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PostPosted: 25 Apr 2003, 18:28 
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A War Against What?
by Daniel Pipes
New York Post
October 1, 2002
Militant Islam keeps on killing, but politicians and journalists still avert their eyes.

One terrible example comes from Pakistan, where a sequence of assaults on Christians, both local and foreign, has taken place over the past year:

* Oct. 28: an attack on St. Dominic's Church in Behawalpur kills 16.

* March 17: an attack on the Protestant International Church in Islamabad kills five (including two Americans).

* May 22: an attack on the executive secretary of Karachi Diocese of Church Pakistan, who was tied to a chair and injected with poison.

* Aug. 5: an attack on the Murree Christian School kills six.

* Aug. 9: an attack on the Christian Hospital in Taxila kills four.

* Sept. 25: an attack on the Institute for Peace and Justice, a Christian charity in Karachi, kills seven.

There have also been many more non-lethal assaults on churches and church services, the most recent this past Sunday. There is no doubt about the motives of the perpetrators: Militant Islamic groups brazenly speak their minds, declaring their goal is "to kill Christians" and afterwards bragging of having "killed the nonbelievers."

Victims know full well why they are targeted - "just for being Christians," as one person put it. A local Christian leader states "that the terrorist attack was an act by al Qaeda or some pro-Taliban organizations."

Pakistani law enforcement also recognizes who engages in this violence and why. "We are investigating whether there is an anti-Christian gang operating in Karachi, made up of jihadis," the city's chief investigator explains.

A provincial police chief comments about the Sept. 25 carnage: "Unlike the usual terrorists, the killers [last week] showed no haste. They took a good 15 minutes in segregating the Christians and making sure that each one of their targets gets the most horrific death."

A survivor of that slaughter recounts that the murderers separated Christians from Muslims by requiring each hostage to recite a verse from the Koran. Those who could not were seated at a table in the library, bound to chairs, gagged, and shot in the head (except for one person who was shot in a bathroom).

Politicians and journalists, however, pretend not to recognize the problem.

Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf reacted to the Sept. 25 butchery with seeming bewilderment: "I could not say who [was behind the killings]. It could be al Qaeda, it could be any sectarian extremists within, or foreign elements of RAW." (RAW is the Research and Analysis Wing, India's intelligence agency.) Pakistan's interior minister likewise emphasizes that RAW's role "cannot be ruled out."

The media is almost as bad: Paul Marshall of Freedom House shows that American and European reporting on these many massacres in Pakistan overlooks the militant Islamic dimension, instead presenting the atrocities as vaguely anti-Western in purpose.

This pattern of reluctance and euphemism in the case of Pakistan fits into a more general context. President Bush declared war not on militant Islam but on a faceless enemy he has variously called "terrorists," "a radical network of terrorists," "terrorists in this world who can't stand the thought of peace," "terrorism with a global reach," "evildoers," "a dangerous group of people," "a bunch of cold-blooded killers," and even "people without a country."

The establishment media has been complicit. With the notable exception of CNN's Lou Dobbs, who talks about "the war against radical Islamists," it unthinkingly echoes the government's line that the conflict has nothing to do with religious motives. It's as though Franklin D. Roosevelt, after Pearl Harbor, declared war on surprise attacks rather than on the Japanese empire.

This evasion has consequences, for an enemy who cannot be named cannot be defeated. Only when "war on terrorism" becomes "war on militant Islam" can the war actually be won.

Fortunately, the president has on occasion hinted at this, as in May when he called the enemy those "defined by their hatreds: they hate . . . Jews and Christians and all Muslims who disagree with them."

It is not a war on terrorism, nor a war on Islam.It is a war on a terroristic version of Islam. Authorities in the United States, Pakistan and elsewhere need to face this unpleasant fact. Not to do so will mean the unnecessary loss of lives.

http://www.danielpipes.org/article/477


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PostPosted: 25 Apr 2003, 18:31 
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Why America should wage war against Iraq and ignore “Old Europe”
By Dave Duffy

I’m sort of amazed at the debate going on in America and around the world over America’s pending war against Iraq. I can’t think of anything more obvious than the fact we have no choice but to forcibly disarm Iraq, and I see it directly tied to the success of our war against terrorism.

If Iraq has a chemical and biological arsenal, which it has, and if it is seeking to build a nuclear bomb, which it is, and if it has ties to terrorism, which it does, doesn’t it stand to reason they should be forcibly disarmed in light of the fact Iraq hates America and they have failed to voluntarily disarm even after 12 years of UN sanctions?

Iraq threw UN inspectors out in 1998, and the only reason inspectors are back in is because the United States put an army on its doorstep and told them to let them back in. But they are not actively cooperating with inspectors, but instead are engaging them in a game of hide and seek. Iraq obviously has a huge advantage in the game since they have a country the size of California in which to hide things like mobile biological weapons labs, and they can readily move weapons out of sight in the unlikely event that some of the handful of inspectors get near them.

The French and Russians don’t want Hussein out of power for obvious reasons. The French have $40-60 billion worth of oil contracts with Hussein, and Russia has oil contracts plus is owed $8 billion by Hussein. It is they, not the U.S., who are after Iraq’s oil wealth.

Not that I don’t think we should be after Iraq’s oil. In fact, after this war is over I think we should assess Iraq the cost of the war and take it out in oil. That solves the “cost of the war” problem raised by so many Democrats who want to block Bush from pursuing this just war. We can also appease the French and Russians, if we want, by paying them off with oil money. Personally, after the war I would tell the French to stick it, cancel all their Iraqi oil contracts, and tell them to go cry on the shoulders of their new friends, the Germans.

The French and Germans say Iraq has no ties to Al Qaida and other terrorists. Haven’t they ever witnessed the $10,000 checks Hussein gives out to the families of suicide bombers who blow themselves up and kill innocent Israeli citizens? Is that not terrorism? Is Osama bin Laden not driven by his hatred for Israel and the United States infidel that supports Israel. Of course, so as not to offend our Arab friends, we’re not supposed to talk too loudly about the terrorists who kill Israelis. That’s a different type of terrorism because it’s only killing Jews, who many in that region hate, and if we talk too loudly about it some Arab nations may not want to sanction our war against Iraq.

Let’s not forget who Saddam Hussein is: a former hit man in Iraqi politics before he managed to murder all the opposition that stood in his way of grabbing hold of power as dictator. He waged a 10-year war against Iran in which he generously used his arsenal of chemical weapons, then he used them against his own people, the Kurds, in an uprising. He has killed somewhere in the vicinity of half a million people. He hates the United States with a vengeance, and he still possesses biological weapons like anthrax and possibly smallpox. He will likely use those weapons against us the moment he figures out a way, and the most obvious way is to hook up with some terrorists who hate America just as much as Hussein does.

We live in some very dangerous times folks. America may be the world’s only superpower when it comes to conventional and nuclear weapons, but chemical and biological weapons are the poor man’s weapons of mass destruction. It is for good reason that biological weapons like anthrax and smallpox are referred to as “the poor man’s atom bomb.” In the hands of terrorists, weapons like these could decimate parts of America.

Consider the following simulation of a terrorist attack using a biological weapon. It was conducted in June 2001, three months before the terrorist attacks that toppled the World Trade Centers in New York. The simulation took place at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, and participating institutions included the John Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Oklahoma National Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism, and the Analytic Services Institute for Homeland Security. Five senior journalists who worked for major news organizations participated in mock news briefings, and a number of other participants played various key government positions ranging from the Director of Central Intelligence to key Government health advisors. Fifty people connected with U.S. bioterrorism policy preparedness observed the exercise. The goal was to increase awareness among Government officials of the danger of such an attack, and to examine the decision challenges the highest levels of Government would face if confronted with a biological attack.

The name of the simulation was Dark Winter, and the scenario included a covert terrorist attack using smallpox against three American cities: Oklahoma City, Philadelphia, and Atlanta. The ultimate aim was to improve strategies of response. Smallpox was chosen as the disease because historically it has been the most feared and deadly of diseases, and it was the most likely choice of terrorists.

I’ll cut to the chase with the results of the exercise: Although the exercise lasted only two days, it simulated a time span of seven weeks. Within that time, one million Americans were dead of smallpox and the disease had spread to 25 states and 13 foreign countries. The biological attack succeeded, just as the WTC attacks would succeed three months later. The smallpox epidemic it started got out of control, panic had spread across America, interrupting vital services such as food deliveries to supermarkets. Hospitals were overwhelmed, there was rioting in many cities, and people had begun mass migrations from cities to flee the epidemic.

Here is the last scene of the simulation:

Finally, a printed message is handed to all members of the National Security Council. It states that the New York Times, Washington Post, and USA Today have received anonymous letters demanding the U.S. withdraw its forces from the Persian Gulf and Saudi Arabia. The letter claims responsibility for the smallpox attack and contains a generic fingerprint of the smallpox strain matching the fingerprint of the strain causing the current epidemic. Unless the U.S. forces withdraw in one week, it warns of renewed attacks using smallpox, anthrax, and plague.

At the time, the results of the simulation were widely reported in the media as shocking evidence that the nation is not fully prepared against a terrorist biological attack. Bush subsequently ordered production of enough smallpox vaccine for every person in the country, and he ordered the vaccination of the military and some civilian medical personnel, which is now underway.

The weapon of the simulation happened to be smallpox, but it could have been anthrax, stocks of which Hussein is known to possess because previous UN inspections uncovered them. What if such an attack really does occur in the future because we fail to disarm Hussein now and he later manages to funnel some of his anthrax to a terrorist group which in turn funnels it to sleeper cells in the United States? Or what if the U.S. is actually attacked with smallpox? A German newspaper Monday claimed Hussein does have smallpox and accused the German government of keeping the information from the German people.

Why wait for that possibility to take place! We have a chance now to see that such an attack doesn’t happen by taking out Hussein now, before he develops even more WMD such as a nuclear bomb. And when we’re done with Iraq, we should go after countries like Iran which actively sponsors terrorism, countries like North Korea which sells weapons to terrorists, and anyone else who cooperates with terrorists and threatens America. I thought George Bush had it about right after Sept. 11: “You are either with us or you are with the terrorists!”

This War Against Terrorists is not going to be an easy one. There are a lot of people and a lot of countries involved. We’ve got to take them down one by one, and we should ignore the French and Germans. They do represent “old Europe” just as Defesne Secretary Rumsfeld said. Not only are they shells of their former status as mighty European states, but they have sunk into the decay and inefficiency that all socialist regimes eventually sink into.

And just as there are obvious and simple reasons why we should wage war against Iraq, there are obvious and simple reasons why old Europe and many third world countries do not support us: simple jealousy and envy are the main ones.

They are jealous of America’s preeminence in the world and they are envious of the fact that we are not just the strongest nation in the world, but are probably stronger than all other nations combined. Some say America is as strong as the Roman Empire of centuries ago. Don’t fool yourself. We are much stronger than Rome ever dreamed of being. Our strength comes from our democratic and capitalist institutions, and it comes with the responsibility to rid the world of dictators and countries that are bent on terrorism and America’s destruction.

-- Dave Duffy

http://www.backwoodshome.com/columns/duffy030219.html


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PostPosted: 25 Apr 2003, 19:08 
Welcome aboard Everybee.

"If they mean to have a war, let it begin here." Captain John Parker, Battle of Lexington.


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PostPosted: 28 Apr 2003, 16:36 
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Joined: 10 Mar 2003, 14:49
Posts: 426
[quote]

Why America should wage war against Iraq and ignore “Old Europe”
By Dave Duffy

Smallpox was chosen as the disease because historically it has been the most feared and deadly of diseases, and it was the most likely choice of terrorists.

I’ll cut to the chase with the results of the exercise: Although the exercise lasted only two days, it simulated a time span of seven weeks. -------

I bet the author of this article didn't do much research. You have a 3-4 day window to be vaccinated against smallpox. Then they use the ring vaccination to contain it. It happened in NYC in 47 or 48. Smallpox was eliminated by 1980 in the world by ring vaccinations.

If you don't trust my little tidbit. I suggest you see how many first responders have taken smallpox vaccinations. Well under 5% or less. The medical types did their research.

We need a well funded Public Health system to detect and contain any outbreak. Such as the current SARS pandemic nearly.

Jack


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PostPosted: 01 May 2003, 11:36 
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Joined: 25 Apr 2003, 18:28
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Mission in Kashmir
By Janaki Kremmer
SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES

In a place where more than 50,000 people have been killed in the name of God, it could be assumed that religion is a dangerous word. But for 20-year-old Akbar Ahmad, who has seen violence between Hindus and Muslims in Kashmir for most of his life, the answer lies very much in the love of God — or, more specifically, in the love of Jesus Christ. "The new Christian groups coming into Kashmir teach us love and try to understand our problems. They also try to help very poor people in Kashmir. They do not talk about fighting or killing. This is a big change for us," says Mr. Ahmad, who is among a breed of young people looking toward the tide of evangelists in Kashmir as a beacon of hope. Organizations like the Florida-based Campus Crusade for Christ and the Missouri-based Assemblies of God have been establishing a presence in the valley for 10 years. Most work through local representatives. They bring schoolbooks, medicines, self-help programs and, most of all, opportunity. "In the past, most of us had only two choices: Either join the Muslim militancy and take up the gun or leave the state to find work somewhere else," Mr. Ahmad says. "But now, I attend discussions with the Christian priests about our family problems and they educate us for free and soon they have promised me work and an allowance," says Mr. Ahmad, who is happy that someone at last is taking an interest in the welfare of the ordinary folk.
Most of the Christian groups restrict their work among the rural poor and areas bordering Srinagar, a city of about 750,000 people. One of the Christian workers is Ramesh Landge, founder of the Cooperative Outreach of India, a Christian nongovernmental organization based in New Delhi that receives partial funding from the Tennessee-based Germantown Baptist Church. Mr. Landge has distributed 15 sewing machines among young women in a small leper colony in Kashmir. "Nobody else will talk to the leper families — they are outside the society. So we try and create jobs for them," Mr. Landge says. "These young women, many of them who are the children of parents with leprosy but are perfectly healthy themselves, now sew clothes for schoolchildren in the area," says Mr. Landge, who has been going to the valley since 1993 and believes the Christian groups can do a lot more to help the people of Kashmir. While preaching the Gospel may bring peace to some minds, it also may bring more bloodshed. Claim to the verdant valley has been a matter of dispute between India and Pakistan since the British partitioning of the subcontinent in 1947. The two nuclear-armed neighbors have fought three wars — two over Kashmir. Every summer, it is said, hundreds of armed Muslim militants sneak across the border from Pakistan's "jihadi" training camps to foment trouble in the valley. "The militants would like to wipe out any people in the state who are not Islamic," says Kuldip Nayar, a senior political analyst based in New Delhi. Last month, 24 Hindus, including women and children, were killed in Kashmir, supposedly at the hands of Muslim militants. While most of the violence has been perpetrated by Hindus and Muslims on each other, the rise of Christianity could add another dimension. "The local Muslims in Kashmir have traditionally been a liberal lot — but in recent times it would be fair to say that factions have developed that would be fearful of another religion gaining ground," says retired Air Commodore Prashant Dikshit, who is deputy director of the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies. Local Christians like Pastor Leslie Richards have become increasingly concerned about the presence of the evangelists, who they believe are more interested in conversions to Christianity than social work. Mr. Richards says local Muslims are being bribed — given cash if they agree to convert. "These types of conversions are not good for the local Christians. ... The converts here do it for monetary reasons," Mr. Richards told the Indian Express newspaper. The quiet local Christian community, which accounts for less than 1 percent of the state's total population of 10 million people, is wary of drawing attention. Unofficial reports say that more than 10,000 people have converted to Christianity in Kashmir since 1990. "There are more Christians in Kashmir than on the record," Premi Gergan, a prominent Christian in Kashmir, told Christianity Today in an article published last year on its Web site, www.christianitytoday.com. "The number goes into the thousands in the rural areas. We don't want to advertise. It has serious repercussions." The Rev. Chander Mani Khanna, head of the All Saints Church, one of the oldest churches in Srinagar and part of the Anglican Church of North India, has a different take on the issue. "It would be a huge step for these young people to convert, and most of them are more interested in talking about their problems than in conversion," says Mr. Khanna, who has been counseling young people in Kashmir and has converted only one person in 12 months. "This idea of mass conversions taking place in the state is totally false." However, Mr. Khanna says, the number of young Muslims attending his church services has more than doubled in the last year. Christian missionaries have had more to fear from right-wing Hindu groups from the upper castes of society who are opposed to the conversions of lower-caste Hindus and other disenfranchised groups trying to escape their place in Indian society. In 1999, Hindu extremists burned alive Australian missionary Graham Staines, along with his two young sons. Mr. Staines was accused of converting the tribal people of the northeastern state of Orissa. But officials estimate that only 2.18 percent of the total Indian population is Christian and the figure is declining with every census. "It's laughable to say that Christian groups today pose any kind of threat to the Hindu establishment," says the Rev. Dominic Emmanuel, Public Affairs spokesman for the Catholic Bishops Conference of India. "But missionaries always try to fulfill a vacuum, and if there is a need in Kashmir then they will surely be expected to go there," says Father Emmanuel. "It's their duty."

http://www.washtimes.com/culture/20030501-22306902.htm


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