Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Progress 3

Bill Roggio

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Multinational Forces Iraq is negotiating with elements of the Mahdi Army

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Greatness

A podcast from PajamasMedia, Sanity Squad: The Presidents, discusses what makes a great president. They talk about Lincoln and how he was very unpopular at the time, yet history teaches us that he was arguably our greatest. What will history write about George W. Bush? One member of the podcast suggests that history will recognize him as great because he has taken the unpopular step of promoting democracy in order to protect America. I'm not so confident in today's academia. But if history is written by Victor Davis Hanson, Bush will be remembered by the facts and granted due repect.

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Why did a majority of Democratic senators — such as Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Chris Dodd, John Edwards, Harry Reid, Jay Rockefeller, and Chuck Schumer — vote to authorize a war with Iraq on Oct. 11, 2002? And why is this war now supposedly George Bush’s misfortune and not theirs?

The original fear of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, of course, played a role in their votes — but only a role. In the 23 writs that authorized force to remove Saddam, senators at the time also cited Iraq’s sanctuary and subsidies for terrorists. Then there were Saddam’s attempts to assassinate a former United States president; his repression of, and use of weapons of mass destruction against, his own people; and his serial violations of both United Nations and Gulf War agreements. If paranoia over weapons of mass destruction later proved just that, these other more numerous reasons to remove Saddam remain unassailable.

Nevada’s Sen. Reid summed up best the feeling of Democrats that there were plenty of reasons to remove Saddam Hussein in a post-9/11 climate. He reminded his Senate colleagues that Saddam’s refusal to honor past agreements “constitutes a breach of the armistice which renders it void and justifies resumption of the armed conflict.”

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Throughout American history, it was usually the Democratic party that proved the more interventionist. Democratic presidents — whether Woodrow Wilson in 1917, Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1939-40, Harry Truman in 1950, John Kennedy in 1963 or Bill Clinton in 1999 — long battled Republican isolationists who insisted that it was never in America’s interest to fight costly wars abroad unless directly attacked by a foreign nation.

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Partisan advantage explains much of the present posturing against an opposition president. But mostly, the rising Democratic furor comes as a reflection of public anger at the costs of the war — and the sense that we are not winning.
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Read the whole thing.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Progress 2

Another sober report from a Baghdad resident - Baghdad Dispatch: Still Hope After Sunday's Bombs.

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Al-Sabah reports that yesterday alone 327 families returned home and that the scene of vans loaded with furniture of refugees leaving Baghdad is no more. There were times when the average was around 20 a day. The 327 figure brought the total to more than 500 families across Baghdad.

Al-Hurra TV aired a report on the story and interviewed some of the returning Baghdadis, one man said “those who returned earlier and saw the change in the situation called us and encouraged us to return, and I too will encourage the rest to come back”.

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Progress

It's a start. Here's a report from Iraq the Model. Since the news will only show bomb, you'll need to find "progress" elsewhere. Now, it's not Miami, but things so seem to have quieted down. And it isn't victory. It's just progress.

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Despite the traffic jams and though this is the largest deployment for troops in the capital, daily life and civilian activity-contrary to what was expected-still continues at a rather normal level, unlike previous crackdowns where life came to near paralysis.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

This is why I turn off

Every time there is a spending bill in congress everyone is up in arms. "$200 billion on this! $11 billion increase. $5 billion reduction in increase." It's all spin. We can't understand these numbers. They are never presented in perspective. They're always presented in alarmist fashion in order to shape perception. Then there is this info and no one reports on it.

"US Tax Revenues Up 9.7% through four months, Deficit Down 57%"

Monday, February 12, 2007

Is Seeing Believing?

Analogy: The war in Iraq is like broadcasting capitol punishment. Opponents of capitol punishment say that we should broadcast our executions, because if people saw how cruel executions are, they would not support capitol punishment. I think they are probably right. The war in Iraq is broadcast day and night. More specifically, the violence and terrorist attacks are headlined hourly.

War is like capitol punishment. It's a necessary evil. I don't like either, but I believe both are necessary. I don't have to watch it. I have have to like it. But I believe it a means to an end. I don't have to see it.

"Three bomb attacks at markets in central Baghdad killed at least 64"

Hours before this headline, this story was written. (Pajamas Media)

"Baghdad is still enjoying some days of relative calm interrupted only with minor sporadic incidents. In general there’s a feeling that these days are better than almost any other time in months."

Friday, February 02, 2007

An Inconvenient Explanation

Global warming points of view: Philadelphia Magazine

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The new Al Gore, visibly more relaxed and likable than during his last campaign, basically says this:

Our world is habitable because some of the heat from the sun is held here by gases in the atmosphere that are descriptively labeled “greenhouse gases.” Carbon dioxide is one of the main components. Unfortunately, measurements over the past 30 years show a steep climb in carbon dioxide concentrations and happen to track closely a concurrent rise in the average temperature of the Earth. All that extra carbon dioxide, a.k.a. CO2, isn’t produced “naturally”; it’s mostly a result of mankind burning fossil fuels.

If the profligate use of fossil fuels continues and the carbon dioxide levels keep rising, the temperature of the Earth’s atmosphere and oceans will rise to calamitous heights, melting glaciers, disturbing water systems, and causing droughts, crop failures, and much stronger hurricanes and cyclones. Gore forecasts the worst-case scenario as “a nature walk through the Book of Revelation.”

But the real worst case that the once (and future?) politician presents is the breakup and melting of the two massive ice sheets that cover Greenland and Antarctica, an event that would raise global sea levels so much that many coastal areas would be under water. Using an animated seeping blue stain that’s reminiscent of how filmmakers once illustrated the progress of the Nazi regime, Gore shows large parts of San Francisco, Beijing, Shanghai and New York becoming submerged. The result, he says, will be tens of millions of “climate refugees.” It will make the upheaval caused by the flooding of New Orleans and its displaced persons seem like a walk in the park.

There’s no way to watch An Inconvenient Truth without getting worried - at least a little worried.

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Penn professor Bob Giegengack:

The Earth has been warming, he says, for about 20,000 years. We’ve only been collecting data on that trend for about 200 years. “For most of Earth history,” he says, “the globe has been warmer than it has been for the last 200 years. It has only rarely been cooler.” Those cooler periods have meant things like two miles of ice piled over much of what is now North America.

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The Earth’s orbit around the sun is more or less circular, but when other planets align in certain ways and their gravitational forces tug at the Earth, the orbit stretches into a more elliptical shape. Combined with the tilt of the Earth on its axis as it spins, that greater or lesser distance from the sun, plus the consequent difference in solar radiation that reaches our planet, is responsible for long-term climate change.

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Gieg clicks a button, and three charts come together. The peaks and valleys of the Milankovi´c cycles for planetary temperature align well with the ocean-floor estimates, and those match closely the records of carbon dioxide concentrations and temperature indications from ice cores. So, the professor maintains, these core samples from the polar ice and ocean floor help show that the Earth’s temperature and the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere have been in lockstep for tens of thousands of years.

Of course, that was long before anybody was burning fossil fuels. So Giegengack tells his students they might want to consider that “natural” climatic temperature cycles control carbon dioxide levels, not the other way around. That’s the crux of his argument with Gore’s view of global warming

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there was a three-decade period of unusually low temperatures that culminated in the popular consciousness with the awful winter of 1976-77. Back then, scientists started sounding the alarm about a new ice age.

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“I don’t think we’re going to have a rational discussion of this question in the present environment,” he says. “The scientists are mad because they think nobody in Washington is listening to them. So it’s all either apocalyptic disaster or conflict of interest. If you suggest that we’re not going to hell in a handbasket because the rate of global warming is low compared to so many other environmental issues that we’re enduring, then you’re accused of being in the employ of the oil companies and you’re labeled a Republican.”

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“Sea level is rising,” Giegengack agrees, switching off the sound. But, he explains, it’s been rising ever since warming set in 18,000 years ago. The rate of rise has been pretty slow - only about 400 feet so far. And recently - meaning in the thousands of years - the rate has slowed even more.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Michael Yon brings the reality of war home

I've posted about Michael Yon before. And he is still an indispensable resource for news in Iraq. Take the time... no, Make the time to read his reports. You will learn a lot, and maybe even feel a little of the war. We should feel more than we do of this critical moment in history. Please read what follow this passage.

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On 31 December 2006, free fuel was mostly cut off to the IA in a further attempt to show the Iraqi government that the Coalition means business. There is finite time to stand up; the Coalition wants to go home sooner than later, and if we leave the nipple wet, the baby will never grow up. Free fuel was cut.

As predicted by our military leadership, this caused lurches in the system. In Mosul the IA scaled back patrols. This is where national policy meets the road. Literally. At the battalion level. The route where the giant bomb was hidden had not been swept by IA in four days.

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There were five occupants in the humvee...

Hunting Terrorists

Terror found bin Laden's brother-in-law. And, hopefully, we had a hand in it, and maybe some intelligence out of it. Great resources from Bill Roggio.

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Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, one of Osama bin Laden's brother-in-laws with deep roots in al-Qaeda as a financier and facilitator, has been reported to have been murdered in his bedroom in Madagascar.

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Task Force 145 [US Military] has a mandate to hunt down senior al-Qaeda operatives world wide, and is known to have operated in Pakistan to destroy Osama bin Laden's Black Guard. Also, the U.S. recently deployed naval assets to the region, as well as Task Force 145, in the hunt for al-Qaeda and Islamic Courts leaders fleeing Somalia.

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Khalifa also funded the Islamic Army of Aden, which was responsible for the suicide boat attack on the USS Cole which killed 17 US sailors.

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Khalifa also participating in the planning and financing of ... slamming airplaines into the "CIA headquarters, the Pentagon, an unidentified nuclear power plant, the Transamerica Tower in San Francisco, the Sears Tower, and the World Trade Center." This plot was foiled in 1995.

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Khalifa was arrested in the United States in Decmeber of 1994...

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Mohammed Jamal Khalifa is perhaps the poster-child for failure in exclusively relying on the law-enforcement model for counterterrorism operations.
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And as Instapundit notes:

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... I doubt Khalifa would have produced much useful intelligence in the absence of now-banned interrogation techniques. ... Of course, such a ban does tend to make people like Khalifa worth more dead than alive, but I can live with that consequence...