Mr VJP Posted March 28, 2011 Share Posted March 28, 2011 "In the homogeneous Democratic Party of today, Henry Wallace might have made it through a convention. Certainly a community leader from Chicago, Barack Obama could and he only had four years experience in national politics, two of those years spent on the campaign trail. Now he has shown the progressive's traditional impatience with our Constitutional process. He did not go to Congress to get a declaration or an authorization of war. He has no authorization from Congress to spend money on his no-fly zone. In fact he did not go to Congress at all. He went directly to the United Nations, seeking authority to act in Libya. ... He was more comfortable with 'world opinion' and 'the community of nations.' But now that community is breaking up. China and Russian are not with him. The lesser nations are in flux, and even military commanders in the coalition are uncertain. President Obama does not really know what is happening. I suggest he have another of his Beer Summits, this time with George W. Bush, though I would caution him to follow George's custom and make it a Sarsaparilla Summit." --columnist R. Emmett Tyrrell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G-Man Posted March 28, 2011 Share Posted March 28, 2011 We need to stop thinking about the rest of the world thinks and worry about here!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nyantler Posted March 28, 2011 Share Posted March 28, 2011 We need to stop thinking about the rest of the world thinks and worry about here!! +1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bballhunter11 Posted March 28, 2011 Share Posted March 28, 2011 So what your saying is that what happens in Libya doesnt effect us over here? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr VJP Posted March 29, 2011 Author Share Posted March 29, 2011 No, it's more of a question of how it affects us over here. Are we making it better or worse for us over here? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bballhunter11 Posted March 29, 2011 Share Posted March 29, 2011 Well from the sounds of the presidents plan looks like we are mostly getting out of that country for the time being. We are supposed to have a less than "limited" role in the NATO alliance now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr VJP Posted March 29, 2011 Author Share Posted March 29, 2011 You think so? http://www.windstream.net/news/read...018&page=1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr VJP Posted March 29, 2011 Author Share Posted March 29, 2011 There's no question that the rebels Americans are currently fighting for in Libya include in their ranks jihadis who in recent years traveled to Iraq and Afghanistan to kill Americans. The only question is whether that worries you or not. Take Abdel-Hakim al-Hasidi, a leader of U.S.-supported rebels in the fighting for Adjabiya. His hometown, Darnah, has produced many jihadis, and after the Sept. 11 attacks al-Hasidi traveled to Afghanistan to fight the "foreign invasion" -- that is, the U.S. military. According to a report in Britain's Daily Telegraph, al-Hasidi says he was later captured in Pakistan, handed over to the U.S., then held in prison in Libya before being released in 2008. In addition to fighting the U.S. in Afghanistan, al-Hasidi also says he recruited about two dozen men to fight the U.S. in Iraq. Now al-Hasidi and his allies are moving toward Tripoli, which would not be possible without the military power of the United States. The men who devoted so much energy to killing Americans are now thankfully watching Americans kill for them. To some observers, that's no big deal. "No one seems all that frightened by him," the New York Times wrote of al-Hasidi after a visit to Darnah in early March. Al-Hasidi, the paper reported, "praises Osama bin Laden's 'good points' but denounces the 9/11 attacks on the United States." And besides, the Times reported, al-Hasidi finds it amusing that the government of Moammar Gadhafi considers him an al Qaeda terrorist. "He promised to lay down his arms once victory is won and return, he said, to teaching," the Times reported. Maybe you believe that. Maybe you don't. The problem is, al-Hasidi is by no means alone. We know that from intelligence gained in the Iraq War. During that war, American strategists became increasingly concerned by the number of foreign fighters who came to Iraq to take up arms against the U.S. In an October 2007 raid near Sinjar, Iraq, American forces captured a computer that had biographical information on about 700 foreign terrorists who had come to Iraq between August 2006 and August 2007. An analysis of the so-called "Sinjar documents" found that Libya sent more fighters to the Iraqi front than any other country except Saudi Arabia; Libyans accounted for nearly 20 percent of the foreign fighters in the Sinjar documents. Some of those Libyans were from an al Qaeda-affiliated organization called the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, whose membership reportedly included one Abdel-Hakim al-Hasidi. In 2004, then-CIA Director George Tenet named the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group part of the "next wave" of terrorism that could threaten U.S. security whether or not al Qaeda was destroyed. So what should the United States do about Libyan fighters who went to Iraq to kill Americans? And Libyans who went to Afghanistan to kill Americans? And Libyans who recruited them and helped them with their travels? Should we be hunting those people down? Or should we be fighting on their behalf? "It's a real concern, there's no ifs, ands or buts about it," says Michael Rubin, a Middle East scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. "The question for policymakers is, does that concern mean we should not be seeking change in those countries?" Rubin supports U.S. involvement in the Libyan war and believes the number of people like al-Hasidi is relatively small. "It's not a reason not to support the rebels," he says. "It is a reason not to arm them, or not to trust others to arm them." As for the jihadis who killed Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan, Rubin would like to see U.**** teams" take care of them. But that, of course, would be way, way, way outside the United Nations Security Council Resolution that guides American actions in Libya. If the U.S.-led coalition prevails, it seems likely that some of the jihadis will choose not to return to lives as humble schoolteachers, as al-Hasidi claims, but instead become part of the new leadership of Libya. There's no way the U.S. can be involved in an action like the Libyan war without coming in contact with some pretty bad actors. That's a good reason not to be involved in an action like the Libyan war. But even if involvement is an ugly necessity, do we have to give active support and protection to people who have devoted their lives to killing Americans? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bballhunter11 Posted March 29, 2011 Share Posted March 29, 2011 History repeats it self over and over we arm a group of people to fight another force and our weapons always come back to shoot at us. I would guess that helping these people in a limited way may sway some of there opinions maybe not but leaving the current government in place is not helping anyone worldwide. Only time will tell what the results will be. What would have been your plan on Libya? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr VJP Posted March 29, 2011 Author Share Posted March 29, 2011 I'll again post what I posted in another thread here, as it states my feelings perfectly. "I would not have involved our military in Libya. For one thing, I see no reason why the Arab League, which gave the no-fly zone notion a big thumbs-up, doesn't take on that job. They have pilots and jets. Why is it that America and the European nations always have to do their dirty work? All it ever gets us is the ongoing hatred and resentment of Arabs and Muslims. Besides, unlike most people, I have not been sitting on the sidelines rooting for the rebellion forces in the Middle East. I do not confuse enemies of my enemies with friends. I have no reason to think that when the smoke clears, we are going to see a lot of George Washingtons and Thomas Jeffersons running any of those moral swamplands. It is far likelier that Al Qaeda, Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood and Hezbollah, will fill any and all power vacuums in that part of the world, with the mullahs in Tehran pulling their collective strings. ... I am not suggesting that the U.S. military should never venture out beyond our borders, but we should have a better reason for doing so than because CNN is showing us one bunch of anti-American creeps killing another bunch of anti-American creeps. In short, we should not be letting the 6 o'clock news determine our foreign policy." --columnist Burt Prelutsky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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