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Why is this on topic for this forum? Face it, even if the next terrorist
action is carried out with trained hamsters marching down 42 ND street with little explosive backpacks, shutting down general aviation will be a centerpiece of the response. Those of us in aviation have followed the security situation more closely than most so we know that Al Qaeda can pretty much attack at will. The TFR' s, the chain link fences installed around rural airports, the 2% of shipping containers inspected, may have lengthened the terrorist planning sessions by a couple hours but the nation is a colander. Plugging up a dozen holes hasn' t changed the situation a bit. The timing of the next attack can be predicted by figuring out what Al Qaeda would want to achieve at this point. If being stranded away from home or otherwise losing the use of your airplane would be a problem, you should give this some thought in the same way you might look at the tropical weather patterns before planning a late summer flight to the east coast. One of the very few things that our intelligence (is that the right word?) apparatus has gotten right is the idea that the election is the big, fat, juicy target. The ship of state forges on with its great inertia making it virtually immune to outside influences. Once every four years however, the wheel is connected directly to a big flapping sail that can be yanked either way by the gusts of public opinion and fear. Public opinion and fear is what terrorism is all about. It's an opportunity not to be missed. If Al Qaeda wants to influence the election, which way are they going to cast their "vote"? Important question if you are planning a GA trip around the time of either convention. Before giving it some more thought, I said, "The republican convention, of course." All the leadership that conceived and carried out the Iraq war gathered in the most symbolic city and also the one that by geography and demographics is the easiest in which to mount an attack. Who could resist? On the other hand Bush and his administration have made the most basic and fundamental error in the war on terror. It's the same mistake we made in Vietnam and that the British made in the revolution. It's best illustrated by the Israeli struggle with the suicide bombers. Israel thinks that the struggle is one of whether they can blow up enough safe houses and attack enough Hamas leaders from the air to force the Palestinians to stop. Hamas knows that the purpose of the suicide bombing is to get Israel to attack safe houses and shoot at cars with helicopters so they can build the kind of society in which martyrdom is taught as part of the first grade curriculum. So far, they are winning. The purpose of Al Qaeda is not primarily to influence U.S. or world opinion or actions. They are taking a much longer view. Their object is to influence the hearts and minds inside the Muslim world so that their jihad becomes the kind of irresistible tidal wave of history that took out communism. I do not question Bush's resolve, toughness, integrity, or patriotism but he is repeating one of history's oldest mistakes. I just heard a reporter who has been in close contact with the resistance in Iran since the beginning. Thousands of former Sadam toughs who, a year ago, were leading lives about as secular as street hoods in any nation have now given up drinking, smoking, and become devout and fanatic Muslims dedicated to the Bin Laden cause. As even people in the Bush administration have said, we are creating terrorists far faster than we are killing them. We were bailing the boat with a thimble and then we put a two foot hole in it. If Bin Laden were an all powerful puppet master who could direct events precisely, he could not have done better than to create the Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, gang. The Viet Cong were overjoyed when Nixon began bombing the north. They knew that the war would be won by transporting disassembled artillery pieces by bike and foot along jungle trails and that a populous whose homes were being bombed would turn to that task with much greater will. History repeats itself. If Al Qaeda thinks it can influence the outcome of the election, I'm sure they will strive to keep Bush in office. How Al Qaeda will attempt to support Bush I'm not sure. Bin Laden is clearly a student of history though and knows that a panicked electorate will be unlikely to switch to a new leader in a crisis. An early attack would also leave time for investigation and recrimination that could lead to a desire for change. The democratic convention is too early. I'll fly with little worry this month. The republican convention is also early but they might feel that this is outweighed by the effect on their own troops and undecided potential jihad members of staging a spectacular attack on the perceived enemy. I wouldn't lay bets on this one. Both during the republican convention and the last half of October, I'm going to try and fly so that the ATC call to land immediately will leave me and my plane at a convenient airport. -- Roger Long |
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You make several good points, Roger -- but I didn't seen any viable
alternatives in your post. If we aren't to fight back, for fear of creating more terrorists, what are we to do? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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![]() Very good points all. To answer Jay's question, we hit them with a resolve never before seen in war. Islam needs to be beaten back into the cave it slithered out of and kept there for the next 10,000 years. Islam is the enemy and we are in a war for civilization. Make no mistake about that. This war is a test of will. Theirs against ours. So far we're running it like a 5th Avenue PR campaign and they're running it like it should be run. We're applying Western values to this fight and that is the biggest mistake of all. We try to talk things out, we try to reason. Those tactics will not work this time. We have to fight them on their own terms. No quarter. No mercy. They all die. Anything less than total commitment is capitulation. Flame away boys and girls. It's the only way and in your heart of hearts you know it. BillC "Roger Long" wrote in message ... Why is this on topic for this forum? Face it, even if the next terrorist action is carried out with trained hamsters marching down 42 ND street with little explosive backpacks, shutting down general aviation will be a centerpiece of the response. and so on... You make several good points, Roger -- but I didn't seen any viable alternatives in your post. If we aren't to fight back, for fear of creating more terrorists, what are we to do? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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There are a whole bunch of faulty assumptions here, beginning with the idea
that we lost the war in Vietnam. At worst, it was a push, but we did achieve the primary goal of halting the spread of communism in Asia. Ultimately, Vietnam demonstrated the abject failure of communism and should be seen as one of the events that led to the collapse of communism in Russia and Europe. The invasion of Iraq has accomplished similar geo-political goals. The Findlandization of such countries as Iran and Libya has been evident. The thing we must do is stop allowing terrorists to control our media. The beheading of a few hostages has absolutely no military consequence, for example, but the tremendous publicity gained by these actions has inspired thousands of others. These people want only one thing: the complete destruction of all infidels. The thing that people are going to have to understand is that it is possible to lose this war and they should understand the consequences. Terrorists now control Spain. Spain will do whatever the terrorists want; all they have to do is make a few threats or blow up a train. We are in danger of losing the Philippines. If we allow the terrorists to gain control of this country then we are doomed. You are right when you say the terrorists are taking a long view. Their ultimate goal is to create fundamentalist Islamic states in every country in the world. But refusing to fight back, refusing to destroy them wherever they are found, refusing to use every weapon and measure at our disposal: that is the way to lose this war. The terrorists and their sympathizers must be made to understand that one of the costs of continuing this war will be the end of Islam as they know it. They must understand that the media will no longer do their dirty work for them. Their shrines and holy places can no longer remain inviolable. Their religious leaders can no longer be allowed to maintain private armies. Countries that allow the transit of fighters should expect a nuclear response. Those who raise money for terrorist organizations and allow their mosques to be used as forums for recruiting terrorists should die and their mosques should be leveled, no matter where in the world those mosques are. Moslems in the United States should understand that the consequences of shielding terrorists in their midst and apologizing for them will result in their extermination. They cannot continue to advocate the violent overthrow of democracy and expect democratic protections. It is time to take this threat seriously and stop using it as a political football or as an arena for judicial grandstanding. So far I have seen absolutely no sign that either party is willing to do that. |
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It's a war for civilization all right but the enemy is no more Islam than
Timothy McVeigh was a Christian patriot. This situation is only going to be resolved when the societies that produce the terrorists change so that there are no longer large numbers if the disaffected that see terror and fundamentalism as the only path. These are Islamic societies and nothing short of sterilizing the ground with nuclear bombs is going to change that. Terrorism is as abhorrent to true Islam as it is to Christianity. Unless we are prepared to kill millions to eliminate thousands of terrorists we will not solve this problem until the Islamic societies become our allies in the struggle. Your kind of thinking, and just about everything our government is doing, works directly against this. The distortions of culture, society, and government in the mideast that lead to this are largely of our (the West's) doing. The very borders of the nations were established by Britain and other powers of the time without regard to ethnic borders that would create stable nations. We threw the economies and cultures completely out of whack with oil money and tolerated and supported brutal dictatorships that would keep the oil flowing. Bin Laden and Sadam themselves are largely creations of the CIA supported struggle against Russia in Afghanistan and our meddling in the Iran / Iraq war. We need to accept that our decades of mistakes and meddling have created a situation in which terrorism is as inevitable as hurricanes. We don't go into a tizzy of breast beating, changing of society, and restriction of civil liberties when a hurricane does millions of dollars in damage and kills many. Hell, we even give the rich folks on the barrier beaches money to rebuild (until recently). Hurricanes and earthquakes are not manhood and virility challenges to our leaders so everyone shrugs and life goes on. Israel has proved that terrorism can not be eliminated by force even within a small geographic area where some of the toughest people in the world have enormous control and decades of understanding the situation on the ground and the culture they are dealing with. What chance do we have over a huge area at the end of a long logistical trail when the Pentagon can't even find enough translators? This is now an intractable and long term problem that is going to have to be managed. The solution will take decades and patience. Thinking of terrorism as something that has to be eliminated before the next election or we'll need a new president will make true solutions impossible to pursue or implement. Nothing constructive will happen until Islamic societies start to function properly in the modern world, leadership in them is supported by the population at large, and they see themselves as allies with us in the struggle against terror. Everything being done now is probably being cheered by Bin Laden. It's much like trying to glide to a landing spot after an engine out. Pull back on the yoke and you will land shorter or even stall and crash. Right now, all the passengers are screaming, "Pull up, pull up!" and big burly fellows are struggling to the front to try and grab the yoke to pull it back further. Kerry isn't going to do any better unless he can become the kind of leader who can calm the passengers and regain control. I don't have a lot of confidence that he can do that but I'd rather not have a pilot in this situation who clearly thinks that how hard he pulls back on the yoke is the test of his leadership. -- Roger Long |
#6
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Interesting comments. I saw just a couple of things I thought I might
question. On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 07:02:27 -0700, C J Campbell wrote: disposal: that is the way to lose this war. The terrorists and their sympathizers must be made to understand that one of the costs of continuing this war will be the end of Islam as they know it. Does this mean you consider the war to be a holy war? A war of US/Christians vs Fundimental/Islam? They cannot continue to advocate the violent overthrow of democracy and expect democratic protections. Well, in the US, they are specifically granted that freedom. I'm not saying, this is what they envisioned, just the same, they did foresee the possible need of our governmet being overthrown. Thusly, advocating is specifically protected, here in the states, under our Constitution. Like it or not, that's where we stand. Greg |
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 13:02:31 +0000, Jay Honeck wrote:
You make several good points, Roger -- but I didn't seen any viable alternatives in your post. If we aren't to fight back, for fear of creating more terrorists, what are we to do? Excellent question. Most experts agree that one of the biggest efforts we should be making is to not only continue to rebuild, but most importantly, start social reform programs. We need to be spending money educating the uneducated. Their most powerful weapon is ignornance. It's the same weapon that Christian (e.g. Catholic) churches used for hundreds of years. Breed ignorant, uneducated masses and they are yours to control. Education on world events, religion, world economy, domocracy and politics are the weapons which will win the long-war. This is THE weapon and THE long-view that the fundimentalist are using. It needs to be our weapon too. Greg |
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In article ,
"BillC85" wrote: To answer Jay's question, we hit them with a resolve never before seen in war. Islam needs to be beaten back into the cave it slithered out of and kept there for the next 10,000 years. Islam is the enemy and we are in a war for civilization. Make no mistake about that. We're applying Western values to this fight and that is the biggest mistake of all. We try to talk things out, we try to reason. Those tactics will not work this time. We have to fight them on their own terms. No quarter. No mercy. They all die. Anything less than total commitment is capitulation. Flame away boys and girls. It's the only way and in your heart of hearts you know it. No, sorry, I don't -- it's absolutely not "the only way". We do have to fight "them" (the bad guys), and do it resolutely, no question about it. But we also have to educate and persuade and empower the good guys -- the decent people -- who are a majority in Islamic lands every bit as much as in Christian or whatever lands. Failing to do that -- focusing only on "no quarter, no mercy", abandoning our own Western values -- will in fact accomplish exactly the opposite, and drive the good guys in the Islamic world the other way. Christianity at one time, some centuries ago, was nearly as bad as fundamentalist Islam is today (and so are some of our Christian and Jewish zealots today). The Western world has progressed a long way beyond that; Islam and the Arab world can also. |
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Jay,
You'll read my other response I'm sure. Let me be clear about one thing. I supported the invasion of Iraq and still do. It needed to be done. The ugly thing is that we do not do things like that other places they are needed because there is no oil there. The issue is how it was done. The purpose of the invasion was what came after we had control. That part of it has got to be the most massively mishandled, unplanned, and screwed up undertaking in human history. Instead of being recognized as just a speed bump on the way to the real task, the invasion was viewed as the main event. It was like sending paratroopers out of a plane without ammunition, food, or a plan. The scale of what needed to be done post-invasion is something that the U.S. could never do on its own without significantly screwing up the economy. Just the fact of our trying to do it alone doomed it politically. Doing it alone became a test of Bush proving his cowboy toughness. Real men don't ask for help. There was no compelling reason to invade Iraq last year or before the next election other than to influence domestic opinion. Bush et al are like an IFR pilot who needed to make an IFR flight. He felt that he had to make the flight on time in order to impress his boss (the voters). There wasn't time to do a preflight, the radios were acting up, and the vacuum system was erratic. Now he's up in the murk with no communications and partial panel. The purposes of the flight are not the issue. Whether the pilot is a fool for not accommodating the schedule to the realities and conducting the flight responsibly is. Look at the international aspect of terror, the camps spread all over the world, the drug connections, the 911 hijackers living in Germany. This is something that can only be fought by a world united against it and that has to include constructive change in the Islamic nations. Sure, we want it to go away right now but nothing is going to work until that unity of purpose is achieved. Sometimes you have to just accept that you can't make progress on your objective until you have first created the means to do so. Bush skipped that step. I was in Europe the Summer before 911. Everyone was complaining that Bush was doing more to isolate the US than any president since before WWII. 911 came along after we had ****ed off just about every friend we ever had. Iraq then became a giant wedge pounded into the gap. The only way the US can win this fight alone it to seal our borders, eliminate GA and everything similar to it, register and control the movements of all citizens, monitor all mail and other communication, stop import of most goods, and imprison anyone who appears vaguely different. Vaporizing the Mideast would also work but the fallout would blow around and poison us as well. Many things in life are hard and require the patience and wisdom to endure problems while you develop the means to solve them. Bush is a guy who always had the way made easy for him and always took the easy way out. Ordering invasions is easy and it's easy to look tough when you pick up the phone. Faced with probably the biggest test a president has faced since Lincoln, Bush skipped right to the easy part and probably blew our chance to get this back on track for generations. I hope GA and a lot of other great and noble things in our society and the world will survive what is to come. -- Roger Long |
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Hmm, last I checked the guys who watched the last choppers leave were
running the place. Ho Chi Minn was actually a nationalist who said that his first choice would have been to become a client of the US to help his country become a bulwark against Chinese expansion. He looked too much like a communist to us so we spurned him and chased him into taking the next best offer. Sure, we may have checked Russia on several fronts, including Afghanistan, but we did it in a way that left us with the current mess and the very real danger of losing the countries you mention to an even more difficult and intractable enemy. I'm not saying that we shouldn't fight but that we should recognize that you can't build a house with just a hammer. We need to fight and work in a way that achieves what we want. You are absolutely right about one thing though. If we don't get control of our media we won't have the national will to keep on making the mistakes we are making now. Don't worry, I'm sure Ashcroft is working on that and it will get taken care of after the election (unless the tough guys lose). -- Roger Long |
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