Category Archives: The War

Women soldiers

A good compilation of photos of military women, some former or current beauty queens (including one from Texas), others who could be, all serving, most in Iraq. Worth a look.

The real blood-for-oil

It’s been so long since Bush’s speech about not tolerating governments that support terrorism that even he has forgotten it. Else why his latest call for continuation of the long-discredited "peace process" between Israel and the bloodthirsty, terror-sponsoring and promoting Palestinians? Not only that, but he sends the Palies $190 million in aid, which everyone who stops to think about it knows only goes to more arms, ammo and suicide belts. Presumably, it’s all about oil. Keeping the Saudis and Jordanians and other Arabs believing the US is "trying" to resolve the "Palestinian problem," so that our oil keeps flowing without interruptions. The oil’s obviously important, but being in the pocket of the Saudis and the Palestinians ain’t hardly. You have to wonder how much money the Saudis will be paying W when he leaves office. After all, they are one of the biggest backers of his daddy’s library at Texas A&M.

UPDATE  I’m quite wrong, says Israeli scholar Michael B. Oren in the WSJ: "The president isn’t selling out Israel."

Osama bin dead…

…since probably 2001, according to photographic evidence that his 37-second appearance in the latest Dr. Zawahiri video is taken from video shot then. Else, as Instapundit says, why not shoot a new video of him? Debka, meanwhile, says special ops and the Pakis are closing in on his hideout, and the US Senate’s recent raising of the price on his head to $50 million was requested by Pakistan president Musharraf to help pay the tribes which are turning the O man in. Ali  Eteraz likewise has an interesting theory. Me, I think he’s been sleeping with the worms since Tora Bora. Al Q has/can run without him.

Disabled staying

Some good news from the war is that, thanks to improvements in medical technology, disabled soldiers and Marines are no longer necessarily being forced to retire:

"One of the better-known examples is Army Capt. David Rozelle. After losing his foot and part of his leg to an anti-tank mine in Iraq, Rozelle not only stayed on active duty; he became the first amputee to return to combat as commander of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment’s Headquarters and Headquarters Troop."

Brings to mind a 19th century saying of the French Foreign Legion, that its senior officers and NCOs were characterized by "much wood," meaning the wooden limbs then used to replace the flesh they had lost in battle. 

The flying car

The original popular science dream vehicle is actually under development by Urban Aeronautics, an Israeli aerospace company, Bell Helicopter, the University of Pennsylvania, and the feds. With military and civilian uses, from medevac to gunship to bridge inspection. Be sure to read some of the notices at the site, particularly by Aviation Week. Won’t be cheap enough for private commuting at first, if ever. But maybe down the road.

War about war

In a way, when you read the AP piece which Crittenden has posted, it merely reflects what Herbert Meyer calls the growing ascendency of "Perception Two: We’re Reaping What We Sowed," in regards to 9/11. I have to admit that President Bush, despite admirable attacks to dispose of the Taliban and Saddam, has failed to do the obvious: put the US on a war footing, impose some sort of draft, decapitate Iran and Syria and help the Israelis dismantle Hezbollah and Hamas. How Bush expects Gen. Petraeus to succeed in Iraq, without either closing their borders or hitting the insurgents’ suppliers in Iran and Syria, is beyond me. As for Petraeus, he admits, in the Army Field Manual 3-24 Counterinsurgency which he authored (excerpts available here in PDF), that insurgencies are rarely beaten and the only time the US has done it was in the Phillipines a hundred years ago. Moreover, he says wars against insurgencies take nine or ten years to win. Meyer sees little chance of that sort of committment, after more than four years in Iraq. Even Victor Davis Hanson, who has written that democracies rarely support wars of more than a few years, has come around to the view that we’ll retreat from Iraq. Then what? Meyer says we’ll need a bigger repeat of 9/11 to finally go all out. Sure looks that way.

Picking up the garbage

Rudy’s broken-windows approach to NYC law enforcement has an Iraq corollary. Badger Six explains.