"...an utterly corrupt new religion called environmentalism..."
If the history of this planet's climate over millions of years is any guide, we are about to enter a new ice age.
CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper indicated in a 1993 interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune that he wants to see the United States become a Muslim country.
The NYT Memorial Day Mutiny
By Bob Parks (05/28/07)
Some of us in America will be in observance of Memorial Day 2007. While some of us reflect on those who have died defending our country almost every day, some of us will take the opportunity to reflect because the holiday dictates such. There are also some who wish to use this day to continue their protest of the war while there are people in harm's way.
In this case, I speak of New York Times writer Michael Kamber and the Times in general. While fewer and fewer people are reading the New York Times, one can only hope those trying to kill our soldiers arenât reading the online version of Kamberâs latestâŠ.
May 27, 2007
Doubts Grow as G.I.âs in Iraq Find Allies in Enemy Ranks
By Michael Kamber
âBAGHDAD â Staff Sgt. David Safstrom does not regret his previous tours in Iraq, not even a difficult second stint when two comrades were killed while trying to capture insurgents.
âIn Mosul, in 2003, it felt like we were making the city a better place,â he said. âThere was no sectarian violence, Saddam was gone, we were tracking down the bad guys. It felt awesome.â
âBut now on his third deployment in Iraq, he is no longer a believer in the mission. The pivotal moment came, he says, this past February when soldiers killed a man setting a roadside bomb. When they searched the bomberâs body, they found identification showing him to be a sergeant in the Iraqi Army.â
âI thought, âWhat are we doing here? Why are we still here?ââ said Sergeant Safstrom, a member of Delta Company of the First Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry, 82nd Airborne Division. âWeâre helping guys that are trying to kill us. We help them in the day. They turn around at night and try to kill us.â
While I was in the service, we were told not to talk to the media without a briefing first. Some may think this was a First Amendment violation, but in retrospect I can understand the reasoning.
Being disgruntled in the military is nothing new. No one likes doing the repetitive things. No one likes cleaning everything every day. No one likes the drills almost every day. But when it all becomes real, those repetitions become second nature, the cleaned equipment works, and it all makes sense. Thatâs something civilians canât understand.
It must make a reporter with an agendaâs heart race when he hears a soldier nowadays in theater start to doubt the mission and be willing to go on record saying so. Now while Staff Sgt. Safstrom is no coward, the questions Kamber wrote and is presenting must be music to the ears of our enemy.
Iâm sure weâll get a follow-up piece in the Times with quotes from the insurgentâs disgruntled. Iâve been waiting a couple of years nowâŠ.
âHis views are echoed by most of his fellow soldiers in Delta Company, renowned for its aggressiveness.
âA small minority of Delta Company soldiers â the younger, more recent enlistees in particular â seem to still wholeheartedly support the war. Others are ambivalent, torn between fear of losing more friends in battle, longing for their families and a desire to complete their mission.â
These have been asked before, but they beg to be asked again.
During our conflict in Haiti, were there similar stories complete with the quoted doubts expressed by our military in the mission? During our conflict in Mogadishu, were there similar stories complete with the quoted doubts expressed by our military in the mission? During our conflict in Bosnia Herzegovina, were there similar stories complete with the quoted doubts expressed by our military in the mission?
Let me ask another series of questions in response to one commonly asked during protests of this conflictâŠ.
What were our national security interests, thus the reason to go into Haiti? What were our national security interests, thus the reason to go into Mogadishu? What were our national security interests, thus the reason to go into Bosnia?
The answer to the first set of questions was few to none. Just because I donât remember seeing any, doesnât mean it didnât happen. But surely not with the regularity we are seeing today, because as we never see stories about the homeless during a Democrat administration, we seldom have the liberal media passing on national security leaks or the quotes of disgruntled soldiers in a war zone a Democrat Commander-in-Chief sent them to.
As far as the second question, those missions were primarily humanitarian and thereâs nothing wrong with trying to stop Third World genocide. The overthrow of Saddamâs regime was a humanitarian mission, but the terrorist backlash wasnât anticipated in the original game plan.
One constant seems to be whenever we go in and try to help people, they end up shooting us in the back. Remember that when you hear the crescendo for us to intervene in Darfur.
Our people are in the Middle East today where Ninth Century thinking prevails. Can anyone at the New York Times tell me of what news value quoting a few soldiers could be at this juncture of the war? The only good that could come from this would be to boost the morale of those leaving roadside bombs for our soldiers to drive over.
âWith few reliable surveys of soldiersâ attitudes, it is impossible to simply extrapolate from the small number of soldiers in Delta Company. But in interviews with more than a dozen soldiers over a one-week period with this 83-man unit, most said they were disillusioned by repeated deployments, by what they saw as the abysmal performance of Iraqi security forces and by a conflict that they considered a civil war, one they had no ability to stop.
Funny, while I was in I donât remember any surveys conducted of my attitude. I donât remember any stories of surveys conducted by our military while in the previously mentioned missions. Who would be happy in a war zone? The only reason for such a survey would be to drive down the resolve of the readers back home which, incidentally, is precisely what Osama bin Laden predicted would happen.
âIn 2003, 2004, 100 percent of the soldiers wanted to be here, to fight this war,â said Sgt. First Class David Moore, a self-described âconservative Texas Republicanâ and platoon sergeant who strongly advocates an American withdrawal. âNow, 95 percent of my platoon agrees with me.â
To add some air of âobjectivityâ Kamber reminds us that this quote came from a âconservative Texas Republican.â Again, I can remember of no Democrat soldier that advocated an âAmerican withdrawalâ or retreat during a recent Democrat Administration. This is a recently new phenomenon.
Personally, I think more could be done to secure this country from the bad guys if we told our troops to fall back and let the B-52âs do what B-52âs do: blow up the bad guys in mass quantity. But we canât do that because the bad guys hide amongst the civilians they torture, maim, and kill. I did say Ninth Century thinkingâŠ.
âIt is not a question of loyalty, the soldiers insist. Sergeant Safstrom, for example, comes from a thoroughly military family. His mother and father have served in the armed forces, as have his three sisters, one brother and several uncles. One week after the Sept. 11 attacks, he walked into a recruiterâs office and joined the Army.
âYou guys want to start a fight in my backyard, I got something for you,â he recalls thinking at the time.
But in Sergeant Safstromâs view, the American presence is futile. âIf we stayed here for 5, even 10 more years, the day we leave here these guys will go crazy,â he said. âIt would go straight into a civil war. Thatâs how it feels, like weâre putting a Band-Aid on this country until we leave here.â
Of course Kamber had to remind us that we shouldnât question the quoted soldiers loyalty. I would love to hear from those soldiers and hear what they told Kamber that wasnât published, and what published quotes he may have twisted.
Thatâs the reason we were told not to talk with the press, especially when our enemy has access to what was supposedly said.
âTheir many deployments have added to the strain. After spending six months in Iraq, the soldiers of Delta Company had been home for only 24 hours last December when the news came. âChange your plans,â they recall being told. âWeâre going back to Iraq.â
I donât wish to seem insensitive, but long deployments are nothing new. However, we seldom read the complaints from the soldiers in the New York Times, and I canât reiterate enough that we donât read this about our enemies, but our enemies read this about us.
âCaptain Douglas Rogers acknowledges the skepticism of many of his soldiers. âOur unit has already sent two soldiers home in a box,â he said. âMy soldiers donât see the same level of commitment from the Iraqi Army units theyâre partnered with.ââ
âYet there is, he insists, no crisis of morale: âMy guys are all professionals. I tell them to do something, they do it.â His dictum is proved on patrol, where his soldiers walk the streets for hours in the stifling heat, providing cover for one another with crisp efficiency.â
Itâs cover-your-a** time.
Kamber writes that the Captain knows his men are publicly expressing doubt in the mission, âYet there is, he insists, no crisis of morale.â Will someone please show me one quote from a terrorist insurgent describing the doubts his people have in the jihad?
If there is a crisis in morale, itâs being enflamed by the New York Times and every liberal who endangers every service person in the crosshairs of a combatant, a combatant who is now invigorated by the published, and quite possibly distorted, whining of those on the front lines.
A couple sentences were devoted to remind us there are a couple of good things happening in that hellhole. The rest of the piece attempts to put our soldiersâ daily routines in perspective. The perspective of them doing their jobs despite watching their buddies die and the Iraqis they train turning on them.
As we recognize another Memorial Day, I would hope just for once, a ârespectedâ news organization would stop working for that Pulitzer prize at the expense of the many American lives that are lost when a terrorist insurgent decides to stay and fight another day because the New York Times quotes our soldiers who sound like theyâre ready to give up.
Iâd have no point to make if publishing the supposed quotes of our battle-weary was a consistent practice. But as itâs not and there is an obvious political agenda at work, the New York Times (as well as the American left) need be reminded of a few certainties.
Should we prematurely withdraw from Iraq and the jihadists claim they succeeded in driving us out, they will bring the battle to our streets. Letâs see how much use for the New York Times they would have.
http://blackandright.mensnewsdaily.com/2007/05/27/the-nyt-memorial-day-mutiny/
(Printer friendly version) Email: Bob Parks
Bob Parks is a member/writer for the National Advisory Council of Project 21, VP of Marketing and Media Relations/Staff Writer for the New Media Alliance, Senior Writer for the New Media Journal, and VP of the Massachusetts Republican Assembly.
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