Pete in Columbus is doing 43 things including…

help win the War on Terror

38 cheers

 

Pete has written 32 entries about this goal

thank you for your services and sacrifices 13 months ago

With Veterans’ Day just around the corner, I am reminded that I am thankful for those who have kept my family and friends free.

A quote from Calvin Coolidge says it clearly “The nation which forgets its defenders will be itself forgotten.”

A veteran is someone who, at one point in his or her life wrote a blank check made payable to ‘The United States of America ’ for an amount of ‘up to and including my life.’ That is Honor, and there are way too many people in this country who no longer understand it.

To all of you who have served this country, thank you for your services and sacrifices.



Bruce Crandall received the Medal of Honor 2 years ago

Forty-one years after repeatedly leading a two-helicopter team into a region of Vietnam dubbed the “Valley of Death,” retired Army helicopter pilot Bruce Crandall received the Medal of Honor on Monday at a White House ceremony.

Crandall, 74, might have been eligible to receive the award — the nation’s highest military medal — years earlier. But he withdrew his name from consideration in the 1990s because he worried his quest for the medal might take precedence over that of his wingman and friend, Ed Freeman.

“If only one of them were to receive the Medal of Honor, he wanted it to be his wingman,” President Bush said in the East Room before placing the blue-ribboned medal around Crandall’s neck. “Today the story comes to its rightful conclusion: Bruce Crandall receives the honor he always deserved.”

Freeman received his medal in a 2001 ceremony at the White House. Crandall, of Manchester, Wash., attended the event. Freeman, 79, couldn’t attend Crandall’s ceremony because his flight from his hometown in Boise was snowed in.

The two have been friends since basic training. On Nov. 14, 1965, they teamed up during a vicious battle later memorialized in a book and the Mel Gibson film We Were Soldiers.

On that day, about 450 American troops had landed in a remote area of Vietnam near the Cambodian border. They were unaware that their landing in the Ia Drang Valley was amid a major sanctuary for the North Vietnamese Army.

The Americans were surrounded by about 2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers and came under intense attack. Crandall and Freeman flew the injured out to a base and returned with troops and ammunition. They kept making trips back and forth even though they were being shot at by enemy fighters, sometimes only 30 yards away.

They flew through a cloud of smoke and a wave of bullets, Bush said. Ground commanders ordered a halt to the airlifts because of the danger, but Crandall kept going, and Freeman joined him.

“We knew that if we didn’t do it our guys would go down,” Crandall said in an interview last week.

The two men made 22 trips over 14 hours. Crandall switched helicopters three times after the aircraft were shot up.

The two men pulled more than 70 Americans out of the battle zone. The battalion lost 79 men, but the North Vietnamese were overcome.

“For the soldiers rescued, for the men who came home, for the children they had and the lives they made, America is in debt to Bruce Crandall,” Bush said. “It’s a debt our nation can never really fully repay, but today we recognize it as best



NEW troops for the Surge 2 years ago

NEW troops for the Surge



threat of losing an American city to a nuclear weapon 2 years ago

This is a transcript of a section of a Gingrich Speech in New
Hampshire.

NEWT GINGRICH: The third thing I want to talk about very briefly is the genuine danger of terrorism, in particular terrorists using weapons of mass destruction and weapons of mass murder, nuclear and biological weapons. And I want to suggest to you that right now we should be impaneling people to look seriously at a level of supervision that we would never dream of if it weren’t for the scale of threat.

Let me give you two examples. When the British this summer arrested people who were planning to blow up ten airliners in one day, they arrested a couple who were going to use their six month old baby in order to hide the bomb as baby milk.

Now, if I come to you tonight and say that there are people on the planet who hate you, and they are 15-25 year old males who are willing to die as long as they get to kill you, I’ve simply described the warrior culture which has been true historically for 6 or 7 thousand years.

But, if I come to you and say that there is a couple that hates you so much that they will kill their six month old baby in order to kill you, I am describing a level of ferocity, and a level of savagery beyond anything we have tried to deal with.

And, what is truly frightening about the British experience is they are arresting British citizens, born in Britain , speaking English, who went to British schools, live in British housing, and have good jobs.

This is a serious long term war, and it will inevitably lead us to want to know what is said in every suspect place in the country, that will lead us to learn how to close down every website that is dangerous, and it will lead us to a very severe approach to people who advocate the killing of Americans and advocate the use of nuclear or biological weapons.

And, my prediction to you is that either before we lose a city, or if we are truly stupid, after we lose a city, we will adopt rules of engagement that use every technology we can find to break up their capacity to use the internet, to break up their capacity to use free speech, and to go after people who want to kill us to stop them from recruiting people before they get to reach out and convince young people to destroy their lives while destroying us.

This is a serious problem that will lead to a serious debate about the first amendment, but I think that the national security threat of losing an American city to a nuclear weapon, or losing several million Americans to a biological attack is so real that we need to proactively, now, develop the appropriate rules of engagement.

And, I further think that we should propose a Geneva convention for fighting terrorism which makes very clear that those who would fight outside the rules of law, those who would use weapons of mass destruction, and those who would target civilians are in fact subject to a totally different set of rules that allow us to protect civilization by defeating barbarism before it gains so much strength that it is truly horrendous.

This is a sober topic, but I think it is a topic we need a national dialogue about, and we need to get ahead of the curve rather than wait until actually we literary lose a city which could literally happen within the next decade if we are unfortunate.

This is finally said in a way that even the most “head in the sand” person can understand it. Please God, help us.

This is a very sober description of the Islamic terrorist threat we are faced with. We are NOW at war with a culture that wants, not to take over our land, but to KILL us.



The New York Times has discovered that cut-and-run is a bad option 3 years ago

Wow, holy Baghdad! America’s antiwar paper of record, the New York Times has suddenly found “military experts” who are against cutting and running in Iraq! The same experts who were huge critics of the war before the election.

General Anthony Zinni, who had demanded Rumsfeld step down, now tells The Times that troop withdrawals would likely accelerate a civil war in Iraq rather than stop it. Sounds like Bush; sounds like Rummy.

As part of a broader effort to stabilize Iraq, Zinni wants more troops so we can “regain momentum,” create gigs, foster political reconciliation, and allow Iraqi security forces to gain a firm foothold.

John Batiste, another retired general who wanted Rumsfeld’s scalp, calls Congressional proposals for troop withdrawals “terribly naïve.” That would be Congressional Democrats’ proposals, by the way. Batiste sounds like Bush. And Rummy.

Kenneth Pollack, former Clinton NSA guy, argues that troop reductions would backfire. “If we start pulling out troops and the violence gets worse and the control of the militias increases and people become confirmed in their suspicion that the [US] is not going to be there to prevent civil war, they are to going to start making decisions today to prepare for the eventuality of civil war tomorrow…That is how civil wars start.”

My head is swimming. Now that the Democrats have regained power, it’s about-face time? Suddenly, the Times has discovered that cut-and-run is a bad option? Suddenly, winning is important? To the New York Times?



Bottom Line 3 years ago

President Bush said today:

The (November 7, 2006) election is a referendum on which party has a plan to make the economy grow, and which party has a plan to make the American people safe,” he said.

“If we succeed in Iraq, the country (the United States) is more secure. If we don’t succeed in Iraq, the country is less secure.”

Bush said of the Democrats, “I do not question their patriotism. I question whether or not they understand how dangerous the world is.”



Who is Winning 3 years ago

In two hours in 2001, 19 terrorists killed more Americans civilians than the entire global corps of jihadists have been able to kill in the five years following. Indeed, it took five years to kill as many American soldiers as they killed in two hours on a sunny September morning in 2001.

*Let’s look at the scorecard: Two hours on Sept. 11, 2001 – 2,973 Americans at a cost of 19 jihadists.

Sept. 12, 2001, to Sept. 26, 2006 – 2,973 American military deaths at a cost of tens of thousands of jihadists.

Afghanistan is largely rebuilt and the majority of Iraq is in recovery.

Let’s compare historical figures:

Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941 – 2,390 U.S. military deaths.

Dec. 8, 1941, to Aug. 6, 1945 – 405,399 military deaths. The cost? The destruction of Germany, Japan and most of Europe and the Far East. *



Al-Qaida in Iraq Leader Urges 'Holy War' 3 years ago

The new leader of al-Qaida in Iraq urged Muslims to make the holy month of Ramadan a “month of holy war,” in an audiotape posted on Islamic Web site Thursday. He also purportedly said that more than 4,000 foreign fighters have been killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion.

The man on the tape identified himself as Abu Hamza al-Muhajir _ also known as Abu Ayyub al-Masri _ the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, though the voice could not be independently identified. He is believed to have succeeded Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who died in a U.S. airstrike north of Baghdad in June.

For thoes pretending President Bush is the Enemy, I hope they take their head out of the sand, and Help win the War on Terror, before it is too late! May God continue to Bless the USA.



The REAL National Intelligence Estimate 3 years ago

Yesterday, the MSM (along with their fellow travelers in the intel community), had apparently “cherry-picked” information from a recent National Intelligence Estimate, making their case that the Bush Administration’s War on Terror had actually made the problem worse.

Thankfully, the actual NIE is not the harbinger of disaster that the Times and Washington Post would have us believe.

According to members of the intel community who have seen the document, the NIE is actually fair and balanced (to coin a phrase), noting both successes and failures in the War on Terror—and identifying potential points of failure for the jihadists.

The quotes printed below—have ALSO been taken directly from the document—provide “the other side” of the estimate, and its more balanced assessment of where we stand in the War on Terror.

In one of its early paragraphs, the estimate notes progress in the struggle against terrorism, stating the U.S.-led efforts have “seriously damaged Al Qaida leadership and disrupted its operations.” * Didn’t see that in the NYT article.

Or how about this statement, which-in part-reflects the impact of increased pressure on the terrorists: “A large body of reporting indicates that people identifying themselves as jihadists is increasing…however, they are largely decentralized, lack a coherent strategy and are becoming more diffuse.” Hmm…doesn’t sound much like Al Qaida’s pre-9-11 game plan.

The report also notes the importance of the War in Iraq as a make or break point for the terrorists: “Should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves to have failed, we judge that fewer will carry on the fight.”* It’s called a ripple effect.

More support for the defeating the enemy on his home turf: “Threats to the U.S. are intrinsically linked to U.S. success or failure in Iraq.” *President Bush and senior administration officials have made this argument many times—and it’s been consistently dismissed by the “experts” at the WaPo and Times.

And, some indication that the “growing” jihad may be pursuing the wrong course: *“There is evidence that violent tactics are backfiring…their greatest vulnerability is that their ultimate political solution (shar’a law) is unpopular with the vast majority of Muslims.” Seems to contradict MSM accounts of a jihadist tsunami with ever-increasing support in the global Islamic community.

The estimate also affirms the wisdom of sowing democracy in the Middle East: “Progress toward pluralism and more responsive political systems in the Muslim world will eliminate many of the grievances jihadists exploit.” This the core of our strategy in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Quite a contrast to the “doom and gloom” scenario painted by the Times and the Post and their ultra liberal friend!



America has made its choice. My country desires peace. 3 years ago

President Bush’s UN address
Sep. 19, 2006.

Last week America and the world marked the fifth anniversary of the attacks that filled another September morning with death and suffering. On that terrible day, extremists killed nearly 3,000 innocent people, including citizens of dozens of nations represented right here in this chamber.

Since then, the enemies of humanity have continued their campaign of murder. Al-Qaida and those inspired by its extremist ideology have attacked more than two dozen nations. And recently a different group of extremists deliberately provoked a terrible conflict in Lebanon.

At the start of the 21st century, it is clear that the world is engaged in a great ideological struggle between extremists who use terror as a weapon to create fear and moderate people who work for peace.

Five years ago I stood at this podium and called on the community of nations to defend civilization and build a more hopeful future. This is still the great challenge of our time.

It is the calling of our generation.

This morning I want to speak about the more hopeful world that is within our reach, a world beyond terror, where ordinary men and women are free to determine their own destiny, where the voices of moderation are empowered, and where the extremists are marginalized by the peaceful majority.

This world can be ours, if we seek it and if we work together.

Today I’d like to speak directly to the people across the broader Middle East.

My country desires peace. Extremists in your midst spread propaganda claiming that the West is engaged in a war against Islam.

This propaganda is false and its purpose is to confuse you and justify acts of terror.

We respect Islam, but we will protect our people from those who pervert Islam to sow death and destruction.

Our goal is to help you build a more tolerant and hopeful society that honors people of all faiths and promotes the peace.

And the nations gathered in this chamber must make a choice as well. Will we support the moderates and reformers who are working for change across the Middle East, or will we yield the future to the terrorists and extremists?

America has made its choice. We will stand with the moderates and reformers.



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