, has accepted employment as a teacher in Doomadgee, Australia, in the Northern Territory, Queensland Province, I believe. She has just arrived and is terribly excited about her adventure in Australia. She is already singing praises about the beauty of her locale. I hope to be able, with Vicky's permission, to post some of here adventures here along with some photos.

Readers' Attention

The two following blogs are related. Perhaps reading the second one first would be the beter approach.

US vs Islam - Is all quiet on the Western Front????

Mike, thank you so much for a very lucid response (the first and only so far--not that I expected any to begin with), and pointed questioning too, I might add, to my Liberal (far-left?) reflection on Tom's friend's anti-Muslim and anti-Obama administration rant. I am hopeful of providing you with as an equally clear and sensibly stated rejoinder.

[I really enjoyed your introductory paragraph..."Warning: If you don't read this the Great Pumpkin will eat you up. ...you can go suck an egg!"]

First, I went back and reread the article being discussed. I wanted to fully redigest the essence of the article to affirm or countermand my response. After rereading the article several times and reflecting on my remarks I found that I was initially prejudiced against the article before even reading it because of the warning in Tom's lead-in statement, "...he is pretty right-wing so...contains some anti-administration/Obama inferences,..."

Secondly, I really believe that any extremist position, whether Right-wing or Left-wing, that advocates against and actively pursues a policy that engenders the depuration of segments or politic bodies, and specifically religions, of our society to where they cannot openly advocate for their cause, religious or otherwise, and where these actions facilitate fear-mongering and hate-mongering, poses a serious problem to the safety and security to not just only individual Americans but to America itself. That this promulgation of
fear-mongering and hate-mongering and depuration of classes or entities is considered as patriotic escapes me. And, though being unpatriotic may not be necessarily anti-Americn it surely doesn't seem, to me, to be pro-American.

Now, your questions:

Q: I'm puzzled about your closing as well. What is the pitiful morass to which you referred? Is it Christianity, Democracy,or both?

A: I believe our country is in a terrible multi-faceted quagmire (pitiful morass) encompassing the economy, a disfunctional infrastructure, fragmented foreign policy, and a decimated world opinion that threatens and hinders our ability to ameliorate world problems. It would
probably take a book to completely synthesize all these elements, but let me just say that if the congress would have been Democratic during GWB's reign and the POTUS had been other than GWB we'd not be in this pitiful morass. Don't believe I'd include Democracy or Christianity in the morass.

Q:
Define the scope of the pitiful morass and what you believe to be the root cause; not placing blame on anyone, but rather what action or activity you believed caused it.

A: For "Scope," see above. "Root cause" blame has to be placed--and it's squarely in the lap of the Republican Party, Republican congress, a Republican POTUS. Their actions/and decisions led this country into a personal and completely unnecessary unilateral (illegal) war of choice with Iraq (which helped to kill our economy [and many young Americans] and erode our world status); "rubber-stamped" every action asked for by GWB leading to the most gross and unconstitutional abuse of Presidential power in the history of this country (which not only produced a climate of fear throughout the nation, obliterated many of our constitutional freedoms and rights, but reduced the confidence in our nation's leadership and produced "laws" which led to the decimation of our banking/marketing system--which led to our housing crisis [with the help from Congress' complete lack of "Inspector-General" supervision]);

Q: I would like you to define "right wing" in the context you used it.

A: Do you not think this is a lead into blaspheming democrats up and down the pike: 'Those in the know are quite aware that our political and military leaders either refuse to understand or don't understand and the true nature of our enemy and the many different tactics they employ." That kind of talk certainly doesn't sound like left-wing rhetoric to me with a Democratic administration in office. Also, does the statement, "Obama Busily Appeasing Jihadists." sound like President Obama is being lauded?


Q: I have difficulty understanding how someone expressing concerns about what he describes "Islamist enemies" as anti-American.

A: First, I did not say he (or anyone) was anti-American for being concerned about our "Islamist enemies." I said there was a "slightly anti-American flavor" in his writing. I probably should have said "un-American," as I felt he was advocating our own "holy war," jihad, against Muslims in general since he, inclusively, equated or related the various nomenclatures of "Islamist enemies" (Islamists, Jihadists, Islamist enemies, militant jihad) to be Muslims without qualification. How about the Nation of Islam?

Muslims, people of the Islam faith, believers in one God, Allah, believe in and follow the Five Pillars of Islam, the Islamic way of life, which does not advocate general militant jihad (the extension of Islamic domination over the world) but employ jihad only in a protective manner. Also, Islamic law directs a communality with People of the Book, revealed religions such as Jews and Christians. One particular obligation of the Islamic faith is to "commend good and reprimand evil."

The people of the Islamic faith, Muslims, nor the Islamic faith itself, are not our enemies; I don't believe we have over 1,200,000,000 (1 billion 200 million!)--at least--Muslim enemies facing us down. Woe unto us it that were true! Let us be specific in who we attribute to be our enemies. Can we say terrorists are Jihadists? Probably so, since the present-day vernacular of Jihad ("holy war" for God; Jihad being a term that both
prescribes and directs how a devout Muslim focuses his daily life to do all things necessary to live his life in a manner commiserate with the "Islamic way of Life" as prescribed by the Quran) has been corrupted into "Jihadist," meaning specifically one who militarily conducts war against non-Muslims perportedly in the name of Allah in an effort to kill or subjugate non-Muslims and spread "Islamic' dominition, the "Islamic" faith, both politically and culturally, around the globe. These militarist Islamics, Jihadists, are fanatics who in no way represent the real, the true Islam. It is the Jihadists, and only the Jihadists, whether they be Al Queda, Taliban, or whatever fanatic, extremist, Muslim splinter group, who are the terrorists not Muslims.

Another friend, I guess, asked me how I could compare the spread of Islam to the spread of Democracy and Christianity.

A: First, I did not outright "compare" the spread of Democracy and Christianity to the spread of Isam. That being said, the Islam faith encompasses both a political and religious precept and the Quran dogma calls for the spread of Islam--but does not call for it to be in a militaristic manner, a military jihad. I understand the body of the Christian faith also calls for the spread of "The Word," the word of God. And, can anyone not challenge that GWB called for the spread of Democracy around the world?

This may not satisfy everyone, and it most likely will not, but hopefully most will at least understand where I'm coming from--I believe in the
constitution of our United States of America, the right to freedom of speech and all of the other rights embodied in our constitution; I believe in fair play and justice for all; I believe in the Golden Rule and God; I believe passionately that our government should first do no harm--and then to never do any harm; I like to believe we have honest and honorable politicians; I believe that no one is guilty until proven guilty; and I believe that no matter how bad things get, whether nationally or personally, that the sun will rise tomorrow on a new day that may just be the beginning of the resolution the many challenges that face each of us and those that face our country.

Getting a Handle on the Terror War

Getting a Handle on the Terror War
Those in the know are quite aware that our political and military leaders either refuse to understand or don't understand and the true nature of our enemy and the many different tactics they employ. Every once and while a light bulb goes off in some corner of the political-military-think-tank universe and they flirt with a way to go about confronting our Islamist enemy.
Such was the case of a Georgetown University professor.
Defeating terrorism - or at least battling it back to pre-9/11 levels - takes both brawn and brains, a Georgetown University professor said Friday. Yet so far, the United States has only used half that equation - the brawn of military muscle - in its war on terror, leaving the country just as vulnerable to attack as it was when al-Qaida blindsided the United States 5½ years ago, said Bruce Hoffman, keynote speaker Friday at a daylong seminar on religion, violence and terrorism at Case Western Reserve University.
So far so good. The professor understands militant jihad in the form of terrorism and on the battlefield is only a part of the overall strategy of multiple types of jihad that the Islamists are using against us.
He said the United States must pause now and thoroughly study the enemy - its motivation, its strategy, its culture, its strengths and weaknesses - to battle it on fronts that extend beyond a battlefield.
Ah! He understands. It's not just the acts of terrorism that need to be defeated but the ideology that drives it as well.
Now, ever y time the U.S. kills part of al-Qaida, it simply regrows, Hoffman said.
Every time a terrorist plot is broken up, new al-Qaida operatives tinker with the plan to make it stronger so they can attack again, he said. Just as the United States knows it can't kill every terrorist, terrorists know they can't kill every Westerner. Instead, Hoffman said, terrorists are trying to use fear to undermine the pact between governments and their people, all the while planning to launch bigger and more sensational attacks.
Exactly! You don't achieve victory by defeating the enemy on the battlefield. Those are just battles won. You achieve victory buy destroying their ideology at its roots and prevent it from re-surfacing again.
Unfortunately, the professor did not follow through on his argument by identifying the "motivation, its strategy, its culture" of our Islamic enemies. He failed to list actual examples of the tactics used by the Islamists everyday in the non-Muslim world like:
ØTerminate America's freedom of speech by replacing it with statewide and nationwide hate-crime bills.
ØNominate Muslim sympathizers to political office to bring about favorable legislation toward Islam and support potential sympathizers by block voting.
ØYell ''foul, out-of-context, personal interpretation, hate crime, Zionist, un- American, inaccurate interpretation of the Quran'' anytime Islam is criticized or the Quran is analyzed in the public arena.
ØEncourage Muslims to penetrate the White House, specifically with Islamists who can articulate a marvelous and peaceful picture of Islam. Acquire government positions and get membership in local school boards. Train Muslims as medical doctors to dominate the medical field, research and pharmaceutical companies. (Ever notice how numerous Muslim doctors in America are, when their countries need them more desperately than America?) Take over the computer industry. Establish Middle Eastern restaurants throughout the U.S. to connect planners of Islamization in a discreet way.
ØReading, writing, arithmetic and research through the American educational system, mosques and student centers (now 1,500) should be sprinkled with dislike of Jews, evangelical Christians and democracy. There are currently 300 exclusively Muslim schools in the U.S. which teach loyalty to the Quran, not the U.S. Constitution. In January of 2002, Saudi Arabia's Embassy in Washington mailed 4,500 packets of the Quran and videos promoting Islam to America's high schools - free of charge. Saudi Arabia would not allow the U.S. to reciprocate.
ØNullify America's sense of security by manipulating the intelligence community with misinformation. Periodically terrorize Americans with reports of impending attacks on bridges, tunnels, water supplies, airports, apartment buildings and malls.
I await the day when one of our leaders stands up and identifies the multiple types of jihads that the Islamists are using against the non-Muslim and moderate Muslim world.
Litigation Jihad
Education Jihad
Cultural Jihad
Demographic Jihad,
=2 0
Economic jihad
Institutional Jihad
Media jihad
Financial jihad
Criminal jihad
Thuggery Jihad.
Hopefully, the event that will bring such leaders forward will not be the result of 100,000 innocent Americans dead.


April 30, 2009
Spencer: Obama Busily Appeasing Jihadists
In Human Events today, I discuss the momentous first hundred days. And I expect that we ain't seen nothin' yet.
"To the Muslim world," said Barack Obama in his Inaugural Address, "we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect." After 100 days, how’s that going?
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad summed it up best, responding contemptuously to Obama’s offer to sit down to talk without preconditions and taunting Obama for his impotence: "We say to you that you yourselves know that you are today in a position of weakness. Your hands are empty, and you can no longer promote your affairs from a position of strength."
Ahmadinejad is also turning Obama’s campaign promise against him. When Obama indicated that he wouldn’t impose preconditions on negotiations with Iran, the Iranian saw an opening. Now, he’s apparently demanding preconditions for the talks by pressuring Obama for concessions on20the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
Iran’s Thug-In-Chief spoke like an aggressor who has spotted an appeaser, and is determined to wring from him as many concessions as possible.
How has it come to this so quickly? Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano seem to have made it a top priority of their administration’s opening act to weaken our position with the Islamic jihadists:
• They quietly dropped the term "war on terror." Napolitano even went so far as to say that she preferred to refer not to acts of "terrorism" but to "man-caused disasters" (NOW had no recorded comment about her sexist language). Meanwhile, a DHS report on "right-wing extremists" had no trouble referring to veterans and conservatives of all kinds as potential "terrorists." This suggested a disquieting will to silence and demonize the political opposition, all the while regarding the real terror threat with extraordinary myopi a.
• Obama named Los Angeles Times columnist Rosa Brooks as an advisor to the undersecretary of Defense for policy. Brooks is venomously anti-Israel and once wrote that al Qaeda was "little more than an obscure group of extremist thugs," and that the Bush Administration had only imagined that it was a "vast global threat."
• He has tapped Harold Koh to become the legal adviser for the State Department. Koh has said that he had no objection to Sharia’s being applied to "an appropriate case" in the United States.
• In a startling breach of protocol, Obama bowed deeply to the King of Saudi Arabia, implying an obeisance that isn’t going to free us from our dependence upon the oil sheikhs any time soon.
• While on a trip to Europe, he refused to visit the American Cemetery at Normandy, but made a point of visiting a mosque in Istanbul. He expressed, in an address to the Turkish Parliament, his "deep appreciation for the Islamic faith, which has done so much over the centuries to shape the world—including in my own country." It’s unclear ho w he thinks Islam has shaped the U.S., other than to lead to innovations in airport security. His statement did nothing but embolden the jihadists who have dedicated their efforts to bringing Islamic law to the West.
• Obama said also that "the United States is not and never will be at war with Islam" -- indicating that he had no intention of addressing the ideological challenge that Islamic jihadists present to the West, or of acknowledging the fact that although the U.S. is not at war with Islam, many Muslims consider Islam to be at war with the U.S.
Obama invited to the White House the head of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, a 56-nation body that has declared its intention to compel the United Nations to criminalize all criticism of Islam.
• He has declared his determination to open negotiations with "moderate elements" of the Taliban, despite the fact that no such people have ever been found.
• He has declared his determination to close Guantanamo, despite the fact that over 60 former Gitmo detainees have returned to the jihad.
All t his and more in just 100 days.
The Obama Administration apparently doesn’t know the difference between appeasement and diplomacy. A diplomat will sell you and your nation for a price. An appeaser will give it away without getting anything in return.


"...nations can't be...punished in the next world, ....Providence punishes national sin, by calamities."
George Mason, constitutional convention, 1787

Senator McCaskill--Reply To her email

Thank you so much for the informational email to me, to all of us Missourians. My wife and I, and I know most other Missourians as well, appreciate you and your efforts to serve us in the best way possible. We are so amazed at the manner you 'hit the road running' in the Senate--and have aggressively continued to keep the State of Missouri and our country foremost in your efforts to serve. Your visual and astute presence and your strong and clear articulation of problems facing our country and possible solutions thereto has been an inspiration to all of us. And, we are sure President-elect Obama owes a lot to you, as national co-chair, for his election.

I am reminded of the national political personality/reporter/columnist who said yesterday concerning Obama's election that, even given Michelle Obama's mis-valued quote, (paraphrased) "This is the first time in a very long time that I have been so proud of my country." So many of us feel the same way; we are so very proud of our country for overcoming so many different kinds of fears to elect Barak Obama as our next President. There is no doubt whatsoever that this brilliant, luminous, engaging personality; this very intelligent and this charismatic leader, will make us even more proud of our country. And you, our most gracious Ms. Senator, we are also sure, will be right in the mix along with President Obama to lead our country to a more exhalted level. God Bless.

Harvey and Michelle Hurtt
St. Peters, Missouri

Thomas Jefferson--A "patriot?"

I know that many, most, probably, admire Thomas Jefferson but in many respects he was an arrogant (as in aristocratic) blowhard, coward, political (as in our government) subversive, pernicious, avant garde political rabble rouser. The only thing really worthy of note in all the praise of Jefferson is his work on the Declaration of Independence--and in that regard he needed a lot of help from the many other Founding Fathers; he was given the task of drafting the Declaration of Independence by his co-committee members because writing was greatest attribute--and to give him something to do because, otherwise, he was an inept, unproductive and inconsequential delegate to the first Continental Congress; and, the Declaration of Independence was actually written by Thomas Jefferson et al.

He gets a "thumbs down" from me because he turned-tail and fled (deserted?) when the fight was on.

Just my opinion, of course.

Debunking Michelle Obama's Thesis Criticisim--July 2008

My first thought when I read this email (see email below) Satanizing Michelle Obama was, "What did John McCain writesabout in his senior thesis?.....Did he even write one (by himself)? Seeing as how he finished 894th out of 899 (fifth from the bottom!) of his graduating class at the Naval Academy it wouldn't surprise me if he paid someone to write his thesis for him, considering his disdain for academics."

Perhaps John McCain's campaign will make McCain's senior thesis available (if there is one) for critique as Obama's campaign has made Michelle's thesis available? (Political.com's request for Michelle's thesis was promptly accommodated and publicly distributed early this year.)
If one would go back and actually read Michelle's thesis and the Princetonian's basic review--and Snopes brief that put her thesis into context--any open-minded, thinking person would readily come to the conclusion that as a young black college student Michelle wrote a compelling missive on her research and on her frank considerations, thoughts, and perceptions concerning the black culture (a snapshot in time) during a time of significant upheaval in our American society--a time when blacks were finally beginning to emerge from a pit of darkness to achieve a certain level of success and status both educationally and economically, and to take a place at the American societal table.

Also, note that Michelle's study comprised results of responses from 22 percent of the solicited graduates of Princeton from the 70's--NOT current students during her time at Princeton.

My thoughts about people who come up with warped analysis such as the below, over-analyzing and putting a demonic partisan twist to even the most objective palatable thought, is their inane comments about political foes will always have a smelly, foul odor because they are lacking the competence to put forth a positive flavor toward their own candidates; they only know how to disparage their opponents and call them names.

Harvey


I thought you would find this Snopes article of interest about Mrs. Obama.


We paid for her scholarship.....................

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This potential future First Lady must be put aside at the election, including her empty suited husband.




According to Snopes.com, Princeton was requested to put a 'restriction' on distribution of any copies of the thesis of Michelle Obama (a/k/a/ Michelle laVaughn Robinson) saying it could not be made available until November 5, 2008 but when it was published on apolitical website they decided they would lift the restriction.
OBAMA'S MILITANT RACISM REVEALED
In her senior thesis at Princeton , Michele Obama, the wife of Barack Obama stated that America was a nation founded on 'crime and hatred'.Moreover, she stated that whites in America were 'ineradicably racist'.
The1985 thesis, titled 'Princeton-Educated Blacks and the Black Community' was written under her maiden name, Michelle LaVaughn Robinson. Michelle Obama stated in her thesis that to 'Whites at Princeton, it often seems as if, to them, she will always be Black first...' However, it was reported by a fellow black classmate, 'If those 'Whites at Princeton' really saw Michelle as one who always would 'be Black first,' it seems that she gave them that impression'. Most alarming is Michele Obama's use of the terms 'separationist' and 'integrationist' when describing the views of black people.Mrs. Obama clearly identifies herself with a 'separationist' view of race.'By actually working with the Black lower class or within their communities as a result of their ideologies, a separationist may better understand the desperation of their situation and feel more hopeless about a resolution as opposed to an integrationist who is ignorant to their plight.'Obama writes that the path she chose by attending Princeton would likely lead to her 'further integration and/or assimilation into a white cultural and social structure that will only allow me to remain on the periphery of society; never becoming a full participant.' Michele Obama clearly has a chip on her shoulder.Not only does she see separate black and white societies in America, but she elevates black over white in her world.

Here is another passage that is uncomfortable and ominous in meaning: 'There was no doubt in my mind that as a member of the black community, I am obligated to this community and will utilize all of my present and future resources to benefit the black community first and foremost.'What is Michelle Obama planning to do with her future resources if she's first lady that will elevate black over white in America? The following passage appears to be a call to arms for affirmative action policies that could be the hallmark of an Obama administration. 'Predominately white universities like Princeton are socially and academically designed to cater to the needs of the white students comprising the bulk of their enrollments.'

The conclusion of her thesis is alarming. Michelle Obama's poll of black alumni concludes that other black students at Princeton do not share her obsession with blackness. But rather than celebrate, she is horrified that black alumni identify with our common American culture more than they value the color of their skin. 'I hoped that these findings would help me conclude that despite the high degree of identification with whites as a result of the educational and occupational path that black Princeton alumni follow, the alumni would still maintain a certain level of identification with the black community. However, these findings do not support this possibility. 'Is it no wonder that most black alumni ignored her racist questionnaire? Only 89 students responded out of 400 who were asked for input. Michelle Obama does not look into a crowd of Obama supporters and see Americans. She sees black people and white people eternallyconflicted with one another.
The thesis provides a trove of Mrs. Obama's thoughts and world view seen through a race-based prism. This is a very divisive view for a potential first lady that would do untold damage to race relations in this country in a Barack Obama administration.
Michelle Obama's intellectually refined racism should give all Americans pause for deep concern. Now maybe she's changed, but she sure sounds like some one with an axe to grind with America. Will the press let Michelle get a free pass over her obviously racist comment about American whites? I am sure that it will.
PS: We paid for her scholarship.
D Bruce Fite




[Deleted]......I find it so hard to believe you would forward this piece of unmitigated cow manure to anyone. I consider myself fairly open-minded and willingly watch or listen to people of different political persuasion...but, I get turned off real quick (I get mad also!) when unsubstantiated misconstruing statements, spurious, degenerative lies, innuendos, and gross insinuations quickly become the theme of the "communication." This 'blurb' has got to be one of the most unconscionably gross and, frankly, stupid miscarriages of political propaganda I have ever read.

Sorry, buddy, but I truly hope this was passed along as a rabid joke showing the world (those who read it anyway [hopefully not many]) the depth of inane depravity the right-wing will stoop to.

Hope you consider forwarding my comments to all those to whom you forwarded the original.

Your Continuing friend,

Harvey




[............deleted...] wrote:

This is why we must get over our disappointment in John McCain and vote for him. A vote for McCain is a vote AGAINST THIS VERY SCARY MAN. At least we know where McCain stands and that he loves America.

A challenge from the Fort Worth Star Telegram

The Jihad Candidate - by Rich Carroll

Conspiracy theories make for interesting novels when the storyline is not so absurd that it can grasp our attention. 'The Manchurian candidate' and 'Seven Days in May' are examples of plausible chains of events that captures the reader's imagination at best-seller level.
'What if' has always been the solid grist of fiction.

Get yourself something cool to drink, find a relaxing position, but before you continue, visualize the television photos of two jet airliners smashing into the Twin Towers in lower Manhattan and remind yourself this cowardly act of Muslim terror was planned for eight years.

How long did it take Islam and their oil money to find a candidate for President of the United States? As long as it took them to place a Senator from Illinois and Minnesota? The same amount of time to create a large Muslim enclave in Detroit? The time it took them to build over 2,000 mosques in America? The same amount of time required to place radical wahabbist clerics in our military and prisons as 'chaplains'?

Find a candidate who can get away with lying about their father being a 'freedom fighter' when he was actually part of the most corrupt and violent government in Kenya's history. Find a candidate
with close ties to The Nation of Islam and the violent Muslim overthrow in Africa, a candidate who is educated among white infidel
Americans but hides his bitterness and anger behind a superficial toothy smile.

Find a candidate who changes his American name of Barry to the Muslim name of Barak Hussein Obama, and dares anyone to question
his true ties under the banner of 'racism'. Nurture this candidate in an
atmosphere of anti-white American teaching and surround him with
Islamic teachers. Provide him with a bitter, racist, anti-white, anti-American wife, and supply him with Muslim middle east connections and Islamic monies. Allow him to be clever enough to get
away with his anti-white rhetoric and proclaim he will give $834 billion taxpayer dollars to the Muslim controlled United Nations for use in Africa.

Install your candidate in an atmosphere of deception because questioning him on any issue involving Africa or Islam would be seen
as 'bigoted racism'; two words too powerful to allow the citizenry to
be informed of facts. Allow your candidate to emplo several black
racist Nation of Islam Louis Farrakhan followers as members of his
Illinois Senatorial and campaign staffs.

Where is the bloodhound American 'free press' who doggedly verturned every stone in the Watergate case? Where are our nation's reporters that have placed every Presidential candidate under the
microscope of detailed scrutiny; the same press who pursue Bush's
'Skull and Bones' club or ran other candidates off with persistent detective and research work? Why haven't 'newsmen' pursued the 65 blatant lies told lies told by this candidate during the Presidential
primaries? Where are the stories about this candidate's cousin and the Muslim butchery in Africa? Since when did our national press corps become weak, timid, and silent? Why haven't they regaled us with the long list of socialists and communists who have surrounded this 'out of nowhere' Democrat candidate or that his church re-printed the Hamas Manifesto in their bulletin, and that his 'close pastor friend
and mentor' met with Middle East terrorist Moammar Gaddafi, (Guide of the First of September Great Revolution of the Socialist People's
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya) Why isn't the American press telling us this candidate is supported by every Muslim organization in the world?

As an ultimate slap in the face, be blatant in the fact your candidate
has ZERO interest in traditional American values and has the most
liberal voting record in U.S. Senate history. Why has the American
main stream media clammed-up on any negative reporting on Barak
Hussein Obama? Why will they print Hillary Rodham Clinton's name but never write his middle name? Is it not his name? Why, suddenly, is ANY information about this candidate not coming from main stream media, but from the blogosphere by citizens seeking facts and the
truth? Why isn't our media connecting the dots with Islam? Why do
they focus on 'those bad American soldiers' while Islam slaughters non Muslims daily in 44 countries around the globe? Why does our media refe to Darfur as 'ethnic cleansing' instead of what it really is;
Muslims killing non- Muslims! There is enough str ange, anti-American activity surrounding Barak Hussein Obama to peek the curiosity of any reporter. WHERE IS OUR INVESTIGATIVE MEDIA!?

A formal plan for targeting America was devised three years after the
Iranian revolution in 1982. The plan was summarized in a 1991 memorandum by Mohamed Akram, an operative of the global Muslim
Brotherhood. 'The process of settlement' of Muslims in America, kram
explained, 'is a civilization jihad process.' This means that members
of the Brotherhood must understand that their work in 'America is a
kind of grand jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and sabotaging its miserable house by their
hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated and
God's religion is made victorious over all other religions.'

There is terrorism we can see, smell and fear, but there is a new kind
of terror invading The United States in the form of Sharia law and
finance. Condoning it is civilization suicide. Middle East Muslims are
coming to America in record numbers and building hate infidel mosques, buying our corporations, suing us for our traditions, but
they and the whole subject of Islam is white noise leaving informed
Americans about who and what is really peaceful. Where is our investigative press? Any criticism of Islam or their intentions, even
though Islamic leaders state their intentions daily around the globe,
brings-forth a volley of 'racist' from the left-wing Democrat crowd.

Lies and deception behind a master plan - the ingredient for 'The
Manchurian Candidate
' or the placement of an anti-American resident
in our nation's White House? Is it mere coincidence that an anti-capitalist run for President at the same time Islamic sharia finance and law is trying to make advancing strides into the United
States? Is it mere coincidence this same candidate wants to dis-arm
our nuclear capabili ty at a time when terrorist Muslim nations are
expanding their nuclear weapons capability? Is it mere coincidence
this candidate wants to reduce our military at a time of global jihad
from Muslim nations?

Change for America? What change? To become another 'nation of Islam'?