Category Archives: Iraq

Double oink

The Senate lards on the pork in narrowly passing its version of the troops funding measure. Still to be worked out, apparently, is the Senate’s March 31, 2008 withdrawal-from-Iraq deadline, as opposed to the House’s Sept. 1, 2008 withdrawal date. All of which may be mute if Bush, as expected, vetoes it all. You could call them unpatriotic. But I’d prefer "bought-and-paid-for."

Captured Brits solution

Op-For points out that thanks to Parliament, Britain is in no position to start a war with anyone, not even Iran, and even if they were it would be amazing if they’d go to war openly over the troop hostage taking. But why do it openly, asks Peter Boston, a commentor at the Belmont Club:

"Were I calling the shots for the Brits I would sink a patrolling Iranian submarine or two. Quietly and without pubilc announcement. Although we wouldn’t hear about it for another 50 years or so I imagine such an event would create a major confidence crisis in top Iranian circles and start destructive internal recriminations flying around."

Sounds like a winner to me. Better, certainly, than bringing in Jimmy Carter for advice. Hopefully, they’ll be released like the last group before some Iranian sailors lose their lives. 

Doing what Iran does best

Why, taking hostages of course. A roundup at Pajamas Media for those following along at home.

Oink

The House Dems’ lonely cry: We’ll end the war by funding the war and, meanwhile, here’s some pork.

"To get her narrow majority of 218 votes, Ms. Pelosi and Appropriations Chairman David Obey had to load it up like a farm bill: $74 million for peanut storage, $25 million for spinach growers, $283 million for dairy farmers–all told, some $20 billion in vote-buying earmarks of the kind Democrats campaigned against last year."

It won’t pass the Senate, of course, and if it does Bush has promised a veto. Just don’t call them unpatriotic. 

The bad Obama

The half-black presidential candidate isn’t really analyzed by the MSM so much as adored. So Steve Sailer takes on the thankless task of doing it for them.

"…the Bad Obama, a close student of other people’s weaknesses, a literary artist of considerable power in plumbing his deep reservoirs of self-pity and resentment, an unfunny Evelyn Waugh consumed by indignation toward his own mother’s people."

I wouldn’t vote for him even if he was what Sailer also calls him, "a male Oprah…the crown prince of niceness," if only because he has no experience, he voted early against the campaign in Iraq and he otherwise seems to have little clue about what it’s all about. But, then, a lot of other people don’t either.

Via Fresh Bilge 

Information war surrender

Strange, really, how the U.S. military capitulates when it comes to trying to influence the media war. I guess they expect to lose with the MSM and so they refuse to try to win. But that’s really pretty stupid. It may please them to, as Michael Yon notes, decline to set up press centers for the benefit of reporters who need reliable Internet and satellite connections, but they are cutting off their own noses.

"Billions of dollars are spent on the war each month, millions of dollars fly around here like sparrows, yet there are no designated places for journalists? While so many soldiers and their families shout for coverage from Afghanistan (remember that place?) and Iraq, I can sometimes be found from midnight to sunrise sitting outside, trying to transmit photos through a wireless network that only works sometimes."

Much is being made in the blogosphere of Gen. Vincent K. Brooks’ apparent threat to kick Yon out of Iraq. I suspect that has less to do with what he writes than his attitude combined with his former status as an NCO trigger-puller. But he also doesn’t fail to paint pictures of the ubiquitous PX with its incongruous multitude of flat-screen TVs, and the steak-and-lobster, cake-and-cookie mess halls which the brass cannot fail to dislike having publicized. It’s supposed to be all about guns-and-glory, not how many discounted components you can buy for your stereo or camera. As Yon’s reporting illustrates, it’s really about both. And it isn’t new. It was like that in Viet Nam, too. But at least there the military tried, and sometimes successfully did, influence MSM coverage.

The hole in the report

If Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s confession is genuine, the 911 Commission’s bestselling report isn’t far from fiction, leaving out as it is does his role in the 1993 WTC bombing and his Iraq connection, according to investigative reporter Edward Jay Epstein:

"The result is that basic issues concerning KSM’s interrogation–and the dozens of crucial citations in the 9/11 Report–are now in such doubt that 9/11 Commissioner Bob Kerrey suggested last Sunday, in his Daily News column, that KSM be put on trial in New York, where presumably he could be properly cross-examined. While that remedy may be far-fetched, some resolution of this investigative failure is necessary."