My contribution to InstaPunk’s Rewrite the Cartoon Contest. Does this cartoon have impact, Mr. Toles?
Inspired by Doug Petch.
My contribution to InstaPunk’s Rewrite the Cartoon Contest. Does this cartoon have impact, Mr. Toles?
Inspired by Doug Petch.
Not much to say about this, except it is sad when the sight of an American flag drives someone so crazy that they would burn them under a car. (Via Captain’s Quarters)
This follows on the heels of Pennsylvania’s Lt. Governor arriving uninvited to push her anti-war views at the funeral for a Marine. Michelle Malkin also has a follow-up on the Governor’s response. Also, check out today’s Day By Day cartoon.
What is it about some people whose political views drive them to commit such boorish acts?
It is commentary like this:
It’s reminiscent of the line from Animal House, when Otter says, “I think that this situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody’s part.” Bluto answers, “We’re just the guys to do it.” The Democrats have become the party of stupid and useless gestures.
That has put Captain’s Quarters in the realm of higher beings. Congratulations Captain Ed, you deserve it.
Ali at Free Iraqi has an insightful post about the relationship of American involvement in the Middle East to the War on Terror.
Any attack on the American soil will only result in the American people asking for justice and favoring an operation similar to what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan, which is what the American administration wish for but can’t find the necessary support inside and outside America. The reaction of the international community would be not very important at such circumstances, but America is expected to get some good support if it’s attacked again. Now the terrorist are stupid and insane people, but their leaders and most importantly their financier are not that stupid when it comes to risking their power and control over their countries. So if the terrorist decide to act alone they would not only lose the support of these dictatorships but also would risk that those regimes might well, hunt them down in their countries and hand all the info they have about the terrorist to America just to prove their innocence and avoid a very probable serious American strike.
Bin Laden realized that his hands are cuffed now and he has lost the initiative and thus came his reactionary speech just before the elections in trying to retrieve some initiative or to excuse his cowardice for other Muslims who might still support him, saying that he’s not Attacking America because now there are two Americas and one of them is friendly! All he could do and all he can do as long as he’s depending on Arab governments in his finance and logistic support is to keep threatining America but he knows that he can never turn these threats into asctions. This makes Bush’s repeated statements that American troops are in Iraq to fight terrorism so that Americans won’t have to fight it in America very true with only slight error.
He concludes with two options that are available to America: focus on solely on Iraq, or broaden our engagements in the Middle East to force democratic change in the region either from within or by force. He believes the latter option is best for Iraq, because it takes the fight off of Iraqi soil, and best for America’s safety and long-term interests.
While I agree with his conclusion, taking such an aggressive strategy might be beyond America’s means at present. A couple areas come to mind:
While George Bush has already won re-election and can proceed with impunity, his fellow Republicans in the House and Senate can not. Politically, the Bush Administration would need a solid case to present to Congress and the nation to establish why the next Middle Eastern target is a threat to American security. I would dare say most Democrats in Congress and their supporters won’t go along with the President should he present a case for war elsewhere in the Middle East without some pretext. Even though many Americans support the cause of expanding democracy in the Middle East — I among them — there are a sizeable number of people equally disposed to Kerry-style isolationism.
Gregory Djerejian weighs in on the President’s war-time leadership, albeit from a more international point of view. But the President’s inability to engage our European allies in the Iraq War was a major criticism of him both here and abroad. Communicating the necessity of any military action against another Middle Eastern despot, and how such action will further the security of all democratic nations should be a fundamental task for the President, if he wishes to expand this theater of the War on Terror beyond Iraq’s borders.
Beyond the political issue, some military issues must be considered. First, who to choose as the target of such a strike? Certainly, the Middle East is a target rich environment with Iran and Syria being the obvious front-runners as a next target. And if Seymour Hersh is to be believed, then Iran has already been chosen. (The Bush Administration and the Pentagon have denied this.)
But beyond simply choosing a target, lies the execution of a military strike against any such target. If Iran is to be that target — which seems likely given the mullahs’ nuclear ambitions — such a choice might also provide some political cover for the President. Action against Iran could be framed as an attempt to end the Iranian nuclear program, or to help in the stabilization of Iraq by ending the Iranian government’s support of terrorists operating in Iraq.
So, with our current troop levels and force deployments, it is possible that we could move into Iran, securing or destroying the Iranian nuclear facilities, while also pacifying any insurgency towards the establishment of a democratic government in Iran as we have done in Iraq? At present I’m not sure that the U.S. military is capable of such a task.
Victor Davis Hanson takes a look ahead at the challenges which lie in our future.
Iran and Syria may sound defiant in the Islamic media; yet, the world around them in Israel, Turkey, Afghanistan, and Iraq is either democratic or moving in that direction. Their support of terror and desire to acquire dangerous strategic weapons, in the President’s view, means that the larger war cannot be won unless both cease and desist or see their regimes changed — preferably through either diplomatic coercion and multilateral pressure or in extremis American force.
While the democratic stew brews in Afghanistan and Iraq, expect a number of Bush initiatives that will turn up the heat. The UN, reeling from the Oil for Food scandals, the Secretary-General’s nepotism, and the organization’s tolerance for mass murder in the Sudan, is under enormous pressure to democratize its membership, expand the Security Council, open its books — or face a de facto American disengagement. That is no longer a right-wing pipe dream, not when a majority of Americans now voices no confidence in either the efficacy or morality of such avatars of world governance.
The Palestinians likewise are facing an impending dilemma. Either with American support and aid they embrace real democracy and give up tribal Arafatism to negotiate as a legitimate interlocutor with the Israelis, or they will face a unilateral Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, the completion of a security fence, continued destruction of extremists and the recognition that they will lose their window on the West through Jerusalem, and instead stew in their own juice with their like brethren in Syria and Egypt.
Nor will the Bush administration cease its reexamination of its superpower responsibilities. The American people believes that there is no longer any strategic or political logic in stationing thousands of soldiers in Europe, but plenty of reasons — economic, political, and psychological — to remove the vast majority of them at a time of troops shortages closer to the front. NATO has become as impotent as it is widely praised, especially when it fails to honor commitments in Afghanistan and abhors involvement with Iraq. This obstructionism is in sharp contrast to the prior European desire of American-led military intervention — without UN or Congressional sanction — to remove Slobodan Milosevic. Having learned belatedly the wisdom of talking more quietly while carrying an even bigger stick, America may continue to offer praise for the status quo trans-Atlantic relationship, while unobtrusively promoting wider bilateral relationships — like those with Australia — based on shared commitments to freedom and the need for collective security against statism and totalitarianism in all its many guises.
Power Line has links (and commentary) on some efforts to pin the blame for the tsunami catastrophe. Shame on Rueters and Agence France-Presse for using this horrific human tragedy to promote a political agenda.
UPDATE: Sortapundit rebuts the inane AFP article.
UPDATE II: I have some more thoughts on this.
Victor Davis Hanson takes on Rumsfeld’s critics.
The answer, of course, is the usual media-inspired flight from reason that overwhelms this country at various times hype playing on our fears and groupthink to create a sudden story when there really is none. And now with the renewed attack on Donald Rumsfeld we are back to more of the flu-shot hysteria that has been so common in this war. Remember the pseudo-crises of the past four years— the quagmire in week three in Afghanistan or the sandstorm bog-down in Iraq?
Let us not forget either all the Orwellian logic: Clinton’s past deleterious military slashes that nevertheless explained the present win in Afghanistan, or his former appeasement of bin Laden that now accounts for the successful doctrine of fighting terror. Or recall the harebrained schemes we should have adopted— the uninvited automatic airlifting of an entire division into the high peaks of Islamic, nuclear Pakistan to cut off the tribal fugitives from Tora Bora? Or have we put out of our memories the brilliant trial balloons of a Taliban coalition government and the all Islamic post-Taliban occupation forces?
So it is with the latest feeding-frenzy over Donald Rumsfeld. His recent spur-of-the-moment — but historically plausible — remarks to the effect that one goes to war with the army one has rather than the army one wishes for angered even conservatives. The demands for his head are to be laughed off from an unserious Maureen Dowd — ranting on spec about the shadowy neocon triad of Wolfowitz, Feith, and Perle — but taken seriously from a livid Bill Kristol or Trent Lott. Rumsfeld is, of course, a blunt and proud man, and thus can say things off the cuff that in studied retrospect seem strikingly callous rather than forthright. No doubt he has chewed out officers who deserved better. And perhaps his quip to the scripted, not-so-impromptu question was not his best moment.
But his resignation would be a grave mistake for this country at war, for a variety of reasons.
This Cox & Forkum cartoon captures the situation perfectly.
UPDATE: Donald Rumsfeld made a surprise Christmas Eve visit to U.S. troops in Mosul.
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld visited wounded soldiers and brought holiday greetings on Christmas Eve amid tight security at an air base in northern Iraq where an insurgent’s attack killed 14 U.S. troops and eight other people earlier this week.
UPDATE II: Here’s more on Donald Rumsfeld’s visit to Mosul. (From Power Line)