War on Terror

Let’s ‘Surge’ Some More: Michael Yon

Our troops are the world’s greatest humanitarians and liberty’s last best hope; we must stop short-changing their efforts. I believe that is Michael Yon’s message in his Wall Street Journal op-ed:

Soldiers everywhere are paid, and good generals know it is dangerous to mess with a soldier’s money. The shoeless heroes who froze at Valley Forge were paid, and when their pay did not come they threatened to leave — and some did. Soldiers have families and will not fight for a nation that allows their families to starve. But to say that the tribes who fight with us are “rented” is perhaps as vile a slander as to say that George Washington’s men would have left him if the British offered a better deal.

The Iraqi central government is unsatisfactory at best. But the grass-roots political progress of the past year has been extraordinary — and is directly measurable in the drop in casualties.

This leads us to the most out-of-date aspect of the Senate debate: the argument about the pace of troop withdrawals. Precisely because we have made so much political progress in the past year, rather than talking about force reduction, Congress should be figuring ways and means to increase troop levels. For all our successes, we still do not have enough troops. This makes the fight longer and more lethal for the troops who are fighting. To give one example, I just returned this week from Nineveh province, where I have spent probably eight months between 2005 to 2008, and it is clear that we remain stretched very thin from the Syrian border and through Mosul. Vast swaths of Nineveh are patrolled mostly by occasional overflights.

Me:

Those who say this is George Bush’s war are fooling themselves. We have it to do, this War on Terror, now, maybe later, but surely for generations against this enemy. Like war and warriors or not, hippie or hawk, America will fight, be forced to fight, or die as a nation. That is the reality of this enemy’s intent.

Calling for the end to the ever-oscillating size of our military is no jingle from the peanut gallery. I was there, in uniform, during both the post-Vietnam and post-Gulf War reductions. Knee jerking overall troop levels up and down plays all too well during political campaigns (the post-Gulf War “peace dividend” was a surge that became an avalanche). Arid regions and deserts are hard to fight and maintain in for both men and equipment.

However long it takes, we need to finish the fight in Iraq, stay strong in the region, and win for their sake as well as our own.


Note: Read more from Michael at his web site MichaelYon-online.com

Prosecutors in U.K. air terror case show ‘martyr’ video

ABC News reports:

Allah “loves us to die and kill in his path” says a man who is accused of plotting to blow up passenger jets as part of an al Qaeda plot. The martyrdom video was shown to jurors in the United Kingdom today in the conspiracy trial of eight alleged plotters who hoped to use liquid explosives to blow up airplanes in the summer of 2006. The 19-minute video features 29-year-old Umar Islam speaking in English with a British accent as he praises Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar. A shorter four-minute version was released to the public by British authorities, while jurors watched the full-length video.

Islam said no British citizen would be safe so long as the country is at war in Iraq and Afghanistan. “Most of you are too busy, you know, watching “Home and Away” and “Eastenders,” complaining about the World Cup, drinking your alcohol, to even care about anything,” Islam says. [Watch video.] The video was played on about a dozen large monitors throughout the courtoom. A BBC News reporter who was in the court when the video was played said the jurors and others in court appeared transfixed by the videos. At one point, Islam is asked by someone off-camera if he is brainwashed. His answer, yes: “I would. Yes, my brain has been washed, and it has been washed by the clean and cleansing water of Islam,” he says.

Here is ABC’s online report, complete with related article.