September 1, 2007
al Qaeda alliance split by Marriages
Why are Iraq's Sunni tribes turning against al Qaeda? It appears that it started when the largely foreign-run terrorist organization tried to arrange forced marriages with local women. Read the full article in the Washington Times.
WHAT DO YOU KNOW - SUPPORT FOR THE WAR IS RISING!!!
According to the Washington Times, the White House believes it has made significant progress over the past month in swaying public and political opinion toward supporting a continued U.S. military effort in Iraq. According to Bush officials the surge is producing significant results. A recent Zogby poll showed that 54% of those surveyed believe the war is not lost.
AFGHAN VILLAGE AND THE AMERICAN MILITARY
Centcom has a great story about American medics seeing nearly 200 people in a small Afghan village, and dispensing various medications to them, including de-worming medication and vitamins to every person seen. This really is what Bill Frist has been talking about for years - using medicine as a currency for peace. It does work.
BUSH: LOOKING AHEAD TO HIS LEGACY
The New York Times has a fascinating piece about an interview President Bush gave to a book author. According to the Times, President Bush is keenly interested in what history will say about his term of office.
PETRAEUS TELLS CONGRESS THAT HE IS WRITING THE REPORT
General David Petraeus who will brief Congress in two weeks on the progress in Iraq, has assured Congress that the administration is not involved in writing his report.
August 30, 2007
AMERICAN SOLDIERS REMEMBER IRAQI HERO
We don't often read stories of the sacrifices the Iraqi people are making. Here is a story of our soldiers remembering a real Iraqi hero, who gave his life to save others.
PROGRESS IN IRAQ
Victory Caucus says that Lt. General James Dubik and Brig. General Kevin J. Bergner talked about progress being made around Iraq.
CONGRESS TO IRAQIS: JOIN MILITIAS
The Washington Post has published an article by Kyle Teamey, a former Army officer, who served in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. Mr. Teamey points out that much of the violence in Iraq last year came about because of the realization of the Iraqis that our military is increasingly irrelevant. He argues that although a debate over the merits of the war may be the way a democracy works our Democratic Congress has in effect told Iraqis that they are better off joining militias, because Iraq is going to descend into chaos when we leave.
JIHAD AND DEMOCRACY
This is a very thoughtful post by Paul J. Cella as published in Redstate. Mr Cella points out that there is no necessary connection between democracy and secularism. He goes on to point out that democracy is not a natural antidote to the Jihad. He urges us to think hard and discuss openly the character of the Jihad.
BATTLE OF "THE BUMS"
Representative Thaddeus McCotter has an article in Redstate called "Battle of the Bums". It is a good article about "Our Bums" - the American Congress vs. "their Bums" - the Iraqi parliament. As Congressman McCotter reminds us "it would help too, if the collective bums in both the Iraqi Parliament and the American Congress remembered all power in a democracy is vested in its sovereign citizens, not its subservient government."
August 29, 2007
PATRICK RUFFINI ON LARRY CRAIG
Patrick Ruffini has a thoughtful and compassionate post on Larry Craig. It is one that should make all of us think.
IS JOHN MCCAIN FINISHED OR NOT?
John McCain says he has not yet begun to fight. I think Senator McCain is delusional.
He is in the position where he is running 4th in most polls, has lost most of his staff, and has very little money to operate on. I think the danger for McCain is that he may soon drop into the second tier of Republican candidates.
He is in the position where he is running 4th in most polls, has lost most of his staff, and has very little money to operate on. I think the danger for McCain is that he may soon drop into the second tier of Republican candidates.
BUSH: $50 BILLION MORE FOR THE WAR
The Washington Post is reporting that President Bush plans to ask Congress for up to $50 Billion in additional funding for the Iraq war, evidently confident that the Democrats don't have the votes for a pullout.
ARMY OFFICER CLEARED OF CHARGES IN ABU GHRAIB CASE
Much to my surprise, I found this article in the Washington Post. The only Army officer to face a court-martial for Abu Ghraib has been cleared.
August 28, 2007
BUSH: CAN'T WITHDRAW FROM THE MIDDLE EAST
President Bush, in a hard hitting speech to veterans at the American Legion convention, said that if the United States is driven out of the Middle East the civilized world would be imperiled. I think the President is right.
DIVERSITY IN THE IRAQI ARMY??
Sgt. Andy Hurt has a very interesting article at Central Command about the diversity of the Iraqi army. I found the article informative and surprising.
MITT ROMNEY - LARRY CRAIG IS DISGUSTING
Another great article by Tommy Oliver regarding Mitt Romney's unbelievable comments about Larry Craig. I think Tommy has stated very well what many of us have been thinking. Shame on Governor Romney.
TOMMY OLIVER ON MIKE HUCKABEE AND THE CIGARETTE TAX
Tommy Oliver (Perico to his friends) has an interesting take on Mike Huckabee's recent comments on a cigarette tax. Tommy blogs at race42008.com. By the way, Tommy is a Fred Thompson supporter, as am I.
IRAN: POWER VACUUM IN IRAQ INEVITABLE
The President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says that a power vacuum in Iraq is inevitable and Iran is ready to step in when it happens. The Victory Caucus has the story.
August 27, 2007
PEGGY NOONAN's SPEECH
Here is a speech by Peggy Noonan. It was sent to me by my nephew. It is one that we all should take the time to read.
Gen Fred McCorkle sends this speech by Peggy Noonan,
who used to be Pres. Ronald Reagan's speech writer.
Let suffice to say the upper strata of Marine Corps
leadership is on the cc line of this e-mail.
Thanks and Semper Fi, General,
PEGGY NOONAN
'To Old Times'
A toast to American troops, then and now.
Friday, August 24, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT
Once I went hot-air ballooning in Normandy. It was the
summer of 1991. It was exciting to float over the
beautiful French hills and the farms with crisp crops
in the fields. It was dusk, and we amused ourselves
calling out "Bonsoir!" to cows and people in little
cars. We had been up for an hour or so when we had a
problem and had to land. We looked for an open field,
aimed toward it, and came down a little hard. The
gondola dragged, tipped and spilled us out. A half
dozen of us emerged scrambling and laughing with
relief.
Suddenly before us stood an old man with a cracked and
weathered face. He was about 80, in rough work
clothes. He was like a Life magazine photo from 1938:
"French farmer hoes his field." He'd seen us coming
from his farmhouse and stood before us with a look of
astonishment as the huge bright balloon deflated and
tumbled about.
One of us spoke French and explained our situation.
The farmer said, or asked, "You are American." We
nodded, and he made a gesture--I'll be back!--and ran
to the house. He came back with an ancient bottle of
Calvados, the local brandy. It was literally covered
in dust and dry dirt, as if someone had saved it a
long time. He told us--this will seem unlikely, and it
amazed us--that he had not seen an American in many,
many years, and we asked when. "The invasion," he
said. The Normandy invasion.
Then he poured the Calvados and made a toast. I wish I
had notes on what he said. Our French speaker
translated it into something like, "To old times." And
we raised our glasses knowing we were having a moment
of unearned tenderness. Lucky Yanks, that a wind had
blown us to it. That was 16 years ago, and I haven't
seen some of the people with me since that day, but I
know every one of us remembers it and keeps it in his
good-memory horde.
He didn't welcome us because he knew us. He didn't
treat us like royalty because we had done anything for
him. He honored us because we were related to, were
the sons and daughters of, the men of the Normandy
Invasion. The men who had fought their way through
France hedgerow by hedgerow, who'd jumped from planes
in the dark and climbed the cliffs and given France
back to the French. He thought we were of their sort.
And he knew they were good. He'd seen them, when he
was young.
I've been thinking of the old man because of Iraq and
the coming debate on our future there. Whatever we do
or should do, there is one fact that is going to be
left on the ground there when we're gone. That is the
impression made by, and the future memories left by,
American troops in their dealings with the Iraqi
people.
I don't mean the impression left by the power and
strength of our military. I mean the impression left
by the character of our troops-- by their nature and
generosity, by their kindness. By their tradition of
these things. The American troops in Iraq, our men and
women, are inspiring, and we all know it. But whenever
you say it, you sound like a greasy pol: "I support
our valiant troops, though I oppose the war," or "If
you oppose the war, you are ignoring the safety and
imperiling the sacrifice of our gallant troops."
I suspect that in their sophistication--and they are
sophisticated--our
troops are grimly amused by this. Soldiers are used to
being used. They just do their job. We know of the
broad humanitarian aspects of the occupation--the
hospitals being built, the schools restored, the
services administered, the kids treated by armed
forces doctors. But then there are all the stories
that don't quite make it to the top of the heap, and
that in a way tell you more. The lieutenant in the
First Cavalry who was concerned about Iraqi kids in
the countryside who didn't have shoes, so he wrote
home, started a drive, and got 3,000 pairs sent over.
The lieutenant colonel from California who spent his
off-hours emailing hospitals back home to get a
wheelchair for a girl with cerebral palsy.
The Internet is littered with these stories. So is
Iraq. I always notice the
pictures from the wire services, pictures that have
nothing to do with
government propaganda. The Marine on patrol laughing
with the local street kids; the nurse treating the
sick mother. A funny thing. We're so used to thinking
of American troops as good guys that we forget:
They're good guys! They have American class. And it is
not possible that the good people of Iraq are not
noticing, and that in some way down the road the sum
of these acts will not come to have some special
meaning, some special weight of its own. The actor
Gary Sinise helps run Operation Iraqi Children, which
delivers school supplies with the help of U.S. forces.
When he visits Baghdad grade schools, the kids yell,
"Lieutenant Dan!"--his role in "Forrest Gump," the
story of another good man.
Some say we're the Roman Empire, but I don't think the
soldiers of Rome were known for their kindness, nor
the people of Rome for their decency. Some speak of
Abu Ghraib, but the humiliation of prisoners there was
news because it was American troops acting in a way
that was out of the order of things, and apart from
tradition. It was weird. And they were busted by other
American troops.
You could say soldiers of every country do some good
in war beyond fighting,and that is true enough. But
this makes me think of the statue I saw once in
Vienna, a heroic casting of a Red Army soldier. Quite
stirring. The man who showed it to me pleasantly said
it had a local nickname, "The Unknown Rapist." There
are similar memorials in Estonia and Berlin; they all
have the same nickname. My point is not to insult
Russian soldiers, who had been born into a world of
communism, atheism, and Stalin's institutionalization
of brutish ways of being. I only mean to note the
stellar reputation of American troops in the same war
at the same time. They were good guys. They're still
good.
We should ponder, some day when this is over, what it
is we do to grow such men, and women, what exactly
goes into the making of them. Whatever is decided in
Washington I hope our soldiers know what we really
think of them, and what millions in Iraq must, also. I
hope some day they get some earned tenderness, and
wind up over the hills of Iraq, and land, and an old
guy comes out and says, "Are you an American?" And
they say yes and he says, "A toast, to old times."
Ms. Noonan is a contributing editor of The Wall Street
Journal and author of "John Paul the Great:
Remembering a Spiritual Father" (Penguin, 2005),
which you can order from the Opinion Journal bookstore
Her column appears
Fridays on OpinionJournal.com.
Gen Fred McCorkle sends this speech by Peggy Noonan,
who used to be Pres. Ronald Reagan's speech writer.
Let suffice to say the upper strata of Marine Corps
leadership is on the cc line of this e-mail.
Thanks and Semper Fi, General,
PEGGY NOONAN
'To Old Times'
A toast to American troops, then and now.
Friday, August 24, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT
Once I went hot-air ballooning in Normandy. It was the
summer of 1991. It was exciting to float over the
beautiful French hills and the farms with crisp crops
in the fields. It was dusk, and we amused ourselves
calling out "Bonsoir!" to cows and people in little
cars. We had been up for an hour or so when we had a
problem and had to land. We looked for an open field,
aimed toward it, and came down a little hard. The
gondola dragged, tipped and spilled us out. A half
dozen of us emerged scrambling and laughing with
relief.
Suddenly before us stood an old man with a cracked and
weathered face. He was about 80, in rough work
clothes. He was like a Life magazine photo from 1938:
"French farmer hoes his field." He'd seen us coming
from his farmhouse and stood before us with a look of
astonishment as the huge bright balloon deflated and
tumbled about.
One of us spoke French and explained our situation.
The farmer said, or asked, "You are American." We
nodded, and he made a gesture--I'll be back!--and ran
to the house. He came back with an ancient bottle of
Calvados, the local brandy. It was literally covered
in dust and dry dirt, as if someone had saved it a
long time. He told us--this will seem unlikely, and it
amazed us--that he had not seen an American in many,
many years, and we asked when. "The invasion," he
said. The Normandy invasion.
Then he poured the Calvados and made a toast. I wish I
had notes on what he said. Our French speaker
translated it into something like, "To old times." And
we raised our glasses knowing we were having a moment
of unearned tenderness. Lucky Yanks, that a wind had
blown us to it. That was 16 years ago, and I haven't
seen some of the people with me since that day, but I
know every one of us remembers it and keeps it in his
good-memory horde.
He didn't welcome us because he knew us. He didn't
treat us like royalty because we had done anything for
him. He honored us because we were related to, were
the sons and daughters of, the men of the Normandy
Invasion. The men who had fought their way through
France hedgerow by hedgerow, who'd jumped from planes
in the dark and climbed the cliffs and given France
back to the French. He thought we were of their sort.
And he knew they were good. He'd seen them, when he
was young.
I've been thinking of the old man because of Iraq and
the coming debate on our future there. Whatever we do
or should do, there is one fact that is going to be
left on the ground there when we're gone. That is the
impression made by, and the future memories left by,
American troops in their dealings with the Iraqi
people.
I don't mean the impression left by the power and
strength of our military. I mean the impression left
by the character of our troops-- by their nature and
generosity, by their kindness. By their tradition of
these things. The American troops in Iraq, our men and
women, are inspiring, and we all know it. But whenever
you say it, you sound like a greasy pol: "I support
our valiant troops, though I oppose the war," or "If
you oppose the war, you are ignoring the safety and
imperiling the sacrifice of our gallant troops."
I suspect that in their sophistication--and they are
sophisticated--our
troops are grimly amused by this. Soldiers are used to
being used. They just do their job. We know of the
broad humanitarian aspects of the occupation--the
hospitals being built, the schools restored, the
services administered, the kids treated by armed
forces doctors. But then there are all the stories
that don't quite make it to the top of the heap, and
that in a way tell you more. The lieutenant in the
First Cavalry who was concerned about Iraqi kids in
the countryside who didn't have shoes, so he wrote
home, started a drive, and got 3,000 pairs sent over.
The lieutenant colonel from California who spent his
off-hours emailing hospitals back home to get a
wheelchair for a girl with cerebral palsy.
The Internet is littered with these stories. So is
Iraq. I always notice the
pictures from the wire services, pictures that have
nothing to do with
government propaganda. The Marine on patrol laughing
with the local street kids; the nurse treating the
sick mother. A funny thing. We're so used to thinking
of American troops as good guys that we forget:
They're good guys! They have American class. And it is
not possible that the good people of Iraq are not
noticing, and that in some way down the road the sum
of these acts will not come to have some special
meaning, some special weight of its own. The actor
Gary Sinise helps run Operation Iraqi Children, which
delivers school supplies with the help of U.S. forces.
When he visits Baghdad grade schools, the kids yell,
"Lieutenant Dan!"--his role in "Forrest Gump," the
story of another good man.
Some say we're the Roman Empire, but I don't think the
soldiers of Rome were known for their kindness, nor
the people of Rome for their decency. Some speak of
Abu Ghraib, but the humiliation of prisoners there was
news because it was American troops acting in a way
that was out of the order of things, and apart from
tradition. It was weird. And they were busted by other
American troops.
You could say soldiers of every country do some good
in war beyond fighting,and that is true enough. But
this makes me think of the statue I saw once in
Vienna, a heroic casting of a Red Army soldier. Quite
stirring. The man who showed it to me pleasantly said
it had a local nickname, "The Unknown Rapist." There
are similar memorials in Estonia and Berlin; they all
have the same nickname. My point is not to insult
Russian soldiers, who had been born into a world of
communism, atheism, and Stalin's institutionalization
of brutish ways of being. I only mean to note the
stellar reputation of American troops in the same war
at the same time. They were good guys. They're still
good.
We should ponder, some day when this is over, what it
is we do to grow such men, and women, what exactly
goes into the making of them. Whatever is decided in
Washington I hope our soldiers know what we really
think of them, and what millions in Iraq must, also. I
hope some day they get some earned tenderness, and
wind up over the hills of Iraq, and land, and an old
guy comes out and says, "Are you an American?" And
they say yes and he says, "A toast, to old times."
Ms. Noonan is a contributing editor of The Wall Street
Journal and author of "John Paul the Great:
Remembering a Spiritual Father" (Penguin, 2005),
which you can order from the Opinion Journal bookstore
Her column appears
Fridays on OpinionJournal.com.
REPUBLICANS RESPOND TO SCHUMER
The Republican National Committee responded to Senator Chuck Schumer's political cheap shot at departing Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.
AMERICAN MILITARY HELPING AFGHANISTAN
There is a really nice story about American Airmen and Soldiers helping set up a hospital in Afghanistan. Funny how we never hear about these kind of stories.
IRAQI CITIZENS HELPING IRAQI ARMY
The Victory Caucus has another good article about the cooperation between the Iraqi people and the Iraqi Army as they work throughout their country to defeat the terrorists.
BUSH HAILS IRAQ RECONCILIATION AGREEMENT
President Bush on Monday praised the Iraqi political leaders for reaching a reconciliation agreement, pointing out that it had been a long, hard process that was now beginning to show results.
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