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Terrorism

Arafat

by Bryan Strawser · Nov 11, 2004

The Boston Globe’s Jeff Jacoby has a few words on the death of Yassir Arafat:

YASSER ARAFAT died at age 75, lying in bed surrounded by familiar faces. He left this world peacefully, unlike the thousands of victims he sent to early graves.

In a better world, the PLO chief would have met his end on a gallows, hanged for mass murder much as the Nazi chiefs were hanged at Nuremberg. In a better world, the French president would not have paid a visit to the bedside of such a monster. In a better world, George Bush would not have said, on hearing the first reports that Arafat had died, “God bless his soul.”

God bless his soul? What a grotesque idea! Bless the soul of the man who brought modern terrorism to the world? Who sent his agents to slaughter athletes at the Olympics, blow airliners out of the sky, bomb schools and pizzerias, machine-gun passengers in airline terminals? Who lied, cheated, and stole without compunction? Who inculcated the vilest culture of Jew-hatred since the Third Reich? Human beings might stoop to bless a creature so evil — as indeed Arafat was blessed, with money, deference, even a Nobel Prize — but God, I am quite sure, will damn him for eternity.

Filed Under: News, Terrorism

Blackfive: No Matter What Happens Today

by Bryan Strawser · Nov 2, 2004

Once again, Blackfive reflects my own thoughts pretty clearly – there’s nothing here I disagree with:

No Matter What Happens Today

America will survive tomorrow.

Bin Laden and the Islamofascists will continue to attempt to destroy us. We haven’t had a Democrat that wants to fight since Roosevelt. Hopefully, the Democrats will be more on board with conducting the “war” on terror and Islamofascism. It’s not a cake party, it’s a war.

If John Kerry is NOT elected President, I sincerely hope that he follows through on his promises for a stronger America in the Senate. So far, he hasn’t done crap as a Senator to make us stronger.

If George Bush is NOT re-elected President, I sincerely hope that we will unleash HELL on the jihadis the world over. I would expect that he will transition the War management properly in a bi-partisan manner.

I’d like to see us partner more with India and other countries on the WoT. We partnered with the Communists during WWII. Depending on how far the war takes us, China may be a partner, too. France can go to hell…oh, too late, they’ve already taken that trip.

Filed Under: Blogging, Elections, Military, Politics, Terrorism

Cycling at Franklin Park and the Arnold Arboretum

by Bryan Strawser · Oct 10, 2004

Biked today through Boston’s Franklin Park and Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum. 10.8 Miles roundtrip, very slow ride, top speed 27 miles per hour (down the Bussey Hill).

Near the Bonsai house a family played in the leaves:

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On top of the hill near the Perry loop, my sidekick and I met some cute new friends – these two are just a few of the five or so dogs that were up there wandering about with their newfound doggy friends:

Dsc00030

The view from the hill into Boston was stunning:

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Near the end of the ride at Arnold, this lilly pond beckoned for your thoughts:

Dsc00039

I’ve ridden over 35 miles in the last three days – and my legs can tell. But it’s all good.

Filed Under: Cycling, Pictures, Terrorism

Bill Whittle on Deterrence

by Bryan Strawser · Oct 10, 2004

Last week I finally posted a longish post about the war that we’re in. While it took me many weeks to put those thoughts onto virtual paper – Bill Whittle, in a fantastic essay in two parts, has written something far beyond what my poor skills as a scribe can fathom.

Some excerpts:

And all of this rage and fury and spitting and tearing up of signs, all of these insults and spinmeisters and forgeries and all the rest, seem to come down to the fact that about half the country thinks you deter this sort of thing by being nice, while the other half thinks you deter this by being mean.

It’s really just that simple.

Now if sociology were a real science, we could set up experiments. We could, in fact, do what just about every one of us – Liberal or Conservative — has, in our heart of hearts, secretly wanted to do: send that 50% of idiots on the other side packing – I mean, really packing, as in, out of the country, for good — and let history show we were right after all.

We imagine an America made up exclusively of tough-minded Conservatives would be a far better, a safer and stronger place, than an America composed of nothing but compassion-filled Liberals.

They, of course, think precisely the opposite. And I have, over the past two years, determined that internet comment threads do not hold the answer to this predicament. Theirs, and ours, are usually just cheerleading sessions, full of sound and fury and signifying nothing but a soothing reduction in blood pressure brought about by the narcotic high of being agreed with.

We can’t, alas, deport all the left wingers and they cannot, damn it, silence all the right wingers. We are stuck with each other. Each sees the press as biased toward the other, and each gapes in awe and amazement that the other side could possibly feel the same way.

And although we can not run an experiment to look into the alternate futures to glean the best result, to determine the relative benefits of being nice or being mean – for those, ultimately, are the choices, believe it or not – we can at least look back to see which seems to have produced the best results in the laboratory of history.

It all comes down to carrots (liberals) or sticks (conservatives). By the way: if you’re in a rush and need to run, here’s the spoiler: You can offer a carrot. Not everybody likes carrots. Some people may hate your carrot. Your carrot may offend people who worship the rutabaga. But no one likes being poked in the eye with a stick. That’s universal.

I’m a stick man. I wish it were different. But part of growing up – in fact, the essential part of growing up – is realizing that wishing does not make it so.

Folks, it’s time to reach down deep and get in touch with our inner adult.

And another:

This line, this doctrine – either you’re with us or the terrorists – has drawn derision and scorn from the nuanced sophisticates from around the world. What they refuse to see is that in one brilliant stroke it cuts the camouflage away from terror, and in effect neutralizes the very lever that makes International Terror so effective a tool: deniability. More on this in a moment.

I sat amazed at the confidence and the vision President Bush outlined in that speech. I remember saying out loud, to no one in particular, “I was wrong about this man.” A few of the grips nodded in silence. None of us took our eyes off the TV screen.

You simply have to read what he’s written. Part One and Part Two.

Filed Under: Elections, Politics, Terrorism

Vintage Poster: What did you do today for Freedom?

by Bryan Strawser · Oct 10, 2004

Doforfreedom

Filed Under: Pictures, Terrorism

Vintage Poster: In All The Way

by Bryan Strawser · Oct 10, 2004


Inalltheway

Filed Under: Pictures, Terrorism

We’re in a War, Folks

by Bryan Strawser · Oct 4, 2004

I started this post well over a month ago – right after the tragic events at Beslan where terrorists attacked children. Nearly two months later, I think I’m finally far enough down the path in my thought process to bring to conclusion the jumble of thoughts I had back at that time.

While I can handle dealing with those that do not share my worldview (after all, I do not have all of the right answers) – I have a hard time dealing with people who are either 9/11 apologists – and those that simply fail to understand that we’re at war.

War.

We’ve been at war at least since September 11th – and likely longer than that. And I do not see it getting any easier for us.

Regardless of the excuses that the apologists might come up with, on September 11th we were viciously and brutally attacked. While some of our military was attacked (and killed) at the Pentagon, the bulk of the 9/11 attacks went after civilians – simple folks like me working on a morning in their offices in New York. This is notwithstanding earlier attacks on two of our embassies in Africa and the bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen – but 9/11 is when we woke up and took notice.

War.

9/11 is probably the first time that we truly realized what we were up against – and some of our fellow citizens – of this country and others, simply don’t get it.

We’re in a life or death struggle for the very core of our existence. And its not going to get any easier – in fact, it’s likely going to get harder for us.

A few years ago at a ASIS chapter conference, I sat through a brutal presentation by an FBI Special Agent who had handled the evidence collection at the Pentagon after 9/11 – as well as the USS Cole Bombing. He spared little. I saw some scenes that I’ll remember until my last days. He had other scenes from the embassy bombings – they were worse.

This is what we’re up against folks – people that would kill us just to watch us die. And it doesn’t matter if you’re a soldier, sailor, or airman or not – they would kill me just as likely as they would a national guardsman in Iraq. And its time for all of us to wake up to that reality.

There are obviously some differing worldviews out there – and I respect that. It’s in the great marketplace of ideas that we find out if our ideals can stand up to the intellectual onslaught of others.

There are clearly some differing views when it comes to terrorism. Some feel that we need to reach out to our enemy and try to “understand” their worldview. Fuck that. I know their worldview – it was crashing a plane into the World Trade Center. I’m not interested in understanding their worldview.

There are others that believe that this is all our fault. Our foreign policy, our support for Israel, our capitalistic ways, the presence of so much Christianity in our public life. I call these the “apologists” – and there’s plenty of them out there – certainly there are alot here in Massachusetts, but that’s another matter.

We didn’t ask for this war. The men and women who died in Shanksville, DC, and New York didn’t ask for this. The hundreds of police and firemen who died on 9/11 didn’t ask for this. None of us did. But it’s here now. And we have to deal with it.

Lex understands – last month during the aftermath of Beslan, he wrote:

I am not really a Russian. Neither am I an Israeli. When 9/11 happened, Le Monde declared that now, “we are all Americans.” But it wasn’t true then, and it isn’t true now. It’s facile, trite, and meaningless to attempt to throw the mantle of victimhood across our shoulders, sharing in the tragedy from a safe distance and thereby diminishing, diluting – say it! Cheating the victims of their misery by cheapening it with mere solipsistic rhetoric.

We are not Russians. We are not Israelis. We are not.

But they are of what we are of.

We are the civilized world, all of us. Russians, and Israelis and Spaniards and Kenyans. And we are locked in a death match with Nemesis.

Fight or die. Wake up to it. No more talk about Vietnam. That was then, this is now.

This is real.

James Lileks, as always, gets it. He wrote about Beslan in early September:

Cicadas, airplanes, wind in the trees. A peaceful weekend. At least here. There’s a bloody child on the front page of the newspaper. The Strib subhead calls them “Islamic guerrillas” and “fighters” and “militants,” because you know one man’s terrorist is another man’s disciple of God who practices his sharpshooting so he can nail children in the back at 50 paces. This teaser to an inside story made my jaw bruise my sternum:

“This week’s bloodbath in Russia shattered the notion that innocents are taboo terror victims.”

This is why I despair sometimes. Now we learn that innocents are no longer taboo terror victims. Which means that these people weren’t considered innocent.

That’s what we’re faced with out there as we approach this fight – changing paradigms.

I thought back when our two embassies were blown up in Africa that we’d really that innocents were in the crosshairs. Oh wait – they worked for the State Department, so they were complicit in our foreign policy errors. How silly of me.

I thought back when the USS Cole was blown up in Yemen.. oh wait, they were in the military, so they were complicit in our mass killings of civilians, cluster bombs, and all that.

I thought back when thousands were killed in New York, DC, and Shanksville, PA that we’d learn that innocents are no longer… oh wait, they were either in the military, or contributors to our evil capitalistic ways..

War.

It’s real – it’s here. It’s time to come to grips with that.

This, ladies and gentlemen, is the face of our enemy, as outlined in The LA Times (via Yahoo):

Guerrillas armed with automatic rifles and explosive belts who are holding hundreds of hostages at the small provincial school in southern Russia allowed 26 women and children to leave. About a dozen mothers, like Dzandarova, were allowed to take only one child, forced to leave another behind.

“I didn’t want to make this choice,” a stunned-looking Dzandarova, 27, said in the reception room of her father-in-law’s house a few miles from the school. “People say they are happy that my son and I are saved. But how can I be happy if my daughter’s still inside there?”

Her daughter was killed, by the way, in the final battles at Beslan.

Chapomatic gets it – and outlines his own approach to coming to grips with the war – and dealing with apologists:

We’re at the very beginning of a fight to the death. It’s already been said that the only way for us to lose is for us to kill ourselves, by refusing to understand the nature of this war, its consequences, or even the fact that it exists.

I will be much less civil to the next ignorant F911 believer I see. Much less.

And so will I.

At times, I don’t feel like debating the 9/11 issues with people on the “other side”. Most of them simply can’t see past the ignorance of their own ideas. But I know that I must. I have to be willing to carry the battle – it’s my own contribution to the Global War on Terror, I guess.

To each according to his/her own strengths, we have to be willing to carry the battle. Right now it’s just support – tomorrow it could be your hometown, your workplace, or an incident on your airplane as you travel to your vacation.

Lex again:

This is truly courage in the face or barbarism, from people who are much closer to the cancer than we ourselves. We must encourage them. We must match them in the strength of their convictions. We must not be dissuaded.

Let us hope that through the latest act of terror, that the patient has awoken. Let us hope that the tide has finally turned. Let us hope that it is not too late.

Let us keep hope alive.

And in the meantime, because we must, let us keep our powder dry.

Right on, brother!

And then there’s the protestors. I saw some firsthand in Boston recently while headed off for dinner. Two middle aged women standing near the Boston Public Library holding up a sign reading “Israel is a Terrorist State”.

I stopped so fast I about knocked myself over. I wanted to debate the two but I was headed to dinner and was already late.

This is what we’re up against – people who believe that Israel, the only Middle Eastern democracy, is a terrorist state. I’d hate to ask how they view our own country.

I find most left-wing protestors to be hypocritical. So does Ralph Peters, in the New York Post (via Lex):

A final thought: Did any of those protesters who came to Manhattan to denounce our liberation of 50 million Muslims stay an extra day to protest the massacre in Russia? Of course not.

The protesters no more care for dead Russian children than they care for dead Kurds or for the hundreds of thousands of Arabs that Saddam Hussein executed. Or for the ongoing Arab-Muslim slaughter of blacks in Sudan. Nothing’s a crime to those protesters unless the deed was committed by America.

The butchery in Russia was a crime against humanity. In every respect. Was any war ever more necessary or just than the War on Terror?

Lex also had further thoughts last month about the wide distortion field between the apologists and others:

But when folks on the left accuse us of being either stupid or malignantly evil, calling the RNC a “hate fest,” while chortling happily at F9/11 distortions, and no voice of reason or rejection checks them, I have to wonder if they are worthy of our courtesy.

Maybe John Edwards is right. Maybe there really is “two Americas.” The part that I’m in can tell the difference between Soldiers and terrorists.

Personally, John Edward’s discussion about “Two Americas” drives me batty. I want one America. We live in one America. But that’s a different post.

At the debate last week, I nearly blew my top from the couch when John Kerry talked about having a summit of Muslim countries and some of his other descriptions of the Global War on Terorism – some of it was the same apologist crap I’ve heard from others. I’m not interested in a dialogue – I’m interested in how we defend ourselves (and our allies) from terrorist attacks – and how we eradicate some of these terrorist groups out there.

Perhaps Vladimir Putin, President of Russia, said it best last month:

These are not “freedom fighters,” Putin said. “Would you talk with Osama Bin Laden?” he asked. Putin said the Chechen separatists are trying to ignite ethnic tensions in the former Soviet Union and it could have severe repercussions. (Full story)

“Why don’t you meet Osama bin Laden, invite him to Brussels or to the White House and engage in talks, ask him what he wants and give it to him so he leaves you in peace?” the Russian president was quoted as saying by Britain’s Guardian newspaper on Tuesday.

“You find it possible to set some limitations in your dealings with these bastards, so why should we talk to people who are child-killers?” said Putin, who spoke to a group of foreign journalists and academics late on Monday.

Exactly.

I’m not interested in a dialogue.

We’re at war, folks. The USS Cole, Kenya, Tanzania, The Pentagon, the World Trade Center, Iraq, Shanksville. It’s likely just the beginning.

It’s time to wake up to that fact.

I’ll leave it to James Lileks to wrap this up – he says it far better than I:

I’ve no doubt that if Seattle or Boston or Manhattan goes up in a bright white flash there will be those who blame it all on Bush. We squandered the world’s good will. We threw away the opportunity to atone, and lashed out. Really? You want to see lashing out? Imagine Kabul and Mecca and Baghdad and Tehran on 9/14 crowned with mushroom clouds: that’s lashing out. Imagine the President in the National Cathedral castigating Islam instead of sitting next to an Imam who’s giving a homily. Mosques burned, oil fields occupied, smart bombs slamming into Syrian palaces. We could have gone full Roman on anyone we wanted, but we didn’t. And we won’t.

Which is why this war will be long.

The world will not end. It will roll around in its orbit until Sol expires of famine or indigestion. In the end we’re all ash anyway – but even as ash, we matter. The picture at the top of this page is a sliver taken from a 9/11 camera feed. It’s the cloud that rolled through lower Manhatttan when the towers fell. Paper, steel, furniture, plastic, people. The man who took the picture inhaled the dust of the dead. Somewhere lodged in the lung of a New Yorker is an atom that once belonged to a man who went to work two years ago and never came back. His widow dreads today, because people will be coming and calling, and she’ll have to insist that she’s okay. It’s hard but last year was harder. The kids will be sad and distant, but they take their cues from her, and they sense that it’s hard – but that last year was harder. But what really kills her, really really kills her, is knowing that the youngest one doesn’t remember daddy at all anymore. And she’s the one who has his eyes.

Two years in; the rest of our lives to go.

Filed Under: Deep Thoughts, Terrorism

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