Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Words we've been waiting to hear.

An Arab apologizes for 9/11. Not for himself, of course, but for the culture that spawned it, with a short summary of why.

I trust that they will not be propogated. After all, they're not PC. But they're true.

Concerning conspiracy theories

Back in, I think, Winter of 2004-5 Popular Mechanics published an edition specifically to debunk 9/11 myths. They were pretty thorough, and nailed a few that I hadn't even heard of. Naturally, the conspiratorial idiots who think these things up have accused the editor in question of being a pawn of the conspiracy.

A fellow soldier in MI pointed me towards Loose Change once a few months ago. I pointed him to a collection of the points made in that article.

I won.

It makes me sad that these people have as much say-so in the constitution of our government as I do.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Mandatory 9/11 post


From Cox and Forkum.

There was a memorial today on post that I didn't attend because I was passed out at home, sick and medicated. But that's ok with me... I don't need a memorial. As I told the wife the other day when she was talking about attending, every time we slaughter another one of those terrorist bastards is little memorial to me.

Saturday, September 09, 2006

It's about time

"Armed with nuclear weapons," Bush said, Islamic extremists "would blackmail the free world, and spread their ideologies of hate, and raise a mortal threat to the American people. If we allow them to do this, if we retreat from Iraq, if we don't uphold our duty to support those who are desirous to live in liberty, 50 years from now history will look back on our time with unforgiving clarity, and demand to know why we did not act. I'm not going to allow this to happen - and no future American president can allow it either."


Finally, some clear words with backbone in them. (unfortunately, though unsurprisingly, not from Europe) But is this a warning or a starting shot? I think the former.

Linked from Daily Briefing on Iran.

Friday, September 08, 2006

The United Nations and the Iraq War

Some time ago I promised to delve into and illuminate some of the reasons that it was a good idea for the US to invade Iraq. Since I'm still on vacation for a couple of days, I figured I'd start that up though it won't be finished. I still have other things I have to do also. As I was making a list of things to talk about, I suddenly became inspired to expound on the topic of the United Nations. So I've posted this piece first. It's not quite up to professional standards, as I've written it all at one sitting from what is in my head right now, but it's reasonably clear and I've sprinkled it with references when I could find relevant ones.


The Iraqi adventure has proven the abject uselessness of the United Nations as an international security agent.

After fourteen UN resolutions against Saddam’s defiant Iraq the UN did something bold and innovative to compel obedience… absolutely nothing. In addition to doing nothing, the international sanctions (and attached Oil for Food program) that were supposed to compel Iraq into doing something were subverted into private financial projects (i.e. bribery and embezzlement) by a variety of people ranging from the UN leadership to private business interests to members of governments, all the while secretly enriching Saddam Hussein and thereby defeating the entire purpose of the sanctions. On top of this, when the US and Britain proposed in 2002 to doing something to actually enforce the UN resolutions (read: threaten and perhaps use force), many of the other members did their utmost to block the proposed actions, including even the threat of force. (without the threat of force, why would Iraq agree to anything?)

While people (usually on the left) talk about the Iraq war as being the private project of President Bush and his minion, Tony Blair, in violation of international laws left and right, not to mention human decency, it has probably been the greatest single blow for a peaceful international order since the end of the Cold War. Or at least, it would have been were so many people not so doggedly, irrationally set against it. Think about it; for the first time since Korea (I specifically leave out Gulf War I, because if its intimate connection to Gulf War II; they may as well be two phases of the same conflict and perhaps even share a name) rogue international behavior in violation of UN resolutions (some of which explicitly threaten the use of force, although in diplo-speak, so typical laymen miss the point) would be met with real consequences. One of the reasons that the UN is weak is because the nations that it was designed to control, the Irans and North Koreas and Iraqs of the world, don’t listen to it. Again, why should they? No one will make them. The UN might, maybe, if the French and Russians and Chinese are in the mood to lose potential sales, pass economic sanctions which will be ignored or subverted after a few years, if not revoked outright because of ‘humanitarian reasons.’ (That was a constant debate in the UN throughout the 90s) But the use of force? That’s so… uncivilized. The same scenario can be extended to Iran and its nuclear ambitions, to genocide in Darfur and Rwanda and Serbia, et cetera. All pressing problems that the UN should, theoretically, counter. All terrible tragedies that instead require(d) private intervention because the Security Council couldn't/can't bring themselves to act. Finally, even private intervention on behalf of the UN as in 2003 (as I mentioned, previous resolutions that Iraq had violated promised the use of force) was condemned because (hah) it went around specific UN authority. So weakness (ahem, sophistication) breeds impotence, (endless ineffectual diplomacy) as you might expect

What the diplomatic bruhah before the Iraq invasion showed about the UN was that the UN as an institution absolutely lacked the means and collective will to enforce itself on the international community and, because of that, there's really nothing anyone can do about it when third party powers like the US and UK decide to act instead. France's vaunted and much abused (and apparently paid for, if you followed the above links) veto power in the UNSC proved utterly worthless in the end, because it exists and they threatened it on the premise that no one would dare to operate outside the explicit (rather than implied, as the US/UK did) blessings of the UN. But someone dared, and suddenly the big stick was broken. What Protestants care about being ex-communicated, after all?

What does this demonstration of impotence mean for the US? Well first of all no one, even foreign powers, can expect the UN to be a constraint against an unwilling United States in the future for the same reason that it hasn't been a constraint against any other power disinclined to listen to it; no one will make us. If the rules don't work for us, we will change (or ignore) the rules. Future international political battles will take place where they belong; behind closed doors.

I can already hear people whining about how that makes the US a 'unilateral' rogue nation. Well, they're right, sort of. If it is in our national interest to ignore 'the rules' then we will do so, as we have in the past. The thing is, so will everyone else. France can land troops in a west African nation or ruthlessly slaughter people in Algeria without asking permission, the Russians can storm and burn Chechnyan cities and extort Ukraine with its energy resources without going through international processes, the Chinese can threaten to (or actually) invade its neighbors like Tibet and Vietnam and Taiwan without the blessings of the UN... why can't the US topple an enemy power who violated a cease-fire by firing on our forces and broke the WMD clauses, attempted to assassinate a US President, and was a chief supporter of international terrorism? (any one of which is a cassus belli) Why aren't these other (sitting UN Security Council member) powers condemned? Why are THEY condemning us, the damned hypocrites? *shrugs* Because we're the US. Most everyone hates us. Those who don't hate us envy us. We're the biggest, brightest target on the international battlefield, which is why peace activists can, with a straight face and clear conscience, call us a terrorist nation and march in protests alongside Stalinist communists (yes, that happened in 2003. Several times) instead of against people like the Iranians, the Sudanese, Hamas, and so forth.

The launching of the invasion also demonstrated that UN resolutions might actually be carried out by a member nation independent of a specific UNSC "go" date. In its most basic terms, the UN authorized the use of force against Iraq in 1991, the use of force was suspended upon the signing of a cease-fire, the cease-fire was violated, and hostilities resumed, ending in the destruction of the Iraqi government. Therefore, the US and UK carried out the final execution of motions begun twelve years earlier. Hmm; UN Resolutions can be dangerous after all. Sure they may sit there for a decade or so, but sooner or later a member state can suddenly decide to enforce it and lo and behold they have (theoretically) executed the will of the UN body. The idea that a UN resolution would actually be enforced and driven to its conclusion is kind of a shocker; I suspect that there will therefore be fewer of them in the future, and more carefully worded. Given the lowest common denominator requirements in effect already, I expect a decrease in the number and even theoretical potency of UNSC Resolutions. The UN will slowly remove itself from any interference in international power politics beyond the symbolic level because its members fear that Resolutions might be used against them in the future by crazy unilateralists. Like America, for instance.

So it seems that the Iraq war has put a final nail into the relevancy of the United Nations to international politics. Not only is it too weak institutionally to compel behavior of any kind, but because nations can use its declarations as a sort of diplomatic legitimacy shield outside the explicit will of the decision-making body it will stop even trying to influence international politics in meaningful (at least in remotely controversial) ways.

As an American nationalist, I fervently hope this is true. I see the UN as a corrupt, ineffectual, anti-American country club which, at odds with all logic and morality, grants legitimacy and power to the most odious regimes on earth, within our borders and largely at our expense. And I would much rather see it weakened or disappeared than strengthened and intrusive.

Returned

I had no idea that a National Park site billed as a natural wonder full of wild animals could be so... commercialized. I went in with camp foods, trash bags, a firearm and two knives, a Leatherman, cold and wet weather gear, and so forth, since I figured we would be way out from civilization. Nah. Within 200 yards of our tent were three restaurants, a coffee/ice cream shop, a relaxation lounge for those who, you know, didn't want to get dirty, and a grocery/supply store. A little disappointing after I hauled all that shit up there.

Another surprise were the people. At least half of all the people I encountered there were foreigners of all sorts... Russian, German, British, Australian, Japanese... The rest of the (American/Canadian) folks looked like either the rugged outdoorsy types who do this kind of thing for kicks, (whom I expected to see) hippies, (seriously, who else brings a guitar and bongo drums along with their scruffy beards to a national park?) or upper class WASP types on vacation. A large percentage of the middle aged+ men (and there were quite a few) came along with a young, pretty girl. My wife ventured that they were of the mail order variety.

Got some nice pics of the park I figured I would share.

The whole park is in an extended valley so pretty much wherever you look is an image like this. The shade provided is nice when the weather is hot like it was on our trip.











Here we have a scenic river. It's quite low here, as you can judge by the prevalence of non-submerged river stones, but I understand that it's practically raging during spring and early summer from snowmelt.

This is a nice shot of Vernal Falls, which we climbed. And that climb was a bitch, especially since the wife and I decided to be all hard core and military and carry full ruck-loads on our backs that included meals, water, and emergency supplies. Something like an 833m climb, very steep. I'm happy that we made it, but it sure did hurt afterwards.






This is a shot of part of the granite stairwell we climbed to get to the top of the falls. It resembles something you'd find in Incan ruins in Peru, though mercifully at a lower altitude. It continues around the back side of that mountain on the right for quite a ways down, and on the left proceeds up to a near sheer cliff face and climbs up to the falls themselves.






A shot of the valley from the top of the falls. i.e. proof of victory over the damned stairway. That little band of winding water is the same one pictured above with all the river rocks showing, but much higher in elevation.















Atop the falls was a little pool between the runoffs and the falls proper labeled Emerald Pool where a number of people (including some attractive foreigners of some type or another... didn't recognize the language) brought swim suits along for a dip, which they very soon regretted. The water was quite cold.







A nice trip, though the drive was long and the experience vaguely disappointing because of 1) all the hype about Yosemite being marvelous, though I imagine it's better in the spring with more and larger waterfalls, and 2) the commercialization. $50 souvenir clothing and a beer store within spitting distance of your 'camp ground' does not a mystic natural experience make.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Vacation

I'm on leave for a week so the wife and I are taking off to Yosemite, since it's within driving distance of where I'm stationed right now. We'll be gone for a few days and hopefully I'll have some interesting pictures afterwards. Also hopefully, I won't have to kill any bears. I understand they're a problem in Yosemite. So I'm bringing a friend.




I like my SIG.

By the time I get back I might also have a book review. I'm currently reading : To Dare and To Conquer: Special Operations and the Destiny of Nations, from Achilles to Al Qaeda. So far, (I'm 3 chapters in) it's fascinating. The guy knows his stuff and is kind of funny. But I've noticed a trend. The most successful operations, the ones that did indeed alter history, save kingdoms, or break armies, were conducted with the utmost ruthlessness. I fear that such qualities are no longer allowed to US forces.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Worth visiting

Even if only for the humor. MEMRI TV collects clips of Middle Eastern TV (of various kinds) and translates them for English language public consumption. Sometimes you find some highly revealing things there. Sometimes, you just get a chuckle.

Warning: repeated visitation over a long period of time may cause depression, or Dawnfire-like thought processes.