All posts by danz_admin

Bizarro L.A. Times?

In the last week, there are been two op-eds that could be construed as being pro-gun.

Did someone slip a fake copy onto my driveway??

In today’s op-eds, Walk Softly and carry a Big Gun, a commentary by an Alaska resident who asks:

I am puzzled now by the strange way people here are dealing with mountain lions … which is to say, letting them kill you.

And last week, Diana Wagman went shooting:

Guns are bad. All my life, it’s been that simple. At my son’s preschool, if a child pointed a banana and said “bang,” he was admonished to “use the banana in a happier way.”…

So what would make someone like me change my mind? I met this gun enthusiast. As research for my new novel, I asked him many questions, all the while voicing my disgust. My character might use a gun, but I never would. “Come to the range,” the gun guy said. “I’ll teach you to shoot.”

Hmmm… Go figure.

UPDATE: Suman Palit is adopting the same approach.

MLK Day

Today’s the day the we celebrate the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and I’m damn glad we do.

When we talk about race today, we talk about the scandal at the King/Drew medical center, or about the 19th Century racial politics of Al Sharpton. It’s an annoyance to many and should be an embarrassment to some.

But in my lifetime, young black solders in uniform were denied accommodations and meals. In my lifetime, black families – who had worked, lived and owned land in communities for two generations, were explicitly denied the right to vote.

In my lifetime civil rights workers – whose crime was to seek the same rights for people with black skin – were brutally murdered, with the complicity of the white police who were sworn to protect them.

To understand where we really are, and where we are going, it’s important to have some sense of where we came from.

Rev. King may not have been a perfect man – no one is.

But he and his movement are models we should not forget.

That’s 9:00 AM at Camp Pendleton, in Oceanside CA

I know I keep bringing this up, but it’s really ‘good news’ and so great to post on a Saturday.

We’ll need you on Wednesday, Jan. 21st… because here’s what Jim Hake of www.spiritofamerica.net has managed to get together for the Marines to bring with them to Iraq!!

* About $50,000 raised
* In kind contributions, price reductions and goods donations of ~$150,000

With that $50,000 or so we’ve bought:

* 15,000 (2 tons) imprinted frisbees

* Supplies for 10,000 school supply bags, incl 10,000 each of:
– imprinted tote bags
– box of 12 pencils
– bag of 10 ballpoint pens
– pack of 10 colored markers
– wirebound notebook

* 4 pallets of medical supplies

* More med. equipment and supplies for 200 damn nice kits/packages for clinics and doctors

* 800 duffel type travel bags for Iraqi police and medical personnel

Folks, we’ll need enough people to assemble and pack 10,000 supply bags!! Bring a friend…

Terrorism as a Binary Agent

Well, I’m almost above water. And I’ve been reading and rereading Jeffrey Record’s article blasting the Bush WoT policies, and I’ve come to the conclusion that I just can’t buy his arguments about Iraq. And yes, I know he’s a respected academic in the field, and I’m a pseudonymous blogger. Here’s the crux of my disagreement.

The critical point he makes is this:

Or to put it another way, unlike terrorist organizations, rogue states, notwithstanding administration declamations to the contrary, are subject to effective deterrence and therefore do not warrant status as potential objects of preventive war and its associated costs and risks. One does not doubt for a moment that al-Qaeda, had it possessed a deliverable nuclear weapon, would have used it on 9/11. But the record for rogue states is clear: none has ever used WMD against an adversary capable of inflicting unacceptable retaliatory damage. Saddam Hussein did use chemical weapons in the 1980s against helpless Kurds and Iranian infantry; however, he refrained from employing such weapons against either U.S. forces or Israel during the Gulf War in 1991, and he apparently abandoned even possession of such weapons sometime later in the decade.48 For its part, North Korea, far better armed with WMD than Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, has for decades repeatedly threatened war against South Korea and the United States but has yet to initiate one. How is the inaction of Saddam Hussein and North Korea explained other than by successful deterrence?

There is no way of proving this, of course, but there is no evidence that Saddam Hussein ever intended to initiate hostilities with the United States once he acquired a nuclear weapon; if anything, rogue state regimes see in such weapons a means of deterring American military action against themselves. Interestingly, Condolezza Rice, just a year before she became National Security Adviser, voiced confidence in deterrence as the best means of dealing with Saddam. In January 2000 she published an article in Foreign Affairs in which she declared, with respect to Iraq, that “the first line of defense should be a clear and classical statement of deterrence–if they do acquire WMD, their weapons will be unusable because any attempt to use them will bring national obliteration.” She added that rogue states “were living on borrowed time” and that “there should be no sense of panic about them.” If statelessness is a terrorist enemy’s “most potent protection,” then is not “stateness” a rogue state’s most potent strategic liability?

Once you acknowledge that state actors can be deterred, his answer becomes simple

Traditionally, however, war has involved military operations between states or between a state and an insurgent enemy for ultimate control of that state. In both cases the primary medium for war has been combat between fielded military forces, be they regular (state) or irregular (nonstate) forces. Yet terrorist organizations do not field military forces as such and, in the case of al-Qaeda and its associated partners, are trans-state organizations that are pursuing nonterritorial ends. As such, and given their secretive, cellular, dispersed, and decentralized ‘order of battle,’ they are not subject to conventional military destruction. Indeed, the key to their defeat lies in the realms of intelligence and police work, with military forces playing an important but nonetheless supporting role.

In detail, it looks like this:

Intelligence-based arrests and assassinations, not divisions destroyed or ships sunk, are the cutting edge of successful counterterrorism. If there is an analogy for the GWOT, it is the international war on illicit narcotics.

There’s lots more, and you ought to read his work. (personally, I think there are some other large holes in it, as in his inability – or unwillingness – to distinguish guerilla warfare from terrorism:

Terrorism, like guerrilla warfare, is a form of irregular warfare, or “small war” so defined by C. E. Callwell in his classic 1896 work, Small Wars, Their Principles and Practice, as “all campaigns other than those where both sides consist of regular troops.” As such, terrorism, like guerrilla warfare, is a weapon of the weak against a “regular” (i.e., conventional) enemy that cannot be defeated on his own terms or quickly. Absent any prospect of a political solution, what options other than irregular warfare, including terrorism (often a companion of guerrilla warfare), are available to the politically desperate and militarily helpless? Was Jewish terrorism against British rule in Palestine, such as the 1946 Irgun bombing attack (led by future Nobel Peace Prize Winner Menachem Begin) on the King David Hotel in Jerusalem (killing 93, including 17 Jews),19 justified as a means of securing an independent Jewish state? “Terrorism may be the only feasible means of overthrowing a cruel dictatorship, the last resort of free men and women facing intolerable persecution,” argues Laqueur. “In such conditions, terrorism could be a moral imperative rather than a crime–the killing of Hitler or Stalin early on in his career would have saved the lives of millions of people.”

Note that assassinating Hitler or Stalin – even in their early political career – would be guerilla warfare – an attack on the troops or political structure of the state. I think that he misses the key definitions of terrorism as I understand it:

If you hate the United States, or Republicans, you might believe that killing Hastert, even though he is nominally a ‘civilian’ would somehow strike at the effectiveness or strength of the U.S. or the Republican party (note: I don’t advocate this, Ann, please don’t get any ideas…). You’d be deranged in these cases, because one of the strength of our system is its relative independence from who wields the levers of power. But you’d be ‘understandably’ evil. Comprehensibly evil. But to kill the guy who runs the Quick Mart where Dennis stops and gets his Slim-Jims, in order to frighten or intimidate Hastert moves the evil to a whole new category. The grocer’s life becomes meaningless, you make him into a pawn, devalue him as a moral agent, and in so doing, devalue yourself morally.

He buys into the notion of terrorism as an extension of warfare by irregular means. I don’t.

But there’s a deeper blindness in his piece which keeps me from stepping back from my current positions; a simple argument which he misses and which is central to my view.

Here’s the rub.

As I’ve noted in the past, I personally believe that terrorism will be here for as long as we’re struggling with ‘Bad Philosophy’. We will continue to see essentially random acts ranging from ‘mucking’ to Murrah. But the scale and threat posed by that level of terrorism will be relatively low, and the actors will be highly vulnerable to traditional police work (as were the recently-arrested Texas terrorists), unless they are backed by something that controls resources on the scale of a small state or large multinational corporation.

I can get five friends together and blow up a bridge (and I have just the friends to do it, too…). But to do something at the kind of scale that 9/11 represented takes more than the willingness to die for my cause.

Hezbollah can supply the bodies, but it is the cash supplied by that Iranians, Saudis, and (formerly) Iraqis that pays for the staff and infrastructure to educate children in the ways of hate and feed them until they become murderous adults. It is national governments that allow terrorist organizations to build camps to house and train their recruits, and provide the stable living conditions that allow the leadership the time and space to plan and organize.

The kind of terrorism that we need to be worried about is a binary agent. It requires both the kind of human actors that can be found or created in many places, but to make their actions something other than self destructive paroxysms of rage, it takes tacticians, resources, training, and weapons that need to be provided at a larger – national – scale.

And that’s the fear of what a nuclear-armed Iraq or North Korea might do. Not that they would use the weapons directly – because, after all, if they do they’re done for. But that they may find ways to place the weapons in the hands of those who could use them in ways that they might deny.

Using his model of the ‘War on Drugs’ is informative; as long as there are states which are essentially captive to narcotics cartels – say, Panama – it is impossible to stop the flow of drugs. As long as there are states which use terrorist armies as proxies, we will not be safe.

The answer is, I believe to simultaneously do three things:

1) work to dry up state support for terrorism as aggressively as we can;
2) improve our ability to detect and respond to terrorist activities internally;
3) fight ‘Bad Philosophy’. This is one that’s going to take some doing…

On Jan. 21st, Spirit of America Needs YOU!

I’ve been working to point people to Jim Hake of www.spiritofamerica.net, who is working – among other things, on putting together some materiel for a Marine division headed back to Iraq to hand out to Iraqi civilians. So far he’s gathered mostly school supplies, low-level medical equipment, and some toys.

The first $50,000 worth is going to be delivered to Camp Pendleton here in Southern California next Wednesday, January 21st. He needs about 40 volunteers to help unload and assemble this stuff, which the Marines will put into a shipping container and take with them.

So if there’s a chance that you can spend Wed. at Camp Pendleton, it’d be hugely helpful. Here are the details:MEET AT 9:00AM

Take the Camp Pendleton Exit on Rt. 5 just north of Oceanside. Volunteers will meet at the main gate parking lot no later than 9:00 a.m. to be escorted to the event.

WORK INVOLVED

Volunteers will be:

* Assembling school supply kits, putting pencils, pens and notebooks in tote bags
* Assembling medical supply bags, putting sm. equipment and supplies in bags and boxes.
* Moving boxes into containers.

People who can’t lift things won’t have to.

TIME COMMITMENT

Volunteers should be prepared to help until 1:00 pm. If possible, we may need them longer. We’ll provide lunch.

I’ll be there, and hope some other folks can be as well. More details here.

Ace In the Hole: Photo Gallery

We imagined the moment in “Saddam Haiku,” but even that wasn’t as sweet as the real thing. These photos come from a source who shall remain anonymous. If many of the faces look blurred, it’s because we blurred them to protect identities. We also reduced the file sizes to 20-48k for faster downloading. Enjoy!

* The Ace in the Hole
* The Money Shot
* Home Sweet Home
* Welcome Home Party
* Down and Out in Tikrit Hills (a true classic!)

UPDATE: Better versions of these photographs are up now; we found ways to preserve everyone’s identity without altering or shrinking the photos as much. Meanwhile, if you want a comprehensive round up of developments in Iraq, visit our Jan. 19th Iraq Report – part of our regular Winds of War briefings.

A Couple Of Things (read all the way to the end)…

First, apologies, as there is lots of bloggable stuff and little time on my part in which to blog it. Deadlines approach, and they are my mistress for now.

The big thing is obviously the widely publicized Army War College article (pdf) by Jeffrey Record, blasting Bush’s conduct of the “Global War on Terrorism”. I’ve glanced at it, and while I’m inclined to grant the author significant knowledge and expertise that I lack, there is a disconnect between the world he describes and what I see. I’m going to chew on that and will have something to say apace. Who knows, I could change my mind…

Jim Hake is still working hard to come up with swag the 1st Marine Division can give away to civilians in Iraq – reminding them that we want badly to be their friends – you can click here to help, or here to donate cash (as of last week, he’d raised over $30,000 and sourced 2,000 frisbees with ‘friendship‘ on them in English and Arabic). Or, if you live in Orange County or San Diego, email me and we’ll be helping him packing and loading early next week.
Scott Tarkington of Demosophia not only offered to do an amazing and kind favor for me (Biggest Guy was stuck at Union Station in D.C. on his way back to VA), but has a bunch of interesting blog stuff worthy of comment and note. See especially:

* Den Beste’s 3 Way War Typologies
* Before the Wave; and
* Sane Talk About Zionism and War.

Comments are queued up after the above.

Steve “300K” Lopez, my favorite target-of-abuse at the LA Times, has a truly stupid column up on state finances. I’ve heard far better at Middle Guy’s high school debate practices, and this guy gets a Times column and big dollars for it? Go figure. Mr. Carroll, I can set you up with some of these smart high school kids…and Mr. Lopez, I can refer you to some knowledgeable – and liberal – folks who could set you a little bit straight on state finances. In case you’d like to understand why I think it’s so dumb, start here.

I’m enjoying the hell out of Carville’s latest book, and am discovering reading a book one (short) chapter at a time is fun, in a frustrating way – amazingly like foreplay.

I’ve been invited to be one of the motorcyclists escorting the limos for the premiere of the new movie ‘Torque’ – a long story, and something cheesy enough that I may actually take the time and go do it. If so I’ll have to practice my xtreme riding sometime tomorrow…

…and, most important of all, today is the fourth anniversary of the day that TG and I admitted to each other that “this relationship matters.” Yes, it does. She still matters to me, and yes, I know how lucky I am to have her, love her, and be loved by her in return.

Snarky political comments to resume soon.

This Is About Sex, Isn’t It…

Over at Michael Totten’s, he has a great post (which should be read in conjunction with the Benny Morris interview linked by Roger Simon) about what war is.

One of his commenters, Kimmitt, made this comment:

‘And some Americans get an awful lot of wood from the idea that we might be living in a time with a total war. I don’t even pretend to understand why.’

I commented in response:

Can I propose a corollary to Godwin’s Law??

All discussions of geopolitics are ultimately reduced to psychosexual accusations about those who may in any way support war.

I’ll suggest that we can call it ‘Kimmet’s Law,’ and note that fruitful discussion about issues of war pretty much ends about at that point.

I’d also suggest that Kimmitt and friends may want to make their points about the psychosexual defects of those who believe that force has it’s uses to a Tutsi or Bosnian Muslim. I’m sure the Dutch soldiers in Srebenca were concerned that they might appear overly butch as the Serbs came down the road, and that a careful explanation to the Hutu mobs or Serbian patramilitaries that their actions really came from a feeling of sexual inadequancy would have done the job in turning them back.

La Nouvelle Vague

Calpundit has two good posts up on liberalism and historic cycles; I want to send you over to take a look at them and think about what he says.

His first post is about the fact – and I agree that it’s a fact – that elements of ‘New Deal liberal’ politics and policies are so embedded in our political nature that, like fish and water, we no longer see them.

I don’t think the left is doing quite as well as he projects (as far as gun laws go, people like me are happier this decade than we’ve been in a while, and while GWB is expanding the state, the beneficiaries seem more to be large corporations than small business or individuals).His second post is truly intriguing. He raises the question of what the next progressive wave will look like. He says:

None of this is to say that these issues from previous progressive eras are dead. They aren’t: healthcare, for example, is likely to be a significant issue in the coming decade. At the same time, however, they aren’t likely to be the enormous drivers of social change that they have been in the past.

But if the big issue of the next progressive era isn’t labor, the social safety net, or individual rights, what will it be? Today, in hindsight, we can see Truman’s integration of the armed forces and Jackie Robinson’s debut with the Dodgers as the first faint stirrings of the great civil rights crusade that drove the 60s, but nobody in 1950 could have predicted that. Likewise, there is probably something simmering below the surface today that will drive the next big progressive era.

But what?

Exactly – what is the principle around which the left side of the house will coalesce? Hmmm…

From the NY Times…

From today’s NY Times, something worrisome and something hopeful.

On the worrisome front:

WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 – The Bush administration on Wednesday reasserted its broad authority to declare American citizens to be enemy combatants, and it suggested that the Supreme Court consider two prominent cases at the same time.

Maybe someone smarter than I can explain to me what wouldn’t work with existing laws on treason.On the hopeful front, Friedman’s latest, which ends with:

We cannot change other societies and cultures on our own. But we also can’t just do nothing in the face of this mounting threat. What we can do is partner with the forces of moderation within these societies to help them fight the war of ideas. Because ultimately this is a struggle within the Arab-Muslim world, and we have to help our allies there, just as we did in World Wars I and II.

This column is the first in a five-part series on how we can do that.

If you’ve read my stuff at all, you’ll know that I’m looking for this answer. I sometimes feel like I’m clutching at straws in doing so, but I’ll deal with that.

I’d keep the military warmed up while we looked, tho.