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Politics : Attack Iraq? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (8247)11/2/2003 5:43:08 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 8683
 
The long, hard slog
By Oliver North

MEMORANDUM FOR: Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense
RE: Your 16 October 2003 Memo, "Global War on Terrorism"

Mr. Secretary: Though your memo was widely misunderstood and misconstrued by my colleagues in the media, it asks all the right questions. Hopefully you've already received responses from intended recipients, Messrs. Meyers, Wolfowitz, Pace and Feith. Since a copy found its way to my "in" box" as I prepare to return to Iraq, herewith, responses to some of the questions you posed.
You first asked, "Are we winning or losing the Global War on Terror?"
Short answer: Yes. The first standard for gauging success in the war on terrorism is the defense and security of Americans here at home. Since September 11, 2001, when nearly 3,000 people died in the U.S. at the hands of Islamic Jihadists, we have not had a similar event on our shores.
Sun Tzu the great Chinese strategist once counseled, "Those skilled in war bring the enemy to the field of battle and are not brought there by him." The president's political opponents may decry the approach, but you have succeeded in shifting the battleground from U.S. territory to Afghanistan and Iraq. While that makes Afghanistan and Iraq more dangerous in the short term, it can make the U.S. and the world safer in the long term, if we stay the course. Critics who complain that Iraq is now "the central front in the war on terror," miss the gruesome point that it that much easier to kill and capture terrorists if there is a central front. In short, though you can't say it publicly, it's better to battle terrorists in Baghdad than in Boston.
You asked: Does the CIA need a new finding?
Short answer: No. We need a CIA. Since the late 1970s we haven't had an intelligence service worthy of the name. That's not to say we don't have some very smart, dedicated and courageous people working at collecting, analyzing and disseminating intelligence. We do. But for more than two decades the CIA has been a political football in Washington. As a consequence, our ability to collect human intelligence — the only kind that matters in this war — has been drastically curtailed. CIA Director Stan Turner gutted the Clandestine Service, apparently believing we didn't need spies because "satellites can read a license plate from a hundred miles in the sky." Great idea if we're being attacked by license plates — but a lousy concept when small cells of Islamic Jihadists are plotting murder and mayhem.
All my media colleagues keep asking, "Why didn't we know about September 11?" and "What happened to the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction?" and "Why can't we find Osama or Saddam?" You and I both know the answer: We don't know these things because we had — and have — lousy human intelligence (HUMINT). Admitting this to the American people won't give away any secrets to our adversaries — they already know it.
If we're to win this war, somebody well up in the hierarchy of this administration must confront this issue head on — and soon. Start by thanking George Tenant, the current CIA director, give him a gold watch and get him a professorship at Georgetown. Then hire a CIA director who can attract, train and field more Clandestine Service officers who will serve without diplomatic passports to recruit locals in Iraq to spy for us in the souks, madrassas and Islamic centers of the Middle East. Then, go to the Congress and tell them they will have to promise never again to threaten prosecution for CIA officers who collect information from bad people. We're not going to penetrate al Qaeda or Ansar Al-Islam with graduates of Mother Theresa's Home for Unwed Mothers.
You also ask, "Are we capturing, killing or deterring and dissuading more terrorists every day than the madrassas and the radical clerics are recruiting, training and deploying against us?"
Short answer: No. Herein lies the heart of the long-term problem — and the key to the solution for the war in which we are now engaged. It's great that more people in Iraq have electricity today than before hostilities commenced on March 19. It's good that more shops, sewage treatment plants and water purification facilities are opening. But in the long term, it's even more important that schools are reopening. Schools that teach math and science and the abilities needed for modern life — as alternatives to the madrassas — are the long-term solution to the problems of Iraq — and the answer to terrorism.
Many, if not most, of the madrassas currently serving as recruiting stations and training centers for radical Islam are funded by the Saudis with our petrodollars. Instead of teaching physics, math, biology, computer science or petrochemical engineering, students in these "schools" are being taught little more than how to hate, kill themselves, and kill infidels — i.e., Americans, Christians or Jews.
Many of the "graduates" of these institutions have been thoroughly indoctrinated in the teachings of Sheik Hasan al-Bana, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. They then go on to join organizations like Hamas, Hezbollah, al Qaeda, Ansar Al-Islam, Islamic Jihad and a host of other like organizations because they have been taught that they must die the right way — wrapped in a bomb jacket, sitting in an explosive-laden car, or flying an airplane into a building full of Americans. As long as they die killing an infidel — or those who support the infidels — they will reap spiritual rewards in the next life — and their families will derive financial benefits from "charity" for being related to a "martyr."
Stopping the Saudi money that finances these schools of hatred and the blood money paid to "martyrs'" families is important. But even more so are real schools with real teachers who will instruct the next generation — not in how to die the right way — but in the skills needed to live the right way.

Oliver North is a nationally syndicated columnist and the founder and honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance.



To: calgal who wrote (8247)11/2/2003 6:07:34 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
David Limbaugh
Obstructionism in the war on terror
newsandopinion.com | As Democratic presidential hopefuls escalate their criticism of President Bush's policy on Iraq, we should recognize the constant theme amid their calamitous clamor: obstructionism in the War on Terror.

No sooner had they joined with the president in resolving to go after terrorist targets and the corrupt Taliban government in Afghanistan did they begin their handwringing at the prospect that we were about to become bogged down in a quagmire. "We haven't put enough troops on the ground." "We haven't properly trained the Afghan rebels." "We haven't found Osama."

Meanwhile, President Bush calmly and deliberately stayed the course, exercising presidential leadership and patient maturity.

As President Bush attempted to force Saddam Hussein to comply with the Gulf War resolutions and cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors, liberals found more to criticize in President Bush than in Saddam Hussein. They resisted Bush's plan to attack Iraq until it was time for a vote, then reluctantly relented.

But as Bush prepared for war, they did their best to dissuade him from acting, saying that we needed the approval of the United Nations and certain appeasement-oriented countries to initiate the attack. To them, the inexcusable failure of the U.N. and other nations to bring Saddam to justice was reason to condemn President Bush, not the U.N. and those other nations.

On the verge of our attack against Iraq, Democrats castigated Bush again for failing to convince the inconvincible nations to join the coalition. The practical effect of their position would have been to place our foreign policy decisions solely in the hands of an anti-American United Nations and a handful of snooty, feckless European nations as in touch with reality as John Hinckley Jr.

When the war began, they started second-guessing and armchair quarterbacking our military strategy and trying to play up a conflict between Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other administration officials. Out came their prophecies of doom, from mocking our "shock and awe" campaign, to saying insufficient troops were on the ground, to denouncing the air assault as too short lived and the advance to Baghdad as too quick.

They were consistently and demonstrably wrong. Yet now, they expect all of us to listen to their expertise? I don't think so.

Seriously, folks, we need to share a sober moment here. Have we forgotten what this war is all about? We are in a war for the very survival of our free society, living reasonably free of the fear of instant calamity at any time in any location.

We won the war against Saddam's regime and Iraq's military, and there is nothing wrong with Bush having announced that fact — even if he is being pressured into backing away from that statement.

What is going on now is a concerted effort by terrorists lingering from Saddam's fallen regime and from other nations, trying to reverse the gains we've made. The Democrats talk quagmire, but they never complain about Bill Clinton's failed promise to remove troops from Bosnia.

The enemy fights dirty, using unorthodox methods and having unorthodox goals. Their purpose is not to defeat us militarily, but to chip away at our resolve, just like the Communists did during the Cold War.

Regardless of their ceaseless complaints about how we got there, don't liberals believe it's a good thing that we liberated Iraq? Don't their self-professed humanitarian and democratic instincts lead them to want to help stabilize the burgeoning democratic government in Iraq? If not, why not? If so, why won't they quit obstructing and join the effort to work through the difficult, post-war situation?

The task of building a democracy out of nothing would be formidable enough without terrorists working their sabotage at every turn. But if we care about seeing this through, if we are committed to improving the lives of the Iraqi people and helping them to enjoy political freedom — rather than just paying lip service to abstract platitudes about liberty and democracy — it's time we worked together toward that end.

It is nearly impossible to prevent all terrorist attacks — ask the world's foremost experts, the Israelis. Failure to prevent all terrorist attacks in a post-war, unstable Iraq is not tantamount to losing the war. But undermining our resolve to stay the course is.

The more the Democratic hopefuls say we're losing the war, thereby weakening the American people's commitment and the morale of our troops, the more likely we are to allow our victory to be undone. But it's not just about Iraq. If we retreat there, we might as well surrender in the War on Terror. Thank Heaven George Bush is listening to his conscience rather than the daily polls.