Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

Final Day …

Final Day ...
Yesterday my step-daughter married a wonderful young man, Aaron, who is a member for the 82nd Airborne. He has served four tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and will be leaving again in January for his fifth tour. Aaron is a great person, a hero, and someone I respect immensely. .... ... Full story

Brothers at War

Here's the trailer for a true account of the Iraq war told with no hidden or not so hidden agenda. I hope to see it soon. Full story

Taking Chance

Taking Chance (HBO) is the true story of the experiences of Marine Lt. Col. Mike Strobl, who escorted Chance Phelps, a 19-year-old Marine killed during a 2004 firefight, home to Wyoming. Strobl volunteered to escort Chance because he thought the young man was from Clifton, Colorado and Strobl was from that part of the state. Chance went to school his senior year at Palisade High ... Full story

Weekly Energy Notes and Tidbits

Weekly Energy Notes and Tidbits
UPDATE 6/26/08: Not sure if I buy it, but I can guarantee Congress will DO NOTHING: The price of retail gasoline could fall by half, to around $2 a gallon, within 30 days of passage of a law to limit speculation in energy-futures markets, four energy analysts told Congress on Monday. Ever wonder what happens to that $4 a gallon you spend at ... Full story

Lack of Posts & Updates

Hey all, well I just finished my first year teaching and it was an incredible experience. I have been completely swamped lately with work for school, getting updates and other stuff to my publisher, and working with a Photo Journalist who was in Iraq a couple of years ago on a screenplay based on his experiences. We just recently finished it and sent it ... Full story

Civil War guerrillas offer lessons for Army in Iraq

I am currently finishing up some research for an article concerning the 11th Wisconsin and the Battle at Bayou Cache and part of it led me to some interesting research (well, reading) on irregular warfare. I'll be sharing some of this later. But I happened to notice this interesting column from the newspapers today: ... U.S. Army is drawing lessons from the guerrilla raids, ... Full story

Further Evidence That We Should Do More…

The news today shook me to the core. A year or so ago when they cut off the head of Nicholas Berg radical fundamental Islam exposed itself once again. Today I feel the same way. I’ve attempted, I feel, with great success to keep my personal beliefs and feelings removed from this meager blog. However, I feel I can no longer do this, especially in regard to the current war on radical Islamic fundamentalism. A war that so many believe is a farce created by people only interested in world domination and oil. You know, the West as the ultimate bad guy. I know there are those who will in one breath condemn what has happened as today it was announced that the mangled remains of Pfc. Kristian Menchaca, 23, and Pfc. Thomas L. Tucker, 25, were found. And in another breath suggest that the United States (the Western world) has brought this down on itself. In a way we are responsible for some failures, no doubt. I say we have used too much restraint. I was already in a depressed mood after I read an Interview with Andrew Bacevich: The Arrogance of American Power over at the HNN. He was asked: TD: What about the Iraq War at present? Bacevich: There are a couple of important implications that we have yet to confront. The war has exposed the limited depth of American military power. I mean, since the end of the Cold War we Americans have been beating our chests about being the greatest military power the world has ever seen. Overshadowing the power of the Third Reich! Overshadowing the Roman Empire! We’ve been beating our chests? And I know there are many who believe this. First Bacevich contradicts himself. His premise is that we are arrogant and have attempted to subjugate the world. Yet we are not even the military equals of the Third Reich. Fine. I do not understand Bacevich and I know those who do will not understand me. It is our restraint that is getting us into trouble in Iraq. I was not in favor of going in, but it's three years and it's time to get it right. We are a nation, who at the height of our military production during WWII, could place more equipment and machines into battle than Germany, Japan and England combined. If we had cranked up the machine of war a few years ago, instituted the draft, and placed even just 25% more of our resources toward the effort in Iraq, we would have it under control by now. Our own military has reported that had we deployed several hundred thousand more troops the war would have been shorten and we would be on our way to withdrawal at this very time. However, we all know that it would have been a political nightmare to do such a thing. The director of the Iraqi defense ministry, Maj. Gen. Abdul-Aziz Mohammed, said, “With great regret, they were killed in a barbaric way” after admitting that they showed signs of having been tortured. Does anyone remember the ideological makeup of Japanese soldiers indoctrinated under the tenants of Bushido? When Japan started industrializing during the second half of the 19th century it kept the belief system Bushido from its former warrior class the Samurai. Bushido was a way of life; it was about submission of body and soul. It held very strict rules for behavior and did not allow for much individual identification. It was an ideology. It helped them create a robotic military that could systematically execute orders and people. It helped them create the belief of cultural and racial superiority. How many of us really even understand or know the basics of Islam? What is it based on? Here’s a quick refresher. The word “Islam” means to submit, more precisely, “submission to will of God.” To be a Muslim is to be one who submits to the word of God. The religion is founded in submission, which does not allow for a lot of freethinking. When you are told something by a caliph or respected holy person, you do it. I am not a deeply Christian person. I do not regularly attend church, as I believe that being a Christian is a way of life and has nothing to do with identifying myself with a sect. But I am very much concerned with those who try to pass off Islam as this piece loving religion. It is based on war and submission. It spread because of war and do not believe it for a moment if someone tries to tell you that the term “Jihad” has been “misunderstood.” It is all about a holy war. A warrior of a jihad who dies in battle is believed to enter an afterlife of “sensual paradise.” Though initially the founder of Islam (a prosperous Arab merchant, Muhammed) called for Christians to be treated with some level of respect as he considered them to only be “misguided” in their beliefs. However, if they tried to block the expansion of Islam they were to become targets of the Dar Ar-Harb (Adode of War). Jihads targeted all none-believers as it spread. Within a century of its founding in the 7th century, Islam “conquered” Persia, Egypt, and Syria. That was just the beginning. Too often I hear people, even historians, call the Western world (America) nothing but a crusading nation. They even point to the Crusades as the beginning of Islam’s distrust and anger with the West. Anyone who has read or studied the Middle East and Islam would know that the Crusades were more than just wealthy Christians plundering religious holy lands. As a matter of fact, for years after the expulsion of Christians from Jerusalem Arab historians failed to give the events much notice. It meant little to them. Of course, you do know that the word “crusade” is a modern term as the real Crusaders never used the word. They saw themselves as pilgrims. Expert and historian Thomas F. Madden makes the point, “for western Europeans the crusades were epic struggles that helped fashion their image of themselves… Muslims the crusades were hardly worthy of attention. As late as the seventeenth century the crusades remained virtually unknown in the Muslim world.” It doesn’t take a genius to figure out why. Yes the Crusaders could be brutal and there were slaughters. Both sides cut off plenty of heads. But Christianity has grown and developed a conscience that is missing from radical fundamental Islam. I’m not saying all of Islam. (See his book, “The New Concise History of the Crusades,” 2005, preface.) My ranting has spun off to the Crusades, but with good reason. Hopefully, you begin to see how we take and use history and distort it to fit our own needs. Certain aspects of the Muslim world since 9/11 have pointed back to the Crusades as some kind of justification for what is happening now. Or how about the deduction that we are simply on another Crusade today for oil or global domination. Let's go back to Bacevich and his evoking of the Third Reich and Roman Empire as some kind of measuring stick for the United States today. I contend that of all the superpowers of world history, and we are one of them, that we have for the most part used our force only when provoked and have used it with much restraint. My blog post today will probably be seen by some as nothing more than the ranting of a racist, paranoid, ignorant far right radical. Now if I stood up and called the United States arrogant, imperial, ignorant, and Christianity an evil institution, I would be hailed. Oh well. But I have a final and more important point to make. I know that the argument is that we (Westerners) essentially created al-Qaeda. That via colonialism, racism, American hegemony, or our support for Israel, we have created the anger that the Middle East has for us. Al-Qaeda to many people was a natural reaction to our actions. As Victor Davis Hanson and many others have noted it is arguably the “widespread failure to adopt free institutions, democracy, open markets, and civilian audits” that have led to discontent among the masses in the Middle East. These same people whose lives are based on submission and inequality. But the fact is, al-Qaeda would be alive and kicking regardless. Case in point, Iraq. All that oil money yet the vast majority of the country lived in poverty or near the poverty level. Have you researched how far different Iraq was before Saddam? It is easy for radical fundamentalist groups to point to the wealthy U.S. and say, “Look, there’s your problem…” when in fact it is their very own making. Finally, I’ll let the terrorists (radical Islam fundamentalism) speak for themselves: “We give the good news ... to the Islamic nation that we have carried God's verdict by slaughtering the two captured crusaders,” said an Internet post which appeared on an Islamic militant Web site where insurgent groups regularly post statements and videos. “With God Almighty's blessing, Abu Hamza al-Muhajer carried out the verdict of the Islamic court.” Full story

The American Way of War

One of my favorite military historians makes some interesting points in one of his latest rants: The nature of American military power in our age is defined by how it is constrained — through nuclear deterrence, political realities, and cost/benefit analysis. How does the United States employ its overwhelming military superiority to achieve political aims, especially when even friends and neutrals often wish us to stumble ... Full story

CBSNEWSNYT POLL: Americans have “bleaker” view of direction the country in 23 years… ??

The title of this post was not mine, but of the media.  I left this post up thinking someone would point out we have a roaring economy, unemployment is low, ect., and yet Americans have this negative view that all is "bleak."  I would say the media's fixation on all that is bad, meaning Iraq, oil.  Yes, Iraq is not going well, yes, gas prices ... Full story

The War was Right but the Occupation has been a Disaster…

Frankly, this editorial from the UK on the Iraq situation makes a lot of sense: That America’s real error was not the invasion of Iraq, but the failure to plan and manage its reconstruction seems never to have occurred either to Mr Bush or to his opponents. Yet the many Iraqis who initially welcomed the Americans as liberators from the tyranny of Saddam must surely have ... Full story

Instability in Iraq

A recent report released by the U.S. Embassy and military command in Baghdad titled, “Provincial Stability Assessment,” shows that Iraq is still very far from stabilizing.  In the  “province-by-province” report of Iraq's stability (economic and security), six of the 18 provinces rated “serious” and one “critical.”  Read more... Full story

Iraq: the IL-Logic of Withdrawal

Here's a piece (click here) that I had a hard time stomaching. But, as always, I will read and point out intelligently written arguments even if I utterly disagree. Mr. Kirstein, a professor of history at St. Xavier University, believes that the “war” in Iraq is “morally wrong.” War is always morally wrong. I never understand this kind of rhetoric. The real question is, ... Full story

Operation Iraqi Freedom Documents

This is interesting: “At the request of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the US Army Foreign Military Studies Office has created this portal to provide the general public with access to unclassified documents and media captured during Operation Iraqi Freedom. The US Government has made no determination regarding the authenticity of the documents, validity or factual accuracy of the information contained therein, ... Full story

Saddam’s Delusions: The View from the Inside

Based on interviews with captured senior Iraqi military and political leaders and hundreds of thousands of official Iraqi documents, Foreign Affairs has published much of the two-year project’s findings that will change our “understanding of the war from the ground up,” according to the publication. The inner-workings of the Iraq regime and its, frankly, lunatic leader are fascinating. According to the reports, Saddam Hussein ... Full story
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