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Monday, August 25, 2008
"A Day At Blackwater"
Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 3:41 PM
Having achieved near-Haliburton status on the nutty left, Blackwater wisely decided to bring in a bunch of new media types to see for themselves what the company does.  Rob Neppell reports at VictoryCaucus.com.




Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Cool
Posted by: Amanda Carpenter at 11:04 AM
Peyton Manning thanks the troops for their service.




Wednesday, August 06, 2008
Cheers for USMC Corporal Garrett Jones
Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 10:16 AM
The Los Angeles Times runs a front-page story on Corporal Garrett Jones, back in the fight in Afghanistan after losing a leg last year:

On July 23, 2007, Jones was on foot patrol near the Iraqi city of Fallouja when he was injured by a roadside bomb. After the attack, his left leg was amputated above the knee. He developed infections and fevers. His weight dropped from 175 pounds to 125. At 21, Jones faced months of painful rehabilitation and a likely end to his service in the Marine Corps.

One year later, Jones is walking smoothly on a prosthetic leg. He not only continues to serve on active duty, but he has worked his way back to a war zone, serving with his Marine battle buddies in Afghanistan.


(Note the story is sourced from "Camp Barber," which I suspect is named for my old friend Colonel Bill Barber, Medal of Honor recipient, who would have been so honored and also proud of Corporal Jones.)

More from Jones:

"I want to be someone an injured Marine can talk to," Jones said. "And I can tell them: 'Times will be rough and not always easy as an amputee, but you can still make great things out of an unfortunate situation.' That's what I want to do."
and

Jones didn't get his first prosthesis until November. By the end of December, he had learned how to snowboard again, a sport he had enjoyed for years. He plans to compete in freestyle snowboarding in the 2010 Paralympics in Vancouver, Canada.
Read the whole thing. Twice.  And consider a donation to the Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund.


U.S. Marine Cpl. Garrett Jones





Thursday, July 31, 2008
President Bush On The Surge
Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 9:23 AM
The president's statement from this morning:
THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning.  This has been a month of encouraging news from Iraq.  Violence is down to its lowest level since the spring of 2004, and we're now in our third consecutive month with reduced violence levels holding steady.  General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker caution that the progress is still reversible, but they report that there now appears to be a "degree of durability" to the gains we have made.

A significant reason for this sustained progress is the success of the surge.  Another is the increasing capability of the Iraqi forces.  Iraqi forces now have 192 combat battalions in the fight -- and more than 110 of these battalions are taking the lead in combat operations against terrorists and extremists. 

We saw the capability of those forces earlier this year, when the Iraqi government launched successful military operations against Shia extremist groups in Basra, Amarah, and the Sadr City area of Baghdad.  Because of these operations, extremists who once terrorized the citizens of these communities have been driven from their strongholds.  As a result, our Ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker, was able to walk the streets of Sadr City last Wednesday, as something that would not have been possible just a few months ago.

This week, the Iraqi government is launching a new offensive in parts of the Diyala province that contain some of al Qaeda's few remaining safe havens in the country.  This operation is Iraqi-led; our forces are playing a supporting role.  And in the moments -- in the months ahead, the Iraqis will continue taking the lead in more military operations across the country.

As security in Iraq has improved, the Iraqi government has made political progress as well.  The Iraqi Council of Representatives has passed several major pieces of legislation this year, and Iraqi leaders are preparing for provincial elections.  And Prime Minister Maliki recently returned from a successful visit to Europe, where he held important diplomatic discussions with Chancellor Merkel, Prime Minister Berlusconi, and His Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI.

The progress in Iraq has allowed us to continue our policy of "return on success."  We now have brought home all five of the combat brigades and the three Marine units that were sent to Iraq as part of the surge.  The last of these surge brigades returned home this month.  And later this year, General Petraeus will present me his recommendations on future troop levels -- including further reductions in our combat forces as conditions permit.

As part of the "return on success" policy, we are also reducing the length of combat tours in Iraq.  Beginning tomorrow, troops deploying to Iraq will serve 12-month tours instead of 15-month tours.  This will ease the burden on our forces -- and it will make life easier for our wonderful military families. 

We're also making progress in our discussion with Prime Minister Maliki's government on a strategic framework agreement.  This agreement will serve as the foundation for America's presence in Iraq once the United Nations resolution authorizing the multinational forces there expires on December the 31st.

We remain a nation at war.  Al Qaeda is on the run in Iraq -- but the terrorists remain dangerous, and they are determined to strike our country and our allies again.  In this time of war, America is grateful to all the men and women who have stepped forward to defend us.  They understand that we have no greater responsibility than to stop the terrorists before they launch another attack on our homeland.  And every day they make great sacrifices to keep the American people safe here at home.  We owe our thanks to all those who wear the uniform -- and their families who support them in their vital work.  And the best way to honor them is to support their mission -- and bring them home with victory.

Thank you very much.






Thursday, July 31, 2008
The Daniel Silva Interview
Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 1:01 AM
JWC was listening very closely.

The transcript is here. The podcast is in three parts.  Part 1 is herePart 2 is here. Part 3 is here. Aspiring writers should pay very close attention to Silva's discipline.

Silva is a very entertaining, yet very serious writer who is also an artist, capable of making the thriller into a vehicle for important lessons.  Do yourself a favor, and order all of the Allon novels, and begin at the beginning with The Kill Artist.  The order in which to read them:

  • 2000 The Kill Artist
  • 2002 The English Assassin
  • 2003 The Confessor
  • 2004 A Death in Vienna
  • 2005 Prince of Fire
  • 2006 The Messenger
  • 2007 The Secret Servant
  • 2008 Moscow Rules






  • Friday, July 25, 2008
    USMC Mascot Retires
    Posted by: Amanda Carpenter at 3:11 PM
    This morning I had the pleasure of visiting the Washington Marine Corps Barracks to attend the retirement ceremony of the USMC's longest serving mascot, Chesty XII.

    The English Bulldog was awarded the Navy and Marine Medal of Honor for more than 6 years (that's around 42 dog years) of professional mascot service during which his commanding officer noted he had "endured the attention of hordes of children."

    Chesty’s retirement ceremony took place at the end of a practice session to prepare for the sunset parade, which the Marines hold every Friday evening for tourists and spectators at 8:45 p.m. During the ceremony Chesty XII was replaced as the USMC mascot by another English Bulldog, Chesty XIII. (All the Chesty mascots are named after the famed Marine, Chesty Puller.)

    It was a lot of fun to watch and of course, spend the morning with all those good-looking Marines. Special thanks to Gunnery Sergeant Will Price for inviting me. And, check out his book Devil Dog Diary!

    Here are some of my pics:

    The "new" Chesty and the "old" Chesty

    Chesties together

    Waiting for the ceremony on the parade grounds at 8th and I.

    Chesties

    Petting the Chesties!

    Petting Chesties two






    Thursday, July 24, 2008
    Remembering Friend, Protector John Gibson
    Posted by: Tom DeLay at 9:33 AM

    Below is an opinion piece that ran in Roll Call today in honor of my friend, John Gibson, who was killed 10 years ago today while protecting me and my staff in the U.S. Capitol. 

    My daughter jokes that he was tougher on her than I was. But in the case of Capitol Police Detective John Gibson, his influence on my family was not born of the years we were together, the thousands of hours, hundreds of meals and dozens of holidays we celebrated together. It was the man.

    Gibson met everyone, regardless of whether he knew them, with a smile. He was kind and funny and unfailingly honest. He was as tough as iron, except when he wasn’t, and then would emerge the doting, beloved father of three. He was a devout Catholic, and when he wasn’t working through the Boston Globe sports page, he could be seen thumbing through his Bible. He loved hockey, so much so that he even vainly suffered to explain it to me, who couldn’t tell a red line from a Red Wing.

    He served on my security detail from 1995 to 1998, and in that time he became a unique friend in my life. Capitol Police officers on security details, you see, are not supposed to become too friendly with the people they protect. Personal relationships cloud objectivity and judgment — and thank God for that — and yet I, like the members of my staff and, from what I could tell, everyone he ever met, would call Gibson my friend.

    He was often the first person I saw in the morning and the last one I saw at night. He was frequently the person with whom I spent the most time in a day, and, quite possibly, in a month or a year. I did not deserve the unique gift of this man’s company and friendship.

    He was a trusted friend to my wife, a second father to my daughter, and a beloved member of both my personal and Congressional family. John Michael Gibson was my hero even before July 24, 1998, when a disturbed man named Russell Weston ran into my office on the first floor of the Capitol with a .38-caliber Smith & Wesson revolver.

    We all heard the shots. None of us saw them, though, because the moment we were in danger, John ordered everyone to take cover. Weston, who had moments earlier slain Officer Jacob Chestnut at the document room door on the west side of the Capitol, chased a woman down the hall and into the suite of offices known as H-107. John shoved the woman to safety, but before he could defend himself, Weston shot him in the chest. Mortally wounded and with some of his last conscious breaths, John drew his weapon and brought down Weston with shots in his stomach and each leg. Seconds later, the Capitol Police arrived in force, arrested Weston, and removed from his pockets the additional rounds of ammunition he could have used to kill all of us.

    It’s strange that the word that comes quickest to mind when we meet those sworn to protect us — police, firefighters, soldiers — is “professionalism.” The confidence and competence such people exude is not borne of years of intense training and experience, but of the choice they make to undergo it. What makes people like John Gibson and J.J. Chestnut, like every man and woman serving in the Capitol Police, special is not their courage and integrity, but their sacred choice to offer those qualities, and indeed, their very lives, into the service of others. It is easier to call this daily choice to serve “professionalism,” but those of us who know the men and women of the Capitol Police, those of us blessed to have known John Gibson, know better. What we classify as “professionalism,” we recognize, in our grateful hearts, as love.

    John Gibson and J.J. Chestnut did not die to protect “others.” They died to protect me and my staff. They died to protect you. Think about that when they lose their specialty pay in budget cuts, or when they’re in need of new bulletproof vests that will actually fit under the plainclothes uniform of our protectors. Think about that the next time you’re in a hurry and you feel inconvenienced with a request to walk back through the metal detector or flash your ID.

    Think about that. And think about them.






    Sunday, July 20, 2008
    OK, We Tried. The Iranians Aren't Interested In Negotiations.
    Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 2:44 AM
    Lots of hand-wringing on the right over the dispatch of a State department senior official, William Burns, to meet with senior Iranian officials in Geneva.  Seems like a necessary "last chance" offer to me, and Iran has apparently rejected it:

     

    A U.S. decision to bend policy and sit down with Iran at nuclear talks fizzled Saturday, with Iran stonewalling Washington and five other world powers on their call to freeze uranium enrichment.

    In response, the six gave Iran two weeks to respond to their demand, setting the stage for a new round of U.N. sanctions.

    Iran's refusal to consider suspending enrichment was an indirect slap at the United States, which had sent Undersecretary of State William Burns to the talks in hopes the first-time American presence would encourage Tehran into making concessions.

    Officials and diplomats refused to characterize the timeframe as an ultimatum, but it appeared clear that Iran now has a de-facto deadline to show flexibility.



    The Bush Administration has done everything a superpower can do except use military action.  Iran's mullahs come to the conclusion that the U.S. and Israel either will not or cannot stop their nuclear ambitions.  If strikes are launched against the mullahs' nuclear facilities, the U.S. will have tried every avenue to stop the program without resort to bombing. but Iran is an outlaw regime and it does not care a bit what the world demands of it.






    Thursday, July 17, 2008
    Free Speech In Iraq
    Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 10:20 AM
    I interviewed AEI's Fred Kagan yesterday, who has just returned from an 11 -day trip around Iraq.  The entire transcript is here and the podcast is here.

    I asked Kagan about media and political debate in Iraq as the country approaches the crucial provincial elections:



    HH: Now talk to us a little bit, we take so granted our free political press and the benefits it gives us, and the pleasure it gives us, and the outlet it provides us. What’s the media like in Iraq right now? 

    FK: Oh, the media is ferocious in Iraq. I mean, there are lots of media outlets, there’s free press. Most of the outlets, as in America, reflect one view or another, or one party or another. But there are enough of them that, and Iraqis can get them all, that they can get a pretty full picture. And there’s very vibrant political discourse, and there’s lots of arguments and name calling, and all the kind of stuff that we would be very familiar with. But the other thing about Iraq that’s found is when you fly over an Iraqi village, and it’s four mud huts on the ground, two of them will have satellite dishes. 

     

    Americans tend to take for granted the joys and benefits of a completely free media, one in which the temptation to political violence is always held down by the opportunity to organize and vent.  One of the greatest gifts delivered to Iraq by the overthrow of Saddam was this freedom to argue and decry, inveigh and satirize.  Those who want with Obama to bolt on the Iraqis are indifferent to amazing march of freedom in the former tyranny, and cannot be a friend of the Iraqi people or the broader Arab world which is watching a multi-party democracy take hold and deepen its roots.

    Read the entire Kagan interview.  He, Kimberly Kagan and Jack Keane are owed an immense set of thank-yous for the work they have done to persuade the Administration and the country to save Iraq and to publicize the unfolding victory there.






    Wednesday, July 16, 2008
    "Above Empyrean"
    Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 7:30 PM
    Bruce Herschensohn's new novel is a thriller set in an America besieged by Islamist sleeper cells.  It is also a thoughtful meditation on how thew West has lost its sense of alarm after 9/11, and the consequences of such complacency.

    Above Empyrean: A Novel of the Final Days of the War Against Islamist Terrorism




    Wednesday, July 16, 2008
    The Real Story Inside Guantanamo
    Posted by: Tom DeLay at 12:17 PM

    Some friends of mine brought my attention to the new book Honor Bound: Inside the Guantanamo Trials, which explains military law and the inside story of these military commissions. The author, Kyndra Rotunda, is a former JAG lawyer who served on the prosecution team in Guantanamo Bay and as a legal advisor to an elite team of war crimes investigators. Through a series of entertaining first-hand accounts, Rotunda discusses and analyzes the laws governing the War on Terror, the Geneva Conventions, and the laws related to detainees held in Cuba.

    Now I am fortunate enough to have books sent to me all the time, and while almost all are worth reading, there’s only so much time in the day.  So I’m perusing it right now, but here are some highlights.  Remember, this is coming from a first hand source involved in the legal affairs of these detainees.  Now, why isn’t this reported?  I encourage you all to join me in reading Honor Bound – after all, it’s books like these that help arm us with information as we argue with the liberals who care more about terrorist’s rights than those of Americans.  And that includes our own Supreme Court.

    Highlights after the jump…


    Read More...





    Tuesday, July 15, 2008
    Managing Expectations
    Posted by: Amanda Carpenter at 4:00 PM
    Barack Obama is going to end the war, not win it or even bother stabilizing the country on our way out.

    That's apparent from this passage in his Iraq speech today.

    OBAMA: "Iraq is not going to be a perfect place, and we don’t have unlimited resources to try to make it one. We are not going to kill every al Qaeda sympathizer, eliminate every trace of Iranian influence, or stand up a flawless democracy before we leave.”





    Tuesday, July 15, 2008
    Obama VS. Petraeus
    Posted by: Amanda Carpenter at 9:59 AM
    Putting this out there in the run-up to Obama's speech today:

    Obama in the New York Times yesterday: "Iraq is not the central front in the war on terrorism."

    Petraeus at a DoD briefing in April 2007: "Iraq is, in fact, the central front of al Qaeda's global campaign and we devote considerable resources to the fight against al Qaeda Iraq."

    Sure, the Petraeus statement was delivered more than a year ago, but I haven't seen any statements from him  indicating otherwise in the interim. If there are, I'm happy to link.





    Tuesday, July 15, 2008
    An Obama Prebuttal by Bush?
    Posted by: Amanda Carpenter at 9:38 AM
    Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is schedule to make a Washington speech about Iraq policy at 10:45am in which he will call the Iraq war a "distraction."

    Got an email this morning around nine saying President Bush will be holding a Q and A at 10:20am. Perfect timing to work himself into all the coverage of Obama's speech. I'm betting the President will have something (veiled of course) to say about Obama's "distraction' and maybe Obama's decision to quit calling the surge a "problem"  (as detailed by Hugh below) and start recognizing its success.

    McCain will pile on, too. He's planning to make this statement at a town hall meeting later today in Ohio: Obama "is speaking today about his plans for Iraq and Afghanistan before he has even left, before he has talked to General Petraeus, before he has seen the progress in Iraq, and before he has set foot in Afghanistan for the first time."




    Wednesday, July 02, 2008
    "A Salute to the Defenders of Our Freedom" and The Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund
    Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 8:45 PM
    My new Townhall.com column is up.

    Thursday's program is my semi-annual program devoted to the work of the Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund.  If you have any time on the 3rd, please listen to and be inspired and humbled by the extraordinary warriors from the Corps (and those serving alongside them) who have been wounded in the war and who share their stories of recovery.

    My column notes the some of the other great organizations that serve recovering warriors from the Army, Navy and Air Force, and no matter which one you chose to support, please do pick at least one this weekend and demonstrate your thanks for our freedom by supporting the men and women who secure it.

    You can contribute to the Semper Fi Fund online here.  You can send a check to:

    Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund
    825 College Blvd, Suite 102
    PMB 609
    Oceanside, CA 92057











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