Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Is Obama’s National Security Adviser a Liar?

I do not think President Obama’s National Security Adviser, General James Jones, is a liar.

I believed Gen. Jones when he said back in early October, “I don't foresee the return of the Taliban. Afghanistan is not in imminent danger of falling."

I believed Gen. Jones when he said, "The al Qaeda presence is very diminished. The maximum estimate is less than 100 operating in the country, no bases, no ability to launch attacks on either us or our allies."

The question really is, given President Obama’s recent, all-out assault on the Bush Administration and its efforts in Afghanistan, does President Obama think Gen. Jones is a liar?

I’d say he apparently does.

On top of Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and CIA Director Leon Panetta, I'd now say there is enough evidence for President Obama to fire, or ask for the resignation of, Gen. Jones.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Ah, Yes, Not “Rape, Rape”

This is how Bradley S. Klapper, of the Associated Press, began his dispatch from fantasy land as published today in my “news”paper, the Boston Globe:

“GENEVA - The United States has asked Switzerland to hand over Roman Polanski to authorities in California, where he could serve up to two years in prison for having sex in 1977 with a 13-year-old girl, Swiss and US authorities said yesterday.”

And, for another second, I almost thought the crime was because the sex occurred in 1977.

A few letters:

1. Editor,

When my moderate friends and I laugh about the liberal bias in the Boston Globe's "news" stories, Ms. Milligan's column, "Party tries to lock up health bill backing (October 17, A1)", is exactly the kind of liberal propaganda we find so funny.

Ms. Milligan opens, "Seeking to preserve critical public support for health care overhaul, the White House and congressional Democrats are busy tailoring the sweeping package to appeal to" various special interest groups. "Seeking to preserve critical public support"?

The most recent Rasmussen poll, the gold-standard of non-partisan polling, notes that likely voters oppose Obama's plans to nationalize medicine by 50 - 44. Further, those "strongly opposed" are 50% greater than those "strongly in favor" (www.rasmussenreports.com; October 10 - 11).

My moderate friends and I have no doubt that the White House, congressional Democrats and their cheerleaders in the liberal media think "preserving" the support of a minority is sufficient to jam unpopular legislation down the throats of the majority. Heaven forbid the White House and congressional Democrats tried to grow public support, though Ms. Milligan disingenuousness was intended to mislead readers into thinking the nationalization effort was favored by a majority. (End of first letter.)

Blogger’s Note – In the subsequent poll, October 17 – 18, voters oppose nationalize medicine 54 – 42; those strongly opposed are now 75% greater than those strongly in favor.

2. Editor,

It's hysterical that you could not let your readers know that the "hectoring" $7.5 billion aid bill for Pakistan which you railed against was authored by Sen. John F. Kerry (D, MA); you know, the Vietnam war hero, the 25-year US Senate member, the chairman of the "powerful" Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the possessor of so much "foreign affairs gravitas" (A new way to talk to Pakistan, October 17, A10). (End of second letter.)

3. Editor,

You hail a Vietnam war hero, the chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee, a 25-year veteran of the United States Senate and the 2004 Democratic Party Presidential nominee for being a messenger boy and getting his name on a bill (Kerry: a senior senator unleashed, October 22; Blogger’s Note: I’m not kidding, the Boston Globe wrote a gushing editorial praising Kerry for playing messenger boy and getting his name on a bill not a law)?

Your editorial is an embarrassment to President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Sen. John F. Kerry, the Boston Globe, and the New York Times Co. for I cannot comprehend standards so incredibly low. (End of third letter.)

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Ditherer-in-Chief Continues to Dither
Liberal Media Now Carrying Ditherer's Water

Today, Afghan President Hamid Karzai agreed to a run-off election against former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah.

Today, my ‘news’paper ran an editorial arguing President Obama should wait until after the November 7 run-off election, which is after the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial elections, before he announces his decision on his General’s request for as many as 60,000 troops to support the 68,000 troops already in Afghanistan that the Obama-Biden Administration admits it is “under-resourcing”.

Today, my ‘news’paper reported that prior to Karzai’s decision, he was pressured by:
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
US Ambassador Karl Eikenberry, and
US Senator John F. Kerry (D, MA), chairman of the ‘powerful’ Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Not mentioned in any press report that I can find is that Obama’s Special Envoy for Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke, made any contact with Karzai.

Today, the newswires are reporting that Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is stating that Obama cannot wait until November 7 to make his decision on whether to honor the request of his General for 60,000 additional troops to support the 68,000 troops in Afghanistan that the Obama-Biden Administration is under-resourcing.

My take:

Of Clinton, Eikenberry, Holbrooke and Kerry, some one is extremely impotent.

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates should either be fired or resign . . . but I typed this months ago.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

More Hateful Race-Baiting from the Left

First, this is the link to Mr. Rush Limbaugh's reply in the Wall Street Journal today to the hateful attacks he's endured since he dared to try to purchase an NFL franchise.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704322004574477021697942920.html#printMode

The Boston Globe's resident race-baiter, Mr. Derrick Jackson, did not miss the opportunity to pen yet another vile piece that makes no effort to improve race-relations in America. I'll not provide the link to his hate; you can find the column yourself at boston.com if you're curious.

My letter in reply to Jackson's column here:

Editor,

If only Mr. Jackson were so exercised about the actual quotes of current President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate, former Ku Klux Klan Kleagle Robert C. Byrd (A missed chance for Limbaugh, October 17, A11).

For, it was Sen. Byrd (Democrat, WV) who shared this beauty with America in 2001, "There are white niggers. I've seen a lot of white niggers in my time." (Blogger's Note: I don't edit "nigger" because it's important for readers to be physically affected by seeing this ugly word that the "Conscience of the Senate" Sen. Byrd uses so casually. Byrd is President Pro Tem. His Democratic Party colleagues voted him thus.)

No, better for Mr. Jackson to demagogue a radio talk show host in an attempt to keep blacks and guilty whites on the Democratic Party plantation than to write an honest piece that might actually improve race relations in America. (End of letter to the editor.)

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Liquidating the Democratic Party Plantation

As regular readers of this space know, I’m a big believer in Madison’s Factions, the belief that people are governed by so many loyalties that no one loyalty would ever deliver a permanent majority in the United States.

I do not know the exact numbers and I’m not going to research them, but I think we can all agree that blacks, Jews, homosexuals and union members all monolithically vote for Democrats. I’ve never understood this, nor accepted this, as a Madison’s Faction guy (and as a Big Tent Republican). Even if you were a gay, black, Jewish, pipe-fitter, I’d still think that you could vote for a Republican because you valued national security, you wanted to educate your urban-schooled children, and you thought the six inches of birth canal (and the carrier’s fickle mood) was not what determined human life.

Today, my “news”paper, the Boston Globe, gave me hope, unwittingly, that I continue to be ZACKlyRight.

Headline #1 was, “Times Co. takes Globe off market”. For those not within the gravitational pull of the epicenter of American liberalism, the New York Times Company long ago announced that it was considering shuttering the liberally extreme Boston Globe unless it could gain significant concessions from the Globe’s union members or find a suitable buyer (think: drunk sailor). Not too long ago, the Times Co. emasculated the Globe’s unions and got $20 million in annual concessions. The New York Times and the Boston Globe busted a handful of unions so the liberal elites can still pontificate at election time for unions. Maybe a(n) (unemployed) union member or two will notice.

Headline #2 was, “Clinton disappoints gays in Russia”. It seems Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, supporter of the war in Iraq and spouse of President Clinton who fathered “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT)” and the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), did not take the opportunity while visiting the mayor of Moscow, a noted opponent of gay rights, to make a forceful argument for gay rights. Rather, Mrs. Clinton made no supportive statements for gay rights whatsoever lest she offend her bigoted host. This coupled with the honor Nobel laureate Obama bestowed on Rev. Warren, the laureate’s dithering on DADT, and his dithering on DOMA, just maybe a homosexual or two will notice.

Headline #3 was, “Palestinians seek punishment of Israel over Gaza attack.” The article was a painful read as it talked about efforts by the Palestinian Authority to escalate international court proceedings against Israel for defending herself against incessant rocket attacks emanating from Gaza. All the proceedings took place at the United Nations and US Ambassador Susan Rice’s name is not mentioned once in the article; the administration of Nobel laureate Obama choosing to tacitly support the terrorists, I suppose. Maybe an American-Jew or two will notice.

Finally, my fav, headline #4, “Residents of New Orleans losing patience with Obama”. The sub-headline was classic, “Many feel abandoned by government”. No elaboration on my part necessary other than, maybe an African-American or two will notice.

It’s time for the Democratic Party plantation to be liquidated; I am hopeful for the freedom of the oppressed.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Now Charles Krauthammer is Plagiarizing Me!

First it was Maureen Dowd of the New York Times, now Charles Krauthammer of the Washington Post. Maybe this apeared in the Post today but I found it at the on-line Philadelphia Inquirer. Mr. Krauthammer gave me no credit for the words and ideas of mine that he borrowed so I give him no more mention than I already have:

Wavering on the 'good' war
Obama can't even follow through on the Afghanistan conflict he once embraced.

By Charles Krauthammer

The genius of democracy is the rotation of power, which forces the opposition to be serious - particularly about things like war, about which, until Jan. 20 of this year, Democrats were decidedly unserious.

When the Iraq war (which a majority of Senate Democrats voted for) ran into trouble and casualties began to mount, Democrats followed the shifting winds of public opinion and turned decidedly antiwar. But, needing political cover because of their post-Vietnam reputation for weakness on national defense, they adopted Afghanistan as their pet war.

"I was part of the 2004 Kerry campaign, which elevated the idea of Afghanistan as 'the right war' to conventional Democratic wisdom," wrote Democratic consultant Bob Shrum shortly after President Obama was elected. "This was accurate as criticism of the Bush administration, but it was also reflexive and perhaps by now even misleading as policy."

Which is a clever way to say that championing victory in Afghanistan was a contrived and disingenuous policy in which Democrats never seriously believed, a convenient two-by-four with which to bash George Bush over Iraq - while still appearing warlike enough to fend off the soft-on-defense stereotype.

Brilliantly crafted and perfectly cynical, the "Iraq war bad, Afghanistan war good" posture worked. Democrats first won Congress, then the White House. But now they must govern. No more games. No more pretense.

So what does their commander in chief do now with the war he once declared had to be won but had been almost criminally under-resourced by Bush?

Perhaps provide the resources to win it? You would think so. And that's exactly what Obama's handpicked commander requested on Aug. 30 - a surge of 30,000 to 40,000 troops to stabilize a downward spiral and save Afghanistan, the way a similar surge saved Iraq.

That was more than five weeks ago. Still no response. Obama agonizes publicly as the world watches. Why? Because, explains national security adviser James Jones, you don't commit troops before you decide on a strategy.

No strategy? On March 27, flanked by his secretaries of defense and state, the president said: "Today I'm announcing a comprehensive new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan." He then outlined a civilian-military counterinsurgency campaign to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan. And to emphasize his seriousness, the president made clear that he had not arrived casually at this decision. The new strategy, he declared, "marks the conclusion of a careful policy review."

Conclusion, mind you. Not the beginning. Not a process. The conclusion of an extensive review, the president assured the nation, that included consultation with military commanders and diplomats, with the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan, with our NATO allies and members of Congress.

The general in charge was then relieved and replaced with Obama's own choice, Stanley McChrystal. And it's McChrystal who submitted the request for the 40,000 troops, a request upon which the commander in chief promptly gagged.

The White House began leaking an alternate strategy, apparently proposed (invented?) by Vice President Biden, for achieving immaculate victory with arm's-length use of cruise missiles, predator drones, and special ops.

The irony is that no one knows more about this kind of warfare than Gen. McChrystal. He was in charge of exactly this kind of "counterterrorism" in Iraq for nearly five years, killing thousands of bad guys in hugely successful, under-the-radar operations.

When the world's expert on this type of counterterrorism warfare recommends precisely the opposite strategy - "counterinsurgency," meaning a heavy-footprint, population-protecting troop surge - you have the most convincing of cases against counterterrorism by the man who most knows its potential and limits. And McChrystal was emphatic: to go any other way would lose the war.

Yet his commander in chief, young Hamlet, frets, demurs, agonizes. His domestic advisers, led by Rahm Emanuel, tell him if he goes for victory, he'll become LBJ, the domestic visionary destroyed by a foreign war. His vice president holds out the chimera of painless counterterrorism success.

Against Emanuel and Biden stand David Petraeus, the world's foremost expert on counterinsurgency (he saved Iraq with it), and Stanley McChrystal, the world's foremost expert on counterterrorism. Whose recommendation on how to fight would you rely on?

Less than two months ago - on Aug. 17, in front of an audience of veterans - the president declared Afghanistan "a war of necessity." Does anything he says remain operative beyond the fading of the audience applause? (End of Krauthammer column that basically pulls from the last 3,279 posts I've made on Afghanistan.)

Friday, October 09, 2009

Where Have all the Grown-Ups Gone

I think the time is now to globally market the Edsel Chia Pet Mood Rock Ring.

For only $1,500 more, you'd get the Ring and a coupon for a free keg of kool-aid.

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates Must Now Truly Go

It is now past time for Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to either resign or be fired by President Obama.

The masters of feigned outrage, the Democrats, are over-exercised today because they feel President Obama's hand-picked General to fight the war in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, went outside the "chain of command" when commenting on troop levels in London last week.

This from General Jim Jones, the National Security Adviser, who is not in the McChrystal-Gates-Obama hierarchy, " . . . it's better for military advice to come up through the chain of command." All other advice can be scatter-shot, I guess.

For weeks I've been reading about Gen. McChrystal's "leaked" report on Afghanistan that wound up at the Washington Post. Never have I heard anyone question how did McChrystal's report end up with the media.

But, today, Pentagon Spokesman Bryan Whitman seemed to be more upset about McChrystal making comments that SUPPORTED the President's current Afghanistan strategy, the strategy he set in March, when he said, "It was always the Secretary's intent to try to have these discussions to review the assessment within the chain of command and that was the design of it. That's not how it unfolded, so I would be disingenuous if I didn't say that it is disappointing at times as an institution that prides itself on discipline when there are individuals that violate that trust that's placed on them." Though the White House is specifically saying that McChrystal was not actively campaigning for additional troops.

So, a Defense Secretary, who has been on the job for three years, isn't sufficiently informed on Afghanistan that he can advise the President on troop levels.

The same Defense Secretary runs a Defense Department where confidentiual reports end up at the Washington Post before they end up in the Oval Office.

The same Defense Secretary has his spokesperson trash the discipline of the Secretary's department.

The same Defense Secretary is essentially called-out by the National Security Adviser.

Secretary Gates must go yesterday; US troops currently deployed in two shooting wars deserve better.

Sunday, October 04, 2009

Letterman Extortion Scandal?

The liberal extremists who control the media win again.

No matter where I turn, left-winger and shameless, character assassin, David Letterman, is now the victim of his serial workplace sexual harrassment of female subordinates as the liberal media has "named" the scandal based on a CBS employee trying to extort money from Letterman to keep the Letterman's workplace sexual harrassment a secret.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

The Last Three Letters

As usual, no introduction necessary:

1. Editor,

What objective did President Obama give Gen. Stanley McChrystal (Obama receives conflicting advice on troop increases, September 27, A14)?

Does anyone besides me think the answer to this simple question is important before there is ANY assessment of Gen. McChrystal's request for as many as 40,000 additional troops in Afghanstan?

Recall, six months ago President Obama changed the Afghan strategy and it was President Obama who labeled the war in Afghanistan a "war of necessity". (End of first letter.)

2. Editor,

You wrote, "Iran's apparent pursuit of nuclear weapons is the gravest security challenge facing the Obama administration, and a turning point is fast approaching (Talk to Iran, but keep a Plan B, editorial, September 27)."

Apparent?!

Your denial is frightening. (End of second letter.)

3. Editor,

Maybe missed by your readers, no doubt your intention, is that President Obama is maintaining President Bush's sanctions on the military junta in Burma (Human rights: Don't go wobbly on Burma's junta, editorial, October 1).

But I do appreciate the Boston Globe coming to the realization, though at least six and one-half years too late, that systemic rape is one of the most atrocious crimes.

As most of us concerned with facts knew, the International Women's Issues office at the US State Department noted that Saddam Hussein's regime used Burmese-style rape and sexual assault as a weapon in order to achieve the following goals: "to extract information and forced confessions from detained family members; to intimidate Iraqi oppositionists by sending videotapes showing the rape of female family members; and to blackmail Iraqi men into future cooperation with the regime."

Today, thanks to President Bush, the women of Iraq are no longer being systemically raped; their families are no longer being terrorized. (End of third letter.)