Thursday, March 30, 2006

The Point: News From the Front

vol. II, 1st Edition, 30 March 2006


America is fighting a war against Terrorism. On September 11, 2001 we were forced to say so publicly. Before that day, this sleeping giant was content to swipe at individual acts as they happened. When 3,000 of our souls were taken from us, we emerged on the other side having survived, but finding ourselves as a Nation mortally wounded. When the fires were finally put out, and as many of the bodies identified and claimed as possible, we arose from the ashes to face our enemy with resolve and righteous indignation. The phrase “Never Forget” meant something then, and for those engaged in the fight, it still means something today. We are in a war, and we must win.



Today, the two most active theaters of this war are Afghanistan and Iraq. Our Civilian leadership and our brave men and women in uniform are fighting for US, and in our stead. We owe them loyalty, support, honor, and commitment. Not through Political machines; power-hungry self-important aspirants to the halls of Congress or the Whitehouse, but through our direct involvement with, and understanding of the evils they face and the accomplishments they continue to make with dignity, courage, and faithful execution of the mission. While commercial media and disingenuous detractors nip at the edges of their courage and sacrifice, I bring you this report:















Eight Strategic Pillars to Victory in Iraq:


Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgency


Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance


Help Iraqis Forge a National Compact for Democratic Government


Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential Services


Help Iraq Strengthen Its Economy


Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law and Promote Civil Rights


Increase International Support for Iraq


Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public Isolation of the Insurgents



NEW: The President Discusses Democracy in Iraq with Freedom House

"America will leave Iraq, but we will not retreat from Iraq. We will leave because Iraqi forces have gained in strength, not because America's will has weakened. We will complete the mission in Iraq because the security of the American people is linked to the success in Iraq.



We're pursuing a clear strategy for victory. Victory requires an integrated strategy: political, economic and security. These three elements depend on and reinforce one another. By working with Iraqi leaders to build the foundations of a strong democracy, we will ensure they have the popular support they need to defeat the terrorists. By going after the terrorists, coalition and Iraqi forces are creating the conditions that allow the Iraqi people to begin rebuilding their lives and their country. By helping Iraqis with economic reconstruction, we're giving every citizen a real stake in the success of a free Iraq. And as all this happens, the terrorists, those who offer nothing but death and destruction, are becoming isolated from the population. "



NEW: Fact Sheet: Strategy for Victory: Freedom in Iraq


The President discusses Freedom and Democracy in Iraq



Whitehouse Releases "National Security Strategy"

















UPDATED: US State Department Iraq Weekly Status Report:


** Highlights through 29 March 2006: **


1. Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgents


Soldiers from the 1st and 2nd Battalions, 1st Iraqi Special Operations Forces Brigade, conducted a coordinated operation in northeast Baghdad March 26 to capture and detain insurgents responsible for kidnapping and execution activities.


2. Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance


The Iraqi Army took another step forward in combating terrorism and insurgency March 22 when 139 elite soldiers graduated from the Iraqi Special Operations Forces Commando Course. .


3. Help Iraqis to Forge a National Compact for Democratic Government


Speaking after a March 28 Cabinet meeting, President Bush called upon members of his Cabinet to reach out to their counterparts in Iraq to build relationships and help Iraqi officials strengthen their democracy, once a government is formed.


4. Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential Services


All towers on the Bayji to Baghdad West Number Two 400kV line have been erected, and the Ministry of Electricity (ME) is in the process of completing the stringing of the towers. The interdicted towers along the Bayji to Baghdad West Number One 400kV line are expected to be completed by the end of the March.


5. Help Iraq Strengthen Its Economy


USAID's Agriculture Reconstruction and Development Program for Iraq (ARDI), in partnership with the Ministry of Agriculture and two American equipment providers, has repaired 1,543 tractors in workshops across Iraq.


6. Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law


Coalition forces now are focusing on upgrades to Iraq's security forces, calling 2006, “the year of the police,” says U.S. Army Lieutenant General Martin Dempsey, head of the Multi-National Security Transition Command in Iraq.


7. Increase International Support for Iraq


The Arab League Summit began March 28 in Khartoum to discuss issues involving Iraq's future. Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika said Iraq's neighbors should honestly cooperate with the Iraqi people to preserve the country's integrity and unity.


8. Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public Isolation of the Insurgents


On March 26, US Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad inaugurated the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Baghdad.




Dept. of State Quarterly Report on Iraqi Relief and Reconstruction Funding and Expenditures
Excerpts:


During this October-December 2005 quarter, the Iraqi Relief and Reconstruction Fund(IRRF) supported a wide range of programs and activities in ten sectors. This report highlights three of particular importance:


(1) programs to support Iraq’s constitutional referendum in October and the parliamentary elections in December;


(2) support for institutional economic reforms, which supported the conclusion of an IMF Stand-By Arrangement on December 23; and


(3) continued support in delivering essential services, including capacity building for Iraqis responsible for providing those services.





















USAID: Assistance for Iraq



NEW FEATURE: ** USAid Press Releases **




USAID Official to visit Horn of Africa and Assess Humanitarian Crisis


On World Tuberculosis Day, USAID Provides $1 Million to the "Stop TB Partnership"


U.S., Mexico to Collaborate on Capture and Reuse of Methane Gas




** Program Financial Summary through 17 March 2006 **


** Iraq Reconstruction Weekly Update through 17 March 2006**















US Department of Defense

National Military Strategic Plan for the War on Terrorism


** NEW: National Military Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction **



UPDATED: US Department of Defense War on Terror - Current Headlines:



New Threats Demand New Approach to Deterrence, Defense


DoD Committed to Stopping Spread of Weapons of Mass Destruction


Terrorist Cell Leader Captured; Soldiers Destroy Weapons Caches


Iraq Veterans Proud to Serve, Eager to Deploy Again


Afghan, Coalition Doctors Provide Care to Villagers


Anti-Terror War Is Struggle of Ideas, Vice Chairman Says


Bush: United States Will Leave, 'But Not Retreat' From Iraq






















US Central Command



** FULL STATEMENT OF GENERAL JOHN P. ABIZAID BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED

SERVICES COMMITTEE ON THE 2006 POSTURE OF THE UNITED STATES CENTRAL

COMMAND 14 MARCH 2006 **




Current Headlines




BASTOGNE SOLDIERS TRAIN IRAQI PLATOON


ANA'S CENTRAL MOVEMENT AGENCY CONDUCTS OPERATIONS


COALITION FORCES PRESS ADVANTAGE IN HELMAND PROVINCE


TERRORIST TURNED OVER TO MND-B SOLDIERS BY RELATIVE















Multi-National Security Transition Command - Iraq



Multi-National Security Transition Command: Press Releases



20 March :: Twenty detained in Diyala operation


18 March :: Weapons cache destroyed near Habbaniyah


18 March :: Iraqi Soldiers find, destroy weapons cache














Digital Video and Imagery Distribution System

DVIDS Headlines:



Entire Squad From Co. B, 5th Eng. Bn. Reenlists Together


Operation Cowpens


Enlisted Soldier Fulfills Dream of Becoming Pilot


Coalition Forces Work to Improve Iraqi Army Tactics and Training



Military Branch and Unit Publications
Featured Editions This Week:


Anconda Times


Iron Brigade Chronicles




Now, go out and seek the truth from those who fight for all of us each and every day

A Frame for a Bigger Picture

While much debate surrounds the whole so-called "Illegal Immigration" issue, I can't help but take a huge step backwards, out from amongst the trees, for a better look at the forest here.

Many, here and around the blogosphere and inside the MSM, have beaten more dead horses than there are in the pasture...and have waxed far more eloquent than I ever could. I could jump into any of these exhortations and pick the side giving the best sales pitch of the moment, or I could try to re-frame these discussions into my own words; either approach only serves to further beat an already dead herd of horses.

For me the real story in this is the reality that our Government has failed us, our elected and appointed Political heros have failed us, our sytem of checks and balances and the notion of the rule of law has failed us, and ultimately we should be men and women enough to admit we have failed ourselves...over a very long period of years.

As your standard run-of-the-mill John Q. Citizen, let me encourage folks with a little time and energy to look at this from a different perspective, and consider the suckers we have ALL become to the sound bite and the feel-good rhetoric that has gotten us here.

You can all search Google yourselves, so no links are needed from me, but in review let's see if I have this right:

We gave illegals amnesty and promised tighter border controls. They got their amnesty, we got MORE POROUS borders with budget and staff and resource cuts at Customs and INS (pre-Homeland Security).

We tightened the rules for getting and retaining the various visas available for purchase (at the right price...but more than impoverished "sincere" emigrees could ever hope to be able to afford...isn't that why they are coming here in the first place?).

We bloated the bureaucracy so dramatically that we can't get out of our own way to communicate across agencies on matters of surveillance and intelligence about "bad guys" we seem to know are here but can't or won't go find and remove.

We wink at our local business leaders about their employment practices regarding documentation of legal status for their employees. We seem to ALL know who works for them, who hires them, and that some of them pick SOME of these workers up at the local Home Depot, but we can't be bothered to gather up the employees, deport them, and fine the offending employer (a law that has long been on the books). We even have "safe cities" where illegals can not be approached by Law Enforcement unless they commit a crime...they can not be approached solely for suspicion of being an illegal.

Those that we actually DO catch get rushed thru a review hearing, a plea(sometimes) is entered, and a follow up court appearance date is set before we cut them loose BACK on to our streets to never be heard from again.

We know there is a huge market for stolen identification and forged Social Security cards and counterfeit birth certificates, but we never seem to break up these crime rings... at least not that I ever hear much about in the news. We DO, however, chase down a 14 year old hacker that steals info off the web, and splash him all over the news.

It became abundantly clear after 9/11 that we had a serious problem with expired visas that we couldn't or wouldn't be bothered to allocate resources to finding and apprehending and removing from our country. Instead, we heard more rhetoric about fences and the National Guard...remember the birth of the Minutemen? All THEY got for their troubles was to be villified and marginalized and stereotyped as nazis or racists or vigilantes.

When we decided to start telling ourselves border security was a more serious problem than we realized and we met this realization in time for the 04 Presidential campaign, we were convinced we needed to vote "security". We did...by re-lecting all the Political heros that made this mess in the first place (or have done bupkus during their tenure to fix), in deference to votes from illegally obtained voter registrations, or the special interests and advocacy groups insisting they speak out in soft, soothing, reassuring tones about immigrants and how we are a NATION of immigrants, and how immigration is the soul of our country, lest they not get elected or re-elected.

While I would rather elect Homer Simpson to the White House than John Kerry, at least the Decorated Viet Nam War Hero (tm) TRIED to remind us that border security isn't just Mexico and Canada but every container and every ship and every vessel and every vehicle and every person in every Port and every Harbor on the Left and Right border...the Oceans.

We insisted in the most recent hair-on-fire-Dubai-Ports-World-debacle that we were going to make ABSOLUTELY sure security took precedence over sweetheart deals with a company and a Country we apparently have no compunction about being in-your-face discriminatory against solely on the basis of their race and their creed (which smacks in the face of our collective soft-spot for getting along in the world, embracing other religions and cultures, and engaging even-handedly with other countries); most especially Arab world countries we want to get along better with.

And, if that's not enough, consider the genius behind we, the people, actually voting in favor of things like driver's licenses for illegals, in-state tuition rates for illegals going to college, welfare for illegals, food stamps for illegals, WIC for illegals, Medicare for illegals, Medicaid for illegals, Social Security for illegals, and free medical care for illegals (redundant and repetitive here by design).

Now, I admit and am proud to be a good ole country boy living in the heartland, but I am sick of hearing all the feel good fluff about immigration generically, and pragmatism about immigration specifically. I am AWARE that we can not easily round up 12 million people and ship them out. I am aware that it will take a lot of money and a very long time to build fences and walls. I, too, recognize that we are, after all, supposed to be charitable and generous and sensitive to the needs of the downtrodden as the good Americans we all aspire to be. What frustrates me the most is that I ALSO am aware that we are generically lazy, often have the attention span of a Mayfly, and are typically inclined to defer to our Politicians...after all, isn't that why we HIRED them? And surely, the all-reliable media will hold them to account for our expectations and will tell us how they're doing; News at 6!.

But as the cynic I have become, I warn you now of what lies ahead.

We will keep them here, and we will create a new class of citizens for all our Political heros and special interests to pander to. We will watch them coddled and hand-fed, and cow-towed to. We will then drive the need for more services and more government and more Political heros (by newly created representation districts). We will half- heartedly build a chain link fence (knowing the tunnels underneath them are still in place...wink wink) under the auspices of enhanced security (I have 5 english mastiffs...they SCOFF at chain link fences...but I digress). We will hire more Customs and INS and Security technology companies and personnel...we will throw money at every leaking dribble in this "dam" we keep trying to shore up to minimize the flow of bodies into this country...and where will we be when that is done?

Look at the big picture. This is, as has been said elsewhere just lipstick on a pig. Unless they are ALL removed, and the doors locked and bolted, the bleeding of America at her borders will continue.

We will only serve to create even MORE bureaucracy, MORE Politicians, MORE of our money being re-allocated and re-distributed to our new "fellow citizens" of the newly created "Immigrant Class" and the programs we will need to design and fund to help and sustain them...and guess who gets to control that money? The panderers, and whiners, and hand-wringers that got us here in the first place...OUR Political Heros.

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Gen. Abizaid Speaks!

General John P. Abizaid, before the Senate Armed Services Committee on March 14, 2006, issued a Posture Statement of the United States Central Command. Highlights from the Introductory statements are:

INTRODUCTION:
United States Central Command (CENTCOM) is in the middle of a fifth consecutive year of sustained warfare in its area of operations. The Command remains engaged in three principal activities: (1) defeating al Qaida and associated extremist networks throughout the region, (2) stabilizing Iraq and Afghanistan, and (3) partnering with governments and their militaries in the region to help them develop the capabilities and institutions to defeat terrorists and extremists on their own.

MISSION:
U.S. Central Command conducts operations to attack, disrupt and defeat terrorism, deter and defeat adversaries, deny access to WMD, assure regional access, strengthen regional stability, build the self-reliance of partner nations’ security forces, and protect the vital interests of the United States within the area of responsibility.

NATURE OF THE REGION:
The CENTCOM region spans 6.5 million square miles and 27 countries including Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Egypt, the countries of the Horn of Africa, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, the countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Pakistan, and the Central Asian states as far north as Kazakhstan. It incorporates a nexus of vital transportation and trade routes, including the Red Sea, the Northern Indian Ocean, and the Arabian Gulf. It is home to the strategic maritime choke points of the Suez Canal, the Bab el Mandeb, and the Strait of Hormuz. It encompasses the world’s most energy-rich region – the Arabian Gulf alone accounts for 57% of the world’s crude oil reserves, 28% of the world’s oil production, and 41% of the world’s natural gas reserves.

GLOBAL COUNTERTERRORISM AND THE LONG WAR:
Defeating al Qaida and associated ideological movements will require significant counterterrorism cooperation among our allies and partners not only within the CENTCOM AOR, but throughout the globe. It will also require the dedication of military, intelligence, and many other components of national power. Our network of allies and agencies will eventually defeat the al Qaida network, but we have yet to master the integration of national and international power to achieve success against this ruthless, borderless enemy. We have long experience with nation state warfare. We must, in the years ahead, learn to organize ourselves to defeat a stateless enemy capable of delivering state-like destruction without having state-like vulnerabilities. Defeating such an enemy requires a careful study of its clearly articulated strategy and vision.

THE NATURE OF THE ENEMY:
Al Qaida and ideologically-linked groups such as Ansar al Islam, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, al Ittihad al Islami, Jemaah Islamiyah, and Ansar al Sunna represent the main enemy to long-term peace and stability in the CENTCOM AOR, promoting and thriving on instability and violence. They challenge our partners in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. They attack our friends in Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Morocco, Madrid, and London. Although we have not experienced another attack on our homeland, the enemy that brought us 9/11 continues to represent a clear and unambiguous threat to our country.

This enemy seeks to topple local governments, establish a repressive and intolerant regional theocracy, and then extend its violence to the rest of the world. To effect such change, this enemy believes it must evict the United States and our Coalition allies from the region. Masking their true intentions with propaganda, rhetoric, and a sophisticated use of the mass media and the internet, this enemy exploits regional tensions and popular grievances. Al Qaida and its associated movements exhibit strategic patience and are willing to wait decades to achieve their goals.

PRINCIPLES OF GLOBAL COUNTERTERRORISM AND THE LONG WAR:
For the first time in our history, the principal enemy facing the United States is not another nation state – it is an ideologically-driven, borderless network. Such an enemy requires new thinking on how we organize and fight. Militarily, we will continue to kill and capture al Qaida leaders, shut down training camps, destroy operational cells, and prevent al Qaida and associated movements from exploiting ungoverned spaces. Certainly, such action requires precision targeting and highly sophisticated intelligence networks of our own. Nonmilitary measures to defeat al Qaida will be increasingly decisive in ultimately bringing about the network’s defeat. In order to counter its fanatical ideology and diminish its sources of strength, all elements of international and national power – diplomatic, political, economic, financial, the private sector – must be used to pressure the entire al Qaida and associated movement network over time.

STRATEGIC PRESENCE:
As we implement these principles, forces should be deployed in the region to focus on building partner military capacity, protecting the flow of strategic resources, deterring hostile states, and maintaining regional U.S. counterterrorist capacity. It is important to understand that the current large conventional force posture is largely a function of counterinsurgency work in both Iraq and Afghanistan.


His statement further describes the nature of the enemies we face, the work being done BY REGION to address them, the strategy for turn over of Security Control, and the forward thinking of known future conflicts...Iran being the most obvious.

While the MSM and our state-side Political Heroes would have you thinking differently, take the long time needed to get the perspective from the fighters, not the hand-wringing whiners and capitulaters...this is a MUST read.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Don't lose sight of Palestine in the GWOT

You will have to subscribe to get the link, but for those not signed up with CentCOM I offer you this
On 4 March, 2006, Aljazeera broadcast a video recording of al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri warning the HAMAS Movement against recognizing those he termed “secularists” and joining them in one legislative council. Al-Zawahiri said that assuming power must lead to applying the rules of Shari'ah (Islamic law).
This comes from a section of CentCom's reqgular newsletter, under the section called "What Extremists are Saying". This edition has some frightening commentary for those interested in the truth on the ground over the so-called truth from our Media here in the good ole US of A.

Here is the entirety of it:
“ In his State of the Union address, Bush, the advocate of democracy, has threatened HAMAS to halt aid unless it recognizes Israel, abandons Jihad, and abides by the agreements of capitulation between the [Palestinian] Authority [PA] and Israel. In this regard, it concerns me to alert my Muslim brothers in Palestine of several issues in order to realize the dimensions of the US conspiracy against them. The first issue is that the assumption of power is not required in itself, but it is required to consolidate God's law on earth. Should we give up the basis of religion; namely, the rule of Shari'ah, how would we apply the rule of God on Earth. Applying the rule of God is a pillar of monotheism. Following whims and not applying the rule of God is not part of God's religion or His rule. It would be a different religion and a different rule.

“The secularists in the National Authority have sold Palestine and accepted some morsels of it. So, recognizing those who made concessions and bestowing legitimacy on them conflicts with the approach of Islam. By the standards of Islam, these are criminals, and Palestine is not their possession or a real estate so as to relinquish it.

“Joining those who sold Palestine in one legislative council and considering their sale of Palestine, which conflicts with Islam, as a constructive religious judgment and accepting that the number of votes is the judge between us and them is a clear violation of the approach of Koran. That we recognize the legitimacy of their government and system means that we recognize the agreements they signed. It also means that, should these criminals receive a majority in any upcoming elections, then we will have to accept their right to sell Palestine. However, nobody, be he Palestinian or not, has the right to relinquish a grain of the Palestinian soil. This was an Islamic country, which the infidels occupied. It is the duty of every Muslim to seek to regain it. This is the dangerous meaning of accepting to join these secular councils on the basis of a secular constitution and on the basis of the Madrid and Oslo accords, the road map, and other agreements of surrender that violate, and even clash with the Shar'iah…”

Al-Zawahiri also urged the annulment of agreements with Israel.

“Fourth, several statements were made on the acceptance and observance of the agreements signed by the National Authority and Israel, meaning that those who made these statements approve of the Madrid and Oslo accords, the road map, and the other surrender agreements. This is a dangerous deal that must be annulled at once. One wonders why the rule of Shari'ah was conceded and why the surrender agreements were accepted. Was it for 80 seats in Gaza municipality?

“My Muslim brothers in Palestine, Iraq, and everywhere else, we must be wary of the new American game entitled the political process, for it is based on four deceptive principles: First, the abandonment of the law of Shar'iah; second, the recognition of the status quo and the surrender agreements that were imposed by the enemy via the collusion of those who sold our sanctities and dignity; third, the relinquishment of arms and the renunciation of jihad; and the fourth, the enemy's superiority and preservation of its arsenal of conventional and unconventional weapons, its military bases on our lands, and its forces that are occupying our countries, along with its continued assaults on us. The Crusader-Zionist enemy lures some of us into approving part of the game's rules with promises of power and freedom of movement, but then resorts to pressure and siege to force them to accept the remaining rules.

“Some might ask what harm there is in scoring political gains, even if temporary and limited. Well, the answer is that this warning is not concerned with a few gains, but with the high price paid for them. Are 80 seats in the Gaza municipality worth abandoning the faith of monotheism and abiding by the surrender agreements? Others might ask what the alternative is. Well, it is the path of the prophets and messengers, the path of da'wah [Islamic call] and jihad; da'wah for the pure faith and jihad in its name until the land is liberated and the Muslim caliphate emerges, God willing.”
.

While Iran is "believed" to be meddling in the Iraq conflict alongside Syria, Jordan, Yemen, and perhaps the balance of individuals from Saudia Arabia, Egypt, and so on, let us not fall prey to focusiing ONLY on Iraq here. HAMAS made lots of headlines after their victory, but not much more lately. We, inside the US continue to face the Pro-war vs. Anti-war debate, and pay most of our attention to whether the right name has declared the Civil War there that many have been anxiously trying to be first to declare.

Meanwhile, AQ is workinig all the fronts it perceives able to have a hand in, not the least of which is Palestine/Israel. There is much pressure for their influence to be felt and followed by HAMAS. Anyone out there a little uncomfortable with AQ dictating the peace (if it can be found) with Israel? I should think not.

There are even more disturbing messages in this newsletter, and I strongly suggest you consider signing up for it. While our media here tells us what they consider newsworthy, our Military is actually paying attention to everything not just the flashy. They are monitoriing al Jazeera, they are reading Jihad blogs, and they are taking names(over there in the war zone they don't worry themselves with whether spying on the enemy is legal). The very last entry in this week's edition gives this author chills, redoubles my belief in the rightness of waging this war on terror, and should serve to remind everyone that reads this what the nature of our enemy really is.
“My sixth message is to the Islamic nation everywhere to hold firm to the commands of God, to confront the Crusaders' campaigns, whose defeat in Iraq and Afghanistan are sending signals. Let all know that the welfare of this faith is more important than the life of this or that person and that all individuals are mortal and the religion of God is and will remain protected and honored with the help and might of God. I am calling on everyone to rise up to support their brothers in Palestine, Afghanistan, and Iraq with their souls, money, prayers, experience, and knowledge. This is the time. Rise up.

“Praise be to God, Lord of all creation."


There is no respect for human life in this beast, and this beast must be destroyed.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

Now is the time for resolve, not retreat

The DOD Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld issued an EDITORIAL in the Washington Post today. A thorough read will tell you, among other things:
Some have described the situation in Iraq as a tightening noose, noting that "time is not on our side"and that "morale is down." Others have described a "very dangerous" turn of events and are "extremely concerned."

Who are they that have expressed these concerns? In fact, these are the exact words of terrorists discussing Iraq -- Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and his associates -- who are describing their own situation and must be watching with fear the progress that Iraq has made over the past three years.
The Secretary discusses his observations and opinions regarding the situation in Iraq, and shares with us the notion that
"The terrorists seem to recognize that they are losing in Iraq."
He goes on to say that history will bear out the truth of this, and posits that
Fortunately, history is not made up of daily headlines, blogs on Web sites or the latest sensational attack. History is a bigger picture, and it takes some time and perspective to measure accurately.
There has been much exchange here of late regarding Iraq; whether there is a civil war(undeclared or otherwise) and whether we have accomplished anything of value or meaning. The Secretary suggests that while some are wringing their hands, or have declared a civil war in the Iraqi's stead, perhaps we should think about a little truth and reality:
The terrorists are determined to stoke sectarian tension and are attempting to spark a civil war. But despite the many acts of violence and provocation, the vast majority of Iraqis have shown that they want their country to remain whole and free of ethnic conflict. We saw this last month after the attack on the Shiite shrine in Samarra, when leaders of Iraq's various political parties and religious groups condemned the violence and called for calm.
Now, while some among us are convinced this was an unjust war, or was made so because we subsequently disproved our own intelligence regarding WMD (the essential indication that invasion was the only means to address our fundamental concern) the Secretary has an interesting perspective on where we are today:
The rationale for a free and democratic Iraq is as compelling today as it was three years ago. A free and stable Iraq will not attack its neighbors, will not conspire with terrorists, will not pay rewards to the families of suicide bombers and will not seek to kill Americans.
I have no problem staying the course under these auspices regardless of whether they match those under which we found ourselves crossing the Kuwaiti border 3 years ago.

The Secretary gets the last word in this post. Please pay attention to what he says here:
Though there are those who will never be convinced that the cause in Iraq is worth the costs, anyone looking realistically at the world today -- at the terrorist threat we face -- can come to only one conclusion: Now is the time for resolve, not retreat.

Consider that if we retreat now, there is every reason to believe Saddamists and terrorists will fill the vacuum -- and the free world might not have the will to face them again. Turning our backs on postwar Iraq today would be the modern equivalent of handing postwar Germany back to the Nazis. It would be as great a disgrace as if we had asked the liberated nations of Eastern Europe to return to Soviet domination because it was too hard or too tough or we didn't have the patience to work with them as they built free countries.

What we need to understand is that the vast majority of the Iraqi people want the coalition to succeed. They want better futures for themselves and their families. They do not want the extremists to win. And they are risking their lives every day to secure their country.

That is well worth remembering on this anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Friday, March 17, 2006

The Point: News From the Front, 2nd edition

vol. I, 2nd Edition, 15 March 2006


America is fighting a war against Terrorism. On September 11, 2001 we were forced to say so publicly. Before that day, this sleeping giant was content to swipe at individual acts as they happened. When 3,000 of our souls were taken from us, we emerged on the other side having survived, but finding ourselves as a Nation mortally wounded. When the fires were finally put out, and as many of the bodies identified and claimed as possible, we arose from the ashes to face our enemy with resolve and righteous indignation. The phrase “Never Forget” meant something then, and for those engaged in the fight, it still means something today. We are in a war, and we must win.

Today, the two most active theaters of this war are Afghanistan and Iraq. Our Civilian leadership and our brave men and women in uniform are fighting for US, and in our stead. We owe them loyalty, support, honor, and commitment. Not through Political machines; power-hungry self-important aspirants to the halls of Congress or the Whitehouse, but through our direct involvement with, and understanding of the evils they face and the accomplishments they continue to make with dignity, courage, and faithful execution of the mission. While commercial media and disingenuous detractors nip at the edges of their courage and sacrifice, I bring you this report:



Eight Strategic Pillars to Victory in Iraq:

Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgency
Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance
Help Iraqis Forge a National Compact for Democratic Government
Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential Services
Help Iraq Strengthen Its Economy
Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law and Promote Civil Rights
Increase International Support for Iraq
Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public Isolation of the Insurgents

The President discusses Freedom and Democracy in Iraq


1- The Iraqi People Have Chosen A Future Of Freedom And Peace
2- Iraqi Security Forces Are Taking The Lead In Defending Their Democracy
3- Coalition Forces Are Combating The Threat Of IEDs

NEW: Whitehouse Releases "National Security Strategy"


* Champion aspirations for human dignity;
* Strengthen alliances to defeat global terrorism and work to prevent attacks against us and our friends;
* Work with others to defuse regional conflicts;
* Prevent our enemies from threatening us, our allies, and our friends with weapons of mass destruction (WMD);
* Ignite a new era of global economic growth through free markets and free trade;
* Expand the circle of development by opening societies and building the infrastructure of democracy;
* Develop agendas for cooperative action with other main centers of global power;
* Transform America’s national security institutions to meet the challenges and opportunities of the 21st century; and
* Engage the opportunities and confront the challenges of globalization.


UPDATED: US State Department Iraq Weekly Status Report:

** Highlights:**

1. Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgents
Soldiers from the 6th and 9th Iraqi Army Divisions, supported by Coalition
Soldiers conducted one of the largest operations of the past six months and
took control of a terrorist stronghold south of Baghdad.

2. Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance
The final session of an Iraqi National Police Leadership seminar concluded on
March 9, wrapping up a 10-session series that began on November 25, 2005.
Each of the 10 sessions for senior leaders was facilitated by Coalition police
trainers.

3. Help Iraqis to Forge a National Compact for Democratic Government
Iraqi leaders began intensive meetings on March 14 to form a national unity
government ahead of the Council of Representatives’ first session on
Thursday. The parliament session set for March 16 is expected to remain
technically open for days, without adjourning, to give time for to blocs meet a
constitutional requirement to elect a speaker in the first session, officials said.

4. Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential Services
Testing of the V94 turbine generator has proven successful at the Kirkuk power
plant. With an output of 260 MW, the enormous generator provided 48 percent
of Baghdad’s total electrical output on March 8, according USAID officials.

5. Help Iraq Strengthen Its Economy
At the request of the Central Bank of Iraq Governor Sinan al-Shabibi, the Paris
Club Secretariat will send letters to seven of Iraq’s non-Paris Club official
creditors who have not yet agreed to debt relief for Iraq urging them to conclude
bilateral agreements.

6. Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law
The Combined Review and Release Board (CCRB) reviewed cases of 122 male
detainees and recommended release, from Theater Internment Facilities on
March 8.

7. Increase International Support for Iraq
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and the
UN Assistance Mission for Iraq organized a workshop on building a national
commission to address abuses in Iraq.

8. Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public
Isolation of the Insurgents

President Bush delivered the first in a series of speeches on March 13, updating
the American people on the National Strategy For Victory In Iraq. The President's
National Strategy for Victory in Iraq has three tracks: political, economic, and
security. The speech focused on the security track.

Dept. of State Quarterly Report on Iraqi Relief and Reconstruction Funding and Expenditures
Excerpts:

During this October-December 2005 quarter, the Iraqi Relief and Reconstruction Fund(IRRF) supported a wide range of programs and activities in ten sectors. This report highlights three of particular importance:

(1) programs to support Iraq’s constitutional referendum in October and the parliamentary elections in December;
(2) support for institutional economic reforms, which supported the conclusion of an IMF Stand-By Arrangement on December 23; and
(3) continued support in delivering essential services, including capacity building for Iraqis responsible for providing those services.


USAID: Assistance for Iraq
NEW FEATURE: ** Iraq Reconstruction Weekly Update **
USAID Celebrates Women in Iraq
Program Financial Summary through 3 March 2006



US Department of Defense
National Military Strategic Plan for the War on Terrorism
UPDATED US Department of Defense War on Terror - Current Headlines:


Rice Says Victory Requires Time, Patience, Sacrifice

Progress Continues As Iraqi Freedom Nears Three-Year Mark

Iraqi Security Forces, Coalition Launch 'Operation Swarmer'

Abizaid Stresses Security, Government in Iraq

Official Praises Iraqi Forces' Work Following Mosque Blast

Violence in Afghanistan Ebbs, Flows Over Time


UPDATED US Central Command
SPECIAL FEATURE:


** STATEMENT OF GENERAL JOHN P. ABIZAID BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE ON THE 2006 POSTURE OF THE UNITED STATES CENTRAL COMMAND 14 MARCH 2006 **
Excerpts:

INTRODUCTION:
United States Central Command (CENTCOM) is in the middle of a fifth consecutive year of sustained warfare in its area of operations. The Command remains engaged in three principal activities: (1) defeating al Qaida and associated extremist networks throughout the region, (2) stabilizing Iraq and Afghanistan, and (3) partnering with governments and their militaries in the region to help them develop the capabilities and institutions to defeat terrorists and extremists on their own.

MISSION:
U.S. Central Command conducts operations to attack, disrupt and defeat terrorism, deter and defeat adversaries, deny access to WMD, assure regional access, strengthen regional stability, build the self-reliance of partner nations’ security forces, and protect the vital interests of the United States within the area of responsibility.

NATURE OF THE REGION:
The CENTCOM region spans 6.5 million square miles and 27 countries including Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Egypt, the countries of the Horn of Africa, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, the countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Pakistan, and the Central Asian states as far north as Kazakhstan. It incorporates a nexus of vital transportation and trade routes, including the Red Sea, the Northern Indian Ocean, and the Arabian Gulf. It is home to the strategic maritime choke points of the Suez Canal, the Bab el Mandeb, and the Strait of Hormuz. It encompasses the world’s most energy-rich region – the Arabian Gulf alone accounts for 57% of the world’s crude oil reserves, 28% of the world’s oil production, and 41% of the world’s natural gas reserves.

GLOBAL COUNTERTERRORISM AND THE LONG WAR:
Defeating al Qaida and associated ideological movements will require significant counterterrorism cooperation among our allies and partners not only within the CENTCOM AOR, but throughout the globe. It will also require the dedication of military, intelligence, and many other components of national power. Our network of allies and agencies will eventually defeat the al Qaida network, but we have yet to master the integration of national and international power to achieve success against this ruthless, borderless enemy. We have long experience with nation state warfare. We must, in the years ahead, learn to organize ourselves to defeat a stateless enemy capable of delivering state-like destruction without having state-like vulnerabilities. Defeating such an enemy requires a careful study of its clearly articulated strategy and vision.

THE NATURE OF THE ENEMY:
Al Qaida and ideologically-linked groups such as Ansar al Islam, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, al Ittihad al Islami, Jemaah Islamiyah, and Ansar al Sunna represent the main enemy to long-term peace and stability in the CENTCOM AOR, promoting and thriving on instability and violence. They challenge our partners in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. They attack our friends in Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Morocco, Madrid, and London. Although we have not experienced another attack on our homeland, the enemy that brought us 9/11 continues to represent a clear and unambiguous threat to our country.

This enemy seeks to topple local governments, establish a repressive and intolerant regional theocracy, and then extend its violence to the rest of the world. To effect such change, this enemy believes it must evict the United States and our Coalition allies from the region. Masking their true intentions with propaganda, rhetoric, and a sophisticated use of the mass media and the internet, this enemy exploits regional tensions and popular grievances. Al Qaida and its associated movements exhibit strategic patience and are willing to wait decades to achieve their goals.

PRINCIPLES OF GLOBAL COUNTERTERRORISM AND THE LONG WAR:
For the first time in our history, the principal enemy facing the United States is not another nation state – it is an ideologically-driven, borderless network. Such an enemy requires new thinking on how we organize and fight. Militarily, we will continue to kill and capture al Qaida leaders, shut down training camps, destroy operational cells, and prevent al Qaida and associated movements from exploiting ungoverned spaces. Certainly, such action requires precision targeting and highly sophisticated intelligence networks of our own. Nonmilitary measures to defeat al Qaida will be increasingly decisive in ultimately bringing about the network’s defeat. In order to counter its fanatical ideology and diminish its sources of strength, all elements of international and national power – diplomatic, political, economic, financial, the private sector – must be used to pressure the entire al Qaida and associated movement network over time.

STRATEGIC PRESENCE:
As we implement these principles, forces should be deployed in the region to focus on building partner military capacity, protecting the flow of strategic resources, deterring hostile states, and maintaining regional U.S. counterterrorist capacity. It is important to understand that the current large conventional force posture is largely a function of counterinsurgency work in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

In the next issue... the rest of General Abizaid's statement, focusing on these key areas:

Iraq

Situation Overview

- Coalition Forces

- The Enemy

Strategic Focus

Transitions and Timing

Afghanistan

Situation Overview

- Coalition Forces

- The Enemy

Strategic Focus

Much Accomplished, Much More to Do

Horn of Africa and Yemen

Situation Overview

Strategic and Country Focus

Way Ahead: Internationalizing and Civilianizing

Theater Security Cooperation and Other Regional Partnerships

Pakistan

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Arabian Gulf States

Egypt

Jordan

Lebanon

Central Asian States

Iran and Syria

Critical Mission Enablers

A Strong Coalition

Interagency Coordination

Intelligence

Logistics

Strategic Sealift and Intra-Theater and Inter-Theater Airlift

Communications

Personnel

Flexible Spending Authority

Strategic Communications

Strategic Issues

Counter-IED and Force Protection

Contesting the Virtual World

Detainees

Joint Warfighting

Conclusion

Current Headlines

COALITION FORCES COLLECT, DISARM MUNITIONS IN NANGARHAR

MNC-I DIRECTS HADITHA INVESTIGATION

ISF DISCOVER BOMB BY SCHOOL

DETAINEE DIES AT ABU GHRAIB



Multi-National Security Transition Command - Iraq


6th Iraqi Army Division closes in on complete responsibility
Iraqi Police overcome challenges in Baghdad
Iraqi soldiers groom new trainers


Digital Video and Imagery Distribution System

Military Branch and Unit Publications
Featured Editions This Week:

Iron Brigade Chronicles

The Heart Beat


Now, go out and seek the truth from those who fight for all of us each and every day

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

The Point: News From the Front

vol. I, 1st edition, 15 March 2006


America is fighting a war against Terrorism. On September 11, 2001 we were forced to say so publicly. Before that day, this sleeping giant was content to swipe at individual acts as they happened. When 3,000 of our souls were taken from us, we emerged on the other side having survived, but finding ourselves as a Nation mortally wounded. When the fires were finally put out, and as many of the bodies identified and claimed as possible, we arose from the ashes to face our enemy with resolve and righteous indignation. The phrase “Never Forget” meant something then, and for those engaged in the fight, it still means something today. We are in a war, and we must win.

Today, the two most active theaters of this war are Afghanistan and Iraq. Our Civilian leadership and our brave men and women in uniform are fighting for US, and in our stead. We owe them loyalty, support, honor, and commitment. Not through Political machines; power-hungry self-important aspirants to the halls of Congress or the Whitehouse, but through our direct involvement with, and understanding of the evils they face and the accomplishments they continue to make with dignity, courage, and faithful execution of the mission. While commercial media and disingenuous detractors nip at the edges of their courage and sacrifice, I bring you this report:






Eight Strategic Pillars to Victory in Iraq:

Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgency
Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance
Help Iraqis Forge a National Compact for Democratic Government
Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential Services
Help Iraq Strengthen Its Economy
Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law and Promote Civil Rights
Increase International Support for Iraq
Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public Isolation of the Insurgents

The President discusses Freedom and Democracy in Iraq
The President delivered an update on March 13, 2006, on progress in training Iraqi Security Forces and explained Coalition efforts to combat improvised explosive devices (IEDs). The President's Strategy for Victory in Iraq has three tracks: political, economic, and security. This speech focused on the security track. Excerpt:

1- The Iraqi People Have Chosen A Future Of Freedom And Peace
2- Iraqi Security Forces Are Taking The Lead In Defending Their Democracy
3- Coalition Forces Are Combating The Threat Of IEDs






US State Department Iraq Weekly Status Report:
Highlights (through 8 March 2006-a 2nd edition will come out with the 15 March status update)

1. Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgents:

Coalition and Iraqi forces’ operations in Iraq northeast of Fallujah and in Anbar
province recently resulted in the detention of 62 suspects.

2. Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance:

The 3rd Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division assumed battle space responsibility of
an area covering western Baghdad and eastern Abu Ghraib from the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, on March 2.

3. Help Iraqis to Forge a National Compact for Democratic Government:

On March 5, Iraq's president, Jalal Talabani, said he planned to convene the
new Council of Representatives for the first time on March 12.

4. Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential Services:

More than 250,000 residents and 250 businesses in Baghdad, Maysan, and Najaf Provinces have access to potable water after the installation of almost 10
kilometer of water line, repair of a compact water unit, installation of two water compact units, construction of an elevated storage tank, rehabilitation of two pumps, installation of an additional pump, and repair of a water main by the US Army Corps of Engineers.

5. Help Iraq Strengthen Its Economy:

On March 6 South Korea and Sweden both signed bilateral agreements with Iraq to forgive 80 percent of Iraq’s debt.

6. Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law:

Saddam Hussein said he alone should be tried for Iraqi government actions in
Dujail in 1982. He acknowledged that he signed orders for the destruction of
orchards and farmland after an failed assassination attempt against him failed.

7. Increase International Support for Iraq:

On March 4, Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa announced that the Arab League will open offices in Iraq for the first time since the 2003, part of its efforts to help reconcile the country's Sunni Arab, Shiite and Kurdish communities.

8. Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public Isolation of the Insurgents:

In an interview with the Los Angeles Times on March 7, Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said that “For now, Iraq has pulled back from [civil war] after the wave of sectarian reprisals that followed the February 22 bombing of a Shiite Muslim shrine in Samarra. If another incident [occurs], Iraq is really vulnerable to it at this time, in my judgment.”

Dept. of State Quarterly Report on Iraqi Relief and Reconstruction Funding and Expenditures
Excerpts:
During this October-December 2005 quarter, the Iraqi Relief and Reconstruction Fund(IRRF) supported a wide range of programs and activities in ten sectors. This report highlights three of particular importance:

(1) programs to support Iraq’s constitutional referendum in October and the parliamentary elections in December;
(2) support for institutional economic reforms, which supported the conclusion of an IMF Stand-By Arrangement on December 23; and
(3) continued support in delivering essential services, including capacity building for Iraqis responsible for providing those services.






USAID: Assistance for Iraq

USAID Celebrates Women in Iraq

Program Financial Summary through 3 March 2006






US Department of Defense

National Military Strategic Plan for the War on Terrorism

US Department of Defense War on Terror Main Page
Current headlines:

New Iraqi Parliament's First Meeting Slated for March 16

War on Terrorism Requires More Than Might, DoD Official Says

Funding, Public Opinion Pose Challenges in War on Terrorism

Iraqis at Crossroads But Seem to Be Choosing Unity, Pace Says








US Central Command
Current Headlines:

AFGHAN NATIONAL SECURITY FORCES FOCUS ON POPPY ERADICATION

BASTOGNE SOLDIERS CATCH TERRORISTS RED-HANDED

CACHE DISCOVERED NEAR TIKRIT

IRAQI POLICE RAIDS LEAD TO CACHE DISCOVERIES






Digital Video and Imagery Distribution System

Military Branch and Unit Publications
Featured Editions This Week

Iron Brigade Chronicles

The Heart Beat


Now, go out and seek the truth from those who fight for all of us each and every day

Monday, March 13, 2006

What we AREN'T Being Told

I fell into a website this morning associated with Reuters that calls istelf AlertNet: Alerting humanitarians to emergencies and it made me sick. While I would rather NOT encourage more site hits for this Organization, it is worthwhile to offer your considerations to what can be found there:
U.S. and Iraqi forces have been battling a Sunni Arab insurgency against the Shi'ite- and Kurdish-led government since U.S. troops toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

A wave of sectarian violence since the bombing of a Shi'ite shrine on Feb. 22 has killed hundreds.

Asterisk denotes a new or updated item.

*BAGHDAD - A child was killed and three people wounded when a mortar round landed on a house in the Shula district of Baghdad, police said.

*BAGHDAD - Two civilians were killed and four wounded when a car bomb targeting a U.S. military convoy exploded in southern Baghdad, police said.

BAGHDAD - A U.S. soldier died of wounds from a roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

ISKANDARIYA - A civilian was killed and three wounded when a roadside bomb targeting a police patrol went off in Iskandariya, south of Baghdad, police said.

TIKRIT - Five bodyguards were wounded when a car bomb exploded near the convoy of the governor of Salahaddin province in Tikrit, 170 km (110 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.

TIKRIT - Five people were killed and 18 wounded when a bomb targeting a police patrol exploded in Tikrit, police said.

KIRKUK - Two policemen were killed and four wounded when two car bombs exploded in separate attacks on a police patrol in the northern oil city of Kirkuk, 250 km (150 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.

BAGHDAD - Four policemen and six civilians were wounded when a roadside bomb hit a police patrol in central Baghdad, police said.

FALLUJA - A U.S. Marine was killed on Sunday by "enemy action" in Anbar Province, the U.S. military said.

TAJI - One person was killed and six wounded when a roadside bomb went off in Taji, some 20 km north of Baghdad, police said.

BAGHDAD - The bodies of four people were found in Sadr City, in eastern Baghdad, police said. They had been shot and there were signs of torture.
We find 11 story lines listed here under the title "FACTBOX-Developments in Iraq, March 13", yet after further investigation only 2 of them are current (follow the asterisk trail). Each of these 11 stories are "bad" news. Yet, if you look around a little, there is a great deal of GOOD news to be found about Iraq and what goes on there. In fact, just a pop over to CentCom.mil and you get 3 FRESH stories dateline March 13, 2006 that give cause for a feeling that perhaps things really MAY be going well, or better at least, than what our unbiased media friends would have us believe.
INSURGENTS FOUND GUILTY OF POSSESSION OF ILLEGAL WEAPONS AND ILLEGAL BORDER CROSSING

COALITION FORCES RESPOND TO ATTACK IN KUNAR, DETAIN INSURGENTS

2ND.,6TH IA DIV. PROVIDES IMMEDIATE RESPONSE FOLLOWING SADR CITY TERRORIST ATTACKS
This last story especially troubles me since all the headlines I can find and follow today about the attack in Sadr city are ALL in regard to the meme of a civil war's inevitability, yet our Cent Com people, you know...the ones there ON THE GROUND, are telling us we have responded, are rounding up the bad guys, and things are approaching relative calm. Why the disparity in the news from US soil versus on-the-ground-in-Iraq?

A look at today's headlines at DVIDSHUB.NET shares with us 6 headlines:
MiTTs Take Jundi Training to Next Level

4ID Band Takes Mardi Gras on Road for Soldier Morale

MND-B Soldiers Find Multiple Weapons Caches

Iraqi EOD Team Helps Make Road Safer

Gateway Reopens for Iraqi Citizens

MiTTs Take Training to Next Level
So I asked myself "haystack, are the centcom and dvidshub websites working in collusion to spread propaganda and it is only US media outlets who can be trusted to bring the truth?"

I came to the conclusion that a thing in life is pursued or cast aside solely based on the belief it can be attained or achieved. As long as our people inside the US get the first 11 stories, we will continue to draw further back from the sacrifice, commitment, and drive toward that end, which is Victory. If we started seeing HALF the energy spent by the US media on the good and the accomplished and the acts that inspire pride and dignity in Iraq, we would see a much faster pace of the needed investment from our Politicians and our Citizens, and a much earlier Victorious completion of the mission...and a much lower unnecessary loss of life.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Blackmail the Vulnerable

Qualifier: My hair is on fire today over several news stories. Assume what follows to be driven by angst and cynicism and a total lack of respect for all of our Political Heroes...both sides of the deep divide AND the Man at the top himself for letting it come to this.

Today we find in THIS Article in the LA Times that
the House Appropriations Committee approved a measure that Bush had promised to veto — and attached it to a bill the president dearly wanted.

[...]The committee, long a bastion of support for the Bush administration, passed the prohibition, 62 to 2, as part of a bill that included $68 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and $19 billion for Hurricane Katrina relief efforts. If the full House and the Senate go along, the strategy could force Bush to choose between the ports deal and another year of war funding.
Isn't that uplifting? Our 62 Congressmen voting in favor of THIS AMENDMENT have no qualms whatsoever about blackmailing the President over the politically charged Dubai Ports deal even if it means daring him to take badly needed funds and resources from, not only our brave men and women in harm's way, but the displaced and humiliated victims of Katrina. Are you kidding me?

It is no coincidence that the election is in sight. It is increasingly being seen that as Bush slides deeper into lame duck status, the Repubs are starting to jump ship like rats anytime they think it is conducive to ther reelection chances. It's quite plain the Dems continue to seek the soft spot on the President where they can drive in that final, fatal voodoo needle.

Every other line they have drawn in the sand has been blurred and erased with the next shifting political wind, so perhaps they can capitalize this time with the Benedict Arnolds on the right that are willing to bury the President and the party for personal political glory.

This is truly a dark moment for politics; for me at least.

If our Political Heroes were so sure the American people-their constituents-were against this Dubai debacle, why do they need to resort to blackmail?. Why are they afraid this President, who has never lifted the veto pen, would veto or survive a veto override over the port deal when SO MANY PEOPLE are supposedly against it?

We face today the not-so-bold "stand" by the House Appropriations Committee which suggests the only way our Soldiers and Hurricane victims will continue to get their support is if the President gives up on the DPW deal. That is blackmail. It is cowardice, it shows they do NOT in fact have the strength of their convictions regarding Muslim Arabs working American ports, they do not in fact trust their fellow Political Heroes to stand up for what they SAY is the will of the American people, and it says some very sad things about where we have travelled in the political sandbox.

If Congress succeeds in blocking Dubai, our soldiers and our fellow citizens suffering through the hurricane aftermath will get their sorely needed resources. The President will be slapped down and humiliated by the press and anyone needing to make him look bad so they can look good and get elected or re-elected. Everyone gunning for Bush or willing to sell him out for their own gain will give each other the collective high 5. The DPW group will go somewhere else...whether they become unhappy with us as a nation aside, we will have given no NEW reasons for the Arab world to trust us or want to do business with us, and to many this is not a bad thing.

What this will all do for many of us out here in the real world of every day fending for ourselves and fighting to survive is further show that our Political Heroes are not in it for anything but themselves. They are not fighting for the soldiers. They are not fighting for fellow citizens while they suffer miserable circumstances. They will sell us out any time the chance arises to improve their own condition; everyone else's be damned.

I am 1 of millions to blame

for THIS PERSON having the soapbox to utter such shameful, disgraceful, and irresponsible things about the war effort in Iraq.

I voted for Jimmy Carter in 1976. Perhaps if I had known at the time that he would so deeply dishonor our men and women in uniform 30 years forward, I may have made a different choice. Sadly I didn't and now having enabled him to attain a position of authority and stature he rattles of things like this:
It was a completely unnecessary war. It was an unjust war," said Carter, the 2002 Nobel Peace Prize winner. "It was initiated on the basis of false pretenses. All of those are true, but we can't just pre-emptively withdraw


I am sorry I voted for him. I am sorry he went on to facilitate years of inspired Palestinian-bred terrorism, and I am sorry he now dishonors the office of President and the name and dignity of the American Soldier.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

From a Friend and a Soldier: Letter Writing Campaign

chcknhawk from A Soldiers Perspective has asked for help from as many people as possible in expanding a letter writing campaign to show our respect and gratitude and support for the family of a fallen soldier in Iraq. Below, in it's entirety, is his message...I need add no words of my own...


SGT Rickey Jones
Army SGT Rickey Jones, 21, of Kokomo, Ind; killed Feb. 22 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during patrol operations in Hawijah, Iraq


I am trying to help organize a letter writing campaign to the family of SGT Rickey Jones. As you may have read earlier, their home was vandalized by idiots who wouldn't understand patriotism if it flew a plane through their bedroom window.

If you own a blog, please post this effort on your respective blogs and ask your readers to post it on their blogs. If you are as disgusted as I am and would like to write a letter to have delivered to this family, please email Lauren (MyWay716@aol.com) for more information. The good people over at Operation Military Pride are helping facilitate the delivery of these letters.

This family recently lost a son and shouldn't have to deal with people like Fred Phelps and the people responsible for the egging of their home and irreverent phone calls. If you feel the same way I do, please email her and write this family a letter of support and love. Let them know that we appreciate their son's service and mourn their loss. Let's show them what America is really made of. This isn't about whether or not you support the war. This is about common decency for a family that has suffered the ultimate sacrifice...having to bury a child. Thank you in advance. When this is over, I want the post office to have to hire new postmen just to handle the volume. Yes, it's a challenge, as LinkedinUSAF would say.

Helping In The Campaign:
Hilary-Dilary Dock
Media Lies
Fix4RSO
Linked In USAF
Terri's Thoughts
Proud Army Mom
Poohette's Place
Paulette
Hammering Sparks From The Anvil
Political Bloviation
My Daily Rant
Soldier's Angels New York
Yikes!!
Something...And Half Of Something
Machelle's Blog
Gribbit's Word
Big Dog's Weblog
Cao's Blog
Right Truth
Is It Just Me
A Rose By Any Other Name
Republican Witch
Landry's Life
Blue Star Chronicles
Iraq War Today
The Bos'un Locker
A Lady's Ruminations
The Irate Nation
Small Town Veteran
Dead Blogger's Society
The Conservative Insurgent
American Daughter
The Uncooperative Blogger
Christian Pundits
KateSpot
Liberty Bell
The C-Square
My Life
Da Goddess
Christine Murphy Dot Net

Tim Saler: An interview with a Friend of hickpolitics

As many of my readers know, I have been working of late on a project very near and dear to my heart called NoEndButVictory whose mission is to stand behind the troops in the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, the greater war on terror, and to rally our membership into action here at home to keep our legislators focused on the needs of the Soldiers and Iraqi citizens.

Having been recruited there by a well known figure in the blogosphere, I found myself immediately and deeply engaged in the work of co-developing a website from scratch including software development, graphic design, membership recruiting, and site marketing, advertising, and sales; the whole gamut. These tasks hard, time consuming, and best of all, caused me to meet several fascinating individuals along the way. One such person is a man named Tim Saler.

Now that the site is up and running and the pressure subsided somewhat, I asked him if we could spend a little time together getting to know him a little better and exploring his thoughts and opinions on the political climate as we fall full-throttle into the '06 election cycle. What follows is an interview I did with Tim the other day:

haystack: So tell me, just exactly who IS Tim Saler?

Tim Saler: I would like to think of myself as just another citizen with an opinion who happens to have a medium through the Internet from which I can disseminate my thoughts. But, you know, we don't really get to define ourselves quite as much as we might like, and I think I'm more well-known for being an elections analyst or commentator of some sort. But really, I just prefer to think of myself as a concerned citizen with a real passion for public life.

haystack: Where did you come from?

TS: I was born in southern New Jersey. My family moved to North Carolina not long afterwards, but we didn't stay there very long. On back up to New Jersey for several years, then to Indiana, back to New Jersey, and now I live in Philadelphia--though I believe I am technically a resident of South Carolina according to the government. So, I'm all over the place. Where I came from in a figurative sense, however, has a lot to do with the way I was raised as well as the surroundings.

haystack: What was life like for Tim day to day in the so-called "early years"?

TS: I don't know to tell you the truth. I just have to go by stories that I've heard told by family and that sort of thing, since I have very little memory of being quite young. My understanding is that I was really into science--chemistry and that sort of thing--and was quite bright. I was really into sports though, all aspects of the ones that I followed anyway, and I think more than anything with science or math (which I can't really do very well anymore, go figure), that really stuck with me. Nothing about politics though.

Computers were really big. That's for sure. Before I ever even thought about anything having to do with politics, I thought I was going to be a computer programmer. That was my first passion, I guess you could say.

haystack: What led you to your interest in Politics; was politics a big player in dinner-table conversation or backyard barbecues?

TS: No, in fact, I never talked to people within my family about politics at all outside of a couple times that I can remember. In fact I think the first time I ever talked about politics with my father was on Election Day 2004. So, no, it really wasn't ever something that came up. We talked about other things, other interests and priorities that we all shared. I actually prefer that, since I think politics is a little divisive for a family setting like that. I wouldn't want to have ideology, of all things, come between family members. It just seems silly within context.

haystack: Is there anyone in your family politically inclined or otherwise politically active?

TS: Not so much. Every so often I've put my last name into the FEC database for campaign contributions, and my uncle's donated some money to some Democratic campaigns and candidates, but aside from that we aren't a very outwardly politically active family.

haystack: What inspires you about the "political scene"?

TS: At first I think it was the fact that the decisions made in politics really make a difference in people's lives. You know, as a compassionate person, you see people who are hurting and you want to know what you can do to help them. Beyond private charity, sometimes government plays a role in making life better for people. In order for government to do that--to set priorities and policies, if you will--you have to go through the political process. I like the competition aspect of it though.

I think, despite the fact that it is much more high-stakes, it feels a lot like sports. You have basically two teams with players that all have their own unique skills and abilities, and they duke it out. The only difference is that instead of a trophy, the winner gets to set the direction of the most powerful country on Earth.

haystack: What do you like MOST about politics? What do you like least?

TS: What I like most about politics, hands down, is the fact that there are quantifiable and tangible results for a lot of the things that can be accomplished. On the campaign side, few things are more exciting to me than to see the votes come in and to see a good candidate win a race. You just know that so much hard work went into it, and that there was a lot of planning and execution--a lot of things that could have gone wrong but didn't, and it worked out.

Good people who are doing the right thing don't always win in this business, and so when they do I think that's really the best feeling in the world.

What I like least about politics is the cannibalism, and it's something that just has to happen with partisanship and competition. I think it's unfortunate that a lot of times people aren't willing to acknowledge that a person or persons with whom they disagree really is genuine and has the same good intentions, but just has a different way of achieving a similar goal.

You find this intra-party, inter-party, even extra-party. It's pretty frustrating when it happens to you or someone you feel strongly about, but it's part of the game.

haystack: What one thing would you change if you could?

TS: If I could change one thing, I think I would try to change the fairly common opinion about political fundraising. It's obscure, I know, and most people I think would say that they would want to take the money out of politics. I feel a little differently. I hear all the time about how this candidate is in the pocket of the oil industry, or this candidate is in the pocket of the abortion rights lobby.

I wish I could change that, because the truth is that you have candidates and elected officials who are already, by and large, of a particular opinion or persuasion who are sought out by the pressure groups and THEN campaign contributions are made. It's not dishonest or selling out to the highest bidder so much as it is groups that want to reward, if you will, elected officials and candidates who are sympathetic already to their cause.

But I know a lot of people will think I'm naive for looking at it that way, and that's alright. I'm an optimist first and foremost, and I like to look to the best in people rather than presume they're operating from their basest instincts.

haystack: So, what are you doing these days politicallyÉwhat's on your plate right now?

TS: It's still early in the 2006 cycle, but I'm trying to get some things going. Obviously I've got TimSaler.com and all the associated content that goes with it. I'm looking at possibly restarting my 2008 presidential rankings which I began in the summer of 2005 and found to be quite popular among readers. Also I'm still working with No End But Victory, as you know, and hopefully we will have some new and exciting things going on there in the near future.

We've got a great candidate for state representative in nearby Montgomery County who I'll be doing some work for, and perhaps also another candidate for state representative as well, but we won't know about that one for sure. It's quite a bit of work, but I don't feel at all as if my plate is full yet.

haystack: What does that entail?

TS: Well, I'm not really at liberty to talk too much about the details at this point, but it will involve electronic media in the first case whereas the second looks to be a bit more traditional of a campaign. I'd like to go on, but at this point I really can't.

haystack: Fair enough...generically speaking, what goes into the work required in a capmaign for us John and Jane Does that don't know the inner workings of a political campaign?

TS: Well, I am by no means an authority on what goes on inside a campaign, so let me make sure that's clear first and foremost. I think the simplest way to explain it is that, at least around here, you really can't take anything for granted. You've got to be willing to reach out to people and convince them to be for your candidate.

A lot of times it seems like there are people out there who think that all you need is a good candidate, and the voters will just automatically come to find that Person X is a good candidate therefore we should vote for him. Or, alternately, that Person X takes the right positions on the issues therefore he will receive all the votes of people who believe the same things.

In reality it doesn't work like that so much. In many cases you have voters who would traditionally go to to the other side who are brought over to vote for your candidate because you actually cared enough about their vote to ask them for it. There's a lot of complacency among candidates and parties with a long history of winning in a particular district or part of the state (or part of the country, for that matter), and they don't defend their turf very well sometimes.

A Democratic strategist named Dave "Mudcat" Saunders once quizzed a reporter about electoral math, and he asked the reporter how many votes you get when you bring a white male voter over onto the Democrats' side. The reporter said one, Saunders said two. He said it's two because you just took him away from the Republicans. Now I don't get into it on a racial level like that, but if you take the other guy's voter away, you're helping yourself double.

So I've found in my limited experience that there's quite a bit of emphasis placed, at least within good campaigns, on trying to win over voters who aren't even necessarily on the fence but would otherwise commit themselves to the opponent.

haystack: What lies in the wings for short term plans, goals, projects, etc?

TS: The short term plans are pretty much everything that I've already outlined. I'm not sure that there's anything else on the immediate horizon. In terms of goals, I used to really care about the number of people I'd get to come visit the website each day. I don't care quite so much about that, and since I'm not selling advertisements or anything it doesn't make a whole lot of difference to me. But at least in that sense I'd like to keep putting out content that's unique, popular, and the kind of thing that makes people come back for more.

I enjoy it when I see the same House staffer on the site every morning at 10:00 or what have you. I like repeat customers. We're also obviously getting into crunch time on the war in Iraq, with congressional Democrats likely to announce their national policy any day now, and the possibility that it could and would likely call for at least a "strategic redeployment" of our troops from Iraq is quite high.

If the circumstances were right, I wouldn't have any problem with that on principle, but we need to do what we can to try to make sure we keep people in office who are determined to win this war and make sure those who would compromise our ability to win, whatever their party affiliation, aren't sent to Washington this November.

haystack: A man after my own heart, you are on that issue. Let me ask you this. Which projects would you consider life-changing experiences?

TS: I think they're all life-changing in their own way if you're paying attention. You learn lessons from every one, you meet people with whom you make a connection and will learn a lot from personally, and you also make mistakes that you can remember and try your best not to repeat next time around.

I don't know that there's been any one project that's actually been more life-changing than any others for myself. I think what we're doing at No End But Victory has the most impact on people overall because there's a country of millions who, in my opinion, have a God-given right to live in freedom, and we ought to do the right thing and make sure we don't give up on attaining that.

I mean, in comparison to that, whatever I think about the Maine governor's race is pretty insignificant.

haystack: Yeah, I know what you mean. War and Freedom far outweigh a Governor's seat. Which projects were good resume fodder, but otherwise not very exciting?

TS: My own site is pretty boring to tell you the truth. Sometimes it's hard to find something new to talk about. One of the more ironic things that I've noticed and have tried to stray away from, mostly unsuccessfully however, is how a lot of bloggers come to think of themselves kind of like news anchors plus commentary. It's especially ironic when you have people who absolutely rip the mainstream media and yet half the things they write about start from an article they read in the New York Times or something like that.

It's hard not to try to write some blurb about every news story that passes over the wire because you think you've got to have your voice out there on every topic. I try to keep what I do at the site to as little repeat material as possible, which is to say that I don't think people are coming to my site to find out about breaking news. They'll go to FOXNews.com or elsewhere for that. They're not coming for articles so much either, or they would go to the Wall Street Journal.

What they're coming for, I think, is unique content and attention-grabbing op-ed pieces. So, that's what I try to provide. I can't really compete with the huge political sites, so I've got to have something really special if people are going to bother to come by.

haystack: Which was your LEAST favorite political project? Which one your MOST favorite?

TS: Well, without naming names I think my least favorite project was working on a technical re-design of a very popular and widely-read political website. The people were wonderful, and that had nothing to do with it. Great folks. The problem was that I was really quite bad at what I was doing, so it ended up fairly miserable.

My most favorite was probably, and this could change in a hurry of course because it's still going on, one of the state representative campaigns I'm doing some work for. I feel like it's more along the lines of what I ought to be doing. I get typecast sometimes as "the Internet guy" because I know how to use a computer proficiently it seems, even though I'd much rather be doing (and am much better at) more traditional things.

haystack: Describe your absolute WORST experience working a political project?

TS: Oh, I don't know. Like I said, so much of it has been Internet related, but I think troubleshooting the PHP at No End But Victory might have been the worst experience packed into a very short amount of time. I had a headache for a week straight from all that. But, you know, compared to the sacrifices that our soldiers are making for this war effort, this is wildly insignificant.

haystack: I couldn't agree more...November '06 is clearly on the horizon now, with the primary season in full swing. Where do you see the political landscape in January '07?

TS: That's a tough question, and I'll tell you why: a lot of people are trying to make comparisons between 2006 and 1994 in terms of the minority party taking back Congress with an unpopular president and unpopular incumbents. The thing you have to watch out for though is that I think only four major political pundits in 1994 even predicted a GOP victory in the House, and none of them were within 30 seats of the eventual majority.

So, we don't really know what's going to happen in March, but we can take a close look and try to figure out as much as possible. I think January 2007 will see our first 2008 presidential candidacies. It's probably going to take near a third of a billion dollars, if not more, to win the presidency in 2008. You've got to start fundraising fast, and candidates are going to have to be very careful not to peak too early and end up having lost all their support before the first votes are even cast in a caucus or primary.

If I had to guess, I'd say that the Republicans hang on to both houses with reduced margins, and the party feels a lot like they dodged a bullet. Whether they'll be re-energized heading into 2008 depends a lot on the candidates that come out. I think there will be a lot of movement, though, in terms of senators and governors trying to position themselves for higher office.

haystack: What surprises do you foresee?

TS: Depending on whether or not Kate Michelman enters the Pennsylvania Senate race, I think it would be a pretty big surprise to see Rick Santorum sworn in for another term on January 3, 2007. I think we could also have some other candidates that "came back from the dead," so to speak. Arnold Schwarzenegger in California comes to mind. I think Katherine Harris is incredibly underrated in Florida, but whether or not she is able to win depends entirely too much on the national swing in my opinion. And finally, I think the big surprise might be that Dick Cheney would resign after the mid-term elections.

I think it's positively foolish to resign after the mid-terms when the Democrats might control a house of Congress and make approval of the new vice presidential nominee much more difficult. It would also harm the Republicans' chances in 2008 if the next VP is going to be Bush's chosen successor. The Democrats would very much like to head that off from the get-go if possible or force an unpopular candidate. But, it could happen, and I think that'd be a pretty big surprise.

haystack: What will be "more of the same"?

TS: Lobbying reform. No one's fooling anyone on this issue; it's the worst kept secret in town. Any reform on this issue will be minor at best and probably just pay a little lip service to an outraged public.

I mean, think about it: if lobbyists can affect every other vote in Congress, why would they not try to lobby against a vote that would strip them of their influence? What if the vote fails, what kind of relationship do you think the lobbyists will have with the elected official who voted to strip them of their powers? It would be quite a big problem. That's why I don't think it'll get done.

haystack: Are there any State elections worthy of note?

TS: They're all worthy of note to me. One that I think is quite important however is the Alabama governor's race, and here's why. Alabama is set to move up big time for the 2008 primaries, and if Alabama elects a Democratic governor (probably Lieutenant Governor Lucy Baxley, but former governor Don Siegelman is a possible nominee as well) then that will be huge in terms of a machine that Democratic presidential candidates will have to make deals with. Because it's early, it'll have a major impact on momentum, and it could very well thwart the possibility of another northeastern liberal winning the party's nomination.

The other one that really matters in my opinion is the Ohio governor's race. Who controls the machine in that state heading into 2008 could very well hold the keys to the White House. Republicans need to get their act together there and stop beating each other bloody over Petro versus Blackwell. If this keeps up, whoever wins will be damaged goods, and Ted Strickland will be measuring drapes for the governor's mansion by September. That's not good for the GOP.

haystack: You've covered "some" ground in a few of the areas I want to address with this "tough, next to last question" but close the gaps for me here:

What, if any, election results will bring about major change to the following:

Political front?
Legislative front?
Domestic Policy front?
Foreign Policy front?
SCOTUS front?
Implications for the Presidential race in '08?

TS: Politically, Democrats have the potential to win statewide in places like Montana, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Arkansas, Alabama, and Tennessee. Those are states that are either fairly solid Republican presidentially or will be in play come 2008. If Democrats have a good year in 2006, they'll be pretty well on their way to having a good year in 2008. It could get ugly in a hurry for Republicans if they don't hang on in some of these states and try to pick up a race or two, maybe Wisconsin or Oregon.

In terms of legislation, I couldn't tell you what will come next. I had a lot of hope about Social Security reform, but it seems dead now. Bill Clinton suggested a system that used index funds some years back, and I've been a big fan of that ever since. It depends a lot on whether control of Congress changes hands, though. If the Democrats win, I would expect them to try to roll back some of the Bush tax cuts and possibly work on a health care or higher education solution that might help them in future races.

On domestic policy, I would not be surprised to see some more emphasis on environmental issues. One more hurricane season like the last one and it'll be pretty hard for people to deny that our world is changing around us and that we might be able to take some steps to improve our safety and our planet's balance.

On foreign policy, I expect us to start withdrawing troops from Iraq in 2007. Not because there will be a major policy shift, but because I think we'll have pretty much completed everything that we're going to be able to accomplish there.

In terms of Iran, I think we'll probably solve our problems with them diplomatically using Russia and China to help place pressure on Iran to cooperate and engage in peaceful behavior.

I think we'll have one more vacancy on the court under Bush, probably John Paul Stevens but who knows, that will turn into an all-out war between pro-abortion and pro-life supporters. With the current law in South Dakota on the books and others being worked on in places like Mississippi and Indiana, this is going to be a monumentally huge issue.

And for 2008, I can't begin to figure it out yet, but my early pick for the Republican nomination is Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee. I'm telling you, this guy is really, really good. On the Democratic side, my "dark horse" prediction is that Hillary won't run. But we'll see, that's a long way off still.

haystack: Last questionÉa real softballÉwho do you like in the World Series?

TS: Ah, the best question yet!

At this point, it's really, really hard to say because there's so many teams that play well in spring training and then absolutely fall apart in the regular season.

I see a lot of potential with the Texas Rangers though if their pitching situation works out and Kevin Millwood can play as well as he did last year.

For the National League, the Dodgers will be pretty good if they can get some chemistry going. They had a lot of new faces come in this off-season, so there could be some growing pains as they get used to one another. I like the Diamondbacks too.

The Indians look really good in the AL as well.

haystack: Because you answered the tough question so easily, I have a bonus round question for you: will the Bruins ever win the Stanley Cup again?

TS: Will they someday? Hopefully. Will it be any time soon? Not by the looks of it. The trade deadline is mere hours away, and it's quite possible they might sell off some of their best players like Sergei Samsonov.

We'll see what they choose to do, but right now I think things are looking pretty grim up in Beantown with having traded the franchise away in Joe Thornton.

haystack: Thanks Tim, for taking the time and for introducing us to a name we'll surely hear more of in the years to comeÉremember us little guys when you make the big time, ok?

TS: Well, I appreciate that very much, and thank you for having me.