Saturday, December 27, 2003

The Day the UN Ceased to Matter
It's amazing how the BBC can report the debate over Iraq and interpret the failure to do anything meaningful as a moment that mattered. As the UN debated itself into oblivion, the BBC saw the moment as defing, a realignment of nations, leaving the US for Russia. O glorious day, they semed to exult, when we follow the lead of the nascent Russia, preferred to the companionship of the US.
Let them have their way, and good riddance. The Maginot mentality is merely dormant, not dead.
BBC NEWS | Programmes | From Our Own Correspondent | The day the UN mattered

Thursday, December 11, 2003

2004 will be the best year economicallky in 20 years. There goes that issue.

DRUDGE REPORT 2003®


The Democrats must be ready to drink hemlock.

Saturday, November 15, 2003

Radical Cheerleaders: Get a Life
CBS News | Radical Cheerleaders Raise Ruckus | November 14, 2003 20:56:46: "Groups like the Radical Cheerleaders contribute to the sense of festivity at a political rally, says Todd Gitlin, a social activism expert and professor at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.

'Often people who organize demonstrations want to do more than apply their presence to political ends,' Gitlin said. 'They want to project a presence that seems like an embodiment of their values. Cheerfulness says, 'we are having a better time than they are. It promises recruits, 'stick around, you'll have more fun.''

That promise is just what drew Toby Willner of Brooklyn. 'I was so excited to find people doing activism who were having a good time,' Willner said. "

Activism is now attracting those who want to have a good time. What about suffering for your cause? Maybe treating grave isues with gravity?
The children of Clinton.

Tuesday, November 11, 2003

Peter Hitchens: Will Britain Convert to Islam?

I start worrying about these things, but seem to end up more worried about things I can't foresee but feel in my bones are coming, things which will make 9/11 seem like a splinter in the national psyche. Whether it's the explosion of a super volcano, the unleashing of nuclear horror by crazies (fill in the blank from the usual suspects), a wildfire spread of some as-yet-unheard-of disease or something else I lack the capacity to imagine, things are on the road ahead, and it's often the things we can't see that leap out to bite us in the butt. Int he meantime, like Boetheus, I turn to the philosophers to find my consolation. Philosopher poet Blake, for instance, who wrote of "...the New Jerusalem, in Englan'ds green and pleasant land." I don;t think he was predicting Jolly Arab-land in Endgland's green and pleasant lands.


Monday, November 10, 2003

Mark Steyn Gets it Right: The Olde Europe is HEading Towards the Sunsethref="http://www.spectator.co.uk/article.php3?table=old§ion=current&issue=2003-11-08&id=3699">

European scholars spent a great deal of time analyzing why Rome fell. No great surprise, probably least of all to those living in the empire as it died. They might do well to spend sometime in the moment, taking in the feelings and sounds and smells of Europe, the spawn of Rome, the once mighty child of a dying empire and the virile tribes who co-opted her place on the world's stage, as Europe, as we knew her, follows the Roman Empire to the graveyard of civilizations. We may not see her like again.

Saturday, November 08, 2003

Religion of Peace Tells Followers to Flee US Cities

FOXNews.com - Top Stories - American Muslims Told to Leave Major U.S. Cities
What else is new? I'm outta Eastside manhattan when the local news paper vendors close up. I'll keep you posted.

Thursday, November 06, 2003

Clnton Advice on career: If at first

MSN reports that Bill thinks we should send North Korea more aid and food and help them become a self-sustaining economy. Sort of what he tried when he had time in the White House. They took the aid and built nuclear facilities in violation of the agreement the first time around, why think it would be any different now? For that matter, why think NK wants to be a sekf-sustaing economy? If they are determined to follow a totalitarian, socialist failed command economy, they can't develop the proper sort of economic institutions. What does Bill not understand?
Clinton calls for aid to end N.Korea arms crisis

Wednesday, November 05, 2003

In pursuit of an American Churchill - The Washington Times: Nation/Politics

Zell Miller has it just about right: "You don't fight a war by blowing water through corn stalks (qt Lincoln)"
Read this terrific piece about why Bush's actions in the war on terror are prompting Democrat Senator Miller to vote Bush in 03.
Hear, hear!

Wednesday, October 22, 2003

They Can't Take That Away From Me

But the NYT can give it back. Walter Duranty has been long dead, and now it appears his Pulitzer might at last follow him to the graveyard. The NYT -commissioned study of the work for which he won the prize in 1932 has resulted in a recommendation to Sulzberger, Jr. has determined that the work reflected a "serious lack of balance" and was a disservice to American readers...and the peoples of the Russian and Soviet empires." (New York Sun, 10/22/03 Eric Wolff. Read this paper every day.) Throw it back, NYT. It will be a blot off your journalistic soul.
Australia is Not Asian

I've never thought of Australia as Asian. It is part of the Anglosphere, a distant part, but a vibrant outpost of Anglo sentiment and sensibilities. The Singapore PM has confirmed my visceral belief: Australia will not be part of Asia until the population is over 50% non-white. (Reported in the Daily Telegraph)

Sunday, October 19, 2003

The Clash of Civilizations
New York Post Online Edition: postopinion

Ralph Peters cites historian Samuel P. Huntington on the clash of civilizations, and goes further:

"Huntington fell short by suggesting that this clash of civilizations was something new. Clashing is what civilizations do. Especially monotheist civilizations, with their one-God, one-path-to-the-truth, our-way-is-best convictions.

We should not be surprised at the current clash of civilizations. It would be far more surprising if it were not occurring. Such conflict is the rule, not the exception.

Of course, we would be fools to celebrate this clash, despite our own triumphs. It would be better for all if the Middle East could regain its moral and economic health. Cooperation is better than warfare. Peace should be our ultimate goal.

But not peace at any price. And cooperation doesn't work unilaterally.

Our soldiers in Iraq aren't engaged in a religious crusade. But ours is, undeniably, a cultural crusade, based upon our belief that the values of our civilization, from human rights to popular sovereignty, are superior to archaic forms of oppression. It's an old, old struggle, fought on post-modern terms.

Today's Middle East has become a citadel of tyranny. And tyranny must be fought without compromise. If that's a crusade, there's no reason to deny it."

Ralph Peters' new book is "Beyond Baghdad: Postmodern War and Peace."

Many are afraid to suggest that the West and the Islamic world are in conflict, suggesting, as does GWB that the conflict is betwen the nations under attack and terrorists. We would be wise to understand that the conflict has deeper roots.






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Friday, October 17, 2003

Legacy of Henry Ford Lives On

NY Sun headlines: Ford Foundation Spends Millions to Aid Anti-Semitism

Good piece in the Sun today, documenting the how the Ford Foundation financed the NGOs which attended the UN World Conference Against Racism in Durban in 2001 which turned into an anti-Israeli rally. (Authored by Edwin Black)
I would link, but don't subscribe to the Sun online. Maybe it's time I did so.

Thursday, October 16, 2003

Clash of Civilizations

The LA Times writes of Lt. Gen. William G. "Jerry" Boykin, the new deputy undersecretary of Defense for intelligence who sees the war against terror as a war of Judeo-Christian vallues v. Satan.
This is countered thusly:

"The first lesson is to recognize that whatever we say here is heard there, particularly anything perceived to be hostile to their basic religion, and they don't forget it," said Stephen P. Cohen, a member of the special panel named to study policy in the Arab and Muslim world for the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy.

"The phrase 'Judeo-Christian' is a big mistake. It's basically the language of Bin Laden and his supporters," said Cohen, president of the Institute for Middle East Peace and Development in New York.

"They are constantly trying to create the impression that the Jews and Christians are getting together to beat up on Islam.... We have to be very careful that this doesn't become a clash between religions, a clash of civilizations."

Isn't it a clash of civilizations? Medieval thugs v. people trying to get on with their lives?
Gaza Bomb Kills Americans
Jihad Salim, a young man in a white T-shirt, said many Palestinians would feel little sympathy for the United States. "America has to pay for its foreign policy, which is against Muslims," he said.

Whinge, whinge, whinge. Of course US policy supports Israel over terrorists of the PLA. On 9/11 Palestinians danced in the streets. Israelis did not. 'Nuff said.
The Queen Awakes

QEII has apparently grown uneasy at the prospect of the EU constitution:
It is believed that the Palace's concerns focus on whether the Queen's supreme authority as the guardian of the British constitution, asserted through the sovereignty of Parliament, could be altered or undermined by article 10 of the draft text.

This states: "The constitution and law adopted by the union's institutions in exercising competences conferred on it shall have primacy over the law of the member states."

Many MPs say that this will rob the House of Commons of its ultimate authority to override decisions and laws made by the EU.

I fear that the member states will realize what they've signed on to far to late to escape. Odd to think that centuries of struggle in Europe might be trumped by on a document which will not be fully comprehended until many years pass. If the trend of statist governments was toward liberty and human freedom, I would not be so aghast. The nature of statism is to impose itself at the expense of human freedom and liberty. Statist, appeasement-minded Europe, aligned at the behest of Germany and France with totalitarian China presents a spectacle which makes the blood run cold.
God save the Queen! God save a sovereign GB.
Clinton Works on His Legacy

Clinton asserts that : his inability to convince Bush of the danger from al Qaeda was "one of the two or three of the biggest disappointments that I had."
Which of course, raises the question as to why Clinton did so little about the problems he now cites as the most critical when he had the reins in the Oval Office. Must have been some right-wing conspiracy preventing him from doing his job.

Monday, October 13, 2003

There's a War On:

Peter Brookes writes in the NY Post about the ongoing war on terror, quoting Cheney:

"Terrorists are doing everything they can to gain even deadlier means of striking us. From the training manuals we found in the caves of Afghanistan to the interrogations of terrorists that we've captured, we have learned of their ambitions to develop or acquire chemical, biological or nuclear weapons."

"If terrorists ever do acquire that capability - on their own or with help from a terror regime - they will use it without the slightest constraint of reason or morality." There will be no warning and the result: tens of thousands, or even hundreds of thousands of American lives lost in a single nightmarish day."

9/11 (remember that?) would be dwarfed.
The Good News Is...

NY Post: Retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark, who joined the Democratic presidential race last month, is in a statistical dead heat with President Bush, a stunning new poll shows.

The question is, for whom is this good news? Wes (hat tip Joe Leibermann) is new to the race, still stumbling, no one knows much about his real positions or ablity to run, let alone govern. Still, the Democrats, desparate to beat Bush, see him as the best choice to try. When Clark fades (he must, and will) to whom do they turn? Bush is like the pitcher who's given up 8 hits over two innings, yet still has a lead in the game.

Friday, October 10, 2003

What is, and what is reported
This from Down Under ( I came across it on Andrew Sullivan's blog).

In brief, Andrew Bolt recounts the many items in David Kay's report which point to WMD, despite what you may have read in the press.

Thursday, October 02, 2003

The French Consider Their Own Decline

In "Ouest contre Ouest," by Andre Glucksmann, one of the few leading French intellectuals to challenge the country's position on the Iraq war, France is described as a nation, with others in Europe, that fled the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, on the United States in panic and attempted to set up a sterile biosphere away from the world's realities.
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The book, also a bestseller, maintains that this flight from confronting trouble carried with it an attempt to create two opposing notions of the West: a serene Europe, sheltered from terrorist kamikazes, and a warlike, imperialist, autistic United States.
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Glucksmann wrote that the central question of the future was not hegemony or multipolarity, the key French terms illustrating the Chirac government's seeming obsession about the United States and its desire to counter the Americans, but civilization versus nihilism, and whether the West together could make a fight to protect civilization.
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Glucksmann believes that France's leadership has wanted to bring Russia into its project to counter the United States, with France promising in the bargain a return of Russia's lost rank and prestige.
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"What does France gain?" he asked. "The possibility to continue its siesta. It would be up to Russia to counterbalance America, and keep the Islamist and Eastern hordes away. It would be the United States' job to chase down all the worldwide risks that we want to avoid. Paris, in all this, gives itself the role of directing the world by proxy. Once the Euro-Asiatic bloc is cemented through the inspiration of the Elysée Palace, Washington, put in its just place and counterbalanced, will conform."
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These messages converge with that of "L'Arrogance Française," by Romain Gubert and Emmanuel Saint-Martin, whose chapter and section headings - How France Lost Europe or Narcissistic Blindness - well sum up a book that holds that French foreign and European policy is guided by "obsessive concern with its standing, and terror in the face of its decline."
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France's essential arrogance, the authors suggest, is in continuing to act as if the world community and its European partners do not comprehend that for the French leadership, the "EU serves as the means for France to recover its influence and to reconquer its lost power."
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In this light, although the writers of "L'Arrogance Française" do not say so specifically, it is possible to see French policy in relationship to Iraq as a temporary instrumentalization of Germany in an effort to recapture European primacy - an attempt understood and foiled by the vast number of its NATO and EU partners.
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Months later, the fact is, after Sweden's rejection of the euro (in part because of France's refusal to conform to the economic performance standards it set up itself for the currency's credibility), and the likely splintering of the EU into groups of several speeds without any semblance of a unified foreign or defense policy, France has come up empty.
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The sum of the messages of the books, in French to the French, is that this vision of the country's current circumstances is not a French-bashing invention from afar, but a home truth.
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For Bavarez, France is threatened with becoming a museum diplomatically and a transit center economically. To do anything about it, it must revive itself internally first, getting away from what he calls its "social statist model." To advance, it must end the dominant role of a "public sector placed outside of any constraint requiring productivity or competitiveness."
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The reform of the rest of French policy, based on genuine integration into Europe, should follow, he argues.
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He recommends what he calls shock therapy, a forced march toward modernity that involves the risk of a clash among French interest groups and an end to the "sinister continuity" that unites the presidencies of François Mitterrand and Chirac in a kind of angry immobility.
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But for Bavarez, and most of the other writers now gaining the nation's attention, the present reality is harsh for France.
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"Overtaken by the democratic vitality and technological advance of the United State," Bavarez concludes, "downgraded industrially and challenged commercially by China and Asia, the decline of France is accelerating at the same rhythm as the vast changes in the world."
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International Herald Tribune

The first step in getting well is to recognize that you are ill. Bon chance, mes amis.

Wednesday, October 01, 2003

Can't Sing, Can't Dance, Can Act Like A General

I knew there was something I didn't like about Wes Clark. The NYT has supplied the answer: He's Hollywood's hottest star. That confirms my opinion of Clark, and says a lot about Hollywood dems, who have seized on the latest candidate to pop out of the woodwork. It's like a huge casting call, for the most important role in the country, and Clark seems to be getting the greenlight from the casting directors.

Looking for a military type with no blots on his record. Environmental sensitivity a must. Must be avaialble for longterm committment to callbacks. Send headshot to the DNC.
Scary stuff. And Hollywood laughs at actors becoming politicians.

Monday, September 29, 2003

Clark: There He Goes Again

Times like these demand a Ronald Reagan. I can't believe he'd sit and wait as his administration and policies get picked to pieces by the Lilliputians. Could be that Bush the Younger has the patience to ride it out. Give them enough rope and they'll hang themselves. Clark seems to be completing the hangman's noose about now with his foreign policy ideas spelled out, however incompletely in his new book, Winning Modern Wars. It appears to me that Bush has no problem winning the wars, with the nifty army the US has managed to maintain despite Clintonian attempts to downsize and scrimp. (Remember the peace dividend we were all going to get with the end of the Cold War? Less for defense, more to make the US lazy and fat like Olde Europe.) Clark sees it all as a failure, and proposes a Department of International Assistance to oversee a vastly expanded foreign aid program. The mind boggles. I can only ask: What is this guy smoking? Do we really need another department to argue and squabble and spend money on administrative cots and carve out bureaucratic policies to undermine the policies of the elected branches of government? Does Clark believe what he is saying/

From the Washington Post:
Soon after taking office, the Bush administration launched the country on a different course, Clark says, reflecting "a more unilateralist, balance-of-power stamp." He cites the U.S. withdrawal from international efforts to address global warming under the Kyoto treaty and the decision to proceed with a national missile defense system. The administration's response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks only reinforced these defiant, high-handed tendencies, Clark argues.

"Overnight, U.S. foreign policy became not only unilateralist but moralistic, intensely patriotic and assertive, planning military action against Iraq and perhaps other states in the Middle East, and intimating the New American Empire," he writes.

The result, he says, has been damaging to long-term U.S. interests. The administration's approach has hampered counter-terrorism efforts, undercut NATO and "turned upside down five decades of work to establish an international system to help reduce conflict," he writes.

Clark as stalking horse, Clark as the loose cannon, not really capable of winning anything, but good to say all those intemperate things that even Kerry and Dean won't say. I'm sure our enemies, foreign and domestic must be comforted by Clark decrying US empire-building. I'm sure the Clintons are even crazier about Clark, the more he lets loose. I worry about any man who behaves as Clark does, and really believes that he is heading in a positive direction. I find him frightening.

Thursday, September 25, 2003

More Good News On Iraq You'll never read in the Paper of Record

Interesting piece carried in the NY post by a critic of the war who spent some time there at the end of the war as a judicial observer. His conclusion: We are not getting the whole truth from the news media.

The news you watch, listen to and read is highly selective. Good news doesn't sell. Ninety percent of the damage you see on TV was caused by Iraqis, not by coalition forces. All the damage you see to schools, hospitals, power generation facilities, refineries, pipelines and water supplies, as well as shops, museums and semi-public buildings (like hotels)was caused either by the Iraqi army in its death throes or Iraqi civilians looting and rioting.

Great piece. No wonder bush's rating decline as the press covers only the bad news, in the bleakest possible terms, and leaves the good news uncovered.
Palestinian supporter Edward Said has died, according to knopf Publishers. He had been ill with Leukemia for some years.

Wednesday, September 24, 2003

Clark's House O' Waffles

Clark also was cautious about plunging into battle after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when many Americans were out for vengeance.

Three days after the attacks, he counseled this response: "It's fundamentally a police effort against individuals. It's not a military effort directed against factories and airfields. You may still need to use military force, but you have to use it in a very precise way."

It became a huge military effort to uproot the government of Afghanistan and the terrorist network it harbored. Clark seemed to swing behind the strategy once it was set, and he voiced confidence in the outcome.

On Iraq, before any shots were fired, Clark sketched out the dangers that would follow the fall of Saddam Hussein.

"I think there will be a lot of tensions inside Iraq, and I think that we will be welcomed very warmly at the outset but afterward, as these tensions begin to assert themselves, it'll be convenient for many different groups to look on us as the source of their problems rather than the solution," he said in February. "And I think our troops will be at some risk there."

Once the war started, Clark praised many aspects of the battle plan and provided a steadying voice when things were not going well.

He was particularly impressed with cooperation among the branches of the armed forces and their coordination with the CIA and credited the Bush administration with that result.

"In the first place, this is a trained and experienced team of top leaders," he said.

Clark occasionally sounded as if he'd supported the war all along.

"President Bush and Tony Blair should be proud of their resolve in the face of so much doubt," he wrote in The Times of London in the first flush of the takeover of Baghdad.

And in June, he spoke as if his only change of heart had been over whether it was vital to capture Saddam, deposed Iraqi president.

"I was one of those before the war who said, `Don't focus on Saddam Hussein. Go in there, take over the government, and you'll take care of things.'" Afterward, he came to the view that Iraq could not be secure with Saddam still at large.

Clark's stance on the validity of the war is still an open question. Last week, he said he probably would have voted for the Iraq war resolution in Congress but asserted the next day: "I would never have voted for this war. Never."

The Good News Is

Nearly 2/3 of Baghdadis believe that getting rid of Saddam has been well worth the hardships of the past few months. Despite the incessant drumbeat of bad news from Iraq, the people are optimistic about the future. Hard to explain how they have more positive feelings towards Chriac than Bush and Blair, their liberators, but that goes to show - something? about, Iraquis and media coverage and the power of good PR. Maybe Bush shoudl try to hire Chirac's PR people for election 2004.

Tuesday, September 23, 2003

Judeo-Christian Nation ?

Reuters makes a big deal about Colin Powell calling the US a Judeo-Christian nation, a term once heard regularly. Muslims would like the US to be referred to as a Judeo-Christian-Islamic nation. I fail to understand how a secular democracy based on Enlightenment ideals is in anyway Islamic, despite the presence of Muslims. In recent times especially, the designation Judeo-Christian refers more to the foundations of US government in Western Civilization and its values, (which are, after all, heavily dependent on the Judeo-Christian tradition) than on the actual behavior and beliefs of increasing numbers of US citizens.

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Secretary of State Colin Powell called the United States a Judeo-Christian country on Monday but quickly amended that to "a country of many faiths."

The first amendment to the U.S. constitution prohibits the establishment of any state religion -- a provision usually interpreted as requiring strict separation of church and state, though Christian activists dispute that.

Powell made the remark in an interview with the Charlie Rose Show on public television while talking about Washington's vision of what kind of government Iraq should have.

He said he expected it to be "an Islamic country by faith, just as we are a Judeo-Christian..."

"Well, it's hard to tell any more, but we are a country of many faiths now," he added quickly.

The remark was likely to antagonize millions of American Muslims, most of whom want to be included in the mainstream.

Some American Muslims have coined the term Judeo-Christian-Islamic to reflect their ideal of what the United States should be.

Monday, September 22, 2003

Is Media Bias Killing Our Troops?

Falsely bleak reports reduce our chances of success in Iraq By JIM MARSHALL



On Sept. 14, I flew from Baghdad to Kuwait with Sgt. Trevor A. Blumberg from Dearborn, Mich. He was in a body bag. He'd been ambushed and killed that afternoon. Sitting in the cargo bay of a C 130E, I found myself wondering whether the news media were somehow complicit in his death.

News media reports about our progress in Iraq have been bleak since shortly after the president's premature declaration of victory. These reports contrast sharply with reports of hope and progress presented to Congress by Department of Defense representatives -- a real disconnect, Vietnam déja vu. So I went to Iraq with six other members of Congress to see for myself.

The Iraq war has predictably evolved into a guerrilla conflict similar to Vietnam. Our currently stated objectives are to establish reasonable security and foster the creation of a secular, representative government with a stable market economy that provides broad opportunity throughout Iraqi society. Attaining these objectives in Iraq would inevitably transform the Arab world and immeasurably increase our future national security.

These are goals worthy of a fight, of sacrifice, of more lives lost now to save thousands, perhaps tens or hundreds of thousands in the future. In Mosul last Monday, a colonel in the 101st Airborne put it to me quite simply: "Sir, this is worth doing." No one I spoke with said anything different. And I spoke with all ranks.

But there will be more Blumbergs killed in action, many more. So it is worth doing only if we have a reasonable chance of success. And we do, but I'm afraid the news media are hurting our chances. They are dwelling upon the mistakes, the ambushes, the soldiers killed, the wounded, the Blumbergs. Fair enough. But it is not balancing this bad news with "the rest of the story," the progress made daily, the good news. The falsely bleak picture weakens our national resolve, discourages Iraqi cooperation and emboldens our enemy.

During the conventional part of this conflict, embedded journalists reported the good, the bad and the ugly. Where are the embeds now that we are in the difficult part of the war, now that fair and balanced reporting is critically important to our chances of success? At the height of the conventional conflict, Fox News alone had 27 journalists embedded with U.S. troops (out of a total of 774 from all Western media). Today there are only 27 embedded journalists from all media combined.

Throughout Iraq, American soldiers with their typical "can do" attitude and ingenuity are engaging in thousands upon thousands of small reconstruction projects, working with Iraqi contractors and citizens. Through decentralized decision-making by unit commanders, the 101st Airborne Division alone has spent nearly $23 million in just the past few months. This sum goes a very long way in Iraq. Hundreds upon hundreds of schools are being renovated, repainted, replumbed and reroofed. Imagine the effect that has on children and their parents.

Zogby International recently released the results of an August poll showing hope and progress. My own unscientific surveys told me the same thing. With virtually no exceptions, hundreds of Iraqis enthusiastically waved back at me as I sat in the open door of a helicopter traveling between Babylon and Baghdad. And I received a similar reception as I worked my way alone, shaking hands through a large crowd of refinery workers just to see their reaction.

We may need a few credible Baghdad Bobs to undo the harm done by our media. I'm afraid it is killing our troops.


-- U.S. Rep. Jim Marshall (D-Ga.) of Macon, a Vietnam combat veteran, is a member of the House Armed Services Committee.



Blast kills 2 at Iraq’s U.N. compound

Hmmm. This second attack on the UN compound suggests that it's a softer target than it should be, or that the UN is a target. The General Assembly opens this week just up the street. Bush is coming to speak. Maybe a good place to avoid. Call me paranoid, but 9/11 is still very real to me. Plus, there's a war on.
Martin Sheen Feels More Human in Canada


DRUDGE REPORT FLASH 2002®: "American actor and activist Martin Sheen had kind words for Canada when he received an award for being a Christian role model, the CANADIAN PRESS reports.

'Every time I cross this border I feel like I've left the land of lunatics,' Sheen said Saturday, adding he was 'proud' of Canada for not entering the Iraq war.

'You are not armed and dangerous. You do not shoot each other. I always feel a bit more human when I come here.'

Sheen, who has been outspoken recently in his opposition the U.S.-led war in Iraq, was in Windsor to receive the Christian Culture Gold Medal from Assumption University.

The university will offer a new scholarship in his name. "

What's keeping him here?

Sunday, September 21, 2003

Bush Will Tell It to the UN

President Bush said on Sunday he would tell the United Nations he made the right decision to go to war in Iraq despite his failure to obtain Security Council backing for the conflict.
"I will make it clear that I made the right decision and that the others that joined us made the right decision," Bush said in an interview with Fox News Channel's Brit Hume.

Fox released an advance transcript of interview excerpts on Sunday. The full interview is to be broadcast at 8 p.m. EDT on Monday.

Hear hear!
The US denies it's working on a deal with Saddam. Good, nuff.
SADDAM Hussein has been in secret negotiations with US forces in Iraq for the past nine days, we can reveal.
So says the Sunday Mirror in the UK. Who knows? I don't doubt the old dictator would like an exile with a stash of cash nearby. I don't want him to have it. True, it would demonstrate to the world that he is a cowardly thug. However, I think we all know that, except for the extreme factions in the Muslim world, and the idiotarians who apologize for everything which is anti-American. They wouldn't see it as cowardice anyway, so let's not negotiate. Capture or kill. The cash and the WMD will turn up eventually, sooner or later.
Clark is a Dem by Default

Wow. Newsweek blows the lid off the Clark candidacy. After Al Qaeda attacked America, retired Gen. Wes Clark thought the Bush administration would invite him to join its team. He didn't take the rejection happily. Does this guy really think his brief moment of public attention in Kosovo translates into a real chance at the White House? These remarks of his, along with his waffling on Iraq, have raised real doubts about his judgement and integrity. I don't understand what he has to offer.
The Iraq Solution, Courtesy Bubba
Reported in Reuters
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton said Sunday that the United States should not try to dominate Iraq and needed to give the United Nations a greater role in restoring security to the war-torn country.
"We should play a role and spend a lot of money there, but we shouldn't dominate," Clinton said during a brief visit to the United Arab Emirates.

"What we need is for the U.N. to nominally supervise the security situation and NATO to be used as an instrument," he said during a question-and-answer session at the American University of Dubai, where he launched a scholarship program.

"This will enable us to spread both the responsibility and the risks and make it look less like an occupation," he added.

We spend the money, but be careful not to dominate. The UN "nominally" supervises. The UN wouldn't even accept US security for its Baghdad mission, which is one reason it was blown to smitereens. Why would giving a greater role ( as opposed to no role) to the UN improve the security of Iraq? Clinton is long on tossing outvague ideas, short on details.

Saturday, September 20, 2003

The Relative Scale of Battle
In July of 1863 Americans killed each other for three days in the fields of Pennsylvania. That battle, which ended once and for all time the ambitions of Southerners to make secession stick saw over 51,000 casualties. As weapons became more deadly casualty lists grew. The first Battle of the Marne in 1914 caused 250,000 casualties among the French alone. Even before the days of modern ordnance battles on a massive scale resulted in fearful death tolls. In 216 BC Hannibal's troops killed an estimated 70,000 Romans. It is a measure of Western perceptions that the word "massive" can now be applied to what would have qualified barely as a skirmish in other wars.

September 20, 2003 -- WASHINGTON - U.S. troops yesterday arrested 55 pro-Saddam guerrillas believed to have carried out a series of intense, coordinated ambushes on coalition forces in Tikrit that resulted in the deaths of three U.S. soldiers.
The arrests - believed to include those responsible for killing the GIs - came after what commanders are calling one of the biggest battles since the official end of the war in a battle that lasted for almost eight hours.

"We have under control the individuals who attacked our patrol. We fought a battle throughout the night and well into first light," Col. James Hickey, the 1st Brigade commander, told reporters.

The massive battle in Saddam Hussein's restive hometown, the scene of scores of previous attacks on U.S. soldiers, erupted Thursday night as a patrol from the 4th Infantry Division, investigating a suspected launch site for rocket-propelled grenades, was ambushed on the east side of the Tigris River.

Three soldiers were killed and two more were seriously wounded in the attack.

Three soldiers dead is too many. For the soldiers involved it must have seemed like Armageddon. Correspondents who should be engaged in telling us the truth should exercise greater judgement before categorizing military engagements. Maybe they never read their history? Didn't they see Saving Private Ryan? That was massive.
At least mentions of the engagement serve to remind us that there's a war on.
Newsweek Admires It's Own Efforts:Drudge reports:President Bush's job approval rating continued to drop in the Newsweek Poll, to 51 percent. And by a margin of 50 percent to 44 percent, registered voters say they would not like to see Bush re-elected to another term.

For the first time in the Newsweek Poll, Bush's approval for his handling of the situation in Iraq has dropped below 50 percent to 46 percent, a drop of 5 percentage points from the Newsweek Poll of September 11-12, 2003. Forty-seven percent of all those polled disapprove of how he's handling the situation in Iraq, an increase of 5 percentage points from the earlier poll. Bush's approval slide continues in ratings for his handling of other issues. On the economy: approval dropped to 38 percent (from 41%) but disapproval jumped six points to 57 percent. Bush also scores in the low 40s on the environment (43%) and taxes (42%). The only area where Bush continues strong support is his handling of policies to prevent and minimize terrorism at home: 66 percent, the poll shows.

First the good news:
Retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who announced his presidential candidacy this week, leads all Democratic contenders who are currently in the race with 14 percent of the vote among registered Democrats and Democratic leaners, according to the latest Newsweek Poll. He's followed by former Vermont Governor Howard Dean and Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, who both get 12 percent of the vote.

HoweverClark's impressive debut is undercut, however, by the sizable percentage of all those polled (45%) who say they've never heard of him before now, the poll shows.

"Americans are wrong to vilify the French according to the International Herald Tribune."

"French leaders have been remarkable in recent weeks in studiously avoiding gloating about the difficulties encountered by the Americans in Iraq. No French representative has been heard to say anything like "I told you so," although the temptation must be quite strong."

Why would the French be gloating? Because some holdouts in Saddam's stronghold are managing to kill US soldiers despite the end of major combat? May I remind the French and anyone else tempted to gloat that the US acheived a remarkable military victory, marred only by the fact that Iraqis fled the battlefield before we could put more of the militants out of action. Permanently. Did anyone expect that this would be fast? Or easy? Just because the French surrendered to the Nazis in six semaines (weeks, to those of us in the Anglosphere) doesn't mean all military engagements are Vietnam-like mires. Speaking of Vietnam, we could discuss the French at Dienbienphu, but let's not. Instead let's ponder why the French would feel like gloating about anything, ever. Even in the area of food Spain has come to be called the new France.
Do I take these things too seriously? Remember, there's a war on.
HAIL MARY
Vols grab lead over Gators with miraculous
pass

Irreverence. Time for sportswriters and commentators the world round to find another idiom.
And Then There Were Ten

As the field of Dems seeking Bush the Younger's job swelled witht he addition of Wesley Clark it's hard to see how Clark can make any democrat happy. His stance on Iraq is hardly crystalline, he has no experience in areas where democrats hope to make headway, and his general demeanor, is well, that of a general, not a genial Ike-like general, but a rather stern general. Besides, hes' from Arkansas. Do we need a second chief exective from Arkansas so soon? What Democrat scould be singing about this obvious attempt to slow down the Dean bandwagon, except for Bill and Hill? As a placeholder for Hillary while she decides whether GWB can be taken, Clark works. That seems to be about it. I wonder about the judgement of a man who enters upon so serious an undertaking with so little supporting reason.
Schroeder OP ED


In this piece published by the NYT the German Chancellor pledges humanitarian aid, training for police and help in rebuilding Iraq. They want to help and that's good, but he makes the usual reference to one country going it alone, i.e. without Germany and France
"... we must not forget that security in today's world cannot be guaranteed by one country going it alone; it can be achieved only through international cooperation. Nor can security be limited to the activities of the police and the military.

Then"If we want to make our world freer and safer, we must fight the roots of insecurity, oppression, fanaticism and poverty — and we must do it together." Note how fanaticism gets tossed in with the other problem threatening the peace and security of the world.
Continuing
"The international community has a key interest in ensuring that stability and democracy are established as quickly as possible in Iraq." Let us not forget that the international community is a big place, incluidng many who want stability and democracy in Iraq over there dead bodies. Which can be arranged.

Don't forget: there's a war on
UNITED NATIONS, New York A mood of skittish uncertainty has descended on the leaders of the United Nations. They are eager to overhaul their institution, but worry whether any change can give it the freedom it needs to survive without being seen as either a lackey of the United States or an easily swattable gadfly.

That the UN is at a crossroads, and must change in order to survive is an opinion I can support. That the Security Council needs to reflect the realities of the modern world is a great idea. Start by taking the seat occupied by the French and give it some nation which has a larger GDP, greater population, and a nationality which is other than Gallic. Europe holds an incredible three of five seats as permanent members of the Security Council, with the veto that comes with it, based on the world of 1945. Here's a radical proposal: one seat for the EU on the Security Council.

The UN General Assembly gathers next week, just a few blocks from where I am writing. In the wake of the bombing of UN headquarters last month security will be tighter than ever, and the constant stream of motorcades that passes through my neighborhood as diplomats and heads of state arrive from local airports and heliports will be accompanied by a larger police presence, I'm guessing. The charge is made in this article that the US views the UN as ..."a tool to be used when handy." They must know up there at the UN that the terrorists of the world are no respecters of the light blue, and view it as a tool to be used when handy, a stage on which they can strut and bluster with impunity. That blast in Baghdad must have rattled a few portfolios.
187 Billion
One of the first things I learned about government spending as an undergrad (back when the world still believed that reason and diplomacy would solve the problems of the world. More on that later.) was that government spending was not a matter of "we'll spend $187 on this instead of that." If we decide not to spend $187 on the war in Iraq and reconstruction of that country we won't spend the money on education, or health care or AIDS or any of the programs Newsweek rants about. We won't spend the money. Or at least we won't spend it in any meaningful way. It will be frittered away on a Sen. Byrd's projects for the exclusive benefit of West Virginians, or packaged in inventive ways to appeal to special interests and special constituencies. Newsweek's Jonathan Darman disagrees.
Instead of a war in Iraq, here’s what America could be getting for its money I have a hard time agreeing that increasing the EPA's budget "more than tenfold" is preferable to ending the tyranny of Saddam, and turning Iraq into a flypaper with which to ensnare the terrorists who might otherwise find their way to NYC. I don't say this lightly, in view of the tragic losses incurred by the US on an ongoing basis in Iraq, but as Bush the Younger said: "bring 'em on".
BTW, Newsweek, what did 9/11 cost the US in economic terms alone. Try that on your opportunity cost analysis.
Remember, There's a war on

Wednesday, September 17, 2003

WE'RE WINNING THIS WAR

So say MarK Steyn, and he makes a good case for it, taking on the irrational hatred of America shared by leftists all over the world and the equally irrational extremist Muslim world. (Would that be most of it?) If Muslims and Western elites share the same opinions, is that like two patients presenting the same symptoms though afflcited by two distintly different diseases? Anyway, I can't do justice to Steyn, so just get over there and read it yourself. Please.

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

Loose cannon on deck
The military career of general Wesley Clark will be held under a microscope before this thing is over. His judgement needs to be questioned from the outset.


Monday, September 15, 2003

The NYT observes it's handiwork:

From the paper of record:
A week after President Bush's speech seeking to rally support for the campaign in Iraq, the nation appears increasingly anxious about the war effort and worried that the United States may be trapped in an adventure from which there is no evident exit...

It never ceases to amaze me how the press can beat a message into people's heads for a couple of months, then step back and point out that people - gasp, can it be! - have come to believe the message. Of course the nation will be "anxious" about the course of the war if news outlets provide a steady stream of reportage about setbacks and casualties. I do not suggest that these real problems be ignored, but find somewhere in there to mention the successes which are evident in Iraq as well.

Sunday, September 14, 2003

La Plus ca change...

French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said before the Geneva talks that any new U.N. resolution should contain a timetable putting a provisional Iraqi government in place within a month, followed by a draft constitution by the end of the year and elections next spring- MSNBC

Given that the French have had cinq (or five as we say in the Anglosphere), republics since 1789, plus Vichy, it's small wonder that de Villepin wants to rush to Iraqi self-governance. If it's premature, if the wheels fall off the wagon before it goes a hundred yards, no matter, Zut!
Cobble out a new republic! Works for them.
Which is not to suggest I don't want to see Iraqis ruling Iraqis as soon as possible. Ruling and policing and defending and feeding themselves and doing all those things of which they are capable, given the chance. I suspect world events on other fronts will make installing an Iraqi government a matter of some urgency, but I also suspect French motives are not the same as mine.
There's A War On
Bush said it would take a while, a long while to defeat the terrorists. I expect it will continue past my lifetime, and we'll only win if we continue to fight. I'd like to think we will. Politicians talk a good game:
"Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty."
JFK Inaugural, 1961
But I don't know whether politicians have the stomach for it. The drums from the political hustings are sure beating a retreat right now. Instant success with no loss of life, no great expense, no challenges to be overcome is out of Hollywood. I think we used to know that.

Clifford D. May in National Review:

Had anyone asked President Roosevelt how much the war would cost, he would probably have answered: "However much it takes." Had anyone asked how long we'd be at war, he probably would have answered: "For the duration." But it's difficult to imagine anyone having the nerve to ask FDR such questions; difficult to imagine a 1940s version of Ted Kennedy or Pat Buchanan demanding an "exit strategy."
Read it all:


While the wailing and the gnashing of teeth of the doomsayers continues, read Victor Davis Hanson and take heart.

">"In our current feeding hysteria that diminishes astounding success to quagmire or worse, what disinterested observer would ever believe that in just 24 months we have liberated 50 million people, destroyed the odious Taliban and Saddam Hussein, and routed 60% of the al Qaeda leadership — all at the cost of less than 300 American dead? It is almost as if the more amazing our accomplishments, the more we must deprecate them."
read it all, read him every week in National Review.<a href="http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson091103.asp">
A Meaty Start
"President Clinton focused on terrorism from the start. " So says Madeleine Albright in an interview with Time Magazine, which seems to serve the primary purpose of providing her a stage from which to throw brickbats at the Bush Administration. I'm certainly glad to know at last what Clinton's focus was.

"Frankly, if there was a President Gore, we wouldn't be in this particular mess." Albright again, and from her choice of words I can only presume we would be in a different mess with a President (Shu-u-u-dder) Gore.

"The Administration immediately tied Sept. 11 to Saddam." MA

I'll have to do some research on this one, I don't remember the Administration pinning 9/11 on Saddam, but the fact is we waited a year and a half after 9/11 to root out that abcess.

Read the entire ten softball piece yourself:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101030922-485697,00.html