Category Archives: Islam

Let’s not keep shooting elephants to avoid looking a fool

Here’s my lesson of the day:  Read opinion pieces and articles written by folks you generally discount!  Being opinionated can serve to blind you to reading views that run counter to yours and isolating yourself to reading the work of writers and websites ideologically aligned to your own views will keep you swimming in endless circles in a goldfish bowl.

I mostly ignore Fareed Zakaria’s reporting and interviews, preferring to relegate him to “Obama-apologist status”, but here’s his very thoughtful opinion piece,“Why they still hate us, 13 years later”,  from the Washington Post (9/4/14). He writes:

“The central point of the essay was that the reason the Arab world produces fanaticism and jihad is political stagnation. By 2001, almost every part of the world had seen significant political progress — Eastern Europe, Asia, Latin America, even Africa had held many free and fair elections. But the Arab world remained a desert. In 2001, most Arabs had fewer freedoms than they did in 1951.”

“The one aspect of life that Arab dictators could not ban was religion, so Islam had become the language of political opposition. As the Westernized, secular dictatorships of the Arab world failed — politically, economically and socially — the fundamentalists told the people, “Islam is the solution.””

“The Arab world was left with dictatorships on one hand and deeply illiberal opposition groups on the other — Hosni Mubarak or al-Qaeda. The more extreme the regime, the more violent the opposition. This cancer was deeper and more destructive than I realized. Despite the removal of Saddam Hussein in Iraq and despite the Arab Spring, this dynamic between dictators and jihadis has not been broken.”

Assessing the nation-building aspect of our effort, Cora Sol Goldstein, in a piece titled, “The Afghan Experience: Democratization By Force” (page 20, published in the Autumn 2012 Parameters), writes:

“The case of Afghanistan exemplifies the challenges associated with attempting to democratize a reluctant population by force. Small wars aimed at regime change do not create the conditions for executing such ambitious agendas as nation building. The decapitation of the regime’s leaders or the transient defeat of a guerrilla movement does not necessarily lead to popular support for a program of radical change inspired by the victors. A military occupation following a war with limited violence will exacerbate nationalism, sectarianism, and militarism, passions that fuel resentment and the violent rejection of a foreign agenda. In Afghanistan, the presence of the Western allies, and their attempt to impose ideas of governance, first generated skepticism, then political resistance, and finally the emergence of a full-fledged insurgency. NATO forces became involved in a counterinsurgency operation that inevitably led to human rights violations and unacceptable excesses. This resulted in the consequent loss of the moral high ground that supposedly inspired the original occupation, and led to the collapse of the transformative agenda.”

In the past 13 years we the people of the United States of America have been trained to rely on “experts” to guide us on the path to defeating Al Qaeda, by eliminating safe havens for them, by costly democratization efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq, and by believing in the universality of our democratic aspirations.  However, since our politically correct policy experts set off formulating policy to fit multiculturalist arbiters rather than reality, we have lost thousands of American lives tilting at windmills and now, faced with the reality that Islam does not mean peace, Al Qaeda is just part of the threat, and “democracy” is not the aspiration for millions of Muslims in the Arab world, our policy experts on both sides of the political aisle keep trying to hide behind mindless slogans and repeating the same old tired rhetoric.  Parsing takes the place of facing up to the failures and wrong-headed analyses and policies.

Being stuck facing gloating Islamist nuts gleefully displaying beheaded Americans, one can almost feel our leaders reacting like George Orwell in his story, “Shooting An Elephant” and let’s hope President Obama, a weak and ineffectual leader, does not follow the same course:

“I got up. The Burmans were already racing past me across the mud. It was obvious that the elephant would never rise again, but he was not dead. He was breathing very rhythmically with long rattling gasps, his great mound of a side painfully rising and falling. His mouth was wide open – I could see far down into caverns of pale pink throat. I waited a long time for him to die, but his breathing did not weaken. Finally I fired my two remaining shots into the spot where I thought his heart must be. The thick blood welled out of him like red velvet, but still he did not die. His body did not even jerk when the shots hit him, the tortured breathing continued without a pause. He was dying, very slowly and in great agony, but in some world remote from me where not even a bullet could damage him further. I felt that I had got to put an end to that dreadful noise. It seemed dreadful to see the great beast Lying there, powerless to move and yet powerless to die, and not even to be able to finish him. I sent back for my small rifle and poured shot after shot into his heart and down his throat. They seemed to make no impression. The tortured gasps continued as steadily as the ticking of a clock.”

“In the end I could not stand it any longer and went away. I heard later that it took him half an hour to die. Burmans were bringing dash and baskets even before I left, and I was told they had stripped his body almost to the bones by the afternoon.”

“Afterwards, of course, there were endless discussions about the shooting of the elephant. The owner was furious, but he was only an Indian and could do nothing. Besides, legally I had done the right thing, for a mad elephant has to be killed, like a mad dog, if its owner fails to control it. Among the Europeans opinion was divided. The older men said I was right, the younger men said it was a damn shame to shoot an elephant for killing a coolie, because an elephant was worth more than any damn Coringhee coolie. And afterwards I was very glad that the coolie had been killed; it put me legally in the right and it gave me a sufficient pretext for shooting the elephant. I often wondered whether any of the others grasped that I had done it solely to avoid looking a fool.”

Craig Whiteside over at War on the Rocks, laid out the background on the internal dynamics in Iraq, “Obama Shouldn’t Lose His Cool Over The Islamic State”, and he concludes:

“One can look at the chaos in Libya to see that airstrikes cannot be a stand-alone solution, regardless of how much a group “deserves” that kind of attention. If we couple an expanded airstrike campaign with steps aimed at the elimination of militias and reduction in the Iranian presence inside Iraq (including proxies), we can help the Iraqi government convince (once again) the Sunni reconcilables to return. The consequences of failure are ten years of warfare over exactly how Iraq will be “partitioned,” a reduction in oil production and a rise in global energy prices, and a worsening of the sectarian civil war that is threatening the entire region. This is the time to “think slow”and not just react out of anger for the Foley/Sotloff tragedies and other IS atrocities.”

Just last week news reports on another American attack following the same “leadership decapitation strategy”, which John Brennan and President Obama rely on as their silver bullet approach was reported, “Pentagon: Airstrike kills terror leader in Somalia”.   Hooray, we killed another #1 in an Al Qaeda affiliate, but Al Shabaab responded:

“Al-Shabaab’s new leader is Ahmed Omar Abu Ubaidah, spokesman Sheikh Ali Dheere said in an audio message posted online.”

“He is the group’s third leader and was characterized as a low-ranking commander. No other information was available.”

Alas, Nightwatch printed a very insightful comment on this approach 11/7/13.  So in case John Brennan and the CIA didn’t see it, here it is:

 “It also highlights a degenerative leadership pattern resulting from the US program of leadership decapitation. First, there is always someone waiting for the chance to be leader. Second, the new leaders are less experienced and wise than the men they replace. Third, the new generation of leaders is more extreme and theologically rigid than its predecessors. Finally, the new leaders tend to be unknown to intelligence relative to their predecessors. Decapitation is not a permanent solution to an insurgency or an uprising.”

Eureka, JK’s formula, “AQI>ISIL>ISIS>IS”, hummmm “more extreme and theologically rigid than its predecessors”, sound familiar?

Now is the time to start reading our own intelligence reports, study the lessons learned reports, talk to people outside our own comfortable niche of policy “experts” and begin to form a broader, long-term strategic framework.   The voice that has never wavered on the big picture threat we face, Andrew McCarthy, states:

“The same has also always been true of the ideological/doctrinal divide between Sunni and Shiite jihadists. For example, al-Qaeda has had cooperative and operational relations with Iran since the early 1990s. Iran collaborated with al-Qaeda in the 1996 Khobar Towers attack that killed 19 U.S. airmen; probably in the 9/11 attacks; certainly in the aftermath of 9/11; and in the Iraq and Afghan insurgencies. Al-Qaeda would not be what it is today without state sponsorship, particularly from Iran. The Islamic State might not exist at all.”

“The point is that al-Qaeda has never been anything close to the totality of the jihadist threat. Nor, now, is the Islamic State. The challenge has always been Islamic supremacism: the ideology, the jihadists that are the point of the spear, and the state sponsors that enable jihadists to project power. The challenge cannot be met effectively by focusing on one element to the exclusion of others.”  (The Islamic State Is Nothing New, National Review Online 9/3/14)

Let’s not keep shooting elephants to avoid looking a fool.

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Al Qaeda Wasn’t ‘on the Run’ | The Weekly Standard

Al Qaeda Wasn’t ‘on the Run’ | The Weekly Standard.

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Patrick Poole vets the Free Syrian Army….

Over at PJMedia Patrick Poole wrote a fascinating piece, “U.S.-Backed Free Syrian Army Operating Openly with ISIS, Al-Qaeda’s Jabhat al-Nusra”, chronicling the sad serial ineptitude of government officials and “policy experts”, who tirelessly promote the Obama narrative of a moderate Free Syrian Army, no matter how much evidence to the contrary emerges.  Mr. Poole cites numerous sources, so be prepared to click on lots of links to other reports.  Excellent reporting!

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Still mulling over my ISIS plan

All the punditry and sundry policy experts are weighing in with what the US strategy is for “defeating ISIS” and I’m going to paste my email response to JK on a link he had sent earlier.  The link is a very interesting piece, “U.S. Influence Drip-Dripping Away” by Adam Garfinkle at the Foreign Policy Research Institute.  Please read the entire article, because JK wrote to me,  “Well LB, I don’t have a clue as to how you could go about synthesizing this one. But it does about the best job I’ve read on just what a cock-up our current (mostly) Administration[s] have achieved.” and he’s right, this is an entertaining, as well as informative piece.   Garfinkle poses these questions:

“But this whole business of leveraging non-jihadi Sunni power is a sore and embarrassing point in another way. Pentagon Press Secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said yesterday that Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was “looking at a train-and-equip program for the Free Syrian Army.” Umm, didn’t Secretary Kerry strongly suggest some months ago, just a short while after the second Geneva meeting on Syria had fallen flat on its face in late January, that exactly such a program had already been vetted? In June didn’t President Obama ask Congress for $500 million for exactly that purpose? So why is the Pentagon talking like it thought up this possibility just yesterday? Could it be that all that has gone before was just so much persiflage and outright deception, designed to shroud the President’s determination to do nothing in a haze of appearing to do something?”

“Joe and Jane America might have one more set of questions, if they’ve been reasonably attentive to the lay of the land in the Middle East. “Let’s see now”, Joe might say to Jane, “the Saudis, Egyptians, Emiratis, Israelis, Jordanians, and the Palestinian Authority, too, are all opposed to the kind of jihadi militants that applauded the 9/11 attacks, but the Obama Administration is on bad terms with nearly all those parties.” And Jane might respond, “Yes, Joe, that’s right; but our Secretary of State is welcome in Qatar and Turkey, whose governments support Muslim Brotherhood militants, not to exclude Hamas, and even more extreme groups besides as far away as Libya, all of whom hate the United States.” “Wait”, answers Joe, “doesn’t the United States have a significant military presence in Qatar, as well as a major naval presence in Bahrain, putting us under the sheets, so to speak, with both sides of the GCC spat?” “Gosh”, exclaims Jane, “that’s right; but if the United States has a lot of military assets in Qatar, can’t we use our relationship with the Qatari authorities to get them to stop doing such bad things?” “That’s a good question, Jane; we should find an expert who can give us an answer.””

Garfinkle answers that question and many more – I repeat,  definitely worth reading!

So, as these email discussions with JK go, I decided to share my response to this article and this is where I am at in my thinking on how to deal with ISIS:

“Pretty blunt and to the point, except here’s where I disagree to a certain extent.  I hate for this to sound like I support dictators, but in that region of the world we’re pretty much forced to deal with (not necessarily support) dictators or religious zealots.  I’d opt for the dictators for the most part, with the caveat that we need to definitely impose a stringent carrots and sticks approach with a heavy emphasis on the sticks for those that aid and abet Islamist nutjobs.  Of course, geographical imperatives might push us to less than ideological purity even in this formula – but at least we might be able to contain handing the weapons to those intent on killing us with them.  I mentioned before that I think we should hold off on heavier involvement in “defeating ISIS”, because the pressure needs to build on Arab leaders and Iran – push their backs to the wall.  ISIS is deliberately trying to draw us into this mess with these publicity stunt beheadings.  Rushing in half-cocked will leave us in the same mess as before – accepting bad options in hopes that we have avoided even worse options.  If I were in charge, I’d be burning up the phone lines to Arab leaders and asking them what they plan to do about this and I’d assuredly be talking to Putin and the Chinese too and our allies.  I’d even talk to Assad, which this analyst discounts and the discussion would be about American expectations about our possible operations inside Syria to eliminate ISIS and the warnings to Assad about repercussions if he screws with us.  This arming the Free Syrian Army to take out Assad is dumb – because that just creates another totally failed state unless the UN is going to conjure up a viable government (not likely).  I’d like to let ISIS grow a bit and pressure the Arabs a bit more – that might sound dangerous, but to me rushing in to “save” folks who don’t realize they were drowning doesn’t win you anything but haughty assurances they didn’t really need your help. 
  You keep mentioning wanting Congress to sign on to whatever plan is undertaken, well, I want the “leaders” in the ME to be forced to sign on too.  Still lots of doubts in my thinking, but the big players need to be part of the discussions, before we creep our ways into another strategic corner. Obama just dithers to avoid making a decision; I prefer to plan carefully and to prepare the battlefield more to my liking with strategic diplomatic efforts.  Still mulling it over….”

I’d rather have President Obama lay out a clear strategy on the ISIS crisis than make incoherent, reactionary moves to appease his critics, stridently demanding he act quickly or his partisan friends worrying about the November elections.  The ISIS situation, as most situations in the ME, isn’t a military challenge for us.  We have the military superiority to annihilate ISIS, but the cancer analogy works best to describe the long-term prognosis – the cancerous ideology of Islamism keeps metastasizing and therein lies the true strategic challenge.

G. Murphy Donovan lays out an excellent analysis of the strategic challenges in a New English Review piece, “Islam, Monoculture and the Obama Caliphate”.   GMD writes:

“A fresh crop of neo-fascist thugs is now abroad, varieties that make Fatah, Hezb’allah, Hamas, or al Qaeda seem enlightened. The new face of Islam is savage: slavery, beheading, crucifixion, and genocide. Demands are binary: “accept Islam or die.” The mad dogs of Muslim hell are off the choke chain.

The standard-bearer of Islam’s latest lurch backwards is the newly minted Islamic State of Iran and Syria (ISIS). Muslim terrorists have upped the ante and called America’s bluff again. Unlike the imaginary red lines drawn in the Oval Office, ISIS has now drawn a bright red line with American blood.

The cradle of civilization has become a charnel house, a manufactured tragedy wrought by the intersection of pandering, strategic naiveté, and blowback. Administration and media sycophants were inclined to ignore beheadings in Mosul when the victims were natives. Now that the Islamic knife cuts closer to home, decapitation is finally covered above the fold.

Such news might sound bad, but apparently not bad enough to interrupt the presidential partying on Martha’s Vineyard this summer.”

Well, no worries, President Obama is on the job, fully rested and invigorated, ready to take on the ISIS problem:

“Speaking earlier this morning in Estonia, President Obama addressed dealing with ISIS. He talked of making ISIS a “manageable problem” if the “international community” comes together:

“We know that if we are joined by the international community, we can continue to shrink ISILl’s sphere of influence, its effectiveness, its financing, its military capabilities to the point  where it is a manageable problem,” said Obama.” – (“Obama: ISIS a ‘Manageable Problem,’ If ‘International Community’ Comes Together” – The Weekly Standard)

Yes, ‘IF” the “international community” comes together…. okay, y’all remember how this chant goes: “Yes, we can!”  And this man was elected not once, but twice, by the American people and today he even had his teleprompter handy, so no, “we don’t have a strategy, yet” blunders.  His strategy, like mine, involves international diplomacy  except he assuredly won’t be saying the things I would say. Between him and his oh so talented staff, they have dissed our allies and backed all the wrong horses in the ME thus far, leaving even Egypt and UAE taking military matters into their own hands to deal with the nightmare left in Obama’s wake in Libya.  Obama has spent his entire presidency emphasizing a cut and run policy in Iraq and Afghanistan, he drew red lines with disappearing ink in Syria, and now he thinks he can build an international coalition to “manage” ISIS?  Americans might be stupid enough to elect him twice, but I doubt most of the rest of the world will trust him to “manage” the ISIS problem.  Good grief, he wants to be the international community organizer now, when the world hoped for American leadership.

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Mission creep in Iraq continues as US launches airstrikes in Amerli – Threat Matrix

Mission creep in Iraq continues as US launches airstrikes in Amerli – Threat Matrix.

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More “experts”, please

Whenever some event breaks through the DC echo chamber,  there’s a stampede of uninformed, sadly misinformed, or totally clueless nincompoop politicians, who rush to the nearest microphone to blather on with their “sources within the Pentagon  state” or “intelligence reports state” or even, “our group has done research on this”, on and on and on.  Mixed in the herd you’ll hear a bunch of braying asses, from various think tanks, former government flunkies and retired generals.

We’re back to a retread of the old  Syrian “moderates” mantra, except this time the same crew  (General Jack Keane and his ISW, John McCain, Lindsay Graham)  selling this strategy want us to arm these “moderates” to defeat IS, instead of Assad.  General Keane was on FOX News assuring us that they have been vetting these “moderates” and I can only wonder who has vetted them???  John McCain is for and against the various ME leaders, with more frequent changes of heart than John Kerry.  Lindsay Graham just follows blindly along, wherever John McCain leads.  Here’s a link from The Last Refuge blog with photos, of John McCain on his “fact-finding” trip to Syria last year.  He was hosted by the Syrian Emergency Task Force, whose political director, Elizabeth O’Bagy,  was the ISW”s Syria expert – lobbying for US aid to arm Syrian rebels.  One of McCain’s friendly hosts on that trip morphed into ISIS’s press officer, Abu Mosa, and he’s standing right next to McCain in the picture.  Mosa was recently killed in an airstrike.  One can only wonder who vetted McCain’s chaperones, the ISW or O’Bagy’s Syrian Emergency Task Force?  And just as a reminder, when O’Bagy ended up fired from the ISW for lying about possessing a doctorate degree, none other than John McCain rushed to her rescue and hired her as a staffer.  Why does anyone take these people’s advice seriously and why does the media rush to use John McCain as the voice of the GOP?

When it comes to President Obama’s failures as President, the glaring truth hits you that this man, unlike his adoring followers believed, does not walk on water.  Hell, he doesn’t even tread water very well.  Let’s state the truth, without his teleprompter and prepared speeches to read it’s obvious he was way oversold as an intellectual and beyond an easy familiarity with hot-button domestic partisan political issues, he doesn’t understand foreign affairs and assuredly ranks as a total dunce on history nor has he shown any inclination to study intelligence reports or seek to expand his knowledge.  He consistently chooses a side to back in ME power struggles, whose politics run counter to American values and whose aims harm our only democratic ally in the region, Israel.   In the current flashpoint with IS, he must face some tough choices if we are to destroy IS.

The endless fear-mongering about the danger IS poses to the region, the US and the whole world escalates and the drumbeat for military action beats faster, but no one has articulated a big picture strategy or any sort of multilateral consensus on long-term strategic objectives nor even short-range objectives, beyond “IS must be eliminated!”.  So far there are mumblings about the Iraqi government needs to come together and hopes the Iraqi military, per Obama State Department spokeswoman, Marie Harf, “but the Iraqis also have to stand up, they have to pull themselves together”.   Beyond these vague hoped for changes, the Obama administration doesn’t, as the President stated, “we don’t have a strategy yet”.

Let’s kill two birds with one stone, both Bush and Obama have made huge strategic blunders in the the Muslim world.  Both have followed bad advice from “experts”, chosen many less-than reliable partners to work with and generally left us more disliked and viewed as part of the problem than the solution.  American influence, rather than being a force for good, now carries a taint of foreboding, even among our allies.  Rather than argue which had the worst policies, let’s face up to the fact that in the eyes of the world, they aren’t dissecting between Republican and Democrat, but Americans and therein lies the single most destructive force in America.

We can’t formulate an American policy to deal with the massive instability in the ME until we lay out some objectives and above all else we should assess potential partners in the fight against IS and the awful Islamist ideology on first determining if they are rational actors or batshit crazy Islamist-friendly ideologues.  Some former British officials suggest we must work with Assad, but Ben Rhodes, President Obama’s Deputy National Security adviser has discounted that suggestion.  Why?  To act militarily in Syria will require dealing with air assets and loyal Assad forces still operating on the ground.  Assad may be a despot, but we and the British possess plenty of conduits to open secret talks with Assad and form some sort of understanding on an international military operation in Syria to destroy IS.  This must be done to successfully confront IS.   McCain and Graham hit the NY Times editorial page with their “moderates” plea again and they state:

“Such a plan would seek to strengthen partners who are already resisting ISIS: the Kurdish pesh merga, Sunni tribes, moderate forces in Syria, and effective units of Iraq’s security forces. Our partners are the boots on the ground, and the United States should provide them directly with arms, intelligence and other military assistance. This does not, however, mean supporting Iranian military forces, whose presence only exacerbates sectarian tensions that empower ISIS.”

and further state

“Whether or not Mr. Obama listens to us, he should listen to leaders with a record of success in combating groups like ISIS, especially John R. Allen, Ryan C. Crocker, Jack Keane and David H. Petraeus, among others. He should consult with military and diplomatic experts like these, just as President George W. Bush did when rethinking the war in Iraq.”

Rather than ramble on about this list of luminaries in our wonderful desert adventures thus far, let me just state, perhaps we need to expand our vision and options, both in strategic-thinking and seeking “expert” advice.  Instead of buying into a hard sell on retreading this arm the “moderates” plan, which would mean we’d also be fighting Assad forces too, maybe, we need to think a bit more, seek out more intelligence, talk to more allies in the region and  even talk to some of our adversaries in the region.  And yes, we need to talk to Iran too.

Of course, the Obama White House should read Henry Kissenger’s excellent WSJ piece for a fuller understanding of the big picture stakes in our disastrously short-sighted strategic vision and answer the questions:

“To play a responsible role in the evolution of a 21st-century world order, the U.S. must be prepared to answer a number of questions for itself: What do we seek to prevent, no matter how it happens, and if necessary alone? What do we seek to achieve, even if not supported by any multilateral effort? What do we seek to achieve, or prevent, only if supported by an alliance? What should we not engage in, even if urged on by a multilateral group or an alliance? What is the nature of the values that we seek to advance? And how much does the application of these values depend on circumstance?”

Personally, I wonder what an honest intelligence assessment can tell us about the “Syrian moderates”, who vetted them, and the brutality of all players in the Syrian civil war, because ruling out Assad in favor of listening to John McCain (vet his chaperones for his Syria fact-finding trip, please) or Keane’s ISW’s track record on Syria (foisting the fraud, Elizabeth O’Bagy on the American public to sell us a pack lies) leaves me feeling like we’re being sold a lemon at a used car lot.  I’d like to hear more from the former British Army chief.  Surely, there are more “experts” we can consult than the ones who played such a crucial role in getting us where we’re at presently.

 

 

 

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The bodies pile up

The carnage continues, with this report by the UK Daily Mail:  “Marched to their deaths: Sickening ISIS slaughter continues as 250 soldiers captured at Syrian airbase are stripped then led to the desert for mass execution”

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Terrorism as Theater

Terrorism as Theater. An interesting Robert Kaplan article in Stratfor – worth reading.

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Rick Moran article on Islamic State

Islamic State forces charged into a massive air base in northeastern Syria, sending Syrian army units flying and capturing – and beheading – dozens more. The terrorists reportedly used a child suicide bomber to breach the outer fence, and then st….

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We shall know them by their name (s)

The media, the White House and even our Defense Department want to play some silly semantics game about IS, so JK referred me back to the Sinjar Records, captured by American forces in Iraq in 2007 and compiled and analyzed at the Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) located  at West Point:

http://tarpley.net/docs/CTCForeignFighter.19.Dec07.pdf

The very first sentence in the introduction states:

“On December 4, 2007 Abu Umar al‐Baghdadi, the reputed Emir of al Qa’ida’s Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), claimed that his organization was almost purely Iraqi, containing only 200 foreign fighters.”  1
(1. Abu Umar al-Baghdadi, For the Scum Disappears Like Froth Cast Out, posted to http://www.muslm.net on December 4, 2007.)

So, al Baghdadi is not some new nemesis to mysteriously come out of nowhere in Iraq and certainly his IS is not some completely new entity – it’s the same al Qaeda terrorists, who are now following through on their stated mission – to create a new Caliphate.  The White House can pretend it’s some new radicalized group, but really it’s still al Qaeda.  Our officials love to regale us with the endless stream of #2s and #3s in the al Qaeda power structure they’ve eliminated with their leadership decapitation strategy, whilst the al Qaeda leadership remaining prefers to follow a straight up literal decapitation strategy.

 Does this administration read any intelligence reports?  So we’ve gone from “Assad the reformer”, to “Assad the threat to civilization”, to Assad our partner in the new “war on terror” against evil-doers” or um, I am awaiting a new WH narrative to explain whose side we’re on now:

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