Daily Kos

Tag: War on Terror

Ungrateful Afghan civilians resent dying for freedom Hotlist

Tue Aug 26, 2008 at 03:27:11 PM PDT

Despite being the beneficiaries of America's Good War, which enjoys broad bipartisan support in the US, and despite being assured by both John McCain and Barack Obama, that their liberation will be escalated next year by about three American brigades, the Afghanis continue to bitch about civilian casualties this, repeated air strikes on villages that. Now Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who is ungrateful both for his installation as puppet president and for the generous salary he received as an American oil company exec, is demanding a reevaluation of the status of foreign forces in his country, all because of some silly misunderstanding. While the Afghans aren't acting nearly as uppity as their ungrateful conterparts in Iraq, it is becoming clear that, once again, yet another backward country has failed to appreciate America's greatness and is now starting to reject the hand of generosity reached out to them by the Pentagon. It's the Dominican Republic all over again!

Feel free to read more insults to America after the flip.

Poll

Afghanistan:

21%14 votes
1%1 votes
18%12 votes
37%24 votes
20%13 votes

| 64 votes | Vote | Results

Can Biden End The "War On Terror" and Open Debate About Afghanistan?

Mon Aug 25, 2008 at 05:28:03 PM PDT

The War on Terror.

Even the phrase itself is a grammatical affront.

The collection of policies, plans, and executed follies that the Neo Con think trust had assembled under this commercial brand are all relics from another era, one where a poorly read and frightened American public (and media I might add) was open to a little sloganeering and a lot of self defeating Shock & Awe. Good times.

But that was then and this is now. With a massive changing of the guard in the offing, do the Hopeful Democrats have what it takes to step into a new era of Geopolitical relations and end forever the chimera that was the War on Terror? Yes? Then there is only one way to accomplish that, and that is in pulling the troops out of Afghanistan.

US Admits Detaining 7 Year Old Child For 5 Years

Mon Aug 25, 2008 at 09:32:14 AM PDT

This is Dr. Aafia Siddiqui. Dr. Siddiqui is a Pakistani national, physician, mother of three young children, one in US detention since 2003. She was kidnapped five years ago in Pakistan and is obviously a victim of horrendous torture at Bagram AFB.

Dr. Siddiqui before capture, arrest and five years "lost" as a ghost detainee.

Dr. Siddiqui charged in the U.S., July 2008

The Long War

Fri Aug 22, 2008 at 07:52:25 AM PDT

For those who have not noticed, the Global War on Terror has morphed into what is now being labeled as "The Long War".

Soon after the neo-cons got their "Pearl Harbor", former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told Americans what to expect. "Forget about 'exit strategies, we're looking at a sustained engagement that carries no deadlines."

Donald Rumsfeld is today a discredited and widely reviled figure. Robert Gates, Rumsfeld's successor as Defense secretary, is generally admired for manifesting qualities that Rumsfeld lacked -- a willingness to listen not least among them. Yet on one crucial point, the two see eye to eye: Both believe that the United States has no alternative but to wage a global war likely to last decades.

LA Times The 'Long War' Fallacy by Andrew J. Bacevich

Speaking at West Point in April of this year, Gates, echoed his predecessor's assessment. "There are no exit strategies." Gates described a "generational campaign" entailing "many years of persistent, engaged combat all around the world."

The Terrorists Among Us

Wed Aug 20, 2008 at 09:46:54 AM PDT

While researching an unpublished diary I discovered a group of terrorists that are flying under homeland security's radar. Not only are they aliens to our country, but also to earth. Luckily for us ignorant citizens there is a worldwide shadow organization helping to hunt them down, and kill them.

The latest TSA Follies . . .

Wed Aug 20, 2008 at 09:42:51 AM PDT

So, you're a retired brigadier general in the Air National Guard, and even certified to carry a pistol as a pilot of a commercial airliner, under the program designed to provide last-chance security against terrorists seizing control of a jet.  What does the TSA do?  Put you on the terror watch list, of course:

Court Rules That No Fly List Can Be Challenged

Wed Aug 20, 2008 at 08:35:11 AM PDT

The Ninth Circuit ruled that a person can challenge the inclusion of their name on the government's no fly list. Sounds pretty obvious that you should have that right, but that isn't the Bush Administration's position.

The Case is Ibrahim v Department of Homeland Security and it was decided by a two to one decision of the Ninth Circuit Court if Appeals.

Ms. Ibrahim was a Stanford student on a student visa from Malaysia, who also happens to be a Muslim. When she tried to fly home from San Francisco, she was blocked from boarding the flight, detained and handcuffed in front of her fourteen year old daughter, and taken to a police station. Two hours later she was released and she was permitted to fly home the following day after being subjected to "enhanced searches."

Will Republican attempt to restart Cold War accidentally remind people of reality?

Tue Aug 19, 2008 at 11:37:46 AM PDT

For the last seven years, Republicans have poked the real pain we felt on 9/11 to convince us that small nations who weren't involved in those attacks would be an "existential" threat to the United States if they got hold of even a handful of nukes--even though we have 10,000 warheads enough to destroy every country on earth several times over.

However, the Bushies and McCain's false promises of support to Georgia to get them to attack Ossetia to provoke a Russian response may undermine their "War on Terror" propaganda in a couple of ways:

Poll

Will Republican attempt to restart Cold War accidentally remind people of reality?

53%22 votes
24%10 votes
12%5 votes
9%4 votes

| 41 votes | Vote | Results

Your Police Can Spy on You: New Bush Police Surveillance Plans

Sat Aug 16, 2008 at 11:33:33 AM PDT

Today a new article in WaPo exposes Bush's latest tactic to bring the US closer to a true police state:

The Justice Department has proposed a new domestic spying measure that would make it easier for state and local police to collect intelligence about Americans, share the sensitive data with federal agencies and retain it for at least 10 years.

We're talking about local and state police, not some federal agents. And yes, that was "intelligence collecting", spying, not just enforcing the law. And what stringent safeguards, what conditions are in place to protect our real or imagined freedoms?? All the police need is "reasonable suspicion".  Ah, yes, that wonderful and accurate cornerstone to prevent abuse: it's up to each officer's own renowned instincts, his "suspicion".

New Ride at Coney Island: Waterboarding Thrill Ride

Sat Aug 16, 2008 at 07:49:10 AM PDT

I think its going to take a long time for the American people to digest their passive participation in the performance of torture.  Massive psychological traumas can take years to fully process, especially considering the scale of other events in which American torture took place.  There are varying degrees of recognition though, much among arts, film and television, like this.  Coney Island has a new ride:

But it was still shocking to many when artist Steve Powers created a Coney Island attraction called the Waterboard Thrill Ride. It's not really a ride, it's more of a peep show.

This is an act of artistic brilliance I believe.  In the historic heart of urban American leisure, we are confronted with our collective guilt.  

Obama's Historic Presidency: Looking Back in 4 Years

Wed Aug 13, 2008 at 10:55:16 AM PDT

The American people and in fact, all citizens of the world, should examine what we have done in the four years since reclaiming our government from the lobbyists and war criminals in the election of 2008. They will have to agree that the results have been unique in all history.

—Future Speech of Barack Obama

Four years are behind us. Look at what has happened during these four years. People are forgetful. They accept good and wonderful things as they happen — and then forget about them. But we do not want to forget how things were, and what has happened. This is the transformation which the whole world calls the American miracle. Let us look back and examine the unprecedented achievement and progressive policy that has occurred since the 2008 election.

What was it like four years ago? Think back on the great and moving events: how America was despised in the world, how millions responded to Barack's speech in Berlin with overflowing hearts and indescribable joy. Only people who have been freed from some burden rejoice like that. That is the message of change that Barack Obama has brought. That is the greatest thing a statesman can do: to bring hope to a country!

Poll

Given that inept presidents like Bush are unlikely to ever win a third term, and given the youth and potential legacy of Barack Obama, are presidential term limits a good idea?

81%35 votes
13%6 votes
4%2 votes

| 43 votes | Vote | Results

Bin Laden and the Driver

Sun Aug 10, 2008 at 05:37:58 AM PDT

August 6, 2008. An undisclosed location. It was 7 years ago that the President was handed a memo titled "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in the U. S." (click here for CNN) And Six Years, 11 Months, and 5 Days ago, on September 11, 2001, he struck.

Bin Laden is still at large - but we got his driver - sentenced the bastard to 5 and a half years. The Taliban, which gave bin Laden his base of operations, is growing stronger. After going after bin Laden for a while, we cornered bin Laden in Tora Bora, paid some Taliban fighters to 'take him out.' They took him out, to lunch, to a nice bistro not far from the fighting.

Hamdan Sentence - 5 1/2 Years

Thu Aug 07, 2008 at 01:35:27 PM PDT

Salim Hamdan was sentenced to 5 1/2 years in prison, significantly less than prosecutors requested:

Earlier Thursday, during his sentencing hearing, Hamdan told a military court that he never suspected bin Laden was a terrorist until after the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Prosecutors weren't buying his story and recommended he be sent to prison for 30 years to life.

Hamdan, speaking through a translator, gave the unsworn testimony one day after six officers convicted him of providing material support to al Qaeda but cleared him of terrorism conspiracy charges.

He will be eligible for release in 6 months:

Hamdan has been imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay since 2002. The judge has given him credit for five years of prison time.

Seven Years Later

Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 04:35:30 PM PDT

What better way to celebrate the 7th anniversary of Ignored "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in the US" PDB Day than with a conviction in a sham show trial?

Yup, it's been seven years since that infamous daily briefing at the Crawford pig farm ranch, an event which Bush marked by taking the rest of the month off.

The day after he received the memo, "Bush seemed carefree as he spoke about the books he was reading, the work he was doing on his nearby ranch, his love of hot-weather jogging, his golf game and his 55th birthday," the Washington Post noted. Today — 2,557 days later — Bin Laden still remains free and "determined to strike in U.S."

But they got his driver. Sort of.

After closing arguments Monday, Charles D. Swift, a former Navy lawyer who has represented Mr. Hamdan for years, said the two-week proceeding here had been a trial that did not follow the American rule of law and that the defense believed American courts would eventually correct the legal errors here. Mr. Swift called the military commission "a made-up tribunal to try anybody we don’t like."

The not-guilty verdict on the conspiracy charge was a setback for the military prosecutors. The charge had asserted that Mr. Hamdan joined in the conspiracy that included the 2001 and other major terror attacks by helping transport and protect Mr. bin Laden....

Michael J. Berrigan, the deputy chief defense counsel for Guantánamo, said the defense was encouraged by the verdict. "For a team that was expected to strike out at every pitch," he said, "we at least hit a triple."

He described the conspiracy charge that was rejected by the panel as the government’s main charge, and noted that when Mr. Hamdan was originally charged in 2003 the only charge he faced was conspiracy.

So, while they don't have bin Laden, and have no convinctions of anyone involved in that conspiracy, they've got Hamdan on "material support." And, as the Center for Constitutional Rights, which has led the legal battle over Guantanamo for the last six years, points out they've sealed the undermining of long-standing traditions of jurisprudence:

"Hamdan’s trial violated two of the most fundamental criminal justice principles accepted by all developed nations:  the prohibition on the use of coerced evidence and the prohibition on retroactive criminal laws.

The trial will not create finality – the decision to keep these cases out of the ordinary criminal courts will produce years of appeals over novel legal issues raised by the untested military commissions system. Even after those appeals are finished, the process will never be seen as legitimate by the world.  This case was the first trial run of the commissions system, and the decision proves nothing except that the system itself should be scrapped. Terrorism-related crimes should be tried in the time-tested domestic criminal justice system, a system whose rules have been designed over the centuries with one goal: to seek out the truth."

While those years of appeals proceed, the Pentagon intends to detain all of the defendents forever, anyway, even those who are acquitted. As if that will keep the world from noticing that bin Laden is still at large and the "War on Terror" has been a complete debacle.

Bin Laden's driver convicted at Gitmo

Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 09:13:26 AM PDT

Several news sources are reporting that Salim Hamdan, Bin Laden's one time driver has been convicted of "Providing Material Support to Terrorism." Hamdan has been held at Guantanamo Bay since shortly after he was captured by bounty hunters in Afghanistan during the invasion, and sold to the US forces.

http://www.nytimes.com/...

http://voanews.com/...

Changing the Tactics of the War on Terror (Updated 3x)

Mon Aug 04, 2008 at 09:29:36 AM PDT

Kevin Drum passes along more solid reasoning from two notably distinct sources: both are adamantly opposed to any surge in Afghanistan. More and more, I'm seeing people come to their senses regarding Afghanistan, and Islamic terrorism in general.

RAND Study Concludes: 'War on Terror' Not Working

Fri Aug 01, 2008 at 11:47:32 PM PDT

An extensive analysis of the conduct of the "War on Terror", carried out under the auspices of the RAND Corporation has concluded that an approach to fighting contemporary global "Islamist" terrorism based upon the war/military model of response has not worked, and will not provide an effective basis for tackling Al Qa'ida.

Below, I consider briefly some of the most important features of the study, as well as some of the detailed findings which tend to support Barack Obama's analysis of events on the ground in Iraq, and how to respond to the current threat.

The report runs to some 225 pages, however I have excerpted the most pertinent parts. Although there may appear to be quite a lot of quotations, in the context of such an extensive study, I think it comes within fair use. The report is extensively footnoted, I have removed these from the text below. Should you wish to read the report it is available in pdf form only here

And So July Ends

Thu Jul 31, 2008 at 02:28:54 PM PDT

"War" on Terror

Today at TPMCafe Senator John Kerry discussed ways our response to extremism and terrorism should be changed.  As so many well informed people have been saying all along about the "War on Terror," everything about the way our government approaches the subject needs to be rethought from the bottom up.  The basic strategy of Communist guerrilla recruiters, which was highly successful in so many places, was always to swell the ranks by winning over the hearts and minds of the local population.  Terrorist organizations have adopted roughly the same strategy.  The militaristic approach our nation has employed during the Bush years plays right into the hands of the recruiters.

More after the flip.


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