Hi there, !
Today Sun 12/03/2006 Sat 12/02/2006 Fri 12/01/2006 Thu 11/30/2006 Wed 11/29/2006 Tue 11/28/2006 Mon 11/27/2006 Archives
Rantburg
532872 articles and 1859621 comments are archived on Rantburg.

Today: 86 articles and 475 comments as of 15:16.
Post a news link    Post your own article   
Area: WoT Background    Non-WoT    Opinion    Local News       
'Israel losing patience over truce violations'
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 1: WoT Operations
0 [2] 
6 00:00 crazyhorse [1] 
27 00:00 JosephMendiola [3] 
1 00:00 SpecOp35 [4] 
2 00:00 Penguin [3] 
1 00:00 Excalibur [1] 
6 00:00 gromgoru [5] 
7 00:00 xbalanke [1] 
6 00:00 anon1 [2] 
16 00:00 Glomose Elmeamble1591 [2] 
5 00:00 Anonymoose [2] 
0 [3] 
0 [2] 
0 [2] 
0 [2] 
1 00:00 Elmiling Flose7726 [1] 
2 00:00 USN, ret. [3] 
4 00:00 Icerigger [1] 
4 00:00 Johnnie Bartlett [1] 
1 00:00 Ebbolump Glomotle9608 [2] 
Page 2: WoT Background
11 00:00 Jan [4]
4 00:00 gorb [1]
5 00:00 Procopius2k [3]
0 [3]
3 00:00 gromgoru [7]
6 00:00 Icerigger [3]
44 00:00 Captain America [1]
1 00:00 Cyber Sarge [1]
5 00:00 Icerigger [3]
7 00:00 gromgoru [1]
8 00:00 Icerigger [5]
2 00:00 frozen al [2]
0 [1]
10 00:00 Zenster [1]
5 00:00 Shuns Uleating3851 [1]
0 [3]
0 [3]
3 00:00 Thrigum Hupeating7439 [7]
1 00:00 Seafarious [1]
3 00:00 Procopius2K [1]
10 00:00 A M Way [1]
2 00:00 Excalibur [1]
8 00:00 exJAG [1]
1 00:00 Icerigger [2]
5 00:00 gromgoru [3]
2 00:00 tu3031 [1]
0 [2]
3 00:00 SteveS [1]
3 00:00 JosephMendiola [1]
1 00:00 gromgoru [1]
Page 3: Non-WoT
1 00:00 Glenmore [1]
8 00:00 Icerigger [5]
7 00:00 Mark Z [1]
2 00:00 DoDo [1]
2 00:00 Icerigger [1]
9 00:00 Old Patriot [2]
2 00:00 Icerigger [2]
13 00:00 SteveS [3]
11 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [1]
15 00:00 Lancasters Over Dresden [5]
4 00:00 .com [1]
8 00:00 Elmert Crosh5077 [1]
0 [1]
4 00:00 Icerigger [1]
12 00:00 Besoeker [2]
6 00:00 Silentbrick [1]
Page 4: Opinion
4 00:00 OldSpook [4]
1 00:00 gromgoru [3]
0 [2]
4 00:00 trailing wife [2]
9 00:00 Icerigger [7]
2 00:00 .com [2]
11 00:00 BA [3]
3 00:00 Rex Mundi [1]
6 00:00 anonymous2u [1]
Page 5: Russia-Former Soviet Union
8 00:00 KBK [2]
8 00:00 crazyhorse [1]
12 00:00 KBK [2]
6 00:00 JosephMendiola [2]
3 00:00 Angomosh Omairt7236 [1]
7 00:00 trailing wife [1]
12 00:00 KBK [1]
4 00:00 Icerigger [1]
5 00:00 Capsu 78 [1]
3 00:00 Gluling Creager3798 [1]
21 00:00 USMC6743 [1]
Afghanistan
New Taliban Code for Terrorists
Sami Yousafzai and Urs Gehriger of Die Weltwoche recently met with a member of that hard core. In the border area between Afghanistan and Pakistan, they sat down to cups of green tea with Mullah Sabir. During the years of Taliban rule (1994-2001) Sabir, 40, was responsible for security along the border with Iran. Today he is governor of Ghazni Province (south of Kabul) and commander of 900 fighters.

What is your attitude towards NGOs which are building roads and digging wells to improve people's lives?

The organisations which have come here under the new administration only pretend to help the people. In reality they are part of the government. Whatever they may propose to build – bridges, clinics, schools – we will not tolerate their activities.
So they murder the Rachel Corries.
There have been nearly one hundred suicide bombings in Afghanistan since the beginning of this year. Have the Taliban lost their pride and their courage to fight the enemy in open combat?

With their combat planes and precision bombs, the enemy is far superior to us technologically. The suicide bombings are a tactic with which we drive the enemy to panic. Without this miracle weapon we would never accomplish our goal of re-conquering all of Afghanistan.

[The recently issued manual of rules does not deal with the phenomenon of suicide bombings, which is new to Afghanistan. The subject is treated in a separate 40-page document, in which suicide bombings are declared legitimate with the aid of citations from the Koran. Suicide bombers are described as "Omar's missiles," referring to Taliban leader Mullah Omar.]

Who wrote the new rule book?

I don't know exactly. Mullah Abdul Ali, our mufti responsible for religious questions, was certainly consulted. The new Layeha was approved by our supreme leader, Mullah Omar.

See the New Taliban Code for terrorists.
Posted by: Sneaze Shaiting3550 || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Drive the enemy to panic" - HHHHHMMMM, how is that when suicide bombers gener kill-injure more civilians = fellow Muslims, etal. than "enemy" soldiers!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 11/30/2006 0:33 Comments || Top||

#2  Without this miracle weapon we would never accomplish our goal of re-conquering all of Afghanistan

If there's any of you dumbf*cks left to rule I'm sure you'll enjoy the sympathy of your subjects.
Posted by: Howard UK || 11/30/2006 4:07 Comments || Top||

#3  I always wondered this is if Reporters can get to their senior members why cant our CIA/MI6?????
Posted by: Ebbolump Glomotle9608 || 11/30/2006 4:58 Comments || Top||

#4  Because the CIA is forbidden to pose as journalists.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 11/30/2006 6:21 Comments || Top||

#5  [i] In the border area between Afghanistan and Pakistan, they sat down to cups of green tea with Mullah Sabir. [/i]

Does this strike anyone else as the type of intro you would read in a pop music or celebrity sniffing rag?

"[i]People[/i] Magazine recently caught up with Al Qaeda on the set of their latest project..."
Posted by: JDB || 11/30/2006 9:06 Comments || Top||

#6  That is good because if the CIA could pose as journalists, before long the enemy would start killing journalists then nobody would get to find out anything.
Posted by: anon1 || 11/30/2006 9:07 Comments || Top||


Africa Horn
Six dead as three suicide car bombs explode outside Somali government base, official
Three suicide car bombers, among them a veiled woman, killed themselves and three companions at a police checkpoint outside Somalia's government base of Baidoa, a senior official and a police officer said Thursday.

"Three cars have arrived at government checkpoint and as the police tried to check them, they exploded," Deputy Defense Minister Salad Ali Jelle told The Associated Press. "The three drivers were killed on the spot and three others who were with them," the minister said by telephone. "We have captured three who were with them who have tried to flee. The dead include non-Somalis, they are al-Qaida supporters."

A female suicide bomber wearing a veil detonated herself in one of the vehicles, said a police officer on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. He said four civilians were taken to a Baidoa hospital.

Another policeman at the scene, Mohammed Ahmed Mohamud, told The AP the three captured men appeared African but not Somali. There have been numerous reports of foreign Islamic radicals coming to Somalia to join a holy war. No one claimed responsibility.

On Sept. 18. a suicide car bomber tried to kill President Abdullahi Yusuf. The president escaped unharmed; 11 people were killed in the explosion and a subsequent gunbattle, including Yusuf's younger brother. The transitional government blamed the Sept. 18 car bombing on extremists within the Islamic movement. The group denied it was behind the bombing and no one has claimed responsibility.
Associated Press Writer Mohamed Olad Hassan in Mogadishu contributed to this report.
I hope he's not a made-up person.
Ditto. P.S. to a5089: when posting, please edit out all the non-germane drivel that the Roooters reporters insist on sticking into every story. Thx, AoS.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 11/30/2006 13:10 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is the only tactic these people and the only answer is to destroy them and their ideology utterly.
Posted by: Excalibur || 11/30/2006 14:03 Comments || Top||


Sudan: Hudna with Southern Christians already over?
Fighting has broken out between the Sudanese army and the former southern rebels, the Sudan People's Liberation Army, the United Nations has said.

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said he was "deeply concerned" over clashes that flared in the southern town of Malakal on Monday and Tuesday. Non-essential UN and aid agency staff have been leaving Malakal.

The violence breaks a deal between Sudan's Arab north and black African south signed nearly two years ago. The BBC's Jonah Fisher, safely in Khartoum, says it is one of the most serious violations of that deal.

There were reports of heavy gunfire in Malakal, but no reliable word on casualties.

The violence started as clashes between southern troops and pro-Khartoum militia but quickly escalated. Forces from the national army and the former southern rebels, the SPLA, fought in the streets of Malakal. The situation had calmed by Wednesday, but the UN chief remained concerned over outbreak of violence.

In a statement, Mr Annan appealed to Sudan's national unity and the government of southern Sudan "to make all possible efforts to contain the situation".

Located on the banks of the Nile near Sudan's oilfields, Malakal is one of the tensest towns in the south. During 20 years of civil war, Khartoum armed numerous tribal militias in the area to enable it to begin extracting oil.

A final peace deal between the Arab north and black African south was signed in January 2005, but it has not been easy to get the militia to hand in their weapons.
You don't say.
Unlike the continuing conflict in Darfur, Sudan's north-south ceasefire has largely held. There are 10,000 UN peacekeepers deployed in southern Sudan at a cost of $1bn a year.
THIS IS THE KICKER WHERE THE UN COPs OUT AS USUAL - worthless scum that they are.
A spokeswoman said they had no mandate to intervene and that the UN was encouraging both sides to peacefully resolve the situation.
Posted by: 3dc || 11/30/2006 00:42 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sudan is a typical islamic failed state. This the the real face of islam. No one is going to do a thing about it least of all the UN or other muslims. Since this is the colonial powers problem they shouldn't get off the hook, not one bit at all. How about it Europe and the UK?
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 11/30/2006 2:10 Comments || Top||

#2  Sudan is a typical islamic failed state.

I dunno. They seem quite successful at being Islamic. They've certainly killed a lot of people who qualify as less holy than Arabs.
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 11/30/2006 7:27 Comments || Top||

#3  Look at it this way...there can be no famine if there are no mouths to feed. Therefore, this group is simply supporting Koffee's calls for assistance to alleviate starvation across the continent.
Posted by: SpecOp35 || 11/30/2006 10:23 Comments || Top||

#4  I sure hope that someone will send a Sergeant Whatisname to the Sudan People's Liberation Army.
Posted by: gromgoru || 11/30/2006 11:11 Comments || Top||

#5  Is Ethopia starting to feel surrounded?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 11/30/2006 11:14 Comments || Top||

#6  Looks like civil war might break out.
Posted by: wxjames || 11/30/2006 13:14 Comments || Top||

#7  What if you gave a hudna and nobody came?
Posted by: xbalanke || 11/30/2006 17:34 Comments || Top||


Africa North
10 terrorists killed and another arrested in Biskra and Batna
The army forces killed yesterday 10 terrorists and arrested another on the mountainous area near M’ziraa, Biskra, and Th’niat Elabed, Batna, in an armed fighting. The clash took place when the army forces were carrying out a combing operation, started a few days ago just after a terrorist attack in M’shunesh area. The raking operation was supervised by the ground forces’ General Commander, General Tafer, and the Commander of military zone IV, Bourefla Sherif Abderrazak, in addition to a number of military commanders from military zones IV and V. All human and logistic means were provided for the operation carried out to put terrorist groups out of harm.

The target is tens of groups, including foreign terrorist group members from Sahel African countries belonging to the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), sources told El Khabar. According to the same sources, the terrorists were besieged during the operation that ended by the killing of seven terrorists, on the mountains located near M’ziraa commune where another was arrested. The army forces, which started the operation from Batna, killed three terrorists in Th’niat Elabed at an armed fighting with the terrorist groups that tried to leave the area. Army forces are carrying on their manhunt against terrorists there.

The combing operation comes less than a week after three soldiers and two communal guards were killed in an ambush tended in the fifth military zone, in M’shunesh, located between Batna and Biskra. A number of terrorists have been killed and others arrested lately, and some hiding places have been destroyed in the raking operations in Bouira, Tizi-Ouzou, Jijel and Boumerdés, earlier this month. Several terrorist-supporting nets have been dismantled and firearms and war material discovered, then. Army forces have been besieging terrorist groups for more than a week, in El Aures mountains situated between Biskra and Batna, and others in the mountains located between Khenchela and Tebessa.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Morocco arrests imam for recruiting Iraq bombers
Moroccan police have arrested a Muslim prayer leader who is suspected of recruiting young men to be suicide bombers in the insurgency in Iraq, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

The imam, identified by police simply as Abdelilah according to Aujourd'hui Le Maroc newspaper, was arrested Monday in Tetouan, a city in northern Morocco near the Strait of Gibraltar. Abdelilah preached at a mosque in Mezouak, a vast slum on the city's outskirts, exhorting Moroccans to "fight the American-Zionist occupation in Iraq," the newspaper quoted police as saying.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  what other religion has their holy men asking/drooling for violence????!!!!
Posted by: Ebbolump Glomotle9608 || 11/30/2006 5:07 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
Bangladesh court denies militants' appeal
Six Muslim militants face execution within weeks for killing two judges in Bangladesh after the Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal against their sentences in a deadly bombing campaign case, an official said Wednesday. Execution dates for the six men were now likely to be fixed, barring last-minute appeals to the president for clemency. “The Supreme Court rejected the petitions seeking permission to appeal against a High Court judgement upholding the sentences,” Inspector General of Prisons Brigadier General Zakir Hossen told AFP. “The do not have any judicial process open to them now. The only option is to make a mercy petition to the president,” he added.

The convicts have seven days to petition the president. After that, they could be hanged within 28 days. Police say Shaikh Abdur Rahman, leader of the militant group Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), and his deputy Siddiqul Islam were the masterminds behind a string of blasts carried out as part of a campaign to impose Islamic law in the Muslim but secular country. The attacks began in August 2005 and targeted court, police and government buildings. At least 28 people including four suicide bombers died.

At the time of their sentencing, the men said they would not appeal. Four of them later lost their nerve changed their minds and the authorities treated letters by Rahman and Islam seeking to justify their actions as requests to appeal. The six men were sentenced to death by a lower court in May after being found guilty of conspiring to murder the two judges last November. A seventh accused is on the run and was convicted in his absence. Ministers said earlier they wanted to execute the men to show that Bangladesh would not tolerate crimes committed in the name of Islam.
Especially against Judges and Ministers.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Nice ginger beard.

Isn't dying your hair unIslamic?
Posted by: anon1 || 11/30/2006 9:08 Comments || Top||

#2  Any bets as to whether the executions ever get carried out, or if the gov't steps in to 'study' the situation?
Posted by: USN, ret. || 11/30/2006 14:23 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
FoxNews Breaking: F-18 crashes near Miramar Marine Base
Initial word is the pilot ejected.

Crash occurred near Miramar - San Diego, CA vicinity.

Details to follow...
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 15:47 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Confirmation (sort of) that pilot ejected. FoxNews showing short vid of smoking wreckage from a distance - news helicopters not allowed in airspace of Marine Station Miramar, of course.
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 16:00 Comments || Top||

#2 
Local radio station reports scanner traffic that pilot ejected safely and recovered.
Posted by: Master of Obvious || 11/30/2006 16:12 Comments || Top||

#3  Hmm, wonder if they were trying to duplicate something that went wrong before? Could just be accident too. Either way I'm relieved the pilot is ok.
Posted by: Charles || 11/30/2006 16:32 Comments || Top||

#4  Charles: Accident reconstruction would not normally involve actual flying of the aircraft and attepmting to duplicate anything suspected of causing the accident. The use of flight simulators and or maintenance trainers would be more likely.
Had a Marine accident board member visit my A-6 flight control trainer and place a rivet bucking bar in the flight controls and witness how it affected the linkage and control surfaces. The bucking bar had been pulled from a wreck and the crew (ejected and survived!) described what the aircraft was doing (or not doing as the case may be) We were able to duplicate the mishap aircraft's actions to a 'T'. A similiar scenario would be employed using the flight simulators and flight control computers. Any 'black box' data that was usable is a gold mine for such an investigation and at no risk to other people/ equipment.
Posted by: USN, ret. || 11/30/2006 17:09 Comments || Top||

#5  I work a mile or so from Mirimar and saw a pillar of smoke earlier in the day and presume now that that was the crash.

Unlike the Navy top gun school that was at Mirimar before it as far as I can tell the Marines never fly over land only as long as it takes to get over the ocean. Since the smoke was near or on the base I assume the accident happened during take-off or landing.

Mind you this is just a guess. I didn't hear the crash and the smoke I saw might be unrelated.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 11/30/2006 17:59 Comments || Top||

#6  http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20061130-1333-bn30plane2.html
Posted by: crazyhorse || 11/30/2006 21:07 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Four Lashkar-e-Taiba militants killed in Kashmir
Three Lashker-e-Taiba militants and a `darwaish' (hermit) were killed while a Hizb-ul Mujahideen insurgent surrendered in Jammu and Kashmir since Thursday evening, police said on Friday. Militants shot dead one Farooq Ahmed Dar (38) after dragging him out of his house at Panzoo-Tral, 45 km from here, on Thursday night, a police spokesman said. Police have launched a hunt to nab the militants responsible for the murder of Dar.

Three LeT militants, all locals, were killed in an encounter with police in the upper reaches of Hanzer area under Marwah police station in Doda district on Thursday. The dead militants have been identified as Mudasser alias Abu Hamza, Mohammad Irfan alias Abu Sohail, both residents of Patimahal-Kishtwar, and Mohammad Ismail alias Abu Qamair, a resident of Gujjar Kothen Dachan.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq
ABC Discovers Iranian Weapons Supply Militia in Iraq
EFL
U.S. officials say they have found smoking-gun evidence of Iranian support for terrorists in Iraq: brand-new weapons fresh from Iranian factories. They even have that straight from the factory smell According to a senior defense official, coalition forces have recently seized Iranian-made weapons and munitions that bear manufacturing dates in 2006.

This suggests, say the sources, that the material is going directly from Iranian factories to Shia militias, rather than taking a roundabout path through the black market. "There is no way this could be done without (Iranian) government approval," says a senior official.
Well, there's something to talk about, eh?
Posted by: eLarson || 11/30/2006 15:23 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Somehow the surprise-o-meter got left off.
Posted by: eLarson || 11/30/2006 15:27 Comments || Top||

#2  Does this mean we can finally bomb these suckers? No? I guessed not.
Posted by: Excalibur || 11/30/2006 15:37 Comments || Top||

#3  And I bet you will never hear a peep about this story from the US wire services.
Posted by: crosspatch || 11/30/2006 15:43 Comments || Top||

#4  And in other news, the sun rises in the east, water is wet, and Francisco Franco is still dead.
Posted by: Dreadnought || 11/30/2006 15:59 Comments || Top||

#5  As far as I'm concerned this puts Bush in the same category as jimmuh carter. Pathetic.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305 || 11/30/2006 16:19 Comments || Top||

#6  "This suggests, say the sources, that the material is going directly from Iranian factories to Shia militias, rather than taking a roundabout path through the black market. "There is no way this could be done without (Iranian) government approval," says a senior official."

WTF? Not saying it wouldn't have been done with governmental approval, but what a moronic statement. The capacity for corruption and stealth is stupidly not acknowledged.

It has seemed lately that ABC, as a mainstream news provider, is little closer to the camp of sanity than NBC and CBS show themselves to be. That a mainstream outlet is telling this story at all differentiates it.
Posted by: Jules || 11/30/2006 17:18 Comments || Top||

#7  Argh, that s/h/b "a little closer".
Posted by: Jules || 11/30/2006 17:20 Comments || Top||

#8  As far as I'm concerned this puts Bush in the same category as jimmuh carter. Pathetic.

Awesome work EU6305!
Getting ready to go to work for Rum Pat Rum 2008?
Posted by: Shipman || 11/30/2006 17:39 Comments || Top||

#9  Hurry, EU6305 (or 6, whatever it takes), all the Howard NeoBeales of the Apocalypse are lining up.
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 17:43 Comments || Top||

#10 

There you go.
Posted by: gorb || 11/30/2006 17:55 Comments || Top||

#11  Lawzy, lawzy, the collective in-take of breath, immediately followed by some sort of inane bullshit, if Bush does go after the Mad Mullahs will be something to see. I predict a vacuum lasting about 30 secs after the attack ends, followed by 2-3 weeks of breast-beating and pud-pulling about how they figgered it would happen all along. Mixed in, starting about 36 hrs after the last JDAM waxes a terminal complex, will come the bitching cuz it didn't happen per their schedule and / or that it wasn't thorough enough. Should be quite a purple-letter day.
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 18:06 Comments || Top||

#12  Don't know what I'll do in 2008. The only thing that got me to the polls in 2004 was the fear that Theresa Heinz Kerry might have ended up on the evening news every night for the next four years. Haven't been so disillushioned in years. I don't wanna sound like a war monger. I'm just afraid of what will happen if nobody ever stops the Iranians. I don't care about the oil. I just don't want any more nukes going off and I don't want to have to bow to mecca. Who is Rum Pat Rum anyway? Or Howard neoBeales?
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305 || 11/30/2006 18:13 Comments || Top||

#13  Impossible. It's a civil war. Iran and Syria can't be involved in formenting the violence.
Posted by: Danking70 || 11/30/2006 18:19 Comments || Top||

#14  Ah, now you're making sense. Not fair. Lol.

We're all in the same boat. I don't expect there will be nukes tossed around, not unless everything goes titzup. China, down the road, is where that notion might become real.

I'll wager that was Ship's way of saying Run Pat (Buchanan) Run 2008. Isolationism is an idiot's play in this world. Pat's about 100 years too late.

The Howard NeoBeales was in reference to a post I made not long ago. You might say I'm getting tired of the ankle-biting fuckwits who blame everything on Bush. Yep. I am.

Bush is a whole 'nuther person. He believes what he believes, thinks what he thinks.

There's a pretty good chance that there are people you know, maybe even like, who are not your clone. Sis, Mom, Dad, Bubba - we all have folks who we, otherwise, love or like - who are to the Left of Marx. That's life.

Bush has done a lot. He has fumbled a lot. Sounds almost normal. Imagine that, huh: another guy, a guy with a different POV, doing what he thinks is right. That he's not a clone seems to come as a surprise to so many. Dunno why. I've never had one, though Ship might come close when he's on his meds. So Bush not meeting my schedule or doing everything I want when I fucking want it shouldn't come as a surprise.
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 18:28 Comments || Top||

#15  Well this is the camels nose under the tent. Yes, I am surprised that it was reported at all, but it could be the lever the president needs.

I would like it if he called a press conference tomorrow to point out the obvious fact that the Iranian government is actively causing the deaths of American soldiers and actively working against our interests in destabilizing Iraq.

I would also like him to say that if this activity does not cease immediately then Iranian targets will be hit by the US Military as a clear defense response.

It won't happen, of course, but that is what I would like and what I believe is the appropriate course of action.
Posted by: remoteman || 11/30/2006 18:38 Comments || Top||

#16  I don't expect Bush to be my clone.

But right now it looks like he is showing weakness in the face of the mad mullahs just like Carter did. Granted, idiots like Kennedy and Murtha haven't made it any easier. But Bush has two years to do something about these bastards and then he's going to down as the worst president since Carter and that's pretty bad.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305 || 11/30/2006 19:27 Comments || Top||

#17  Hmmm. 200K US troops on the ground in Islamic lands killing Bad Guys and he's another Carter?

Are you fucking serious?

Sorry, you're back to sounding like a fucking idjit.
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 19:30 Comments || Top||

#18  #2 Does this mean we can finally bomb these suckers? No? I guessed not.
Posted by Excalibur 2006-11-30 15:37

No. You're absolutely right. We're not going to do jack. Put Olmert in White House and you'll get the same dithering.
Posted by: Lancasters Over Dresden || 11/30/2006 20:01 Comments || Top||

#19  Got any stock picks, horses, etc?
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 20:04 Comments || Top||

#20  This means that Iraq isn't in a Civil War - its (and us) are in a de-facto war with Iran.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 11/30/2006 20:27 Comments || Top||

#21  End of the month, which can only mean the armchair-generals and the foreign-policy-ekspurts have been let out of their halfway-houses, and can't get into LGF...
Posted by: Pappy || 11/30/2006 20:37 Comments || Top||

#22  "Granted, idiots like Kennedy and Murtha haven't made it any easier."

And people like you, who can't bring themselves to grant him any more than that, aren't making it any easier, either.

The entire Democratic Party, in a cheap, cynical bid for political gain, has dedicated itself to interfering with the war in every way conceivable since the very day it began, up to and including threats of impeachment.

Nearly every commercial media outlet in print, broadcast, and cable has devoted every last ounce of effort for five solid years to undermining public confidence in both the purpose of this war and the competence with which our military is waging it. They have denigrated every success we've had. They have exaggerated every setback. They have trumpeted one goddamn bogus "scandal" after another to confuse and demoralize the public, to the point where most people anymore don't have the slightest fucking idea what the hell we're fighting for.

Not only that, Bush has had virtually the entire international political establishment set against him since the very beginning as well.

And all you can grant him is that all these things "haven't made it any easier"?????

Go screw yourself.

Posted by: Dave D. || 11/30/2006 20:48 Comments || Top||

#23  This means that Iraq isn't in a Civil War - its (and us) are in a de-facto war with Iran.

That is the most succinct observation in this thread yet. Let's hope our government acts upon this fact.
Posted by: Zenster || 11/30/2006 20:59 Comments || Top||

#24  Dave, your third paragraph is one clue to what's wrong with Bush. He didn't hit back, and he still doesn't hit back. He's a good man and all that, but this is war and we need a prick. A no nonsense bastard who points the finger of censure at the leftist macaca. Instead, we have a lame duck.
Wake me when our leaders are serious.
Posted by: wxjames || 11/30/2006 21:04 Comments || Top||

#25  Got any stock picks, horses, etc?

Number two in the seventh, at Santa Anita, Saturday.
Posted by: Mick Dundee || 11/30/2006 22:40 Comments || Top||

#26  Will a bitch do, wxj?

Brilliant, Mick.
Posted by: .com || 11/30/2006 22:52 Comments || Top||

#27  All together now, wid feeling(s)> SAY IT TAINT SO!
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 11/30/2006 23:45 Comments || Top||


Downed F-16 Pilot was Texas Tech Grad
CANNON AIR FORCE BASE, N.M. (AP) - The missing pilot of an F-16 from Cannon Air Force Base that crashed in Iraq earlier this week has been identified as Maj. Troy Gilbert, a 1993 Texas Tech graduate who was assigned to the 309th Fighter Squadron at Luke Air Force Base in Phoenix. The military classified Gilbert, 34, as "whereabouts unknown" Wednesday.

Lt. Gen. Gary North, commander of the U.S. Central Command Air Forces, said Wednesday that a priority would be identifying the human remains found at the crash site.

Gilbert graduated from Tech with a bachelor's degree in economics, according to Luke AFB officials.

U.S. forces investigating the crash have said insurgents reached the site before American forces. Videotape pictures obtained by Associated Press Television News appear to show the wreckage of the F-16CG jet in the farm field where it crashed Monday and the remains of a U.S. serviceman with a tangled parachute nearby.

The jet crashed about 20 miles northwest of Baghdad while supporting ground combat by coalition forces in Anbar province, where many of Iraq's insurgent groups operate, the Air Combat Command said. DNA samples were taken from the scene and would be tested at a military medical facility in the United States, the central command said.

Cannon had said earlier that the pilot was not from the eastern New Mexico base.

The 524th Fighter Squadron, part of the 27th Fighter Wing from Cannon, has been operating from Balad Air Base in Iraq since being deployed in September. Gilbert was deployed to the 332nd Expeditionary Wing at Balad Air Base. Cannon officials confirmed markings from the base were apparent on news photos and television images that showed sections of the single-pilot aircraft.

An Iraqi witness reported seeing the jet flying erratically before it crashed. A U.S. military spokesman in Iraq said he doubted the plane was shot down because F-16s fly very fast and have not encountered weapons in Iraq capable of taking them down. The cause of the crash is under investigation.

Air Force spokeswoman Susan Stout said the Air Force has been in contact with family members in the Phoenix area. A man who answered the phone Wednesday at a number listed under Gilbert's name said the family has no comment and referred members of the media to the Air Force's public affairs office.

Gilbert's family later released a statement through the Air Force, although details about his immediate family were unavailable. "Troy was first and foremost a wonderful husband and father. His Christian faith, personal values and work ethic guided his personal life and his career as a military officer," the statement said. "He was highly respected by and deeply loved by so many. At the time of the tragedy during combat operations, he was unselfishly protecting the lives of other American military members. We, his family, cherish the worldwide prayers and support during this extremely difficult time."
Sleep well, Troy, may God cradle you in his loving arms.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 11/30/2006 13:39 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Thank you, Major, for giving us your very best. We salute you. And grieve your loss along with your loved ones.
Posted by: SpecOp35 || 11/30/2006 14:57 Comments || Top||


With Iran’s help, Hizbollah trains Iraqi Shi’ite militiamen
WASHINGTON - A senior American intelligence official said on Monday that the Iranian-backed group Hizbollah had been training members of the Mahdi Army, the Shi’ite militia in Iraq that is headed by Muqtada al-Sadr.

The official said that between 1,000 and 2,000 fighters from the Mahdi Army and other Shi’ite militia groups from Iraq had been trained by Hizbollah in Lebanon, mostly in small groups. A small number of Hizbollah operatives have also visited Iraq to help with training there, the official said.
Iran has facilitated the link between Hizbollah and the Shi’ite militias in Iraq, the official said. Syrian officials have also cooperated, though there is debate among intelligence officials about whether it has the blessing of the senior leadership in Syria, the official said.

The intelligence official spoke on condition of anonymity under rules set by his agency, and discussed Iran’s role in response to questions from a reporter.
The interview occurred at a time of intense debate over whether the United States should enlist Iran’s help in stabilizing Iraq. A commission headed by James A. Baker III, a former secretary of state, and Lee Hamilton, a former Democratic Party lawmaker, is expected to call for direct talks with Tehran. The claim about Hizbollah’s role in training Shi’ite militias could strengthen the hand of those within the Bush administration who oppose talks with Iran.

The new American account is consistent with a claim made in Iraq this summer by a mid-level commander of the Mahdi Army, who said his organization had sent 300 fighters to Lebanon, ostensibly to fight with Hizbollah forces there. “They are the best-trained fighters in the Mahdi Army,” the militia commander said in an interview in Iraq. He spoke on condition of anonymity.

The specific assertions about Iran’s role went beyond those made publicly by senior American officials, though Gen. Michael V. Hayden, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, did tell Congress earlier this month that “the Iranian hand is stoking violence” in Iraq.

The American intelligence on Hizbollah’s role is based on human sources, technical means, and interviews with detainees captured in Iraq, American officials said.

American officials say that the Iranians have also provided direct support to Shi’ite militias in Iraq, including explosives and trigger devices for roadside bombs, and training for several thousand fighters, mostly in Iran. The training is carried out by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Ministry of Intelligence and Security, they say. American officials also suspect that in some cases the Iranians may have provided guidance to the Shi’ite militias to attack specific targets in Iraq.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 11/30/2006 13:14 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Ye, so?
Posted by: gromgoru || 11/30/2006 18:11 Comments || Top||

#2  If the Sunnis contemplate the quote "The enemy of my enemy is my friend" they will smoke like Norman at the end of "I, Mudd".
Posted by: Penguin || 11/30/2006 19:43 Comments || Top||


Two US battalions moving into "extremely important" Baghdad area
(KUNA) -- General Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, confirmed during a Pentagon briefing on Wednesday that two U.S. battalions are moving into the Baghdad area, which Pace described as "extremely important".

U.S. Army General George Casey, commander of multinational forces in Iraq, is working very closely with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to ensure that the actions of coalition forces and Iraqi security forces are coordinated, and that they support the political process Maliki is striving to attain, Pace said. Pace declined to predict how big the troops increase in the Baghdad area would grow, or for how long. "Baghdad is extremely important to the Iraqi government, and their armed forces and their security forces are the proper long-term solution to that problem," Pace said. If there are Iraqi forces available to Maliki to move into the Baghdad area that are not currently engaged elsewhere in Iraq, and if Maliki is able "to move them comfortably without creating a vacuum" some place else in Iraq, "that is worth looking at as well," Pace said.

There has been an increase in the number of both Iraqi and coalition forces in Baghdad, he said, "but the impact of those increases has not been what we wanted it to be," so Casey and Maliki "are reassessing," Pace said.

Pace denied reports suggesting that the Pentagon is considering shifting U.S. Marines to Baghdad and turning the volatile Al Anbar Province over to the Iraqis. "Why would we want to forfeit any part of Iraq to the enemy?" Pace said. "We do not. We want to provide security for the Iraqi people. You want to be able to assist the Iraqi government in providing good governance and providing economic opportunity, and those three things fit together -- security, governance and economy. You are not going to have success or progress in one without success and progress in all three".

There are no "immediate thoughts" to moving all coalition forces out of Al Anbar Province and turning over "right now today" all security in Al Anbar to Iraqi security forces, Pace said, adding, "It is not on the table".

"It is not practical to expect that we can snuff out terrorism completely, but it is reasonable to strive to have an environment inside of which terrorist acts are below the level at which the Iraqi government can function, where the economy can prosper and where the Iraqi people can live their lives the way they want to," Pace said.

Asked about many who have concluded that Iraq is already in a civil war, Pace said the level of violence being inflicted by al Qaeda and the like in Iraq is specifically designed to create a civil war and "an ungovernable condition so the terrorists can then set up shop and rule those people the way they want to".

"So it is much more important that we focus on how to defeat the enemy that is trying to create the civil war than it is we spend a lot of time dancing on the head of a pin as far as what particular words we should use to describe the environment which is currently unacceptable," he said.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  ...we spend a lot of time dancing on the head of a pin as far as what particular words we should use to describe the environment which is currently unacceptable," he said.

Ahhh...a Marine. Gotta love 'em. Not that he changed anyone's mind, of course.

How many reporters can dance on the head of a pin?
Posted by: Bobby || 11/30/2006 5:53 Comments || Top||

#2 
How many reporters can dance on the head of a pin?


An infinite number, for of late days reporters are mythical beasts. All that are left are "journalists" who find it sufficient to phone in the reports of enemy agents.
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 11/30/2006 7:24 Comments || Top||

#3  Pace is in a tricky position. Since almost all the US forces are in Baghdad or Anbar, if he makes a troop movement in either direction, he is accused of "abandoning" the other.

This denies him the blunt tool of a major force movement, so he has to rely on finesse--moving just the right number of soldiers to the most critical area.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 11/30/2006 9:10 Comments || Top||

#4  Economy of Force
Employ all combat power available in the most effective way possible; allocate minimum essential combat power to secondary efforts.

Economy of force is the judicious employment and distribution of forces. No part of the force should ever be left without purpose. When the time comes for action, all parts must act. The allocation of available combat power to such tasks as limited attacks, defense, delays, deception, or even retrograde operations is measured in order to achieve mass elsewhere at the decisive point and time on the battlefield.

- FM 100-5, Operations

Not that any 'journalist' would ever be caught reading up on the subject matter they claim to report on. Not to be confused with actual writers who cover such mundane subjects like 'Sports' do on a daily basis. How long would a sports columnist be in his job if he kept getting the subject matter and facts wrong or made up stories from whole cloth?
Posted by: Procopius2K || 11/30/2006 9:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Procopius2K: Economy of force is neglectful of an additional factor, time. That is, economy of force is a constant--what is applicable is using that force in a strategic, rather than tactical sense.

In this case, for example, if we used our forces to secure Baghdad, Anbar would be neglected. So this means the security of Baghdad must be done with gradualism, using far less personnel than would be used, optimally.

In a manner of speaking, playing offense and defense at the same time.

Gradualism is peculiarly unsatisfying for those who expect large, discreet battles with a given beginning and end, however. But as we take over a neighborhood and purge it of its troublemakers, we can then turn it over to local authority. They will need to do much less to keep it clean then to clean it up in the first place.

This frees us up to move to the next neighborhood.

But all of this opens Pace up to double criticism: that he isn't doing enough in either place. Though all our forces everywhere are busy, even a small shift is used to natter at him that he isn't fighting the large, discreet battles with the enemy.

Eventually, what I expect will be that the US will turn over most of Baghdad to Iraqi security, when a comfort level is obtained in the city. Then most forces will move to Anbar, to both keep the Sunnis cooled and to protect them from the Shiites.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 11/30/2006 10:07 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas minister released from Israeli custody
Israel released from custody Palestinian Authority Housing Minister Abdel Rahman Zeidan of Hamas, Palestinian sources reported on Wednesday night. Zeidan was arrested by the IDF a month ago, joining dozens of Hamas ministers and parliamentarians rounded up by the IDF after Cpl. Gilad Shalit's capture in June.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hopefullly in a brand new suit, with a wad of shekels and a kiss on both cheeks...
Posted by: Pappy || 11/30/2006 9:53 Comments || Top||

#2  Why?
Posted by: USN, ret. || 11/30/2006 14:26 Comments || Top||

#3  You do so to ensure that his welcome back party includes a hemp necktie.
Posted by: Zenster || 11/30/2006 17:59 Comments || Top||

#4  Should have traded him. I want Gilad home back now.
Posted by: Johnnie Bartlett || 11/30/2006 19:57 Comments || Top||


Science & Technology
Combat Videos: YouTube and cams vs ASSIST - Adv Soldier Sensor Info Sys & Tech
Posted by: 3dc || 11/30/2006 16:54 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Southeast Asia
Court sentences man to 12 years for aiding terrorists
An Indonesian court on Wednesday sentenced an Islamic militant to 12 years in prison for providing a gun to the aide of a leading member of a Southeast Asian terrorist network. Joko Wibowo, alias Abu Sayaf, was convicted by a regional court in Central Java of violating anti-terror laws for giving a semiautomatic pistol to a member of Jemaah Islamiyah that was used for military training.

The three-member panel of judges said Joko gave the revolver and 20 bullets to Subur Sugiarto, a main aide to Noordin M. Top, a Malaysian fugitive accused of being a key leader of the group. "The defendant has been proven guilty of violating the anti-terror law," presiding Judge Boedi Hartono said at the ruling. Hewas also convicted of illegal possession of a firearm.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Two more suspects in Poso attacks surrender
Two men suspected of being involved in a series of attacks on Christians in the Central Sulawesi cities of Poso and Palu have surrendered to local police. The men identified as Ateng and Nasir were flown to Palu from Poso for further questioning. Police would not say when the men gave themselves up. Another suspected militant, Andi Bocor, surrendered to the police two weeks ago but was later released after being interrogated for three days.

Central Sulawesi Police spokesman Adj. Sr. Comr. Muhammad Kilat would not comment about the men's surrender. "In line with the requests by the interrogators, I cannot give any official statement yet," he said. Kilat said a full statement would be made after the two men were questioned.

National Police deputy chief Insp. Gen. Anton Bahrul Alam said police had approached the families of the six men to find information about their whereabouts. The families promised to give police the information on three conditions, he said. These were that the police were not allowed to beat the suspects, the suspects had to be accompanied by lawyers, and their families were to be allowed to visit the detained suspects at any time, Anton said. "We agreed with the requirement ... that's why we asked the families to help us find the wanted suspects," he said.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


5 hurt as MILF attacks Dapiawan village
Five civilians were hurt when Muslim separatist rebels attacked a southern Philippine village, torching at least 15 houses, the military said yesterday. About 50 Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) rebels stormed the village of Dapiawan in Datu Piang town, Maguindanao province, 930km south of Manila, on Sunday.

Lieutenant Colonel Julieto Ando, a regional army spokesman, said the rebels first set on fire to a building housing government militiamen in Dapiawan. Four hours later, the guerrillas “harassed” government troops, triggering a firefight. The rebels also burned down at least 15 houses of civilians, Ando said. “Five civilians were hurt as they were caught in the crossfire,” he said. “The rebels also carted away peoples’ important belongings.”

Ando said the harassment only stopped after intervention by an international team monitoring a ceasefire between the MILF and the Philippine government. “This is a serious violation and we will file a protest,” he said.

MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu said the incident was the result of a personal grudge. He said an MILF commander retaliated against village officials after his 9-year-old daughter was hurt in a recent ambush by local security men.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sorry, I have a hard time taking anyone that calls themselves a MILF seriously....
Posted by: Elmiling Flose7726 || 11/30/2006 17:02 Comments || Top||


Govt hunting five female Islamic rebels
Philippine troops, on the offensive for nearly four months against Islamic militants on a remote southern island, are hunting five female members of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) militant group, the head of the army said. Lieutenant-General Romeo Tolentino said yesterday half of the 10 foreign rebels hiding out on Jolo Island were women, including the wife of Umar Patek, one of two prime suspects in the 2002 Bali suicide bombings that killed 202 people. The other alleged mastermind of the Bali attacks, Indonesian extremist Dulmatin, is also believed to be sheltering on Jolo. Last month, his wife and two children were caught during a raid on a suspected Abu Sayyaf hideout.

Tolentino said despite arresting Istidia Oemar Sovie, his soldiers were finding it difficult to ensnare her husband, who has a $10mn bounty on his head, because of Jolo’s heavily canopied, mountainous terrain and a lack of support from locals. “It’s really hard to go against the culture of the people in the area,” he told reporters in Manila. “We’re not saying the residents there were not cooperating with us. They were perhaps more afraid of possible retaliation from the rebels if the residents started giving us information.”

Tolentino said intelligence indicated the top leaders of the Abu Sayyaf, the Philippines’ most violent Muslim rebel group, and JI militants sheltering with them were still in the interior of Jolo, about 950km south of Manila. Dulmatin’s wife, who will be deported to Indonesia in 10 days, told security officials a Singaporean, a Malaysian and four Indonesians were on Jolo to train members of Abu Sayyaf in bomb-making. Sovie was not charged with any terrorist offence or membership of JI, a group which wants to create an Islamic state across Southeast Asia.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Let's hope that they're not motivated by the reward of a gang rape.
Posted by: Zenster || 11/30/2006 0:32 Comments || Top||

#2  Imagine that, five Islamist hussies all awaiting their allotment of 72 vir ... err... umm, wait-a-minute, what exactly do Islamist female suicide boomers get in Paradise?
Posted by: Lancasters Over Dresden || 11/30/2006 20:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Don't they get to be the most beautiful virgin in their husband's harem? I'm not sure what they get if they aren't married, though.
Posted by: trailing wife || 11/30/2006 22:26 Comments || Top||

#4  "Govt hunting five female Islamic rebels"

Now would that be shotgun, rife or bow season?
Posted by: Icerigger || 11/30/2006 23:19 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran: Top Cleric Issues Fatwa Against Azeri Journalists
Qom, 30 Nov. (AKI) - One of Iran's leading conservative clerics, Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Fazel Lankarani, has issued a fatwa - religious edict - in which he sentences to death two Azeri journalists, Rafegh Taghi and Samir Sedaghatoglu. "It is the duty of every good Muslim to help the execution of this fatwa," wrote on his website the cleric, who is based in the holy Shiite city of Qom.

Rafegh Taghi, an editorialist for the newspaper Senet, published in Baku in the republic of Azerbaijan, is considered guilty of having offended Islam and its Prophet Mohammed in an article called 'Us and Europe' which Lankarani slammed as "clearly offensive to Islam" because it talks about "the superiority of Europe compared to the Middle East .. it considers Islam inferior to Christianity .. offends the Prophet Mohammed."

Samir Sedaghatoglu, the paper's publisher, has instead been charged with "not forbidding the apostate to offend Islam."
And the NYT will be all over this!
"Those who commit such acts are guilty of apostasy if they were born Muslim and are guilty of offending Islam if they are infidels," the ayatollah also said.
Go get 'em, Reuters! You, too, AP!
The edict echoes the Iranian fatwa against Indian writer Salman Rushdie issued in 1989 by Ayatollah Rouhollah Mussawi Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic.

An Azerbaijani court has sentenced the writer Rafiq and his publisher to two months in jail for an article which was illustrated by the same cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad originally published in Denmark that caused outcry in the Muslim world.
Posted by: mrp || 11/30/2006 09:59 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  oh the religion of peace and non violence strikes again!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Ebbolump Glomotle9608 || 11/30/2006 12:09 Comments || Top||

#2  HEY LANK...........EAT SHIT AND DIE>>and mokhamed too!! When are going to realize YOU ARE INFERIOR!!!
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 11/30/2006 13:03 Comments || Top||

#3  ".. offends the Prophet Mohammed."

He musta called Lanky late at night, all PO'd. I hear Qom has a direct line.
Posted by: Zoot || 11/30/2006 13:20 Comments || Top||

#4  The dust of Iran needs to see the footprint of American miliary superiority, and the destruction of anything even remotely associated with islam. Destroy Qom, destroy every mosque, every religious school, and every vestage of the military, especially the "Revolutionary Guards". Pound their ports, destroy their infrastructure, and wipe out "their ruling class". Then stand by to ensure no one goes in to help them rebuild - especially not the UN or any NGOs. Let them eat sand and drink oil. See how well they learn from that. If they don't learn, nuke the entire place until it glows. Point to it as an example when "discussing" the behavior of other islamic states. It's time for the US to sh$$ or get off the pot.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 11/30/2006 17:27 Comments || Top||

#5  Old Patriot, since you are no longer advocating initial use of nuclear weapons, your suggestions for Iran become increasingly attractive. I'd prefer that the Iranian people have a chance to establish a democratic state of their own without all the preceding bloodshed.

But, hey, guess what? If the only road to a peaceful Middle East leads through an Iranian wasteland, I'm down with that. Iran has bred up so much of the Middle East's and this entire world's misery that it's time they had a big heaping dose of their own medicine. Whatever it takes to demolish their nuclear weapons program and dislodge the mullahs represents the least amount of force that should be applied.
Posted by: Zenster || 11/30/2006 17:52 Comments || Top||

#6  Me Grom. Me like bioweapons. Nukes are for pussies.
Posted by: gromgoru || 11/30/2006 18:31 Comments || Top||


Good morning....
Taliban winning, NATO losing in Afghanistan: KasuriIraqi president: Security deal reached with IranMorocco arrests imam for recruiting Iraq bombersBangladesh court denies militants' appeal10 terrorists killed and another arrested in Biskra and Batna'Israel losing patience over truce violations'Morocco jails German for trying to convert Muslims
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I might be alone on this, but I think she looks evil.
Posted by: Thoth || 11/30/2006 0:47 Comments || Top||

#2  I'd need a close inspection to determine her evilness.
Posted by: badanov || 11/30/2006 4:28 Comments || Top||

#3  Georgia on my mind!
Posted by: Mike || 11/30/2006 7:09 Comments || Top||

#4  Reminder you of anyone Thoth?
Posted by: Shipman || 11/30/2006 7:32 Comments || Top||

#5  mom
Posted by: Shomort Glemble8904 || 11/30/2006 8:46 Comments || Top||

#6  Cashmere sweater, pleated skirt, hmmmm. Classics covering up the goodies.
Posted by: AlmostAnonymous5839 || 11/30/2006 10:01 Comments || Top||

#7  I'd be singing a few carols myself getting close to her.

Posted by: Unaise Slealing3840 || 11/30/2006 10:29 Comments || Top||

#8  Evilicious!
Posted by: Slitle Clatch6431 || 11/30/2006 11:47 Comments || Top||

#9  She must be . . . . punished.
Posted by: gorb || 11/30/2006 12:51 Comments || Top||

#10  evil that good can't be bad. Plus, looks like she'd take one for the country. Look at the national ensign and Marine flag in the background.
Posted by: Broadhead6 || 11/30/2006 12:54 Comments || Top||

#11  Georgia looks to have some nice peaches.
Posted by: Zenster || 11/30/2006 14:14 Comments || Top||

#12  8 degrees here.
Posted by: Icerigger || 11/30/2006 15:13 Comments || Top||

#13  Icerigger - not terribly warm here, either. Georgia could do a lot to warm up the place...
Posted by: Old Patriot || 11/30/2006 15:37 Comments || Top||

#14  Hang in there. At least my lake will finally freeze over. Nothing like cold water grilled bass!
Posted by: Icerigger || 11/30/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#15  She looks like the blond from Animal House.
Posted by: 49 Pan || 11/30/2006 18:14 Comments || Top||

#16  Woof.
Posted by: Glomose Elmeamble1591 || 11/30/2006 22:35 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
86[untagged]

Bookmark
E-Mail Me

The Classics
The O Club
Rantburg Store
The Bloids
The Never-ending Story
Thugburg
Gulf War I
The Way We Were
Bio

Merry-Go-Blog











On Sale now!


A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
Click here for more information

Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
3dc
Skidmark

Two weeks of WOT
Thu 2006-11-30
  'Israel losing patience over truce violations'
Wed 2006-11-29
  Kashmir bad boyz offer conditional hudna
Tue 2006-11-28
  Two Kassams land in Sderot area
Mon 2006-11-27
  Russers Bang Abu Havs
Sun 2006-11-26
  NATO says killed 55 Taliban in Afghan clashes
Sat 2006-11-25
  Olmert agrees to Hudna, promises Peace In Our Time
Fri 2006-11-24
  Palestinians offer Israel limited truce
Thu 2006-11-23
  Sunni Car Boom Offensive Kills 133 Shia in Baghdad
Wed 2006-11-22
  Nørway økays giving Mullah Krekar the bøøt
Tue 2006-11-21
  Pierre Gemayel assassinated
Mon 2006-11-20
  Sudanese troops, Janjaweed rampage in Darfur
Sun 2006-11-19
  SCIIRI bigshot banged in Baghdad
Sat 2006-11-18
  UN General Assembly calls for Israel to end military operation in Gaza
Fri 2006-11-17
  Moroccan convicted over 9/11 plot
Thu 2006-11-16
  Morocco holds 13 suspected Jihadist group members


Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.
18.188.142.146
Help keep the Burg running! Paypal:
WoT Background (30)    Non-WoT (16)    Opinion (9)    Local News (11)    (0)