Category Archives: Terrorism

Rewriting the “counter-narrative”

“U.S. military social media accounts apparently hacked by Islamic State sympathizers” – from the Washington Post

“Islamic State Hacks CENTCOM Twitter Feed as Obama Talks Cybersecurity” – The Washington Free Beacon

President Obama skipped Sunday’s rally in Paris to show solidarity with other world leaders to fight Islamic terrorism.  The negative press prompted the White House to conjure up a “global security summit” in February and to blame security concerns for the President’s safety as the reason President Obama didn’t attend.  Yes, 40 other world leaders took the risk and stood up to Islamic terrorists, but our leader from behind, who reportedly spent a good bit of Sunday watching football on TV, huddled with his team, playing Monday morning quarterback, rewriting their “counter-narrative”….  #Man-madeDisaster

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A “counter-narrative”?

Leave it to Eric Holder to explain how we’re going to fight Islamic terrorists.  From This Week with George Stephanopolis on Sunday:

“STEPHANOPOULOS: The French prime minister said yesterday that France is at war with radical Islam.

Is the U.S. At war with radical Islam?

HOLDER: Well, I certainly think that we are at war with those who would commit terrorist attacks and who would corrupt the Islamic faith in the way that they do, to try to justify their terrorist actions.

So that’s who we are at — at war with. And we are determined to take the fight to them to prevent them from engaging in these kinds of activities.

Our president has indicated that we will be calling, on February the 18th, a summit, so that we deal with better ways in which we can counter violent extremism and really get at the core, come up with ways in which we prevent people from adhering to, being attracted to this terrorist ideology.

We certainly have to work, I think, in a dual way. We need to confront people who engage in these acts, hold them accountable. But we also have to somehow come up with a counter-narrative that too many people, especially young men, find attractive.

And, as I said, February the 18th, the White House will host a summit that I announced at the meeting here today in Paris.”

There you’ve got it, they’re not Islamic and we’re not at war with them, really, and in case you missed it, we need to hold terrorists accountable as the Obama administration continues to release the most dangerous GITMO Islamic terrorists.  ” But we also have to somehow come up with a counter-narrative that too many people, especially young men, find attractive”.  Yes, of course, “a counter-narrative” will dissuade bloodthirsty barbarians…..

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Journalists and Jihadis at The American Thinker

Muslim sensitivities everywhere are now more important than truth or justice anywhere.  Alas, France and many other naïve Europeans have surrendered pride and identity to Brussels and in turn volunteered to be colonized by a 5th column of A….

Read more of G. Murphy Donovan’s excellent article!

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Another lone wolf homegrown terrorist?

Some quick links with information on the assassin,Ismaaiyl Abdullah Brinsley , who murdered two NYC police officers yesterday.  Guess the PC MSM doesn’t want to follow clues or uncover unpleasant facts.

Patrick Poole, superb intelligence reporter for PJ Media offers:

http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2014/12/20/did-cop-killer-ishmael-brinsley-visit-terror-tied-brooklyn-mosque/

http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2014/12/20/nypd-cop-killer-ishmael-brinsley-started-fight-with-atlanta-panhandler-discovered-he-was-muslim-too/

 

Thomas Lifson, reporter extraordinaire at The American Thinker adds:

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2014/12/cop_killer_brinsley_may_have_been_a_jihadist.html

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Not so fast on bashing Sony

The chattering class bumped it into overdrive bashing Sony for pulling it’s movie, “The Interview”, slated for release , in the wake of Sony executives email accounts being hacked and bellicose threats from North Korea, warning of attacks in US movie theaters if the movie is released.  Jonah Goldberg, in a NRO piece, “No Superheores in The Interview Cave-In”,  writes:

“The first issue of Captain America came out on December 20, 1940. It shows Cap slugging Adolph Hitler in the mouth.

Good stuff, but note the date. America wouldn’t enter World War II for about another year. At the time, many Americans wanted to stay out of another European war. And here was an American superhero punching the leader of a sovereign nation in the kisser. Subsequent issues kept pitting Captain America against Hitler and his goons.”

Goldberg’s piece relates some interesting history about threats the two Captain America writers faced from Hitler stooges here in America and how they stood up to them and kept writing.

When it comes to North Korea, often the regime’s actions make little sense to me and their threats seem bizarre, but thankfully John McCreary’s Nightwatch can be relied upon to shed light on, what to most of us, seems pretty lame, crazy talk from the Hermit Kingdom.  Nightwatch offers some fascinating history, a little later than Goldberg’s 1940’s reference:

“North Korea-US: Special comment. After the Korean War, as conditions settled in South and North Korea, the North persisted in sending infiltrators into Seoul to destabilize the government. One of the most often reported tactics was to attack a movie theater. North Korean infiltrators regularly attended the movie theaters in Seoul to roll hand grenades in the aisles to kill as many people as possible. Attacks in theaters occurred weekly at times in the late 1950s.”

This isn’t meant to cause alarm, but intended to give some insight into the North Korean targeting of movies and movie theaters, which to Westerners who see government actions separate from the private movie industry, seems quite baffling.  In North Korea there is no separation of government from private industry and their understanding of freedom ranks down near zero percent.  Now, I had read about the Captain America history before, but this information on North Korea made me realize that most Americans have read far more about Hitler than we have about North Korea.  Let’s hope this White House  doesn’t call Dennis Rodman for insights into his dear friend, Kim Jong-un and anyways, WND, already called Rodman, whose PR firm stated Rodman has no comments on the Sony cyber-hack attack by North Korea.  Perhaps, in light of escalating threats and cyber-targeting by North Korea, it’s time for our elected officials and the pundit class to do a crash course on North Korean history or at very least read Nightwatch.

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Boston bombing case update

Reuters reports: “Friend of accused Boston bomber may plead guilty in gun, drug case”, where Stephen Silva, high school friend of, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is facing charges:

“Stephen Silva was charged in July with having possessed a Ruger P95 9mm pistol with its serial number filed off, as well as with conspiracy to distribute heroin. He pleaded not guilty in an August hearing but may be planning to file a new agreement this week, according to papers filed with the U.S. District Court in Boston late Monday.”

Surprise, surprise another drug connection to a radical Islamist terrorism case in America.  I highly recommend The Last Refuge blog, with their ongoing investigation into the murder of Jessica Lane Chambers and continue to connect the dots between the black gang, the Yemeni gas station owner, (who now claims to be just a worker there), and the drug trafficking angle.  The FBI and ATF are on the ground in Panola County, MS investigating now.

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Mississippi Burning – Day #6 – The Murder of Jessica Lane Chambers Exposes Massive Problems In Panola County Mississippi…

Mississippi Burning – Day #6 – The Murder of Jessica Lane Chambers Exposes Massive Problems In Panola County Mississippi….

The Treepers over at The Conservative Treehouse have outdone their exhaustive and excellent investigative work on #Ferguson with just a week’s worth of digging for information on the horrific murder of 19 year-old Jessica Lane Chambers in MS last weekend. They’ve uncovered gang-related links to her ex-boyfriend and even the chatty, gas-station owner, who provided the CCTV video of Jessica’s stop there for gas the night of her murder, has turned out to be a radical Muslim from Yemen, who also happens to be involved in the local black gang. Surprise, surprise, his gas station is the hub of drug-dealing in the community. Read their excellent reporting and then consider the little picture/big picture possibilities with this small-town story suddenly sprouting international wings… Let’s keep connecting the dots. One can only wonder how far radical Islamists have penetrated poor, black communities in America.

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President Obama releases more terrorists

While we were distracted by race politics, President Obama quietly released more GITMO prisoners – 6 went to Uruguay, of all places (full story at Bloomberg News)

He also released three Taliban prisoners to Pakistani authorities, according to The Long War Journal’s, Threat Matrix (story here) – trying to expedite the closure of the prison at Bagram.

While the mainstream media flits like flies, from one news dump to the next, the Obama administration works to check off boxes from the same agenda they started with.  While they may be pathetic crisis handlers, it behooves us to not underestimate their determination and dedication to that agenda.

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OKBOMB Revisited

If you like whodunit mysteries, John Schindler at the XX Committee wrote a fascinating piece about all the loose threads from the Oklahoma City bombing, which is coming upon it’s 20 year anniversary next year: “Lingering OKBOMB Questions”.

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Asking the right questions

As a parent, one of the most difficult kinds of children to deal with is the one who doesn’t accept your answers without asking, “why”.  Being one such child myself and having not one, but four, yes, FOUR, such children of my own, who refused to accept pat answers, decades ago I realized that sometimes these questions served as pieces to a larger puzzle.  Defining that larger puzzle revealed answers to important questions we weren’t even aware needed to be asked.

A couple of weeks ago, I came across a website called BookBub, where you can enter your email address, select categories of books you’re interested in and which type of e-books you want – kindle, b&n, etc.  Then you receive a daily email with great e-book deals.  So, I’ve been reading one of these BookBub deal books called, “Great Work: How to Make a Difference People Love”, which explores how to create great work, by being willing to ask the right questions.  Here’s an example from this book on how a three-year old’s question led to an iconic American invention:

“It was 1944. The Land family was on vacation in New Mexico, hitting some sights and snapping photos. Three-year-old Jennifer had a question that was really bothering her. As described by her father, Edwin, “I recall a sunny day in Santa Fe, New Mexico, when my little daughter asked why she could not see at once the picture I had just taken of her.” Edwin explained to his little girl that the film had to be developed in a special place called a darkroom, and that the negatives had to be printed on special paper. Translated from the perspective of a three-year-old: blah-blah, blah-blah.”

“We all do this in our own way—explain why things are the way they are to someone who questions the expected— as if the current solution is some foregone conclusion, a done deal. Thank goodness Jennifer was a strong-willed kid who was not satisfied with her dad’s answer. She still wanted to know, “Why can’t I see my picture right now?” And that sulky disgruntlement got Edwin to thinking: “As I walked around the charming town I undertook the task of solving the puzzle she had set me.” Three years later, the camera, the film, and the physical chemistry came together as Edwin and Polaroid introduced the concept of “instant” to the photography world.”

Sturt, David (2013-09-02). Great Work: How to Make a Difference People Love (Kindle Locations 531-540). McGraw-Hill Education. Kindle Edition.

Reading about asking the right question leading to new ways to approach a problem led me to wondering if we haven’t asked the right questions in regards to our American foreign policy.  The Great Work book offers this bit of trivia about queries:

“When early scholars wrote in Latin, they would use the word quaestiō at the end of a sentence to signal that it was a query. That took up too much space. So in the Middle Ages, quaestiō got abridged to qo, with the q appearing above the o. Then, over time, natural refinements shaped that stacked q and o into the well-known squiggle and dot that we use today. It’s a fitting symbol for all the curious hunches of a difference-making quest. Each is a journey that’s oriented and navigated, from departure to destination, by the question mark itself.”

Sturt, David (2013-09-02). Great Work: How to Make a Difference People Love (Kindle Locations 728-733). McGraw-Hill Education. Kindle Edition.

Perhaps we need to ask more questions before we can find the “right” questions to ask to realign American foreign policy with American national interests.  As President Obama’s initial half-baked “strategy” to defeat ISIL/ISIS/IS falters,  the larger question, “why does American foreign policy seem to benefit a whole host of foreign countries, disparate interest groups and even our adversaries more than it benefits America?”, seems to be one such big picture question that might illuminate the larger puzzle.  Finding the pieces to solve this puzzle might lead us toward a more coherent foreign policy spanning the globe, not just dealing with the ISIL/ISIS/IS quandary.

Back in September, President Obama announced his “strategy”, stating, “we will degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL”.  Here we are in November and  his “strategy” isn’t working.   We (the American taxpayers) have invested somewhere between 4-6 trillion dollars, not to even count the cost in American lives lost in the fight to defeat al Qaeda and it’s affiliates.  Along the way the strategy veered into nation-building, replete with trying to build western-style armies and police forces amongst people who have no understanding of western secular governance.   All sorts of tangential programs blossomed from drug eradication programs in Afghanistan to the tune of 7.5 billion dollars yielding an increase in poppy production, yes, an increase to misappropriated or unaccounted for spending on private contractors, bribe money to buy locals, etc., etc., etc.  We (our government and US Forces) tried to downplay that anti-American sentiment grew the longer we stayed and the more we tried to help.  We overemphasized small short-term successes, while ignoring large long-term failures.   And at the big picture level, we never pinned down what victory really was.  We went from 8 years of hearing that we mustn’t leave safe havens for terrorists to even more feckless announcements that al Qaeda was defeated and that walking away from the fight and declaring victory is the same thing as really winning the fight.

To expect coherence in American foreign policy at this late date seems to be more wishful thinking than realistic, but let’s ask more questions.   Supposing we actually defeated al Qaeda, ISIL/ISIS/IS, and all the other big Islamist terrorists, would the Islamist Ascendency come to a crashing halt?   Would the power vacuums in the region be filled by more moderate factions?  Are we viewing “victory” myopically by focusing on smaller parts of the Islamic world’s power struggles, without considering the larger battles between Shia and Sunni and between them and secular factions?  Do we even really have a good grasp of the power structure of these factions and of the “hearts and minds” of the people whom we’re ostensibly trying to help?  Is negotiating with Iran in America’s national interest and how does this impact our dealings with the Shia-aligned powers in Iraq or with our Sunni allies in the region?  Does removing Assad really open the door for those elusive “Syrian moderates” to crawl out of the woodwork and end the brutal civil war or will it be a green light to the most determined zealots to fight harder to seize power?  ISIL seems to be gaining allies (“Islamic State leader claims ‘caliphate’ has expanded in new audio message“),  while John Kerry is mum about the size of our “coalition”, should we be concerned?  And now the most basic question of all, “Is an American team, where the President of the United States does not listen to his own top generals on how to employ American military might, a larger national security threat than ISIL?”

Before we can figure out a strategy we need to define the strengths and weaknesses of the various leaders, the political alignments of the various, expanding number of factions, and the people (both at home and abroad).  We need to define America’s national interests in the Muslim world and to do that requires asking the troublesome questions about that “religion of Peace”, with its many faces of jihad.  And just maybe, we need to set our partisan blinders aside and take a good, hard look in the mirror and ask ourselves if after spending trillions of dollars on this “war on terror”, “American democratization project” or however you want to define the past decade we expect to defeat anyone with such a muddled, misguided, delusional foreign policy, while our enemy remains committed to the same clear strategic goals?  Can an America that remains divided by rancorous partisan politics ever be successful at agreeing on “American national interests” or piecing together a unified, coherent foreign policy?

Often I sit here looking at my bookshelves as I think about what to write and this morning, prodded by the focus on questions most assuredly, my eyes kept returning to Samuel Huntington’s, “Who Are We?” sitting beneath “Discourses on Livy” in a stack of books on my children’s little rocking chair near my desk.  Let’s hope the answer to all these questions isn’t the book underneath Huntington’s………  Colin Gray’s “Another Bloody Century”….
As a young child watching the news, I used to ask my mother why there’s so much fighting in the Mid-East and her answer made more sense than some of the most brilliant analysis by renowned foreign policy experts.  She would sigh and say, “They haven’t moved past throwing stones yet.”  She often followed that with little lectures on tolerance and turning the other cheek.  One can hide behind secular academic blather, but perhaps hate is the driving force behind the Islamic Ascendancy and that is a question to ponder long and hard upon.

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