Archive for the 'War On Terror' Category

May 06 2008

Can you imagine…

Published by Thomas under War On Terror

… if you’re son is deployed to Afghanistan, and you suddenly hear this? (WARNING: Graphic language and sounds)

Apparently, this soldier accidentally pressed the redial button on his cellphone when he was in the middle of a firefight with the Taliban. His family got to hear the details of the attack and was horrified when the call was cut off right after someone yelled, ” Incoming! RPG!”

It turns out that the soldier, whose name is Stephen Phillips, got out of the fight alive and well.

This incident was just yet another reminder that we are facing a tough and resilient enemy. Should we fail in our efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Islamofascist disease come here. It is easy to blame President Bush and go along our merry way. It is not so easy, however, to blame him when we recognize that President Bush is the only man who stood and still stands in the way of this madness and our country.

Whatever you think of the man, he has been steadfast and immovable when everyone wanted him to retreat and withdraw, including the Republicans. He has capitulated on virtually everything in his second term as President… but not this.

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Jan 12 2008

When I was home…

Where I grew up on the north side of Houston in the burbs there was a national cemetery just across the street outside my subdivision. The area was mostly quiet until the advent of the freeway, Beltway 8. The cemetery was flank on either side by a couple of cattle farms, and on the rarest of moments we’d hear the bell toll from the central building at the heart of the cemetery.

I remember being about, I don’t know, nine or ten years old and I thought to myself how quiet that cemetery was. It wasn’t like normal cemeteries where there were occasional caravan of cars and motorcycled cops for escorts. That rarely ever happened.

It wasn’t until years later in high school when I moved away that I realized that it was a national cemetery for military veterans and government officials. Indeed, the road is named “Veterans Memorial”.

Surrounding the perimeter of the cemetery was a black iron fence, and the nearest grave for the longest time was not visible from the road. Those cattle farms were long gone for years now, replaced by mini-malls and shopping centers, washeterias and apartment complexes. But the cemetery was still there, like a constant perennial land marker for that side of town.

When I visited this past December, I drove on that same road on my way to see my parents, and it was different. It took me a moment recognize what I was seeing because it was like watching images of the graves set in Normandy. There were over a hundred white markers, tombstones, of newly dug graves lined in neat columns and rows, and they ran all the way up to that black iron fence.

Military men and women back from the war.

Our casualties. Our soldiers.

I felt immeasurably sad and proud. We are so blessed to have such protectors and warriors. They were Texans and it figured that they were overrepresented in our military, but I couldn’t help but wonder if I knew someone now lying there…

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Nov 29 2007

Vietnam Revisited

Published by Thomas under Liberalism, Iraq

Some time this past April Senator Reid declared that the war in Iraq is lost. Right around the same time House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was making her pilgrimage to the Mideast to encourage our enemies of our good intentions and to reassure them that they’ll be safe in their country from our meddling.

Despite General Petraeus’s good report on the Surge in September and the cascade of good news all across Iraq, the Democrats have stuck to their guns and maintain that the war is indeed lost. Shia militias and Sunnis are coming over to our troops in droves; actually working together and actively fighting Al Qaeda with us. Michael Yon had a very, very significant picture posted on his website of Muslim and Christian men erecting a Christian cross atop a church. Talk about a picture being worth a thousand words.

To these eyes, baby, that’s winning.

Continue Reading »

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Nov 20 2007

Question

Published by Thomas under War On Terror

I thought I’d pass along a question posed to me last night. To paraphrase:

We are six years into this war and there hasn’t been one single movie made showing the courage and valor of our troops in Iraq. Isn’t there something wrong with this?

2 responses so far

Jul 04 2007

Does that star-spangled banner yet wave?

Published by Thomas under War On Terror, History

In the autumn of 1814, America laid in tatters. British redcoats had just routed U.S. regulars and militamen in the Battle of Bladensburg and sent them in flight. And then, days later they set Washington on fire. The flames licked the White House and swallowed its roof into charred pieces. The Capitol too was on fire until a freak thunderstorm erupted overhead and doused the conflagration spreading all across that magical new city, Washington D.C. If it weren’t for the cold steely decisions of Madison and his wife, Dolly, our Republic would have been snuffed out and would have become a minor footnote in annals of history.

The Burning of WashingtonPresident Madison, the man named the Father of the Constitution, watched at the side of the Battle of Bladensburg as an observer when the British smashed our first wave of troops and sent the rest scurring in panic. Madison was stood on a rise watching the trails of smoke ascend from his home, the White House, and watched as the flames lit up the night sky as though it was daytime. Political expediency in holding together a fragmented nation drew him and America to that fateful moment. Both General Winders and Secretary of War Armstrong were inept commanders, but they held political value. Winders was a Baltimore lawyer before he was a general and Armstrong helped to hold New England together as part of the United States. Clearly, neither one of them had military experience until the War of 1812 broke out.

For those unfamiliar with the War of 1812, there was overt treason and sedition from the New England states. They sold goods to the British navy and kept them afloat and there were also overt talk of secession. Even as late as 1813 after one stunning defeat after another, the rank and file American didn’t behave as though a war existed at all. (Doesn’t all this sound familiar? It should.)

But the burning of Washington coalesced us together into one implacable resolution, one implacable unyielding will. The British aimed to strike at the heart and soul of America. And to their chagrin, they succeeded… magnificently.

Fresh from their victory at Washington, British ships massed alongside Fort McHenry and unleashed their version of shock and awe. It was the heaviest bombardment in history up to that point, and I understand it was superceded only by the Normandy invasion. They were using newfangled technology: exploding rockets and explosive cannonballs. The British launched an estimated 1,500 to 1,800 cannonballs; some were ill-timed and exploded in mid-air, others were deadly accurate.

While the bombardment raged, Francis Scott Key stood to the side on a British navy ship negotiating the release of U.S. prisoners captured during the British raid in Washington. The sight of the bombardment was as spectacular as it was frightening. Francis Key, the other negotiators, and the prisoners knew that as long as the bombardment lasted, Fort McHenry still fought. When dawn arose, our flag was still there snapping in the wind. Major George Armistead, the commander at Fort McHenry wanted a flag so big “the British would have no trouble seeing it from a distance”.

Well, they didn’t, and neither did Francis Scott Key. On the back of a letter in his pocket he penned part of a poem called, “Defense of Fort McHenry”. We would later call it “The Star-Spangled Banner”.

Oh, say can you see, by the dawn’s early light,
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming?
Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the perilous fight,
O’er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
And the rockets’ red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.
O say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?

On the shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep,
Where the foe’s haughty host in dread silence reposes,
What is that which the breeze, o’er the towering steep,
As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
Now it catches the gleam of the morning’s first beam,
In full glory reflected now shines on the stream:
‘Tis the star-spangled banner! O long may it wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.

And where is that band who so vauntingly swore
That the havoc of war and the battle’s confusion
A home and a country should leave us no more?
Their blood has wiped out their foul footstep’s pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave:
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.

Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved homes and the war’s desolation!

Blest with victory and peace, may the heaven-rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In God is our trust.”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

I find the last stanza particularly stirring. It is the very heart of every honorable soldier who have served in our military that they “shall stand/ Between their loved homes and the war’s desolation.” We have been very blessed indeed because we have known war’s desolation only once during the Civil War and haven’t felt it again. Other nations and other parts of the world know this desolation as daily life.

The now mostly forgotten War of 1812 and our current war has many parallels and I hope to see historians resurrect it to prominence again some day. But then as now, the question remains:

O say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?

It was written as an open question. That’s something to think about this Independence Day…

Other Independence Day Postings:

Michelle Malkin: Happy Birthday, America
Bookworm: Happy Birthday, America
Neo-neocon: On liberty
Gateway Pundit: Happy Independence Day 2007
Shrinkwrapped has reprinted the Declaration of Independence in full.
Captain Quarters: Happy 231st Birthday, America

3 responses so far

Jun 06 2007

Turkish military in Iraq?

Published by Thomas under General, Military, Iraq

Fresh from the Drudge Report

“We are aware of this Turkish troops buildup on the border and the Iraqi government position has been that we will not accept or tolerate any military incursion into Iraqi territories,” he said.

“We have urged all sides, including the Kurdish leadership, to ease tension and to seek dialogue to resolve all outstanding issues because we believe any military incursion into the northern provinces would only lead to further escalations and instability and this is in nobody’s interests, not in Iraq’s, nor the United States, nor Turkey,” he added. “We are in contact with the Turkish officials and we have friendly, good relations with the Turkish government.”

According to this article from Breitbart.com, Turkish military incursions into Northern Iraq was fairly frequent before Operation Iraqi Freedom. U.S. Lt. Col. Christopher Garver can’t confirm anything at the moment but said that we were “very concerned”.

Just what in tar-nation is going on over there?

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May 03 2007

There’s no WMD’s

Published by Thomas under War On Terror

I repeat ladies and gents: Iraqi is devoid of any WMD’s whatsoever. Bush lied, people died. If he didn’t lie, where’s the WMD’s?

27 killed in Ramadi chemical attack

Ramadi: A suicide bomber targeting a police station exploded his truck full of chlorine gas in a residential area yesterday, killing 27 people in the biggest chemical attack by insurgents in Iraq since the invasion.

Amid the continuing violence, Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki ordered that jobs and pensions be offered to former officers of executed president Saddam Hussain’s military, many of whom had joined the Sunni insurgency against US forces.

The chemical attack took place in the western city of Ramadi. First reports said that 20 people had been killed, but the toll was later amended by police.

Um… Okay, so there WERE WMD’s…

4 responses so far

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