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Rocket's Brain Trust

Fri Jul 14, 6:26pm

MSM - Biased Reports

HT Jewish World Review

RBT saw this on the OP/ED page in today's paper and couldn't agree more.

RBT

*****

Biased reporting
[By Thomas Sowell, July 12th, 2006]

http://www.NewsAndOpinion.com | The same newspapers and television news programs that are constantly reminding us that some people under indictment "are innocent until proven guilty" are nevertheless hyping the story of American troops accused of rape in Iraq, day in and day out, even though these troops have yet to be proven guilty of anything.


What about all the civilian rapes that are charged — and even proven — in the United States? None of them gets this 24/7 coverage in the mainstream media.

[...]

Then there was the incident when a Marine shot a terrorist who was pretending to be asleep and the media turned that into a big scandal until an investigation revealed how these and other tricks used by terrorists had cost the lives of American troops in Iraq.


None of the brutal beheadings of innocent hostages taken by terrorists in Iraq — and videotaped for distribution throughout the Middle East — has aroused half the outrage in the mainstream media as unsubstantiated charges made by terrorists imprisoned in Guantanamo.

[...]

We all need to understand the fraudulence of the claim that these media liberals who have been against the military for decades and who have missed no opportunity to smear the military in Iraq are now in the forefront of "honoring" our troops by rubbing our noses in their deaths, day in and day out.


Troops who have won medals for bravery in battle — including one soldier who won a Congressional Medal of Honor at the cost of his life — go unmentioned in most of the mainstream media that is focused on our troops as casualties that they can exploit.


[...]

Every newspaper and every television commentator has a right to criticize any aspect of the war in Iraq or anywhere else. But when they claim to be reporting the news, that does not mean filtering out whatever goes against their editorial views and hyping unsubstantiated claims that discredit the troops.


Those troops deserve the presumption of innocence at least as much as anyone else.

Read it All





Posted by rocketsbrain on Fri Jul 14, 6:26pm. 0 Comments

Fri Jul 14, 4:30pm

MUST READ - Is the US at war?
HT New Media Journal via The American Thinker

My have we heard this somewhere before :-)

Is the US at war?

Frank Salvato, editor of the New Media Journal, sees us as ”on the brink of world war” and responds with a call to”acknowledge the reality of war,” as the editorial’s title has it.

... it is time to reject the idiocy of political correctness. It is time that those of the fifth column, both here in the United States and abroad, start to accept the undeniable fact that the world is facing a global conflict that pits the free world against those who embrace a radical Islamic ideology.

[...]

Read More

Posted by rocketsbrain on Fri Jul 14, 4:30pm. 0 Comments

Fri Jul 14, 1:33pm

Plaming Out: Joe Wilson Jumps the Shark

HT The American Spectator via Austin Bay

The term jumping the shark as described by Jeffrey Lord at The American Spectator

RBT

*****

Plaming Out: Joe Wilson Jumps the Shark

By Jeffrey Lord
Published 7/14/2006 12:10:33 AM


In TV-land the moment is infamous.

One of the stars of the longtime hit TV series Happy Days, Arthur "The Fonz" Fonzerelli, played by Henry Winkler, is made to do something by the show's writers that was clearly designed to save the fading series from sinking ratings.

The something? The Fonz, on water skis, was forced to literally jump a shark. The episode not only failed to save the once popular series that also starred future director Ron Howard, "jumping the shark" became a Hollywood metaphor for the point at which a once believable premise became a caricature.

With the filing of a lawsuit against Vice President Cheney, White House political aide Karl Rove and ex-Vice Presidential aide Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Joe Wilson and Valerie Plame have finally jumped the shark. With the revelation by columnist Robert Novak that it was neither Rove nor Libby, much less Cheney, who was his primary source for his column mentioning -- in passing no less -- that Wilson's now-famous assignment to Niger was arranged by his CIA-wife, Wilson's entire claim to fame takes a torpedo amidships. The New York Post now reports that Novak's main source was the anti-Iraq War Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, a charge that Armitage has thus far not refuted. Why would someone who opposed the invasion of Iraq as did Wilson and his wife rat out Analyst Plame? There is no reason, which is why Armitage is presumably not included in the suit.

With the filing of this lawsuit Americans outside the Beltway will finally begin to understand something about both Wilson and Plame.

America has been here before. This is not the first time that career officials of the U.S. government have "jumped the shark" by letting legitimate policy differences drive them to Fonzie's water skis.

The name of Major General Edwin Walker has long since receded into history. Like both Wilson and Plame, Walker was a distinguished government servant, in Walker's case serving in the U.S. Army. A West Point graduate, he served with distinction in Italy during World War II. He was involved in combat in the Korean War, and when serving stateside during the 1950s he was the guy who made certain President Eisenhower's orders to desegregate Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, were implemented. By 1959 he was commanding troops of the 24th Infantry Division in West Germany.

There, like Wilson's famous trip to Niger at what the Senate Intelligence Committee says was Plame's arrangement, General Walker began strapping on Fonzie's water skis.

The political polar opposite of Plame and Wilson, Edwin Walker was a committed right-winger. But like CIA analyst Plame and Ambassador Wilson, General Walker was still in the employ of the United States government as a non-political appointee. Alas, as with Plame and Wilson, Walker simply could not control himself. He had his opinions. He was an American. There was that pesky and oh-so inviting First Amendment luring him out to the water skis.

Walker waded in. Specifically he was accused of distributing fliers from the right-wing John Birch Society to his troops. Like Plame, he was quickly accused of abusing his official position as an Army General for politics. Un-deterred, Walker did an earlier version of Ambassador Wilson's stunt. Wilson, of course, wrote of his political opinions for the New York Times, his views on President Bush setting off the explosion that would finally end his wife's CIA career. Walker sat down for an interview with a newspaper called the Overseas Weekly. Like Wilson, who has gone after not only the President but the Vice President and others, Walker chose to attack former President Harry Truman, ex-Secretary of State Dean Acheson, and Senator Hillary Clinton's favorite White House communing partner, former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. All three, said Walker, were "definitely pink." Pink. As in sort of a lighter shade of Communist Red.

Bam! Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara had had enough. General Walker was ex-General Walker in a blink. By resigning instead of retiring he lost his pension. Undeterred, he was immediately back home in Dallas where he became a candidate in the 1962 Democratic primary for Governor of Texas. Walker came in sixth behind JFK's Secretary of the Navy, LBJ pal John Connally. He had made himself such a sensation that in April of 1963, sitting in his living room, he narrowly escaped death at the hands of an unknown would-be assassin who shot through Walker's window with a rifle. Seven months later the assassin, a committed Communist named Lee Harvey Oswald, struck again, this time killing President Kennedy and wounding Walker's one-time opponent, Texas Governor Connally.

Walker wasn't done, however, with the fame game, as dutifully noted at Wikipedia. Like Plame and Wilson, he was furious at the negative publicity that had ended his government career, ignoring completely that he himself had turned on the spotlight. Walker sued not McNamara or Truman or the estate of the late JFK. In 1967 he decided to sue the media, his case against the Associated Press bringing in a negative decision from the U.S. Supreme Court.

Edwin Walker had finally jumped the shark. He didn't even make the cover of Vanity Fair. By 1976 he was arrested for "public lewdness." He died in 1993, an obscure footnote to history. His central target -- Harry Truman -- down below 30% in the polls when he left the White House, was long since enshrined by historians as the president who refused to buckle to America's enemies.

After one long run of Happy Days, like General Walker, Analyst Plame and Ambassador Wilson have finally jumped the shark.

Joe and Val, meet The Fonz. Say goodbye to Hollywood.

Jeffrey Lord is the author of The Borking Rebellion. A former political director in the Reagan White House, he lives in Pennsylvania.

The American Spectator

Posted by rocketsbrain on Fri Jul 14, 1:33pm. 0 Comments

Wed Jul 12, 6:11pm

Israel to declare war tonight?
Scroll for Updates

HT Israel Matzav via Kim at Wizbang

Place your bets :-)

RBT

*****
Israel to declare war tonight?

One of my sources, Harvey in Efrat, claims to have it from 'reliable sources' that Israel is going to declare war tonight. Here's what Harvey is telling me (for the record, I have known Harvey for 35 years - we were roommates at a youth group convention in 1971, and his sources are generally from within the IDF and are usually reliable):

[...]

Read More

Update:

HT Donald Sensing at Winds of Change

Not quite to the Stone Age
by Donald Sensing at July 12, 2006 04:59 PM

Israel loses the initiative to Hezbollah as well as Hamas
In the middle of the Vietnam War, US Air Force chief of staff Curtis LeMay said,

My solution to the problem [of North Vietnam] would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression, or we’re going to bomb them back into the Stone Age. And we would shove them back into the Stone Age with Air power or Naval power—not with ground forces.

Turn we now to Lebanon, where Iran-sponsored Hezbollah terrorists crossed the border into Israel and snatched two Israeli soldiers, carrying them back to Lebanaon. In response, Israel has mounted a major incursion into Lebanon, promising severe measures to recover the two soldiers.

Lieutenant-General Dan Halutz, the Israeli Army Chief of Staff, warned the Lebanese government that Israel would attack its infrastructure and "turn back the clock in Lebanon by 20 years" if the soldiers were not returned, Israeli TV reported. Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, described the Hezbollah raid as an "act of war" by Lebanon and promised a "very painful and far-reaching response".


[...]

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Update II:

HT Austin Bay

Israel squares off against Hamas and Hezbollah

Note the releatively muted US and –so far– European condemnation of Israel’s actions against Hamas.

Now Israel is moving against Hezbollah, after Hezbollah launched attacks on northern Israel and captured two Israeli soldiers.

Two quick theories:

Thoery One: Iranian insanity on nukes has tried European patience. Hezbollah is a financial creature of Tehran.

Theory Two, cast as a fair question: Have the Egyptians, Fatah, Saudis, and Lebanese governments given Israel an implicit go-ahead? The strategem: Reduce these violent factions (Hamas and Hezbollah) and then every one will re-set the chess table.

[...]

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Update III:

Pajamas Media is posting continuing updates on the situation in Israel.

Check PJM for updates


Allahpundit at Hot Air is also continuing to post updates.

Update IV:

HT Chester via Instapundit

Here's Chester's analysis and a link to a great prescience piece on what's unfolding now.

Also Dr. Sanity has this piece on who the real enemies are and do we have the moral courage to take them on!

Iraq the Model
has these thoughts

And from the Real Ugly American

Roger L. Simon speculates that this was a Sharon trap all along. Tyrants have trouble actually running governments and seeing the trash is picked up. Hamas got what they wished for and now they are going to pay dearly.
Posted by rocketsbrain on Wed Jul 12, 6:11pm. 0 Comments

Tue Jul 11, 9:02pm

Iran: Why August 22nd?
HT Atlas Shrugs

The insistence that it be August 22nd by the Islamic Republic of Iran to respond to the obscenely generous nuclear package gifted by the EU3 and the US back on June 6 is puzzling. Knowing Ahmadinejad's obsession with the 12 imam Madhi and his fanatacism with hidden messages in the Koran, we too must familiarize ourselves with this who do voodoo.

Epaminondas at The Villagers with Torches blog reveals an extraordinary piece of Islamic intel

[...]

Read More
Posted by rocketsbrain on Tue Jul 11, 9:02pm. 0 Comments

Tue Jul 11, 8:59pm

Novak Says He Named 3 Sources in Leak Case
HT Drudge Report via Atlas Shrugs

SCROLL FOR UPDATE


THE FRENCH CONNECTION


Novak Says He Named 3 Sources in Leak Case


By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 12, 2006; A04

Syndicated columnist Robert D. Novak acknowledged for the first time yesterday that he identified three confidential administration sources during testimony in the CIA leak investigation, saying he did so because they had granted him legal waivers to testify and because Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald already knew of their role.

In a column to be published today, Novak said he told Fitzgerald in early 2004 that White House senior adviser Karl Rove and then-CIA spokesman Bill Harlow had confirmed for him, at his request, information about CIA operative Valerie Plame. Novak said he also told Fitzgerald about another senior administration official who originally provided him with the information about Plame, and whose identity he says he cannot reveal even now.

[...]

Novak says in the forthcoming column that he initially refused to reveal his sources in an October 2003 interview with three FBI officials. He says he remained reluctant to testify before Fitzgerald, even with the waivers the three officials had given the prosecutor, but that his lawyer told him he was sure to lose a costly legal battle and be jailed for contempt of court. Novak says he testified under subpoena before a grand jury a few weeks later, in February 2004, after reading a statement about his discomfort in discussing confidential sources.

He said he is speaking out now because Fitzgerald notified his attorneys that the investigation, as it relates to him, has been concluded. There is no legal prohibition, however, against a witness discussing his own testimony, as other journalists in the case quickly did.

Novak's role in revealing Plame's CIA employment, which was classified, was the most controversial of his 49-year career as a Washington reporter. "What was frustrating," he said, "was that there were a lot of crazy things being said, that I had taken the Fifth Amendment or I had made a plea bargain. . . . It's obviously caused me a lot of trouble. If I had it to do all over again, would I have done it? It's a hard question to answer."

[...]Critics say that Novak helped the administration retaliate against Wilson, who had become a prominent critic of Bush's conduct in the run-up to the Iraq war, by revealing that Wilson's wife worked for the CIA. Novak said yesterday he does not feel that he was used.

"The primary source was not a political operative," he said, and he mentioned Plame's role in the middle of a conversation about other subjects. "I don't believe it was part of a plan to discredit anybody."

A spokesman for Rove, Mark Corallo, said Novak's account of phoning Rove confirms what the White House strategist has said. "Karl never reached out to any reporters," Corallo said. "They called him."

Novak said he and Rove had differing recollections of what happened when he asked about Plame. Novak recalls Rove saying, "Oh, you know that, too?" Rove, according to Corallo, has said he responded, "I've heard that, too."

[...]

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Update:

HT Wizbang

In Atlas' thread she linked to The Drudge Report as the source. One thing Atlas linked to that RBT ommitted was an attribution that Novack said his source for the actual name of Valerie Plame was an entry in Who's Who for Wilson. This quote was not in any of the links that Atlas, Drudge, Winds of Change, and others were linking to. FOXNEWS' Brit Hume was also saying the samething.

Drudge's link was going to a WaPO article by Howard Kurtz. Kurtz's article is silent on this point. RBT reread Kurtz's article several times and was beginning to wonder if RBT's advanced age was causing him to miss something.

Also thankfully Paul at Wizbang later noticed the same omission.

RBT suspected one or all had access to Novak's original column. After some looking RBT found the original Novack column. Here's the quote:

Following my interview with the primary source, I sought out the second administration official and the CIA spokesman for confirmation. I learned Valerie Plame's name from Joe Wilson's entry in "Who's Who in America."

RBT posted this comment in Paul's thread:

The French Connection

Paul,

If you're a regular reader of The American Thinker there is a conspiracy theory over there that this was a high level French intel directed disinformation campaign. This was to discredit President Bush and throw the dogs off the involvement of high level French officials in many of their dealings with the Saddam Regime.

This involvement includes the UN Oil for Food Scandal (The French were the largest recipients, followed by the Russians and the Chinese), Niger/Oil (French mining and oil interests), and dangling EU membership in front of Turkey to deny our use of their airspace and the IV ID to invade from the North (perhaps would have stopped the insurgency in its tracks by cleaning out the Sunnia Triangle before it could start?)

Here's the key link at The American Thinker I dug up again:


Joseph Wilson IV: The French Connection


and some more at:

rocketsbrain


RBT


Update:

HT Tom Maguire of Just One Minute via Instapundit

Instapundit is linking to Tom Maguire's excellent summary and chronology of the Plame/Wilson Affair.

And also The American Thinker has this insightful twist on this breaking story:

Novak Speaks: New Questions for Fitzgerald and Comey

Captain Ed at Captain's Quarters also noted the MSM dropped the reference to Novack getting Plame's actual name from the Who's Who in America
Posted by rocketsbrain on Tue Jul 11, 8:59pm. 0 Comments

Tue Jul 11, 12:55pm

7/11 Revisted - Bombay Bombings
HT Atlas Shrugs

India: A strong ally of ours suffered mulitple terror attacks at the height of rush hour. Seven explosions hit Bombay's commuter railway system. At least 20 dead. Just the beginning, body parts everywhere. Strory developing.

Indian television broadcast video of badly injured people sprawled on tracks and being carried to ambulances. Witnesses reported seeing bodies parts strewn about the stations. Some of the injured frantically dialed their cell phones.

Fausta has more. So does Pajamas Media.

UPDATE: More than 135 dead (100 confirmed) in India train bombs, 300 injured. 8 explosions. Dave notes the date. You just know............

UPDATE: Fox reported SEVERAL ARRESTS HAVE BEEN MADE: RADICAL ISLAMISTS. (shocka) 148 confirmed dead

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*****

Update:

HT Austin Bay

The Mumbai terror attacks’ hideous numerology

Indian police describe today’s Mumbai horror as a “coordinated” terrorist act. Several Indian states placed their police and security forces on high alert to stop further terrorist attacks.

Americans will immediate think of Al Qaeda and point to the hideous numerology as a clue: 9/11 (New York and Washington), 3/11 (Madrid), 7/7 (London), and now 7/11 (Mumbai). Roll sevens and elevens on the dice table and the shooter wins–at least on the first throw. Terrorists use mass murder to create fear and chaos. If the public begins to dread seven and eleven on the calendar, international terrorists will consider that a psychological victory.

Al Qaeda or an Al Qaeda affiliate may well be involved in the murders. Polyglot, poly-ethnic India, however, confronts an array of home-grown ethnic, religious, and political zealots with track records in terrorism, from Kashmiri Islamist militants to Hindu separatists to the depredations of Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers. In 1991 the Tigers assassinted former Indiam Prime Minister Rajiv Ghandi in India’s Tamil Nadu state.Bill Roggio has a post rich in details.

Here’s a recent news update from Bloomberg. The report says Kashimiri separatists (specifically, the Islamist Lashkar-e-Taiba, LET is the acronym) are current prime suspects. This link leads to a wanted poster and write up on Lashkar-e-Taiba’s “northern Kashmir commander, Salahudin.”

[...]

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Posted by rocketsbrain on Tue Jul 11, 12:55pm. 0 Comments

Mon Jul 10, 8:32pm

Diplomacy and Political Correctness vs. Reality
HT The Belmont Club

Fighting asymmetric warfare in a politically correct manner?

RBT

*****

James Dunnigan, speaking at the Glenn and Helen podcast, argued that the key problem posed by Kim Jong Il's missile posturing -- for China -- was that it might force Japan to go nuclear, adding that Japan with it's plentiful supply of fissile material and superlative industrial and technical base, could produce weapons and launchers that could unquestionably work within fairly short order.

These two instances illustrate the limits of political correctness in dealing with nations. No declarations of "illegitimacy" will eliminate the actual existence of Israel; no admonitions against rearmament can wholly restrain a Japan bent upon survival. Words are one thing, but physical reality is another.

[...]

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Posted by rocketsbrain on Mon Jul 10, 8:32pm. 0 Comments

Mon Jul 10, 8:22pm

The Curse of Freedom
HT Iraq the Model and Michael Yon via The Belmont Club

Interesting perspectives you will not read in the MSM.

RBT

*****

Two articles on Iraq. One from Omar at Iraq the Model. The other from Michael Yon. Omar describes the effect that the War on Terror is having on the Arab consciousness, based on an extensive monitoring of online forums. He thinks that, apart from the horrors which makes the front pages, it has also been a vast learning experience which has enabled many thoughtful Arabs to distinguish between terrorism and fighting for their country. Michael Yon, for his part, is upbeat about Iraq and less upbeat about Afghanistan for the reason rooted in precisely what Omar mentions: the relative development of consciousness in both regions.

[...]

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Posted by rocketsbrain on Mon Jul 10, 8:22pm. 0 Comments

Mon Jul 10, 8:18pm

MSM - Marine General on Progress in Iraq, the Media and more
HT Blackfive

Here's a must read at milblog Blackfive.

RBT

*****

Via retired Marine First Sergeant John W., below is a speech that was given by Marine MG Michael Lehnert, Commanding General, Marine Corps Installations West. I thought it would be worth your time to read and pass on:

[...]

Read it All
Posted by rocketsbrain on Mon Jul 10, 8:18pm. 0 Comments