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Archive for 10. October 2009

OBAMA:Taliban are our friends and will help fight Al Qaeda.

Obama: The Taliban are our friends and will help us fight al Qaeda. In other breaking news, screw American troops.

For an administration whose political party proclaims itself the guardian of civil rights, they hang around a lot of shady characters.
ACORN willing to help folks out setting up a child slavery prostitution ring? Aw, only rightwing conspiracy nuts believe that. Who are you gonna’ believe, the Democrats or your lying eyes?
And hey, how about that Taliban? They’re now our very special friends, pose no threat to America, and will help us fight al Qaeda. What could be more awesomely awesome?

Obama is adopting the preposterous assumption that the Taliban can play a role in running Afghanistan and, if we leave them alone, they’ll leave us alone. Of course, Obama doesn’t want the Taliban to totally govern Afghanistan, but, you know, they can help out and stuff. Meanwhile, our troops, who will supposedly only have to keep al Qaeda weak (not destroy them), will be working with our new friends.
While our troops are being slaughtered, Obama will find all sorts of good news, abetted by his media cheerleaders, that will allow him to totally pull out of Afghanistan. This will pacify his extreme left base who, after the 2008 election, have suddenly decided that we really don’t need to fight in Afghanistan after all. Declare victory and run away.
God help us. There will be blood on Obama’s hands.
In case anyone has forgotten how brutal the Taliban are, how they have helped al Qaeda in the past, and how they ignore the most basic of human rights, check out the links in this story from About.com:

The Taliban’s long lists of edicts and decrees took an especially misogynistic view of women. Schools for girls were closed. Women were forbidden to work or leave their homes without verifiable permission. Wearing non-Islamic dress was forbidden. Wearing make-up, sporting western products like purses or shoes, was forbidden. Music, dancing, cinemas, any form of non-religious broadcasting and entertainment were banned. Lawbreakers were beaten, flogged, shot or beheaded.
In 1994, Osama bin Laden moved to Kandahar as a guest of Mullah Omar. On Aug. 23, 1996, bin Laden declared war on the United States and exerted increasing influence on Omar, helping to fund the Taliban’s offensives against other warlords in the north of the country. That lavish financial support made it impossible for Mullah Omar not to protect bin Laden when Saudi Arabia, then the United States, pressured the Taliban to extradite bin Laden. The fates and ideology of al-Qaeda and the Taliban became intertwined.
At the height of their power, in March 2001, the Taliban demolished the two enormous, centuries-old Buddha statues of Bamiyan, an act that showed to the world in ways that the Taliban’s wanton massacres and oppression should have much earlier the ruthless, distorted Puritanism of the Taliban’s interpretation of Islam.

From FOXNews.com:

WASHINGTON — President Obama is inclined to send only as many more U.S. troops to Afghanistan as are needed to keep Al Qaeda at bay, a senior administration official said.
The official, in an interview with The Associated Press, also added that the president is prepared to accept some Taliban involvement in Afghanistan’s political future, reiterating what Obama said in March.
The assessment comes from an official who has been involved in the president’s discussions with his war council about Afghanistan strategy.
Aides say the president’s final decision on Afghanistan strategy and troop levels is still at least two weeks away, but the emerging thinking suggests he would be unlikely to favor a large military ramp-up of the kind being advocated by his top commander in Afghanistan.
McChrystal’s troop request is said to include a range of options, from adding as few as 10,000 combat troops to — the general’s strong preference — as many as 40,000.
Obama’s developing strategy on the Taliban will “not tolerate their return to power,” the senior official said. But the U.S. would fight only to keep the Taliban from retaking control of Afghanistan’s central government — something it is now far from being capable of — and from giving renewed sanctuary in Afghanistan to Al-Qaeda, the official said.
Recognizing the U.S. can neither win in Afghanistan nor succeed more broadly against Al Qaeda without Pakistan’s cooperation, Obama’s war council is weighing a new role for Pakistan in the 8-year-old struggle in the region.
Obama’s national security team marked the war’s eighth anniversary on Wednesday with a three-hour session in a secure room in the White House basement. The focus on Pakistan, the suspected hiding place of Usama bin Laden and other Al Qaeda terrorists as well as Taliban leaders, could provide a hint into the president’s leanings.
Members of the president’s national security team argued that the Taliban in Afghanistan do not pose a direct threat to the U.S., officials told The New York Times. It was unclear if everyone in the war council accepted the premise.

Posted via email from Jay’s Blogs

Fitzgerald: Pakistan: A Brief And True Relation

Fitzgerald: Pakistan: A Brief And True Relation

The misplaced faith in Pakistan exhibited by many in Washington is not new; it has been going on for fifty years, ever since the first early infatuation, by various Dulles brothers and American generals, with fly-whisking ramrod-straight terry-thomas-moustachioed generals who kept assuring the Americans that “Islam is a barrier to Communism” and allowed themselves to be compared — favorably — with bandung-conferencing, new-left-book-club-subscribing, Krishna Menon (India’s foreign minister) and supercilious Jawaharlal Nehru.
It started with Pakistan as part of that farcical military alliance, CENTO, with Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Pakistan as the stout defenders of the West against atheistic Communism. That West, represented by Great Britain and the United States, supplied all the arms and all the money. The thing collapsed in 1958, having hardly existed, with Qassem’s coup in Iraq, and “strongman” Nuri es-Said’s body being dragged through the streets of Baghdad for further mutilation.
 
But the love affair, entirely unrequited, with Pakistan continued. The Americans sold weapons and even advanced planes. But Pakistan took those weapons and used them to threaten, or even to make war on India in repeated campaigns, and Pakistan military’s support for terrorism in Kashmir did not begin yesterday, or the day before.
 
The misuse of American aid, and the dawning understanding, among some in the Senate, led to the Pressler Amendment. But unfortunately, those who had over slow time begun to really understand Pakistan’s treachery, such as Senator Glenn, did not have a way to pass on that understanding to their successors. The Senate had no institutional memory, and lessons learned by some in Congress were forgotten when they left the scene.
 
And the Pressler Amendment itself was largely ignored by the Executive Branch, and the State Department as part of that branch, as those who consult the Congressional record and read the outraged words of Senator Glenn and others will soon discover.

But what happened? Pakistan was a friend of America and hence a friend of the West. This led to the naive acceptance of A. Q. Khan into laboratories in Germany and then the Netherlands, where this metallurgist was given access to all kinds of nuclear know-how secrets, secrets which he systematically stole and brought back to Pakistan, where the Pakistani military and intelligence worked with him hand-in-glove. (Or are we to believe that A. Q. Khan did everything himself? Built “the Islamic bomb” by the dozens himself?) Pakistan could divert resources to bomb-building because of American aid. American taxpayers helped to build, helped make possible, Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. You helped, and so did I. But we didn’t know we were helping. We trusted our government to be properly mistrustful, assumed our government did not consist, at the highest levels, of people so unbelievably ignorant of Islam and naive about such people as the Muslim generals and zamindars who run Pakistan. You see that we were wrong.

And the comedy continues. The Bush Administration trusted Musharraf. His manner, his affect, was so straightforward, so trustworthy, that the Americans, who take so long to grasp when they are being fiddled, trusted him wholeheartedly. Americans seem to have an especially hard time realizing when they are being fiddled when those doing the fiddling are Arabs and Pakistanis or other Muslims well-versed in the arts of outward pleasing (while inwardly, there is murder in their hearts) of powerful Infidels who can supply them with all the good things — money and weapons, chiefly — of this earth. These are the very things that the Camp of Islam, with its permanent backwardness the result of Islam itself, cannot easily supply, or could not, at least for the Arabs if not the Pakistanis, until the manna of oil revenues (which owe nothing to Muslim endeavor) arrived.

Pakistan is a Muslim state where Christians are discriminated against, humiliated, persecuted, attacked and even murdered at will. The Americans have done nothing about this. Pakistan is a Muslim state that has for decades supported, and continues to support, groups that conduct terrorist attacks in Indian-held Kashmir, and in India itself. Hindus themselves, who at Partition constituted a very large proportion of the population of the land areas that became West Pakistan (now Pakistan), have been steadily harassed, and persecuted, and even killed, so that their numbers in Pakistan, both relative and absolute, have greatly diminished. Pakistan is a country whose people have Islam, and only Islam. They take no interest in, have no knowledge of, their own Hindu ancestors. They have no interest in pre-Islamic India, for example in the civilisation of Mohenjo-Daro (ignored by the Pakistanis). Non-Muslims are perfectly capable of taking an interest in previous civilizations — the Christians did not stamp out, or forget, the pagan world of classical antiquity, and the Renaissance is associated with a new and sustained interest in that pre-Christian world. Even some Muslims have a history that has made them unusually aware of their pre-Islamic past, such as Iranians, whose historic memory is sustained both by the physical obviousness (the ruins and remains of that world, at Persepolis and elsewhere) of a great Persian Empire that predated the “gift of Islam” imposed by Arab conquerors, and by the memory of the successful rejection of Arab linguistic and cultural imperialism, in which Persian poets are believed by Iranians to have played an important part.
 
But Pakistan is unlike Iran. In being indifferent to the history of pre-Islamic or non-Islamic India, the Pakistanis have no history, have no alternative identity or past to look to. They have Islam and only Islam. And that is what has so impoverished them, far more than, for example, the Indonesians. Old maps call the East Indies “India extra Gangem,” because these islands were largely Hindu and Buddhist. They were regarded as part of the civilization of India, in the way that Sicily, for example (think of the Greek temples at Agrigento), was known as Magna Graecia. It was only in the 14th and 15th centuries that any significant Muslim penetration of the East Indies occurred, hastened through the conversion of the rulers of Java and Sumatra and the application of the principle of cuius regio eius religio.
 
By now it is well-known — there is so much testimony even by some Pakistanis — that Musharraf was determined to extract as much money and weaponry as he could from Bush. And Bush, who believed he could look into someone’s eyes and tell if that person was trustworthy (he famously declared his belief in Vladimir Putin, for example) was fooled by Musharraf. For Western leaders so often cannot grasp just how easy it is, how natural it is, in the Muslim world to lie, and lie. It is not a skill that has to be learned late in life. Deception of all kinds, practiced with members of other sects or tribes or factions, or even with members of one’s own family, learning to please the powerful or all those whose good will is temporarily needed, learning to be smooth — all this comes so naturally to Muslims, and has been remarked upon by so many Western travelers, over so many centuries, that it gave rise to the brutal truth of the British saying that summed-up this behavior: “At your feet, or at your throat.”
This doesn’t apply universally. In Afghanistan, for example, among tribes whose vocation and avocation, whose pastime and sport, is making war on other tribes or other peoples, the description of these warlike and inexhaustible tribes might need to be modified: “at your throat, or at your throat.”

It is known that Musharraf would do all kinds of things, but that he did not effectively or wholeheartedly fight Muslim terrorists or, more importantly, do anything to suppress the Muslim groups that support terror. He couldn’t, and his successors can’t or won’t do so, either. Musharraf would deliberately, ostentatiously, and intermittently, have some Pakistani military attack a terrorist base, usually most ineffectually, and only in order to please the Americans and keep that aid coming. The same policy continues today. And much of the aid continues to be diverted for another use: to further build up Pakistan’s nuclear bomb arsenal. The F.B.I. and C.I.A. still cannot quiz A. Q. Khan, who has recently admitted, and in public, that he worked hand in glove with the Pakistani military and that if they dared to turn on him, he had plenty on them that he could reveal — and in the course of his speech, mostly did, in its essentials, reveal. Why no mention of this in the American press? And did anyone in Congress take notice, bring to the notice of others, this amazing admission?
 
Now Pakistan has managed once again to fool the Americans. Or rather, Hasan Haqqani has managed to do so. He is a smooth man, with his elegant and reassuring wife (those blue jeans, that easy Wellesley-girl manner that the jeunesse doree of the zamindar class put to such good use when they are abroad. But it was Radcliffe-and-Oxford-educated Pinky Bhutto who pushed the nuclear program and who can be seen shrieking about Jihad in Kashmir on Youtube. So Pakistanis fool the Americans, time and time and time again.
 
As to the latest aid, why should it be given at all? The argument that Pakistan must have it, or collapse — well, what’s wrong with Pakistan collapsing, or at the very least, being forced to spend all of its efforts simply staying afloat and not disintegrating into internecine warfare? Ordinarily, one wishes one’s enemies, the members of the enemy camp, to have as much internal strife as possible, in order to divert the aggressive impulse, and the size of the threat. Why should American money go to Pakistan, especially since again and again it has been shown that the attempt to distinguish “non-military aid” from military aid is a false one, for the government of Pakistan, that is, the real government of Pakistan, the Pakistani military, will always find ways to divert funds freed up by aid to buy more weapons or support more weapons projects.

And even if one thought a little aid might do a little good, why is it to come from the Americans, or other Infidels? Why isn’t it coming from the government of Saudi Arabia, drowning in hundreds of billions of dollars, or the governments of those statelets with vast unearned wealth and so few people to share it: the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and all the others? Why aren’t they asked — pointedly and repeatedly — to share just a little of that vast wealth, some twelve trillion dollars having been received by the Muslim members of OPEC since 1973 alone, with fellow members of the Umma? They could start with those in Pakistan whose economic backwardness may be directly attributed to two things: the inshallah-fatalism of Islam (that fit in perfectly with the mores of the early Arabs, who lived on raiding, on seizing the property of others, including those who, like the Jewish farmers of the Khaybar Oasis, did till the soil, did work), and the hatred of bid’a, or innovation.
 
Since the Arab Muslims are supposed to be loyal to fellow members of the Umma, why has that loyalty been shown mainly in Saudi aid to mosques and imams who have wahhabized or are wahhabizing, that is, becoming even more extreme extremists than Islam itself had made them? And why should the Western world, why should the Americans, support these Arab Muslims? Americans have spent (or committed) two trillion dollars in a vain effort in Iraq to produce a prosperous, democratic, unified country (and take with a grain of salt, preferably sel de Guelande, the recent breathless stories in The Times about how “the Iraqis” are suddenly getting beyond sectarianism). Americans still spend hundreds of billions on ungoverned and ungovernable warlike tribes in Afghanistan, and still shell out money by the billions for every Muslim polity or people — Egypt, Jordan, the “Palestinians” (the local Arabs who are the shock troops of the Lesser Jihad against Israel) — that forgot to be born with billions of barrels of oil reserves. Those polities and people might actually be expected, were the people in question non-Muslims, to work for a living, rather than make war, or play tric-trac and smoke hubble-bubble pipes, or whatever else it is that the Arabs do all day, because they certainly do not have a work ethic (see Wafa Sultan’s upcoming book on this very subject). They live either on the manna of oil and gas — which requires no effort on their part — or on the increasing manna of foreign aid from the West.

And inevitably, as I have noted so many times, the psychological attitudes that naturally arise when Infidel governments give aid to Muslims, reduplicate exactly, in both Infidel Donor and Muslim Donee, the attitudes exhibited in Islamic-ruled societies by the dhimmis offering up their Jizyah to their Muslim masters. For a brief period, roughly the sesquicentury from 1800 to 1950, Muslims were not only weak but understood themselves to be weak vis-à-vis the Westerners, who were viewed as the inhabitants of Frangistan, the lands of the Franks (”Franks” being a generic term for the Crusaders and, by extension, all European Christians). The American government, and European governments, seem to be afraid to cut aid to the Muslim countries and peoples, even though again and again, information has come to light about the diversion of that aid to malevolent purposes that can only harm the non-Muslims of the world (that Pakistani nuclear project, for example), or the appropriation of that aid by corrupt rulers (see Mubarak and his Friends-and-Family Plan). Such corrupt rulers are kept afloat by such aid, and can therefore continue to divert other moneys to military uses, both those that threaten Infidels (e.g., Israel, or even Ethiopia over Nile waters), and those that can be used internally to squash dissent. Who pays, ultimately, for the mukhabarats, or Secret Services, and the police, of Egypt, Jordan, the “Palestinian authority”?
 
But no one dares to suggest that it would be far better to cut off all aid to the Muslim lands, forcing them to go to the Saudis, and other rich Arabs, for such aid instead. For if they were to do so, one of two things could happen. They would receive such aid, but the poorer Muslims they would not be grateful for it but demand, and expect, ever more. Any such using up of funds in this way would diminish the amount available for the Saudis, the Emiratis, the Kuwaitis, the Qataris, and others, in promoting Islam, either by building mosques and madrasas all over the Lands of the infidels, or conducting vast propaganda campaigns on behalf of the Arabs and Islam. Those campaigns often employ well-connected Western hirelings, including former diplomats and intelligence agents who were once posted to the Muslim world, Western businessmen angling for contacts, journalists and academics on the make and on the take (google “MESA Nostra” for more), and the usual assorted well-placed fixers in Washington and London and Paris. Clark Clifford and the BCCI scandal come to mind. Money also goes of course to pay for campaigns of Da’wa. Any such diminishment in the funds available to spread, and promote, and protect from prying minds, Islam, is to be welcome. And the donor Arabs would resent this, and this would create more friction within the Camp of islam, among the members of the world-wide Umma, between the oil-and-gas-rich states, and those that depended on handouts from them.
 
And the alternative — that the rich Arabs would stiff the Pakistanis, and the Jordanians, and the Egyptians, and the Indonesians (whose own oil is running out), and even the shock troops of the war against Israel, the “Palestinians” — well, that would certainly raise sky-high the friction, the envy, the resentment, felt by the poorer Muslims, who would wonder where the loyalty to fellow Muslims had gone. Was it merely expressed as a shared hatred of Infidels, or did it also imply the impulse to take care of, to be truly charitable towards, Muslims who forgot to be born with oil deposits anywhere in the vicinity? The internecine resentments and envies can only be bad for the coherence and unity of the Camp of islam. And that is a good thing.
Just look at the American aid to Pakistan. Now, despite a half-century of meretriciousness, more of that aid — another $7.5 billion of it — has been awarded by a Congress inveigled by the Administration, and insufficiently aware of what Pakistan has been doing, or not doing, with that money. It’s not hard to find out about. Pakistani commentators themselves have noted the double-game of Musharraf and the men who succeeded him (in the army and in the civilian government). A. Q. Khan has made things even easier by his recent, apparently-hushed-up recent admissions or rather revelations. We see every day, in every way, the determination of the Pakistani military not to close the border to the Taliban, for the Taliban, after all, are the creatures of the Pakistani military, who helped to form them, to nurture them, to supply them, and then to help them return to Afghanistan and to install their regime, a regime that the Pakistanis recognized diplomatically and gave support to in every other way. The fact that in a spot or two — say, the Valley of Swat — the interests of the local rich are threatened by succursales of Al Qaeda, and so the Pakistani military are willing to go after them and perhaps a very few of the Taliban most deeply implicated in collaborating with Al Qaeda, means nothing when it comes to ending all support for the Taliban, much less actually attacking their sanctuaries all over the place inside Pakistan. It won’t be done, and it can’t be done by the Muslim military of Muslim Pakistan.

And just look at the graciousness of the Pakistani government. It pockets this aid, and then whines, and asks for more, and more. And it keeps playing on the theme that “you don’t trust us” and “if you trusted us you would give us the most advanced military aircraft” and “if you trusted us you would give us night-fighting equipment” and “if you trusted us you would give us…oh, what about some of those fine long-range missiles we hear so much about”? You get the picture. Pakistan pockets what it treats as Jizyah from the Americans, as its due, as what it deserves, and then never stops complaining, never offers thanks, but asks and asks and asks for more. And it’s not even a Dickensian “please sir” with the bowl held out for refilling. No — it’s a scowl, and a “is that all?” and “where’s the rest?”

  O God in Heaven, please give our rulers — those who think they know best how to protect us — some sense. Or some semblance of sense about Islam. Or something. Please. It’s not much to ask.

Posted via email from Jay’s Blogs

Does Europe Prefer a Presidency that Fails America?

Last January, Rush Limbaugh shocked the liberal establishment, and much of the world, when he flatly assessed America’s prospects under the Obama Administration with the words “I hope he fails.” In the minds of myopic leftists who cannot comprehend the possibility of anything succeeding outside of taxpayer funded government programs, Limbaugh was expressing his desire for America itself to fail.

Surely, America could only succeed if Obama succeeds. This is the heart and soul of liberalism. But, like the rest of the liberal philosophy, it is fundamentally wrong. From the welfare state to the public school system to the various “family service” agencies that consistently peddle their poisonous anti-family agenda, it is liberalism itself that fails America on every occasion that it gains any new toehold in society.

In short, Limbaugh’s assertion was that he hoped Obama’s far-left radicalism would not succeed in doing still more damage to the country than has already been done by past liberal endeavors at state sponsored “compassion.” Nor does he, or any other sincere American patriot, want to see a continuation of the international disasters that ensue as predictable repercussions of naive, morally and spiritually rudderless leftist dabbling in international affairs.

Unfortunately for the radio talk-show giant, as well as the rest of heartland America, that is precisely what Barack Obama, with his twisted philosophies and his ineptitude, has in store for this nation. The Olympic site selection fiasco at Copenhagen was only the beginning.

To the hopelessly dull-witted, it may seem contradictory that European nations, who loudly claim to be so much happier with Barack Obama than they ever were with George W. Bush, would nonetheless rule against Obama’s wishes on an issue in which he invested so much of his credibility. The “slap in the face” that they delivered to him on the world stage will not soon be forgotten. Yet to expect otherwise, based on the presumption of universal international adulation for the Obamas, is to ascribe to a worldview that is completely devoid of the realities of modern international relations.

When dealing with the America of George W. Bush, foreign leaders were compelled to respect the intentions and desires of America, whether they liked it or not. In the wake of 9/11, Bush’s assessment of the world as “either with us or against us,” imputed a requirement on all countries to take a side in the Terror War, and expect to be held accountable to it.

Of course this generated much backlash against President Bush, since so many of America’s “allies” had frittered away the decade of the 1990s when they should have been shoring up their defenses against the dangerous rise of militant Islam. But while the Islamist threat grew and metastasized, several European nations were making underhanded deals with Middle Eastern leaders. The infamous UN “Oil for Food” program, by which Saddam Hussein exploited the corruption of so many prominent Europeans, was the most egregious example. That sort of international game playing, which lined the pockets of crooked officials while yielding the insidious side effect of empowering terrorist states, could not continue unchecked without eventually reaching a day of reckoning.

President Bush was indeed despised for standing firm and effectively shutting down the scam. So of course the countries that had benefited from the laxities of Clinton-era international relations were not happy that their lucrative game was ending. Now they once again see increased opportunities to wheel and deal as they had done, unhampered by an American executive branch that is too weak and ideologically disjointed to call them to account.

The problem for Barack Obama is that, prior to the Copenhagen decision, he had perceived the international reaction to him as supportive and sincere. Only under such a muddled premise could he or his wife have hoped, by their sophomoric and self-absorbed lobbying, to garner victory in their bid to have Chicago host the 2016 Olympics. Make no mistake about it: This was no mere decision on the location of a sporting event. By his presence in Copenhagen, Obama elevated its significance to that of a major international accord. In the end, the other participating nations viewed it as no less significant.

Now, the brutal reality of his real international standing is hitting him directly in the face, though he may still be too self-aggrandizing and shallow to comprehend it. The other nations of the world do not “like” him personally, but they like the detrimental effect he is having on a nation that they have long viewed as too powerful and too competitive with their own interests.

America, in their view, needs to be cut down to size. And Barack Obama, with his abhorrent and counterproductive economic and domestic policies, is just the person to do it. If the American economic engine can be sufficiently weakened, then the rest of the world can move past it. Ditto on the diplomatic front. As the sole world “superpower,” America has historically been the defining force in the direction of international affairs in which it became involved. But if it can be mired down in failed social and diplomatic policy, its international role can likewise be significantly reduced.

This is the America that Europe, and much of the rest of the world, wants to see. This is the “change” for which America’s competitors on the world scene had so fervently hoped. And if the “useful idiot” leading the country eventually becomes a victim of the collapsing international standing that he has so diligently championed, such “collateral damage” is of little or no consequence to them.

Posted via email from Jay’s Blogs

Obama Wins Yasser Arafat “Peace” Prize: World Amazed

So Barack Obama just picked up the imprimatur and nihil obstat from Oslo’s Nobel Prize Committee for “his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between people.”
 
Yes, that’s right, this year’s Nobel “Peace” Prize goes to Barack Obama. What’s the appropriate response: incredulity? Nah: the Nobel Peace Prize is a thoroughly discredited politically-correct coefficient of liberal transnational socialism. Barack Obama was tailor-made for this dubious honor, just as Yasser Arafat was. No, the appropriate response should be a compound of contempt and irritation, contempt for the bloviating Norwegians who once again have distinguished themselves by their sanctimonious fatuousness (”Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world’s attention and given its people hope for a better future . . . .”), irritation at the fact that this pseudo distinction will, in the eyes of the credulous, tend to legitimate the actions of the most anti-American and incompetent President in history.
 
The Times (no, not The New York Times, which is purring with pleasure at the news, but the London Times) is correct:

Rarely has an award had such an obvious political and partisan intent. It was clearly seen by the Norwegian Nobel committee as a way of expressing European gratitude for an end to the Bush Administration, approval for the election of America’s first black president and hope that Washington will honour its promise to re-engage with the world.
Instead, the prize risks looking preposterous in its claims, patronising in its intentions and demeaning in its attempt to build up a man who has barely begun his period in office, let alone achieved any tangible outcome for peace.

Bottom line: this action is less the awarding of a prize than a kick in the teeth aimed at traditional American power and prestige.
As usual, Andy McCarthy cuts to the chase:

I’m not all for Americans winning international prizes, especially the Nobel Peace Prize. In fact, I’m vigorously against it. The transnational progressives who pass out these accolades believe America is the problem in the world, the main threat to peace, the impediment to “progress,” etc. The award is a symbolic statement of opposition to American exceptionalism, American might, American capitalism, American self-determinism, and American pursuit of America’s interests in the world.
 

Exactly. If you are pro-American, you must be anti-the Nobel Peace. I am pro-American, ergo, etc. And Andy is to be commended, too, for his suggestion that we rebaptize this discreditable faux-honor with a more suitable name:

After a number of years, the NFL renamed its Super Bowl trophy after its most fitting recipient — it’s now called the Vince Lombardi Trophy. I’d like to see the Nobel Foundation follow suit. If today’s headlines said, “Barack Obama Wins Yasser Arafat Prize,” that would be perfect.
 

THIS YEAR’S NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE, OBAMA, HAS JUST REFUSED TO MEET LAST YEAR’S NOBEL LAUREATE, DALAI LAMA: WHAT DO YOU MAKE OF THAT?

Posted via email from Jay’s Blogs

Islamic Leaders to Non-Muslims: Do not Question Islam

As we surf across net it is very clear to see that the criticism of Islam is on the rise. This is obviously because the non-Islamic world has become more aware of the threat that Islam brings to our way of life, as the Islamic way of life and our way do not mix. When there is a problem people have every right to speak up and try and deal with that problem, but according to Islamic leaders we do not have that right. More and more high ranking Muslims are coming out and basically telling us to shut up and not to question Islam. Here are some examples of this type of behaviour.

Non-Muslims in Malaysia have been warned by state rulers not to question the supremacy of Islam or the special privileges given to the Malay Muslim majority there. The Muslim rulers have said that questioning of Islam and the superior standing of Islam “can lead to disunity and racial strife that can undermine the peace and harmony”. In other words just shut up, convert or live like a dhimmi.

This week a fatwa issued by a committee from the highest authority in Sunni Islam, Egypt’s Al-Azhar University in Cairo has stated that Muslims have the right under Islam to hack into the websites of non-Muslims that are fighting back in the information war.

Approximately two months ago the Human Rights Council at the United Nations had banned any criticism regarding Sharia Law and human rights in the Islamic world. Muslims are obviously very worried that the ugly truth about Islam is getting out to more and more people, which means that we are doing a good job. Keep up the good work everyone!

http://www.news.faithfreedom.org/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2132

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Obama: Mockery of Noble Prize or did he deserve it?

Here are the reactions from politicians all over USA and out of US. Has Nobel Prize committee made a mockery out of the most covetted prize in the world or does Obama really deserve it?
 
Be the judge youself.
 
The Post asked political experts what receiving the Nobel Peace Prize will mean for President Obama. Below are contributions from Tony Fratto, Donna F. Edwards, Robert Shrum, Robert Reich, Lisa Schiffren, Douglas E. Schoen and Ed Rogers.
 
TONY FRATTO
Deputy assistant to President George W. Bush and deputy press secretary from September 2006 to January 2009
Well, those Norwegians were up to their tricks again this morning. Just when you forgot that they were up there, what with autumnal darkness descending on the northern region, they send up a flair to announce their presence by awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to a U.S. president who, while espousing “hope” for peace, has demonstrated little in the acquiring of “actual” peace. As if to inconveniently punctuate the silliness, NASA today bombed the moon.
In the president’s defense, he’s had precious little time for actual achievement, being barely nine months into his term. But never mind that. The Nobel committee was fairly explicit that Obama’s hope of achieving peace was all that was required, presumably making countless Miss Universe contestants equally eligible. Oh, they mentioned plans for nuclear weapons reductions as well, but of course the smart people would have quickly noted that President George W. Bush reduced stockpiles by nearly 4000 weapons from 6000, making new reductions of a few hundred relatively inconsequential. No, as with all things Obama, it’s far better to bet on a hopeful vision than to wait around for what are inevitably becoming disappointing results.
Here’s the irony: in the Nobel committee’s over-reach, rather than honor the U.S. president, they’ve instead awarded an albatross around his neck and opened him up to mockery. As an American, I’m happy for the president’s recognition, but my hope is that over time his record shows him to be deserving — not for his hopeful quest, but for actual achievement.
 

REP. DONNA F. EDWARDS
Democratic member of Congress from Maryland
When the Nobel committee announced President Obama as the Peace Prize recipient, thus began the sarcasm, second-guessing and chatter. Some opined that selecting President Obama is either a repudiation of our former president or premature for this one. Perhaps it is neither. Perhaps the international community is reaffirming our promise as practitioners of peace and diplomacy and protectors of human rights? Perhaps the Nobel committee sees the work undone and acknowledges at once both our imperfection and our desire to keep working?
Obama has spoken with clarity about the quest for nuclear nonproliferation, dialogue and engagement in the Middle East, the aspirations of women in the Arab world, and the alleviation of disease and hunger in Africa and in this hemisphere. He began the difficult task of turning words into action for peace and justice, artfully balancing grit and diplomacy with Iran, North Korea, and in the Sudan.
Our president is being recognized as a peacemaker and an inspiration for millions around the globe. But, this honor for the president is not just about the individual. We chose Obama as our face, our handshake extended to the world. In this peace prize, the world is expressing its gratitude for peace to come.
 
ROBERT SHRUM
Democratic strategist and senior fellow at New York University’s Wagner School of Public Service
Obama’s winning the Nobel less than a year into his term shows how much the world values and welcomes affirmative and inspiring leadership from the president of the United States. On my plane Friday leaving Frankfurt for the Middle East, passengers were congratulating me as an American for this tribute to Obama — and his proof that we are once again the America they hope for.
All of us should take heart and pride from this. Despite the jeers about the Nobel from those who cheered our loss of the Olympics, what the prize represents is a powerful asset in the arsenal of our democracy. The way FDR, JFK and Ronald Reagan enlarged and conveyed the idea of America strengthened our influence and ideals around the globe, both while they were in office and long afterwards. In Obama, we have a president who commands such heights, not one who is disdained or despised — and we are better for it.
This was an extraordinary moment in a young presidency of high purpose that is renewing our country’s international standing. But this is also a hard and unrelenting time, and Obama will have to re-earn his Nobel Prize everyday — from North Korea to Iran and Iraq, and, in the coming weeks especially, Afghanistan. The prize doesn’t tell him what decisions to make; it does tell us that we have a president with a new chance to lead in the world instead of going it alone. This Nobel is not premature; it comes at just the right time. Instead of simply witnessing history already made, it can help Obama bend history in the direction of our best hopes.
 
ROBERT REICH
Secretary of labor from 1993 to 1997; professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley
President Obama’s only real diplomatic accomplishment so far has been to change the direction and tone of American foreign policy from unilateral bullying to multilateral listening and cooperating. That’s important, to be sure, but it’s not nearly enough. Had the world not suffered eight years of George W. Bush, Obama would not have won the prize at this early stage of his presidency. I’d rather he had won it after Congress agreed to substantial cuts in greenhouse gases comparable to what Europe is proposing, after he brought Palestinians and Israelis together to accept a two-state solution, after he got the United States out of Afghanistan and reduced the nuclear arms threat between Pakistan and India, or after he was well on the way to eliminating the world’s stockpile of nuclear weapons. Perhaps the Nobel committee can give him only half the prize now and withhold the other half until he accomplishes one or more of these crucial missions.
 
LISA SCHIFFREN
Speechwriter to Vice President Dan Quayle; contributor to National Review Online’s “The Corner” blog
After the incredulity and snickering at a Nobel Prize for significant achievement in international affairs going to a promulgator of vaporous “hope,” with no foreign policy accomplishments, at time of multiple crises, the White House must respond delicately.
Unfortunately, this is another instance for Obama of excessive reward for mere potential. He should be offended. Even the worst frauds on the past recipient list had to work a lot harder for their prizes.
So aides owe the president a dose of reality. Otherwise, the prize may exacerbate his vanity and narcissism, which are his most visible flaws, and inflate his cult of personality, which won’t create jobs or end wars.
One hopes our president understands that the award is a bribe to continue apologizing for America, going soft on rogue nations and despots with nuclear goals, and backing away from the non-peaceful challenges of Afghanistan and Islamic extremism. If not, he’ll learn when Americans next vote.
The moment requires a nuanced, non-political performance. Obama must be able to convey genuine modesty. If that isn’t in his repertoire, handlers should hire the best Broadway acting coach they can get.
Oh, and donate the million bucks to a soup kitchen — times being not so hopeful here at home.
 
DOUGLAS E. SCHOEN
Democratic pollster and author
Every American has to be proud that President Obama has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And there is, of course, an enormous amount that the president has done to end the United States’ estrangement from the world community.
But that being said, the prize was necessarily awarded more for what Obama has said he wants to accomplish than for any concrete achievements.
Moreover, many of the tough decisions the president faces going forward involve the possible use of force — in Afghanistan imminently, as well as potentially in Iran and even in North Korea if circumstances should require a change in approach in both regions.
The most immediate impact of the prize is that it will burnish the president’s image and stature, which have both been somewhat tarnished given the intractable challenges he is facing at home and abroad. The hope has to be that the president’s enhanced image will make it easier to negotiate constructive settlements to ongoing conflicts as well as to begin to put in place a process to settle the Arab-Israeli conflict.
At the same time, the president must remain resolute in his pursuit of America’s interests around the world. That the Nobel Committee called Obama “the world’s leading spokesman for its agenda” should not in any way obscure the fact that the president, no doubt, will have to make some very challenging decisions involving U.S. troops and the possible use of force in the weeks and months to come.
 
ED ROGERS
White House staffer to Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush; chairman of BGR Group
I’m trying to be proud that my president has won the Nobel Peace Prize. But I have no idea what his accomplishment could be that deserves this or any other award. Shouldn’t there be some positive contribution toward peace in a place where there is conflict? I think we should all be more embarrassed than proud.
I assume Obama did not apply, but surely he could have quietly told the committee, “thanks, but no thanks” prior to a public announcement. But, if Ed McMahon just shows up at your door with balloons and the Nobel Prize, what are you supposed to do? Say no?
I don’t think the Nobel committee has done Obama any favors. Americans will see this as contrived and undeserved. It will breed resentment, and, for the first time, Obama may face every politicians’ worst nightmare: ridicule.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/09/AR2009100901721.html

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