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July 09, 2008

Iranians Launch Long Range Missiles Today

Today Iran launched 9 missiles in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which 40% of the world's oil supply must navigate.

Iranian TV via APTN
This image from Iranian Television shows a Shahab-3 missile being launched on Wednesday.

They claimed a 12,000 mile range for one of these, their Shahab missile.  In response, Secretary of State Condalezza Rice called the tests...

"evidence that the missile threat is not an imaginary one."

"Those who say that there is no Iranian missile threat against which we should build a missile defense system perhaps ought to talk to the Iranians about their claims," Rice said while traveling in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Correction, 7:02 p.m.:

Apparently the early Msnbc article got the decimal in the wrong place.  The Shahab-3 missile now is said to have a range of 1250, not 12,000, miles.  Therefore it could not threaten the U.S. directly.  It could, however, presumably reach Israel.

January 01, 2008

A New "Rwanda" in Kenya?

  (Image from newsimg.bbc.co.uk)

The slaughter in Kenya now may be progressing to a Rwanda-type genocide.  Then, international governments sat on their hands while the Rwandan slaughter flared rapidly into genocide.  This must not happen again.  The U.S. and the E.U. need to act now, before it is too late to stop another Rwanda. 

President Kibaki came from behind to win against opponent Raile Odinga, who is alleged to have "made an agreement with the Muslims" according to an email (below) from Kenya Sunday.  Odinga's followers are the ones doing the rioting and killing.  Hundreds of the dominant kikuyu tribe have been killed with machetes, or burnt to death in cars, houses and churches.  50 died who were seeking sanctuary in one church that was burnt to the ground Sunday in Eldoret.  According to MSNBC, here

Kibaki's supporters say he has turned Kenya's economy into an east African powerhouse, with an average growth rate of 5 percent. He won by a landslide in 2002, ending 24 years in power by the notoriously corrupt Daniel arap Moi. But Kibaki's anti-graft campaign has been seen as a failure, and the country still struggles with tribalism and poverty.

Odinga, a flamboyant 62-year-old with a son named Fidel Castro, cast himself as a champion of the poor. His main constituency is Kibera, where some 700,000 people live in breathtaking poverty, but he has been accused of failing to do enough to help them in 15 years as a member of parliament.

In a disturbing reminder of Rwanda, this is also a tribal dispute.  President Kibaki is of the Kikuyu tribe, the largest in Kenya.  Odinga is of the large Luo tribe.  The Luos feel that the Kikuyus have held the government too long, and are too prominent in business.  They want their turn.  Leftist Odinga, who named a son after Fidel Castro, is their champion.

Also - as may have been the case in Rwanda - this conflict may be exacerbated by tensions between Muslims and Christians.  Kenya is almost evenly divided between the two.  Just 2 years ago, a law was narrowly defeated that  prohibited Christians from meetings in public places, while at the same time allowing Muslims to have such meetings, here

Here is a first-hand report from a respected Kenyan pastor, received by email Sunday 12/30/07:

Thanks, for your prayers were answered!  Mary, I and family were traveling from Kakuru to Eldoret and ran into 5 roadblocks.  At one of them, the machete-waving rioters tried to pull Mary out of the car, asking what tribe she was from.  God intervened and sent 3 men (probably angels) from the local Kalinjin tribe that were able to get me and family out of the situation by driving us to Eldoret.  The Kalinjin men told me they would rather die than let me and my family not get home 50 kilometers away!  Awhile later, we were stopped again and the mob said that the 3 men were paid to drive us through.  100 men surrounded the vehicle and broke our taillights with rocks and somehow one man released us and told us to get out of there as fast as possible.

We are home now and this is what I can say: we saw death with our own eyes, and we saw the Lord save me and my family.  On two incidents we saw, they burnt two cars of people in front of our eyes.  Whenever my girls saw these bad people stopping us on the road, they saw death of at least their mother, because she is of the Kikuyu tribe.

Keep praying.  Kibaki [the President of Kenya] came from behind and beat Raila Odinga .  Now Raila's people are even more upset.  They are the ones who have been rioting all along, because they don't agree with the results.

By the way, I'm sorry that I even did not know that today is Sunday.  That was not in me.  The only thing that mattered was life for my family and I.

6 Kikuyus have been killed in Eldoret.  (He did not know then about the 50 more who died when an Eldoret church was burned to the ground that same day.)  10 Kikuyus killed in Kisii, 10 in Kakamega, and Mathare and Kibera slums are burning now.  Many people are displaced.

Keep praying for our protection.

I believe the church now has an opportunity to bring reconciliation to the tribalism that is obviously a major rift in the country.  Pray that God's people from across all 42 tribes would unite and bring healing to the land.

Pass this on to anyone you know who will pray for our Kanyan brothers and sisters.

(Italicized text added to original)

November 17, 2007

"Christians, Come Back To Your Home, Iraq"

          Photo by independent embedded journalist Michael Yon, here

This is the same church pictured in my post 11/9/07, here, with Christians and Muslims putting the wooden cross back up on the church roof. 

Now Michael Yon reports this:

Today, Muslims mostly filled the front pews of St John’s. Muslims who want their Christian friends and neighbors to come home. The Christians who might see these photos likely will recognize their friends here.

The Muslims in this neighborhood worry that other people will take the homes of their Christian neighbors, and that the Christians will never come back. And so they came to St John’s today in force, and they showed their faces, and they said, “Come back to Iraq. Come home.”

They wanted the cameras to catch it. They wanted to spread the word: Come home. Muslims keep telling me to get it on the news. “Tell the Christians to come home to their country Iraq.”

                           LTC Stephen Michael at St John’s.   

Michael Yon writes:

LTC Michael told me today that when al Qaeda came to Dora, they began harassing Christians first, charging them “rent.”

It was the local Muslims, according to LTC Michael, who first came to him for help to protect the Christians in his area. That’s right. LTC Michael told me more than once that the Muslims reached out to him to protect the Christians from al Qaeda. Real Muslims here are quick to say that al Qaeda members are not true Muslims.

From charging “rent,” al Qaeda’s harassment escalated to killing Christians, and also Muslims. Untold thousands of Christians and Muslims fled Baghdad in the wake of the darkness of civil war.  Most of the Christians are gone now; having fled to Syria, Jordan or Northern Iraq.

                                                    The interpreter “Ice”

Yon writes:

Ice, pictured here with members of the congregation outside St John’s after mass, grew up in this neighborhood. His family is Christian and St. John’s is their church. I asked Ice if the Muslims treat the Christians poorly in Iraq, and he said what other Iraqi Christians and Muslims have also told me: an unequivocal “No.” Ice said they had no problems at all until al Qaeda instigated friction between people.

November 13, 2007

New Invisible Tanks

Now you see it: How the tank might look with background images beamed onto the side  (Look closely at the back of the tank.  It's not all there, or so it would appear.  Just a faint haze)

                             (Image from dailymail.co.uk)

Reported by The Daily Mail, UK, on 10-30-07, here.

New technology that can make tanks invisible has been unveiled by the Ministry of Defence.

In secret trials last week, the Army said it had made a vehicle completely disappear and predicted that an invisible tank would be ready for service by 2012.

The new technology uses cameras and projectors to beam images of the surrounding landscape onto a tank.

The result is that anyone looking in the direction of the vehicle only sees what is beyond it and not the tank itself.

A soldier, who was at the trials, said: "This technology is incredible. If I hadn't been present I wouldn't have believed it. I looked across the fields and just saw grass and trees - but in reality I was staring down the barrel of a tank gun."

How the technology works in a combat situation is very sensitive, but the MoD is believed to be testing a military jacket that works on the same principles.

Breakthrough: The MoD's 'Q', Professor Sir John Pendry

It is the type of innovation normally associated with James Bond, and the brains behind the latest technology is the MoD's very own "Q" - Professor Sir John Pendry, of Imperial College London.

He said the only drawback was the reliability of the cameras and projectors.

But he added: "The next stage is to make the tank invisible without them - which is intricate and complicated, but possible."

November 09, 2007

Beginnings of Christian-Muslim Friendship in Iraq

Thanks_and_Praise-vers2.jpg

Michael Yon, brave independent reporter in Iraq, took this icon of a photo.*  He wrote here

A Muslim man had invited the American soldiers from “Chosen” Company 2-12 Infantry to the church, where I videotaped as Muslims and Christians worked and rejoiced at the reopening of St John’s, an occasion all viewed as a sign of hope.

The Iraqis asked me to convey a message of thanks to the American people. ” Thank you, thank you,” the people were saying. One man said, “Thank you for peace.” Another man, a Muslim, said “All the people, all the people in Iraq, Muslim and Christian, is brother.” The men and women were holding bells, and for the first time in memory freedom rang over the ravaged land between two rivers. (Videotape to follow.)

Wretchard at The Belmont Club, here, says:

Joe Rosenthal didn't know what was in his camera the day he snapped the flag-raising at Iwo Jima. There are times when a single picture captures the essence of an entire campaign. Maybe Michael Yon's picture from Baghdad has done it for the Surge.

This is the iconic photo on Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima during WWII.  Wretchard adds:

All just wars are about the restoration of peace. But it's important to remember that the flag raising on Suribachi occurred on the fourth day of a campaign that would last a month longer. In the War against extremism, as in Iwo Jima, the worst may be yet to come. But it's good to take a deep breath and remember what the journey is all about..

Finally, another famous photo, of the last U.S. helicopter out of Saigon, Viet Nam.  The scene is the U.S. Embassy in Saigon.  The helicopter was about to leave for the last time, unable to take the hundreds of waiting Vietnamese allies whose frantic hope was to leave with them.  It is in stark contrast to the other two photos above.

_________

Michael Yon does not receive funding or financial support from Fox News, or from any network, movie, book or television deals at this time. He is entirely reader supported. He relies on his readers to help him replace his equipment and cover his expenses so that he may remain in Iraq and bring you the stories of our soldiers. If you value his work, please consider supporting his mission.

November 08, 2007

Buried - Great News On Iraq

                                  (Image from naturalhorsetraining.com)

It is still happening, even though the surge is working and violence is down drastically in Iraq.  Major media still can't stomach such good news out of Iraq.  They still headline any bad news about Iraq and bury the good news. 

This time, the "paper of record" the New York Times carried the amazing story that Al Queda can no longer be found in Baghdad, but buried it in its back pages, here.

But they still can't bring themselves to call Al Queda "terrorists" but persist in calling them "militants."  And they still can't bear to write the words "Al Queda in Iraq" but continue the awkward "Al Queda in Mesopotamia" instead.  (Mesopotamia??  Are they hoping no one will connect that with Iraq?  What confidence in the underperformance of U.S. education!)

Then the prestigious Washington Post buried the spectacular news that Sunni and Shiite clerics issued a major Fatwa together, banning violence in Iraq.   It can't even be found in their online version.  So here it is, from CNN news.  (Scroll down to the second story.)

So - Al Queda can no longer be found anywhere in Baghdad.  Good work and kudos to the U.S. Military and to all citizens of Baghdad!

And Shiites and Sunni clerics have forbidden fighting between Shiites and Sunnis in Iraq!  Wow!  This from a top-level conference in Mecca, Saudia Arabia by the OIC (Organization of Islamic Conference) and signed by the sheik heading the Sunni Endowment in Iraq and the leading Shiite cleric, Al Sistani.  Applause, please!

What great news!  A good news day on the Iraqi front, after a long drought.

November 07, 2007

Stratfor on Losing Pakistan

                     Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf

                              (Image from hindu.com)

Saturday Pakistan President Musharraf declared a state of emergency.  Since then there have been arrests and protests in the major Pakistan cities.  The U.S., which considers Musharraf an ally, has been bringing pressure on him to stop.

As the only Muslim nuclear state, Pakistan poses special problems.  If it becomes a failed state, or if an Islamist faction wins power, nukes could make their way into the hands of terrorists who would target Western countries.  So what happens in Pakistan is extremely important to the U.S. and the West.

Stratfor points out that what is important is that Pakistan must not fall into the hands of those who would pose a nuclear danger to other countries.*

Pakistan was cobbled together first by the Brits, as part of the British Empire in India.  Then when India split and Pakistan became the Muslim part of India with the migration of millions of Muslims into Pakistan from India, it changed again.  In addition, the mountainous parts of Pakistan have always been ungovernable by anyone, from the Brits to Pakistani governments.  The warlike mountain tribes have always used their steep mountain terrain to repel any outside would-be rulers.

Pakistan eventually become somewhat unified by the Muslim religion.  But there are many sects, and several major population groups.  Left to its own devices, Pakistan has always splintered into several warring territories with shifting borders.

Efforts at democracy in Pakistan have always led to risks of splintering and permanent civil war.  Only the army has been successful in holding it together.

As has been the case in Turkey, the army in Pakistan has been the single force reliably defending the constitution.  One of the strongest inheritances the British left, besides English as a common, uniting language, has been its strong military tradition.  When the English trained native armies, it also implanted the traditions and strength of the British army.

As a result, the army is the most stable, most responsible and most respected institution in Pakistan.

Stratfor's view is that as long as the army holds together, it will not matter what happens to Musharraf.  So long as the army is unified and maintains its present position of power, Pakistan will hold together and its constitution will continue to be defended.  And Stratfor notes that there are no signs so far that the army is losing its unity. 

_____

*See article at http://www.stratfor.com/products/premium/gir.php?utm_source=071106-GIR&utm_medium=email-strat-html&utm_content=071106-GIR-header-read&utm_campaign=GIR.

November 02, 2007

Stratfor on Iran's Hezbollah Card

                                   (Image from hirhome.com)

Stratfor says that Iran has been threatening retaliation if it is attacked.  Hezbollah is a major part of that threat.  In fact,

Hezbollah terrorism mastermind Imad Fayez Mugniyah has been training Shiite militants from Arab Persian Gulf states in Lebanon's Bakaa Valley for possible retaliatory attacks...

Unlike Al Qaeda, which has been badly damaged as an organization since 9/11, Hezbollah has never been stronger--and does pose a strategic threat to the United States.

Iran also has its own internal forces such as the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IROC) which includes the Quds Force and Special Unit of Martyr Seekers.

Hezbollah grew out efforts to export the Iranian Revolution to other Shiite groups in the region.  Their brightest and best go to Iran for advanced military and intelligence training and indoctrination.  Iranian weapone and training have helped Hezbollah become a powerful military force in Lebanon, a government to itself as well as a threat to Israel.   Iran has given hundreds of millions of dollars over the years from Iran, plus income from Syran and from its widespread illegal activities.

In addition to its formidable conventional military threat, Hezbollah has continued to refine its already considerable core competency in militant specialities such as kidnapping, assassination and the construction and employment of improvised explosive devices (IEDs).  It was a Hezbollah operation that resulted in the kidnapping of two Isreali soldiers, an act that precipitated the 2006 conflict...

Because of Iran, Hezbollah has far more operational cadre, and better trained ones, than Al Queda ever had, or before Al Queda ever existed.  In fact, Al Queda borrowed much from the Hezbollah playbook, and had some training from Hezbollah leaders.  Hezbollah also has the advantage of secure bases in countries like Lebanon and Syria, as well as Iran - unlike Al Queda.

In Hezbollah, size, professionalism, experience and state-sponsorship are combined to create a dangerous organization.  In fact, because of these factors, Hezbollah poses a larger potential threat to the United States than does Al Queda - aspecially an Al Queda crippled by U.S. actions since 9/11.

After seeing what the U.S. did to Al Queda after 9/11, Hezbollah might prefer to attack Americans abroad rather than in the U.S.  But if it should attack here, we may have 4-5 weeks after a U.S. attack on Iran before Hezbollah attacks began here.  That is because, although Hezbollah would already have "off the shelf" plans ready for various U.S. attacks, it would surveil the targets again before the attacks.  Counter-surveillance during those times could help catch the plotters before they have time to carry out their attacks.

Hezbollah also has clearer vulnerabilities than Al Queda, with many available targets in Lebanon.  While many of them are placed in civilian concentrations, many can be attacked without major concern for civilians, especially the training facilities in the Bekaa Valley.  Syria is also a problem for Hezbollah, as its Syrian handlers do not want to end up as targets for the U.S. 

But read the whole article at http://www.stratfor.com/products/premium/tir.php?utm_source=071031-TIR&utm_medium=email-strat-html&utm_content=071031-TIR-header-read&utm_campaign=TIR:

November 01, 2007

Stratfor on Going After Iran

 

                                  (Image from chinadaily.com)

George Friedman of Stratfor wrote on 10-30-07, in "War Plans: The U.S. and Iran":

If the goal is to eliminate Iran's nuclear program, we expect the United States would be able to carry out the mission.

If, however, the goal is to compel a change in the Iranian regime or Iranian policy, we do not think the United States can succeed with air forces alone.

For any goals beyond taking out Iran's nuclear capacity, we would need to be prepared for a follow-on invasion by U.S. forces, coming out of both Afghanistan and Iraq. Those forces are not available at this point and would require several years to develop.

That the United States could defeat and occupy Iran is certain. Whether the United States has a national interest in devoting the time and the resources to Iran's occupation is unclear.

He also points out that we can bring some sanctions to bear.  But we cannot enforce a trade embargo by naval blockade alone, because of Iran's long land borders and their long and wide-spread custom of smuggling.. 

We could take out their oil capacities.  But that would pull some 4 million barrels of oil a day out of the world oil supply, at a time when oil prices are nearing $100 a barrel. 

He describes some of the ways Iran could fight back, such as making Iraq unmanageable and activating Hezbollah and Hamas against Israel and Lebanon, among others.

(He also offers to let you

Tell George what you think
and

Get your own copy)

October 30, 2007

More On Going After Iran

                                   

                                  (Image from chinadaily.com)

Just since yesterday's article about taking on Iran, the situation has changed greatly for the worse.  The respected writer 'Spengler' writes about it today in the Asia Times Online, 10-30-07, here, making these points:

-The situation in Iran changed irreversibly with the elections of last week.  Ahmadinejad is definitely in charge now.  Rafsanjani is out of it.  Firing the old nuclear negotiator was only a sign of the change.  "European diplomats woefully concede that Rafsanjani...is no longer a viable alternative.  Arab commentators are watching with alarm..."

-Iran has only two choices: continue its downhill economic and demographic slide with the coming depletion of its oil.  Or move to take the Sunni oil countries.  It is also a once-in-1000-years chance to bring about the millenium.  With his new power, Admadjinidad will go for Iran's big chance.  This is the Shiite moment.

-The U.S. media has predictably failed to recognize the significance of the huge shift in the Iranian landscape during the past week.

-"Elias Harfouche wrote in the Lebanese daily Dal al-Hayat on October 28, "The unease that accompanied the replacement of Ali Larijani with Saeed Jalili as the head of the negotiating nuclear team was exceptional.:"

-Fears "that if the U.S. or Israel were to strike Iran's nuclear facilities, Iran would retaliate through such proxies as Hezbollah and various terrorist operations under its control.  These fears are well-founded."

Spengler agrees, but argues that letting Iran become nuclear-armed is infinitely worse.

He also argues that the longer we delay a strike against Iran, the more time we are giving Iran to prepare a defense and counter-attacks, such as:

  • Upgrading Hezbollah's offensive-weapon capabilities in Lebanon.
  • Integrating Hamas into its sphere of influence and military operations.
  • Putting in place terrorist capability against the West.
  • Preparing its Shi'ite auxiliaries in Iraq for insurrection.
  • "One might add to this complications on the Turkish-Iraqi border, as Iran and its ally Syria have taken the Turkish side against Kurdish rebels, which Iran claims have the covert assistance of the United States. "

    He predicts "war with Iran on the worst terms."  But he warns "if Washington waits another year to deliver an ultimatum to Iran, the results will be civil war to the death in Iraq, the direct engagement of Israel in a regional war through Hezbollah and Hamas, and extensive terrorist action throughout the West, with extensive loss of American life. There are no good outcomes, only less terrible ones. The West will attack Iran, but only when such an attack will do the least good and the most harm...My proposed mantra for President George W. Bush is, 'There are no good options.'"

    Spengler warns, "To be precise, there are options that are considerably worse for others than for the United States. The use of force against Iran without doubt will make the Iraqi mess completely unmanageable. It will have spillover effects in Turkey, where the electoral majority that supported the Islamists in this year's elections will rise in outrage against the United States and Israel. It may reignite the war between Israel and Hezbollah. Nor should we have any illusions about Iran's terrorist capacities. Western civilians well may pay a heavy price for the excision of Iran's nuclear program in the form of terror attacks."

    But then he concludes, "The price may be steep, but it's worth it...The West has no choice but to attack Iran."

    Not a comforting situation.  In short, if we attack Iran's nuclear capability, we will pay a horrible price.  But if we do not, the price will be unimaginably higher.  And the longer we postpone our attack, the higher the price we will pay.

    You really should read the whole article.

    (Update: for "The Herman Option," click here.)

    Bill Clinton to 9/11 Conspiracy Protestor: How Dare You!

    Bill Clinton Takes On 9/11 Conspiracy Protesters
    Bill Clinton Takes On 9/11 Conspiracy Protesters

    From LiveLeak.com here :  Bill Clinton addressed a crowd in Minneapolis, Minnesota at a fundraiser for his wife's campaign on Tuesday.

    Clinton's 50-minute speech, which started about an hour behind schedule, was derailed briefly by several hecklers in the audience who shouted that the 2001 terrorist attacks were a fraud. Rather than ignoring them, Clinton seemed to relish a direct confrontation.

    "A fraud? No, it wasn't a fraud," Clinton said, as the crowd cheered him on. "I'll be glad to talk to you if you shut up and let me talk."

    When another heckler shouted that the attacks were an "inside job," Clinton took even greater umbrage.

    "An inside job? How dare you. How dare you. It was not an inside job," Clinton said. "You guys have got to be careful, you're going to give Minnesota a bad reputation."

    October 29, 2007

    Are We Going After Iran?

                                       (Image from chinadaily.com)

    Caroline Glick, the astute and well-sourced Israeli journalist, has a good summary here, in "Trying to Prevent WWIII."  She writes:

    It goes without saying that if and when a decision is made in Jerusalem or Washington to carry out an attack against Iran's nuclear installations the public will only learn of the decision in retrospect. All the same, over the last few weeks, it has been impossible to miss the fact that the Iranian nuclear program has become the subject of intense and ever increasing international scrutiny. This naturally gives rise to the impression that something is afoot.

    Take for example the head of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency Muhammad elBaradei's recent remarks on the subject. Speaking to ,i>Le Monde on Monday, elBaradei asserted that it will take Iran between three to eight years to acquire a nuclear arsenal. Consequently, he argued, there is no reason to consider conducting a military strike against Teheran's program. There is still plenty of time for diplomacy, or sanctions or even incentives for the ayatollahs, he said.

    ElBaradei's statement is only interesting when it is compared to a statement he made in December 2005 to the Independent. Back then Baradei's view was that Iran was just "a few months" away from producing atomic bombs. But then too he saw no reason to attack. As he put it when he warned that Iran was on the precipice of nuclear weapons, using force would just "open Pandora's box." "There would be efforts to isolate Iran; Iran would retaliate, and at the end of the day, you have to go back to the negotiation table to find the solution," elBaradei warned.

    Given that the IAEA's Egyptian chief has been unstinting in his view that no obstacle should be placed in Iran's path to nuclear bombs, what makes his statements from 2005 and today interesting is what they tell us about his changing perception of the West's intentions. At the end of 2005, he was fairly certain that the West - led by the US - lacked the will to attack Iran. By making the statement he made at the time, he sought to demoralize the West and so convince it that there was nothing to be done to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

    Now, when faced with a real possibility that the US or Israel or a combination of states are ready and willing to attack Iran's nuclear installations, elBaradei seeks to undermine them by questioning the salience of the threat.

    ElBaradei's statement of course was not made in a vacuum. It came against the backdrop of an increasing unanimity of opinion among top Bush administration members that Iran must be prevented from acquiring nuclear weapons. Last Thursday, President George W. Bush said that a nuclear armed Iran would foment World War III.

    The next day, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who until recently was known to oppose military action against Iran and to minimize the danger that a nuclear-armed Iran would constitute to the US, said at a press briefing that a nuclear-armed Iran would likely spark a nuclear arms race in the Middle East and was liable to foment a major war. Gates added that in light of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's stated desire to destroy Israel, "Washington couldn't trust that Iran would handle nuclear weapons responsibly." Standing next to Gates last Thursday was Admiral Michael Mullen, the new Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Mullen rebuffed assertions that the US campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq have strained military resources to the point that the US today cannot mount an effective campaign against Iran. As he put it, "From a military standpoint, there is more than enough reserve" to mount an attack against Iran's nuclear installations.

    While Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice continues to champion negotiations with the mullahs, in testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday Rice acknowledged that "the policies of Iran constitute perhaps the single greatest challenge for American security interests in the Middle East and possibly around the world." And then there is Israel. It appears that both the IDF and the government are earnestly preparing for the possibility of war. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's sudden visits to Moscow, Paris and London, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak's trip to Washington this week were all devoted to the Iranian nuclear project.

    One of the main things that we have learned from these reports about the September 6 Israeli strike against the North Korean nuclear installation in Syria is that Israeli intelligence on nuclear proliferation is more comprehensive, and at least in certain areas, superior to US intelligence. According to media reports of the strike, the US approved the Israeli operation after Israel brought the US incontrovertible evidence of the threat posed by the nuclear site.

    In light of Israel's apparent intelligence prowess, it seems reasonable to assume that Olmert and Barak did not fly to those foreign capitals empty-handed. Indeed by some accounts they brought with them new and incriminating information regarding the current status of Iran's nuclear program.

    Then there is Iran's neighbor Turkey to consider.

    This week Turkish Prime Minister Recip Erdogan paid a sudden visit to London. There he met with Olmert, who was also in the city that day. The meeting took place less than two weeks after Turkey's Foreign Minister Ali Babacan visited Israel. In an analysis this week in The Asia Times, M.K. Bhadrakumar, India's former ambassador to Turkey tied Turkey's pro-Hamas government's sudden interest in speaking to Israel to the tension between Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan. Bhadrakumar noted that Israel has close relations with Kurdish President Massoud Barzani. He hypothesized that the intensification of high-level discussions likely signals that a deal is being crafted which involves Turkey's position on Iran, and Iraqi Kurdistan's position on Turkey and the PKK. His view is buttressed by the fact that Erdogan is scheduled to meet with Bush at the White House on November 5.

    Finally it is important to note Barak's crash-program aimed at purchasing and deploying missile defense systems capable of covering all of Israel as quickly as possible, and last week's media reports that US, British and Australian commandos are fighting Iranian forces inside of Iran close to the Iran-Iraq border by Basra.

    Assuming that all of these developments do in fact mean that the day is quickly approaching where Iran's nuclear installations come under attack, a discussion of some of the likely outcomes of such a strike seems in order. How would Iran respond? What would be the long-term effect of such a strike? Until Israel attacked the North Korean nuclear installation in Syria last month, according to the foreign reports, most analysts assumed that Iran will retaliate against such a strike with as much force as it is able to muster, and that a successful attack against Iran's nuclear sites will push back Iran's nuclear program for approximately five years.

    As this scenario has it, Iran will direct a counter-strike against Israel that will include a ballistic missile attack carried out jointly by Iran, Syria and Hizbullah in Lebanon. Furthermore, Iran will direct Hizbullah terror cells throughout the world to carry out attacks against Jewish and American targets.

    But again, as bad as it may be, there is no comparison between an Iranian missile and terror offensive and Armageddon. By pushing back Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons by several years, a strike against Iran gives the world the opportunity to bring down the regime through non-military means by fomenting an internal revolution of Iranians.

    This outcome remains the most likely scenario. And it is because it remains the likeliest consequence of an attack that Barak is keen to get a missile defense system up and running. And it is because this is the likeliest scenario that most analysts have suggested that Israel will have to attack Syrian and Hizbullah missile sites at the same time as Iran's nuclear sites are under attack, But the Israeli strike on Syria also points to other possible scenarios - for better and for worse. In an interview with the British Spectator, a senior British governmental said of the Israeli operation: "If people had known how close we came to World War III that day there'd have been mass panic." According to reports in the Washington Post and the Sunday Times, in the days before the attack IDF commandos collected soil samples which indicated the presence of fissile materials at the site. That together with intelligence regarding the transfer of nuclear materials, perhaps even a nuclear warhead from North Korea some three days before the attack, leads to the conclusion that far from being the start of a long-term undertaking, the site in Syria was advanced and nearly operational. Given the strategic nature of the installation that Israel attacked, perhaps the most astounding aspect of the operation is Syria's decision not to respond.

    Syria's non-response may be telling something very optimistic about the consequences of an attack against Iran. It is possible that what we learn from Syria's decision not to respond is that under certain circumstances Iran too may opt not to react to a strike against its nuclear installations.

    On the negative side, the Israeli strike on Syria brought a harsh reality into full view. The nature of the target and subsequent reports make clear that the nuclear collaboration between Syria, Iran, North Korea and perhaps other states is close, active, deep and strategic. In an article published in last Saturday's Wall Street Journal, the ranking Republican members of the House Intelligence and Foreign Relations committees, Peter Hokstra and Ileana Ros-Lehiten - who both received classified briefings on the Israeli strike - emphasized the threat arising from this close collaboration. Their article complemented a report in Jane's Defense Weekly from last month. According to that report, Syrian and Iranian engineers were killed when a North Korean Scud-C missile they were attaching a mustard gas warhead to exploded accidentally. The explosion took place at a Syrian military depot near Aleppo on July 26.

    What this is liable to mean is that even if an attack against Iran's nuclear installations inside of Iran were completely successful, there is a possibility that Iran's nuclear capabilities will not be significantly downgraded. What the Syrian operation indicates is that Iran's program may be dispersed in Syria, North Korea, and in Pakistan which transferred nuclear technologies to Iran and North Korea, (as well as Libya and Egypt). In other words, there is now a distinct possibility that Iran is not the only country that will have to be attacked to prevent Iran and its allied rogue states from acquiring nuclear weapons.

    And yet, when one looks at Iran, and sees the genocidal fanaticism not merely of Ahmadinejad but of the regime as a whole, one understands that whatever the cost, Israel and all who wish to prevent a massive worldwide conflagration cannot allow Iran to become a nuclear power. Everything must be done everywhere to prevent Teheran from acquiring the wherewithal to foment a new world war and destroy the State of Israel.

    October 27, 2007

    Syrian Suspected-Nuclear Site After Bombing

          (Image from Washington Post)

    Click on http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2007/10/25/PH2007102502100.jpg to see all of both photos. 

    The cube-like tall building in the center of the photo on the left is just like the nuclear facilities built in North Korea.  Notice the building is totally missing in the second photo on the right.

    October 22, 2007

    Gingrich - Modern Road to White House 'Verges on Insane'

    art.gingrich.gi.jpg

                         (Image from cnn.com)

    This is Newt Gingrich at the National Press Club.  Talking about the elections, he gives as brief and to-the-point summary as you are ever likely to find, about why the Global War on Terror is the main election issue, bar none.  Click here to view.   Time - 5 minutes. 

    (Hat Tip to Robert Martin) 

    October 02, 2007

    Silence in Syria, Panic in Iran

    This story is making the rounds now, at Free Republic, here, and other sites.

    syria_map

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    Dr. Jack Wheeler wrote on September 19, 2007:    

    One of India's top ranking generals assigned to liaise with the Iranian military recently returned to New Delhi from several days in Tehran - in a state of complete amazement.

    "Everyone in the government and military can only talk of one thing," he reports.  "No matter who I talked to, all they could do was ask me, over and over again, ‘Do you think the Americans will attack us?' ‘When will the Americans attack us?' ‘Will the Americans attack us in a joint operation with the Israelis?' How massive will the attack be?' on and on, endlessly.  The Iranians are in a state of total panic."

    And that was before September 6.  Since then, it's panic-squared in Tehran.  The mullahs are freaking out in fear.  Why?  Because of the silence in Syria.

    What happened on September 6?  The Israeli Air Force attacked a target deep inside Syria, leaving a massive "hole in the desert."  The odd thing is that Israel won't comment on it.  Even more odd - the Syrians deny it ever happened!

    Oddest of all - the Syrians had just finished installing a brand new, very expensive, state-of-the-art air defense system from Russia, better even than Russia's own present system.  Somehow - no one knows how - the Israelis blinded it.  It never worked.  Not only did it not work, it did not even detect the Israeli strike.

    So why did Iran panic?  Because Iran's air-defense system is from Russia too.  Iran was facing the likelihood that its own system is worthless too, and could not defend it against air strikes to take out its nuclear facilities - or any other part of Iran.

    Now the French are getting in on the fun too.  French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner announced since then that "France should prepare for the possibility of war over Iran's nuclear program."

    Wheeler ends by saying:

    Syria is shamed and silent.  Iran is freaking out in panic.  Defenseless enemies are fun.

    (Hat Tip to Robert Martin)

    Update:  See "Did Admadinijad Predict Armageddon at the UN?" at The American Thinker, here.

    September 28, 2007

    Sheep, Wolves, Sheepdogs - and Pastors

                        (Image from bbc.co.uk)

    Mitch Lewis is a military chaplain who writes a marvelous blog.  One of his finest posts, I think, is "Sheep, Wolves and Sheepdogs," here.  It is a compelling read. 

    Mitch quotes from Greyhawk in  “Wolves among us,” at MudvilleGazette, who comments on Dave Grossman’s essay, “On Sheep, Wolves and Sheepdogs.”  Grossman, a professor at the U.S. Military Academy, has a simple metaphor: 

    There are sheep, wolves and sheepdogs in this world. The wolves prey on the sheep; the sheepdogs protect them. Both wolves and sheepdogs have fangs, but they use them for quite different purposes.

    He quotes an old veteran:

    “Then there are the wolves,” the old war veteran said, “and the wolves feed on the sheep without mercy.” Do you believe there are wolves out there who will feed on the flock without mercy? You better believe it. There are evil men in this world and they are capable of evil deeds. The moment you forget that or pretend it is not so, you become a sheep. There is no safety in denial.

    “Then there are sheepdogs,” he went on, “and I’m a sheepdog. I live to protect the flock and confront the wolf.”

        (Image from imagecache2.allposters.com)

    Mitch continues Grossman's quote:

    If you want to be a sheep, then you can be a sheep and that is okay, but you must understand the price you pay. When the wolf comes, you and your loved ones are going to die if there is not a sheepdog there to protect you. If you want to be a wolf, you can be one, but the sheepdogs are going to hunt you down and you will never have rest, safety, trust or love. But if you want to be a sheepdog and walk the warrior’s path, then you must make a conscious and moral decision every day to dedicate, equip and prepare yourself to thrive in that toxic, corrosive moment when the wolf comes knocking at the door.

    Greyhawk quotes this part of Grossman:

    The sheep generally do not like the sheepdog. He looks a lot like the wolf. He has fangs and the capacity for violence. The difference, though, is that the sheepdog must not, can not and will not ever harm the sheep. Any sheep dog who intentionally harms the lowliest little lamb will be punished and removed. The world cannot work any other way, at least not in a representative democracy or a republic such as ours.

    Still, the sheepdog disturbs the sheep. He is a constant reminder that there are wolves in the land. They would prefer that he didn’t tell them where to go, or give them traffic tickets, or stand at the ready in our airports in camouflage fatigues holding an M-16. The sheep would much rather have the sheepdog cash in his fangs, spray paint himself white, and go, “Baa.”

    Until the wolf shows up. Then the entire flock tries desperately to hide behind one lonely sheepdog.

    Mitch added this comment to his post:

    For me, “sheep” is not a pejorative term. I don’t say it with a sneer, as does Nietzsche. The only reason that you NEED sheepdogs is to protect the sheep. The sheepdog’s battle with the wolf is not simply a contest of wills between combatants; its purpose is found in the flock it protects.

    We sheepdogs should be under no illusion that we bring anything other than temporary, localized, imperfect relief from the threats of this world. Still, it would hardly be an act of love to stand by and watch the flock be devoured by wolves. We do what we can.

    But what struck me was the role of pastors in protecting the sheep. 

        (Image from bbc.co.uk)

    In my comment on Mitch's post I wrote this:

    "What I’m also thinking about is the role of shepherds. And the Christian possibility of transforming wolves into sheep or sheepdogs. It does happen, sometimes. Though through all my years in prison, I never saw it happen except through Christ.  Also, of how sheep can get transformed into shepherds or sheepdogs.

    "Funny - somehow over the years as a pastor, I stopped thinking of myself as the shepherd of the flock. Instead, I thought of myself as the shepherd’s sheepdog.

    "Jesus is The Shepherd. My job as pastor/sheepdog was to guide the flock to the right places, see that they were tended, fed and watered, and to protect them from predators. And from The Predator.

    "I even kept a print on my wall of a modern shepherd with a cowboy hat on, with a sheepdog on his lap, as he pulled burrs out of the dog’s coat. I saw myaslf as that dusty, tired, foot-sore sheepdog, getting welcome relief from those burrs.

    "Christian sheepdogs do more for the sheep than protecting them from predators. But they do that too, if they do their jobs.

    "God bless you, Mitch and all like you. And God bless all sheepdogs, whether pastors or soldiers."

    September 17, 2007

    Military Chaplain Asked to Pray Against Iraq War

         (Jonathan Fisher documents his First Tour in Iraq. The accompaniment is a very nice contemporary acoustic version of “For all the Saints” by Indelible Grace.  From Military Chaplain Mitch Lewis' blog here )

    Military Chaplain Mitch Lewis - a United Methodist Chaplain - has been getting mass emails from a Christian Leader asking that people pray that the U.S. will abandon Iraq.  How does a military chaplain feel about praying against what his troops are doing?  He responds here :

    Lewis notes that church-father Origen said that Christians:

    ...did pray for the king and his armies to have success when they were fighting for a righteous cause, even to the point of praying for the "destruction" of the forces of evil.

    He comments that:

    If it's permissible to pray against the forces attenpting to restrain evil doers - those who bomb market places, schools and places of worship - those who kidnap and murder the innocent - those who terrorize their communities and the world - why is it shocking to pray for the success of those who are fighting for the rule of law and a measure of freedom?

    He also quotes from Training Letter 5 for Chaplains:

    Pray for the defeat of our wicked enemy whose banner is injustice and whose good is oppression.  Pray for victory.  Pray for our Army, and Pray for Peace.

    Finally he asks:

    The fact that we are praying for success in an enterprise that costs lives shouldn't stop us from praying for its success.  As I wrote in Like David, "How can I participate in something that I cannot ask God to bless?"

    What do you think?  Does that make sense to you?

    But read his whole post.  And think about visiting his excellent blog on a regular basis.

          

    September 11, 2007

    Sen. McCain Questions Petraeus & Crocker

    Sept. 11: John McCain questions Gen. David Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker about the Iraq war reports. (MSNBC)

    Go here to see video of McCain's questioning.  http://video.msn.com/v/us/msnbc.htm?f=00&g=cf5bd617-0e77-4feb-b248-0a38b3e5ee5b&p=Source_MSNBC&t=m5  From MSNBC.com - Tuesday 9-11-07

    Highlight of this exchange:

    Sen. McCain: "Ambassador Crocker, what is your degree of confidence that Maliki will do some of the things that we have been asking them to do for a long time?"

    Ambassador Crocker:  "My level of confidence is under control."  (Chuckles from Senators)

    Crocker added that Maliki and the Iraqi government are making some modest steps that he finds encouraging, and that the government does have the intention of working together. 

    On Monday Crocker testified that although the Iraqi government has not yet enacted formally what the U.S. has requested, they are already doing some of those things informally while proposed laws are being put together.  For instance, they are already sharing oil revenues with all the provinces, even though the formal law requiring that has not yet been finished and enacted.

    (Hat Tip to www.wikio.com)

    Video - Ambassador Crocker Testifies Before Congress

        Ambassador Royce Crocker Testifying Monday, September 10, 2007

            (Image from amyproctor.squarespace.com)

    This is U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Royce Crocker testifying before Congress on Monday, 9-10-07.

    (Hat tip and thanks to Amy Proctor, here

    Video - General Petraeus Before Congress

          General David Petraeus Testifies Before Congress Monday, September 10, 2007    

                                       (Image from amyproctor.squarespace.com)

    This is the testimony of General David Petraeus, for those who missed it.

    (Hat tip and thanks to Amy Proctor, here )

    Petraeus-Crocker Update

                                                                                                    

    Gen. David Petraeus, top

    Ambassador Ryan Crocker, bottom

    (Images from afsouth.nato.int and islamabad.embassy.gov)

    General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker were interviewed an hour on by Brit Hume on Fox News Monday.  Go here for part of that interview.  (The same page has other links to transcripts of their testimonies before Congress,, as well as videos of their interview by Brit Hume, about half-way down the page on the left.)

    Both will be grilled - if not roasted - by Congressional committees again on Tuesday.

    (See post below, "Testimony by Gen. Petraeus & Amb. Crocker Today"  for more background.)

    September 10, 2007

    Testimony by Gen. Petraeus & Amb. Crocker Today

                                               General David Petraeus

                                               (Image from a101avb,org)

    U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker

    (Image from islamabad.usembassy.gov)

    Today General David Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker testified before Congress concerning the situation in Iraq, and what course we should take in the future. 

    Before Petreus' testimony today,  the New York Times ran a full-page ad by Moveon.org which attacked the credibility of Gen. Petraeus.  It asserted that he had been coached as to what to say by the Bush administration, and that he would not tell the truth.  It also called him "General Betray Us."

    General Petraeus stated at the first of his testimony that he wrote his report himself, and had not shared it with either the Joint Chiefs of Staff or the White House.

    Their testimony had not ended at almost 6 p.m. CDT.  But Ambassador Crocker summarized his testimony by saying "The present course in Iraq is hard; the alternatives are worse."  General Petraeus' testimony could be summarized by saying that surge is working, that gradual draw-downs in U.S. troops are coming, and that withdrawal would cede Iraq to predator countries, mainly Iran.

    Both will be interviewed tonight at 9 EDT and 8 CDT by Brit Hume on Fox News.  Hume hopes to get their testimony in a much shorter, more condensed form.

    I may post links to transcripts of these hearings later, as they become available.  Meanwhile, here is General Petraeus' opening statement before Congress earlier today. 

    Update:

    Here is Ambassador Ryan Crocker's opening statement before Congress earlier today. 

    September 07, 2007

    How 'Backward' Islamists Will Force WW IV

                                      (Image from dailymail.co.uk)

    Islamists come from backward countries without much of a military, or even much of an economy, except for oil.  So could they start, much less win, a truly world-wide war?

    WW I, WW II and WW III (the Cold War) were fought by heavily industrialized, modern countries with huge militaries.  Their scientists were the best in the world, able to invent powerful new weapons.  The amounts of armaments the west produced was mind-boggling.

    Now the U.S. is the most powerful country ever.  Its economy and military are unmatched.  It could literally wipe out any government in the world.  Many other Western countries also could devastate any less-developed country.

    How then could people from such backward countries fight a world-wide war?  And continue it for a generation or more?  Or have any hope of winning?

    Yet  Islamists believe they will win.   They believe Allah has commanded them to conquer the world and force it to be Muslim. They believe Allah has ordained this, and has foretold that it will happen.  And they believe Allah will award special delights to those who fight such a war.

    But could they win?  Or even keep fighting?  Many experts say they could win.  They say WW IV has already started, will get much worse, and will last for generations.  Some of their reasons are here 

    The Islamists have:

    -A potential access to weapons of mass destruction that could devastate Western life.

    -A religious appeal that provides deeper resonance and greater staying power than the aritificial ideologies of facism or communism.

    -An impressively conceptualized, funded and organized institutional machinery that successfully builds credibility, good will and electoral success.

    -An ideology capable of appealing to Muslims of every size and shape, from Lumpenproletariat to privileged, from illiterate to Ph.D.s, from the well-adjusted to psychopaths, from Yemenis to Canadians.

    -a large number of committed cadres.  If Islamists constitute 10-15% of Muslims, they number some 125 million to 200 million, or a far greater total than all the facists and communists, combined, who ever lived. (All empnases added.) 

    In short, the sheer size of what we are facing is daunting.  After all, even relatively low-tech attacks have the ability to seriously damage modern societies and economies, made fragile by being so highly interwoven and inter-dependent.

    William F. Buckley comments:

    Those critics who insist it is only a small war-party faction of the Islamists that we have to fear might have been asked a generation ago if it was not merely a small number of Germans and Russians we were properly exercised about.  Sixty million people were dead after that mis-reckoning.   

    September 05, 2007

    Terrorist Attack at Giant US Air Base Thwarted

            (Image from images.stuckon-stupid.com)

    Brietbart news reports that the enormous Ramstein Air Base in Germany, a major U.S. and NATO military hub, and the Frankfort International Airport were targets for a massive attack by Islamic terrorists, now in custody.

    Germany had them under surveilance for a long time before arresting them Tuesday.  Officials in Denmark also arrested eight Islamist terrorists who were plotting to bomb there.

    The German terrorists had over 1,500 pounds of high explosives, with more potential power than the ones used in the London subway and the Madrid transit bombings.  The planned attack was "massive" and "imminent."  They could have struck "in a few days," during a "sensitive period" that includes the anniversary of the September 11 attacks.   

    But read the whole article. 

    UPDATE 9.6.07: at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/worldnews.html?in_article_id=480021&in_page_id=1811

    August 24, 2007

    There Is Only One Political Issue

                  What Happens When the Taliban Visit an Art Gallery

          (Image from static.flickr.com/83/279634632_70798c4a12.jpg)

    Writing in the American Thinker today, Joseph Rosenburger says:

    The current political squabbles in America between the liberal, socialist left and the moral capitalist conservative right are merely a skirmish line on the edge of two colliding civilizations.  The combatants are not the free market, individual-centric conservatives and libertarians vs. the Nanny State, socialist plantation liberal straw bosses.  Not at all!

    The elephant in the room is Islamofacism - and President Bush and his brilliant General Patraeus, at the head of the greatest Army of our lifetime, are decisively engaged.  What is at stake dwarfs the '08 elections topics of single-payer medical care, unfunded social security, or our billions of dollare held by China and Saudi Arabia, for economic blackmail.

    (Or, he might have added, immigration.)

    Life as we know it - the profound blessings of the Age of Enlightenment and the spectacular technological progress in the arts and sciences that resulted -- is, absent a courageous defense, doomed to be devoured in the maws of a barbarian Islamofacism if President Bush's war leadership fails. 

    Militant Islam means to convert, enslave or exterminate the infidel non-Muslim world, depending on the amount of resistance encountered.  The Koran demands it, and militant Islamists are implementing it wherever they have the critical mass to enforce it.  Secular pluralism and a democratically-established Rule of Law will not survive, absent protectors that exercise lethal force to defend it. 

    This should be the litmus test of who our next president should be, and no other.

    That is the only policy in this election that matters.  If we fail on this one, no other policy questions will be left even to be considered.  There is one, and only one, political issue now.

    Rosenburg continues:

    ...Islamofacism or Western Civilizatin...will prevail depending on who imposes its will on its neighbors sufficient to expand its borders, increase its population, and accumulate treasure...The rise and fall of one society or another reflects the simple equation of warfare, biology and technology development.

    For example, Islamofascists, reproducing rapidly, brainwashing young boys...raising battalions of Kamikazi homicide bombers, cutting off hands and heads to maintain discipline and tribal cohesion, are overcoming a complacent West, spoiled, secular and imploding with declining birth rates.  In fact, Islamists are reaching a tipping point in Europe, for example, nearing a critical mass in Spain, France and Great Britain.

    We'll know for sure the game's over when they burn down the idolatrous art museums in Paris.

    That Islam condemns half its population (females) to abject servitude and shows profoundly little ability to advance the frontiers of science and technology, suggests an approaching dark age if left unchecked.

    The alternative, brighter future depends on supplying General Patraeus with what he needs, funding the Surge all the way.

    Of course he is not the first so to define this choice.  But he does it well, cutting through the political distractions.

    We can use the reminder!

    August 22, 2007

    How Much of a Lame Duck Is Bush?

    Dr. George Friedman

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    Dr. George Friedman, founder of Stratfor, the "private CIA," writes that all U.S. Presidents eventually become lame ducks.  But that does not apply to his military