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Giving Aid & Comfort.
His own humble opinion | 04/11/04 | Daniel Ingham

Posted on 04/12/2004 11:10:02 AM PDT by PsyOp

Giving Aid & Comfort.

By Daniel Ingham
04/11/04

“Is there not some chosen curse, some hidden thunder in the stores of heaven, red with uncommon wrath, to blast the man who owes his greatness to his country's ruin!” - Joseph Addison.

Where does patriotism end and treason begin? Or, where does support for the troops and aid and comfort for their enemies begin? These are questions that many have been asking and debating at some level or other since the President first aimed our collective sights at Iraq and the brutal regime that held it in it’s yoke. It’s one I’ve thought about extensively.

On the right, the answers to these questions are clearly defined and seen in such black and white terms that there is little discussion required at all. Patriotism and supporting our troops means putting the interests of the nation and its defenders first and foremost above all others. Support the troops, support the president, and support the mission. If you do have misgivings or criticisms, keep them private until our boys and girls in uniform are home and out of danger.

On the left, the afore-mentioned attitude is an anachronism. It is seen as hackneyed, provincial, nationalistic, or worse. The left considers it the height of patriotism to criticize military action under all conditions (unless initiated by a Democrat), and claims that by doing so, by demanding that troops are never sent in harms way unless part of a U.N. action, they, in fact, are the true supporters of our troops. And the louder, more vocal, and more public the criticism is, the better.

I fall into the first camp. Why?

First let’s look at the Constitution of the United States. Article III, Section 3, states the following:

“Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.”

Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, added after the Civil War elaborates further:

“No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.”

Those definitions are very straightforward. It’s hard to imagine that anyone could misunderstand them or their meaning. Yet many do. Some seem to believe that the behaviors outlined in these two sections of the Constitution are, in fact, not a definition of treasonous activity, but the very essence of patriotism. If they are right, then patriotism truly is the last refuge of scoundrels. Scoundrels aside, however, they are wrong.

Confused? You’re supposed to be. That is the goal of the left—to blur the lines between black and white until every issue becomes an amorphous gray mess that may be manipulated for the convenience of the political moment. Use the word treason to describe treasonous activity and you will be called a right-wing nut; a paranoid conspiracy-theorist; a fanatic; a fascist. The greater the treasonous activity, the greater the character assassination used to defend it. All in the name of free speech.

Still confused? Let me explain it another way. Part of my 11 years in the United States Army was spent serving in a Psychological Operations unit. The primary job of such a unit is quite simple—use basic principles of human psychology against our enemies in order to lower or eliminate their will to fight. In other words—to destroy their morale.

How do you destroy the enemy’s morale and will to fight? It’s simple, really.

First, you call into question their mission. Make them question why they are fighting. Make them question whether they are doing the right thing. Soldiers unsure of their mission question their orders and hesitate to act when quick action is most necessary. In combat, you’re either quick or you’re dead.

Second, call into question their leadership. Make them question their commander’s skill and honesty. Make them question the motives of the political figures that made the decision to go to war. Soldiers unsure of their leadership may refuse to follow their orders or take direct action against their leadership. In combat, failure to immediately follow orders usually gets soldiers killed.

Third, make them homesick. Point out how miserable they are; remind them how long they have been away from home; how much their loved ones miss them; accentuate the bad and ignore the good; tell them there is no foreseeable end in site (no, you won’t be home by Christmas). Homesick and depressed soldiers are not effective soldiers. Ineffective soldiers often become dead soldiers.

Fourth, make it all about them. Point out that the war is not in their personal best interest. “Hey, you can lose an eye (or worse), doing that.” This last step, converting the soldier back into the psychological equivalent of a civilian, is the most deadly. Soldiers who start thinking only of themselves stop acting as members of a team. A soldier concerned only with his own safety stops watching his buddy’s back. Unit cohesiveness breaks down. Desertions and insubordination becomes rampant. Casualties mount higher.

Conversely, the same propaganda that can destroy enemy morale can boost the morale of friendly forces, and vice-versa.

For propaganda to work, it must be based on truth, or at least the perception of truth in the mind of the recipient. Propaganda that does not adhere to this rule generally falls on deaf ears. During the first Gulf War, the Iraqi radio announcer known as, Baghdad Betty, failed in her attempt to demoralize U.S. Troops when she said: “While you are away, movie stars are taking your women. Robert Redford is dating your girlfriend, Tom Selleck is kissing your lady, Bart Simpson is making love to your wife.” If only she had consulted with Sean Penn or Ms. Garafalo before the broadcast.

But carefully crafted lies can, if repeated often enough, still have some effect. If continued long enough, they can alter perception, and perception can become reality. In Mein Kampf (1926), Hitler described what would become known as “The Big Lie”:

“Through clever and constant application of propaganda, people can be made to see paradise as hell, and also the other way round, to consider the most wretched sort of life as a paradise.”

Any of this sound familiar yet? Vietnam was America’s first televised war. On that point, Dean Rusk once said:

“What would have happened in World War Two if Guadal Canal, Anzio beachhead, and the Battle of the Bulge, or the Diep Raid were on television, and the other side was not doing the same thing? Whether ordinary people can sustain a war effort under that kind of daily hammering is a very large question.”

When the Tet-Offensive occurred in 1968, Walter Cronkite donned a helmet, stood on the roof of the Hotel Caravel in Saigon, with the sights and sounds of battle in the background, and declared the war “un-winnable.” The facts on the ground told a different story. The VC, having finally presented themselves in a stand-up fight were smashed and became irrelevant for the remainder of the conflict. The NVA (North Vietnamese Army), was so badly damaged that it would be five years before it could mount another major operation in the south. But Walter, parroted endlessly by lesser “journalists”, and with the help of folks like Jane Fonda and John Kerry, declared the war “un-winnable” and “immoral.” And so it became in the minds of most Americans--including those asked to go win it.

After the war General Vo Nguyen Giap (Supreme Commander of the Forces of [north] Vietnam), wrote his memoirs. In them, he states that if it weren't for organizations like Kerry's Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Hanoi would have surrendered to the U.S. Interviewed in a Time/Life documentary “The Ten Thousand Day War”, Giap reiterates this point and gives credit for the Communist victory to the U.S. media and protestors like Jane Fonda and John Kerry. According to Giap, the North Vietnamese government played to our media and helped feed them the propaganda that was splashed across the news in the U.S. and around the world. Propaganda that not only broke down the morale of U.S. soldiers, but boosted the morale of the NVA.

Anti-war statements by famous politicians, film stars, and media figures also were thrown in the faces of American P.O.W.s in order to break their will to resist.

After he was released from the Hanoi Hilton in 1973, Sen. McCain publicly complained that testimony by Kerry and others before J. William Fullbright's Senate Foreign Relations Committee was "the most effective propaganda [the North Vietnamese] had to use against us."

McCain wrote of this in the May 14, 1973 issue of U.S. News & World Report. According to him, "They used Senator Fullbright a great deal." During this time Kerry was working closely with the Fulbright committee, telling the American public that U.S. soldiers were committing war crimes in Vietnam as a matter of course. "All through this period," wrote McCain, " [they were] bombarding us with anti-war quotes from people in high places back in Washington. This was the most effective propaganda they had to use against us."

Many P.O.W.’s first heard Kerry’s name from the lips of their Communist captors. Later Kerry was forced to admit that he had not actually seen these “atrocities” committed, and that many of the so-called “vets” he brought with him to give public testimony before Congress and Senator Fulbright’s committee had never actually served in the military.

Ion Mihai Pacepa, the highest-ranking intelligence officer ever to defect from the Soviet bloc, was interviewed by the National Review on February 26, 2004. According to him:

“The exact sources of that assertion should be tracked down. Kerry also ought to be asked who, exactly, told him any such thing, and what it was, exactly, that they said they did in Vietnam. Statutes of limitation now protect these individuals from prosecution for any such admissions. Or did Senator Kerry merely hear allegations of that sort as hearsay bandied about by members of antiwar groups (much of which has since been discredited)? To me, this assertion sounds exactly like the disinformation line that the Soviets were sowing worldwide throughout the Vietnam era. KGB priority number one at that time was to damage American power, judgment, and credibility. One of its favorite tools was the fabrication of such evidence as photographs and "news reports" about invented American war atrocities. These tales were purveyed in KGB-operated magazines that would then flack them to reputable news organizations. Often enough, they would be picked up. News organizations are notoriously sloppy about verifying their sources. All in all, it was amazingly easy for Soviet-bloc spy organizations to fake many such reports and spread them around the free world.
    “As a spy chief and a general in the former Soviet satellite of Romania, I produced the very same vitriol Kerry repeated to the U.S. Congress almost word for word and planted it in leftist movements throughout Europe. KGB chairman Yuri Andropov managed our anti-Vietnam War operation. He often bragged about having damaged the U.S. foreign-policy consensus, poisoned domestic debate in the U.S., and built a credibility gap between America and European public opinion through our disinformation operations. Vietnam was, he once told me, ‘our most significant success.’”

Nixon, in his book The Real War (1980), had this to say:

"The War in Vietnam was not lost on the battlefields of Vietnam. It was lost in the halls of Congress, in the boardrooms of corporations, in the executive suites of foundations, and in the editorial rooms of great newspapers and television networks. It was lost in the salons of Georgetown, and the classrooms of great universities. The class that provided the strong leadership that made victory possible in World War I and World War II failed America in one of the crucial battles of World War III—Vietnam."

I don’t know about you, but that sounds like a lot of “aid and comfort” to me. The result? A proud army, one that won nearly every battle fighting in the “just cause” of aiding an ally against communist aggression, came home defeated and shamed. Those that made it possible practically redefined the word treason--in more ways than one. 58,000 to be exact.

Nearly thirty years later American soldiers are again in harm’s way. They are engaged in a “just cause” against Islamic terrorism. They have deposed one of the bloodiest and most sadistic dictators since the end of the Second World War.

Recently, Senator Edward Kennedy called Iraq President Bush’s Vietnam. Former vice-president Gore claimed that President Bush “betrayed” America’s trust by going to war with Iraq. Media pundits and mavens by the score gleefully report every casualty and declare that we are in a “quagmire.” Presidential hopeful Kerry, who gave aid and comfort to our enemies thirty years ago, continues to do so by declaring that the President lied about “WMD’s”, while failing to remember that he, too, believed the intelligence briefs and the need to remove Saddam.

Meanwhile, in the Arab press, where we, our country and our soldiers are regularly demonized, these “American Patriots” are quoted by those recruiting the terrorists to kill us.

In Early March, Al-Jazeera, the network favored by terrorists everywhere (especially Osama Bin-Laden), picked up Kerry’s banner. They have said, “[Kerry] has suggested Bush's handling of the campaign is "f****ed up.” They’ve repeated Kerry’s charge that the Bush Justice Department has stigmatized "innocent Muslims and Arabs who pose no danger." And, directly quoted him as saying, "Bush misled Americans on the degree Iraq posed a threat."

Terrorists watch the news, too. In fact, Senator Kennedy’s attacks on President Bush are so popular that radical Imams are quoting him in sermons meant to encourage attacks on our soldiers. Shiite terrorist leader Muqtada al-Sadr, who has been stirring up trouble in Iraq and recently called for the killing of U.S. Soldiers, likes what Senator Kennedy has to say so much that he is using it in his:

"Iraq will be another Vietnam for America and the occupiers... I call upon the American people to stand beside their brethren, the Iraqi people, who are suffering an injustice by your rulers and the occupying army, to help them in the transfer of power to honest Iraqis.”

That, too, sounds like “aid and comfort” to me. Teddy and Kerry must be proud.

And what happens if you try to point this simple fact out to these people or their supporters? What happens if you try to tell them they are wrong for speaking out in this manner? You are labeled as unpatriotic. You are called a Nazi. You are trying to stifle “free-speech.”

During the Vietnam war, protestors felt safe denigrating soldiers and spitting in their faces. But this tactic backfired. Eventually the Left suffered a backlash because of this behavior. Today, the first thing out of a war protestor’s mouth is the qualification “I support the troops, but not the war.” That statement is supposed to immunize them against criticism as they trash the President, the war effort, the mission, and our soldier’s accomplishments in setting a nation free.

My question is: “How can you support the troops while providing their enemies with ready-made propaganda? How can you support the troops while giving aid and comfort to their enemies? How can you support the troops if you continually, and publicly, call into question their mission, their leadership, their accomplishments?”

You can’t. The perception of public division here encourages our enemies around the world. It motivates them. It gives them hope for victory. In short, it gives them “aid and comfort.” And it chips away at the morale of our own troops.

Talk to the troops in Iraq or just returned. They are constantly dismayed by the fact that our media only wants to show dead coalition soldiers, ignoring all the schools that they’ve re-opened, children vaccinated, public works restored, and much, much more.

Recently, the same terrorists we are fighting in Iraq, blew up a train in Madrid. They did it 2 days before a national election. They did it alter the outcome of that election so that those who supported us in Iraq would lose. It worked. The Socialist candidate was elected and he immediately called for the withdrawal of Spanish troops from Iraq.

Since then, attacks on U.S. Troops in Iraq began increasing until they exploded in Falluja, where four American civilian contactors were murdered and their charred bodies dragged through the streets by a cheering crowd. Later that day five Marines were ambushed and killed by a roadside bomb in the same city. On hand and ready to film it all, even before the firing began, was a news crew from Al Jazeera. The same network that thinks so highly of Senators Kerry and Kennedy.

After seeing the dramatic political results effected by a terrorist attack in Spain, foreign terrorists from Syria and Iran have joined Saddam regime holdouts in a bid to produce the same results in the upcoming U.S. Elections. And why not? After all, if you watch the news and read the papers here, you’d think that most Americans oppose the war; that Iraqis are worse off now than under Saddam; that we’re only after the Oil, etc. We even have a show trial, sorry, “commission”, set up to blame the President for 9/11 and give Democrats a shot at the White House in November.

So, they might as well kill some more Americans. After all what have they got to lose? And just look at the upside!

Can we afford to allow the left to once again snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, and turn the country back over to the thugs and murderers that ran it before. Can we allow the sacrifices of U.S. Soldiers to be thrown away yet again?

Today, there are dead Americans and coalition soldiers in Iraq because some who fancy themselves “patriots” can’t keep their mouths shut.

In the wake of Pearl Harbor there were serious questions about what President Roosevelt knew and when he knew it. Many believed, and still do (and not without evidence), that he knew the attack was coming and allowed it to happen so as to kick-start America’s full participation in the war. There was a Senate investigation into the matter only one year after the attack. It was held behind closed doors and the findings sealed till after the war.

They knew what we seem to have forgotten. Supporting the troops means supporting them, their mission, and their leadership--especially in public. If you disagree, keep it private. Or, at the very least, don’t broadcast it to the world so our enemies can re-print or re-broadcast it for their propaganda. Got a gripe? Write your congressman, the president, whoever. If they get enough letters of opposition, if the mission is unjust, if they think they will lose the next election by not bringing our troops home quickly enough, they’ll make it happen. In the meantime, the country needs to show the terrorists and Saddam hold outs that we are united against them.

It is not a violation of your first amendment rights if I ask you to put a sock in it while my daughter is in uniform and a target for terrorist thugs. It is my right. And it is your obligation as a fellow citizen not to say anything that would encourage terrorists to keep on fighting even one day more.

“A nation can survive its fools and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and he carries his banners openly against the city. But the traitor moves among those within the gates freely, his sly whispers rustling through all alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears no traitor; he speaks in the accents familiar to his victim, and he wears their face and their garments and he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation; he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of a city; he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to be feared. The traitor is the plague.” – Marcus Tullius Cicero, Roman Orator - 106-43 B.C.

“Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was condemned, repented himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, Saying, I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood.” - The Bible: New Testament, Matthew, 27:3.

Daniel Ingham
Escondido, Ca.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: freespeech; givingaidandcomfort; iraq; kennedy; kerry; middleeast; patriotism; terrorism; treason
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To: PsyOp
Every sailor who served under Lieutenant John Kerry on Swift boats PCF-44 and PCF-94 have gushed about his poise under enemy fire. They tell stories of his rescuing a Green Beret from drowning, killing a Viet Cong sniper, and saving 42 Vietnamese civilians from starvation. To paraphrase Ernest Hemingway they claim that in combat Kerry exemplified “grace under pressure.” But PCF-44 Gunner’s Mate Stephen M. Gardner—in a long telephone interview from his home in Clover, South Carolina—has a starkly different memory. “Kerry was chickenshit,” he insists. “Whenever a firefight started he always pulled up stakes and got the hell out of Dodge.”

The Tenth Brother

141 posted on 04/26/2004 2:30:43 PM PDT by PsyOp (No reading is more necessary than that of Machiavelli…. - Clauswitz, On War, 1832.)
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To: All
With respect to Saddam Hussein and the threat he presents, we must ask ourselves a simple question: Why? Why is Saddam Hussein pursuing weapons that most nations have agreed to limit or give up? Why is Saddam Hussein guilty of breaking his own cease-fire agreement with the international community? Why is Saddam Hussein attempting to develop nuclear weapons when most nations don't even try and responsible nations that have them attempt to limit their potential for disaster? Why does Saddam Hussein threaten and provoke? Why does he develop missiles that exceed allowable limits? Why did Saddam Hussein lie and deceive the inspection team previously? Why did Saddam Hussein not account for all the weapons of mass destruction which UNSCOM (U.N. Special Commission) identified? Why is he seeking to develop unmanned airborne vehicles for delivery of biological agents? Does he do all those things and more because he wants to live by international standards of behavior? Because he respects international law? Because he is a nice guy the world should trust?

Remarks of Senator John Kerry on Iraq

He was for it, before he was against it...

142 posted on 04/26/2004 4:41:29 PM PDT by PsyOp (No reading is more necessary than that of Machiavelli…. - Clauswitz, On War, 1832.)
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To: PsyOp
Giving Aid & Comfort, Part 2.
143 posted on 05/10/2004 8:13:55 PM PDT by PsyOp (Any man can make a mistake; only a fool keeps making the same one. – Cicero.)
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To: PsyOp
Is John Kerry even eligible to run for President?
144 posted on 05/10/2004 9:42:33 PM PDT by Jack Black
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To: PsyOp
Is John Kerry even eligible to run for President?
145 posted on 05/10/2004 9:43:05 PM PDT by Jack Black
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To: PsyOp; Defender2; All
Why do the TV and Cable Newsrooms
hide Hanoi Kerry's past?

146 posted on 06/20/2004 1:40:02 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (Hanoi Kerry is a traitor)
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To: All
Kerry cast a long dark shadow over all Vietnam Veterans with his outright perjury before the Senate concerning atrocities in Vietnam. His stories to the Senate committee were absolute lies..fabrications..perjury..fantasies, with NO substance. That dark shadow has defamed the entire Vietnam War veteran population, and gave "Aid and Comfort" to our enemies..the Vietnamese Communists.

Open Letter from VietNam POW USMC/USAF Col. George "Bud"

147 posted on 08/26/2004 9:01:26 AM PDT by PsyOp (John Kerry—a .22 Rimfire Short in a .44 Magnum world.)
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To: PsyOp

GAD! So sorry I missed this first time around. Have been doing the same kind of research (read Marshall, anyone?), and this makes my point far better than I'd have done. Absolutely superb. Thank you.


148 posted on 08/28/2004 12:08:41 PM PDT by Mach9
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To: Mach9
(read Marshall, anyone?)

Which Marshall? O'm not familiar with the name unless you're referring to the one that authored the Marshall Plan. BTW, glad you liked the article. It was reprinted on the Wintersoldier.com website.

149 posted on 08/30/2004 8:33:43 AM PDT by PsyOp (John Kerry—a .22 Rimfire Short in a .44 Magnum world.)
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To: PsyOp

Chief Justice John Marshall, under Washington, Adams, Jefferson (maybe more)--lots of attention given to treason in those early days.


150 posted on 08/30/2004 12:16:22 PM PDT by Mach9
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To: PsyOp

BTTT


151 posted on 09/25/2004 12:07:59 AM PDT by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
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To: All

"It was an important step towards ending the administration's aimless, open-ended course in Iraq and having Iraqis stand up for Iraq."

— John Kerry, shortly after his senatorial colleagues overwhelmingly voted down the Kerry-Feingold proposal to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq by July 2007.


152 posted on 06/27/2006 9:06:07 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: All

"Why is it so hard to believe John Kerry?... Overcoming skepticism about Kerry's change of heart on Iraq will be especially challenging. For one thing, it tracks nicely with the general public's change of heart and coincides conveniently with the liberals' search for an antiwar champion. In addition, the antiwar fervor that Kerry displayed this week also coincides with an early poll from Iowa that puts John Edwards in first place with Democrats in that presidential caucus state. The two former running mates now seem to be vying for the antiwar political left." —Joan Vennochi


153 posted on 06/27/2006 9:14:46 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: All

"Like the Sunni insurgency, the national Democrat Party and its congressional contingent has demonstrated time and again that they will willingly sacrifice the welfare and security of the American people to get their way... In the end, all that matters to them is regaining the power the American people took from them in 1994..." —Michael Reagan, "Patriot Post".


154 posted on 06/27/2006 9:22:09 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: All

"The detainees at Guantanamo are not innocent unfortunates swept up in an indiscriminate dragnet. These people were captured on the field of battle where they intended to kill Americans and Britons." — Cal Thomas.


155 posted on 06/27/2006 9:23:22 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: PsyOp
21 June 2006 | PatriotPost.US | Patriot No. 06-25

From the Leftmedia Psychosis Files:

"This trip was not only surrounded in secrecy, there was a bit of deception as well." — ABC's Martha Raddatz incredulous that the President's visit to Iraq wasn't carefully detailed to the press in advance.

"I wonder to what degree anybody in the White House thought maybe it might undermine our point if we have to take such excessive security precautions in order to go claim victory or whatever it was the President was trying to accomplish?" — PBS's "Washington Week" host Gwen Ifill.

Trying to hide the white flag: "[A]re you comfortable with characterizing the Democrats as people who want to cut and run?" — CBS's Bob Schieffer to Tony Snow.

From the "Dan Rather" School of Journalism: "Inside the insurgency: Documents purportedly from insurgents speak of their failures and coalition successes. Are the documents genuine?" — ABC's Charlie Gibson **Try asking Mary Mapes.

That 70s Show:

"Do you see, as some of your critics do, a parallel between what's going on in Iraq now and Vietnam?" — ABC's Ann Compton to President Bush.

"Do you ever have a moment where you feel this just won't end well, that no matter how many Zarqawis are killed, the insurgents are just never going to give up?" — CBS's Jim Axelrod to President Bush.

From the "Cut and Run" Files:

"I don't know how many times we have heard the president say, 'We will stand down as the Iraqis stand up.' I don't want to hear that anymore. It seems to me that that mantra no longer stands. That is, we have to start bringing our troops home." — Harry Reid, who voted against bringing our troops home.

"We need to redeploy our troops... They've become the targets, they're caught in the civil war, and I feel very strongly about it." — John Murtha.

"[T]he people that are cutting and running are the administration when it comes to truth about Iraq and about their policies in Iraq, about the misguided information, the lack of intelligence, and the misinformation that they gave the American people as a basis for the invasion of Iraq, and the continued misinterpretation." — Ted Kennedy.

"I don't know why we are so afraid to stand up and say, look, we want to see an end to this thing... Three years and three months into a mission that was supposed to take 30 or 40 days... That isn't cutting and running." — Dianne Feinstein **Who said it would take 30 or 40 days?

"If I'd known the president was going to be this incompetent in his administration, I would not have given him the authority [to go into Iraq]. Had I been president, I would have asked for the authority." — Joe Biden, who also voted against bringing our troops home.

Off the charts: "The entire country may disagree with me, but I don't understand the necessity for patriotism. Why do you have to be a patriot? About what? This land is our land? Why? You can like where you live and like your life, but as for loving the whole country... I don't see why people care about patriotism." — Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks.

Speaking of patriotism: "They're moral human beings who don't want to go to Iraq and kill innocent people to line the pockets of George Bush and the war machine." — Cindy Sheehan.

Jay Leno: President Bush went to Iraq to boost the new government. That shows how rough the situation is in Iraq when a guy with a 30% approval rating stops by to give you a boost. ... President Bush sneaked into Iraq without any formal paperwork, which I guess would make him an undocumented leader. ... President Bush returned safely from his surprise trip to Iraq. A lot of people criticize him, saying he was only in Iraq for five hours. Hey, it's still five hours longer than the French were there. ... Democrats are refusing to give President Bush any credit for killing al-Zarqawi. Like today Al Gore blamed it on global warming. And John Kerry said of the two 500 pound bombs that hit the safe house, he voted for the first bomb—not the second one. ... Gore said they could have gotten the same job done with one hybrid mini bomb that runs on vegetable oil. Less pollution. ... What's the difference between al-Zarqawi and Patrick Kennedy? Patrick Kennedy will get bombed again. ...

156 posted on 06/27/2006 9:49:39 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: All

19 June 2006 | PatriotPost.US | Patriot No. 06-25

"One presidential visit to Baghdad is worth a thousand pathetic declarations of defeat from Nancy Pelosi, Howard Dean or Ted Kennedy—none of whom has shown the least respect for the democratically elected and courageous leaders of reborn Iraq. Bush's visit forced the media to briefly stop whining about the phony issues of Haditha and Gitmo and to acknowledge that Iraq has a free, functioning government. But for ambitious journalists, inventing or exaggerating American misdeeds will always be more rewarding than telling the truth: Zarqawi's death was written off, while Haditha was written up. Still, glints of truth force their way through. And the truth is: We've got a president with guts; our efforts in Iraq are paying off, and their new government is far more important to Iraqis than Gitmo or Haditha." — Ralph Peters.


157 posted on 06/27/2006 10:00:57 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: All

"I don't know how many times we have heard the president say, 'We will stand down as the Iraqis stand up.' I don't want to hear that anymore. It seems to me that that mantra no longer stands. That is, we have to start bringing our troops home." — Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, June 2006.


158 posted on 06/27/2006 10:03:16 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: PsyOp

"[T]he Swift Boat vets lied and lied and lied about everything. How many lies do you get to tell before someone calls you a liar? How many times can you be exposed in America today?" — John Kerry, who has been exposed as a liar regarding his Purple Hearts, a liar regarding his "Christmas in Cambodia," a liar regarding the release of his complete military records, ad infinitum...


159 posted on 06/27/2006 10:41:12 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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To: PsyOp
02 June 2006 | PatriotPost.US | Patriot No. 06-22

"Now, as a result of the massacre-hungry media blitz, Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has denounced U.S. indifference to civilian casualties in the most virulent terms, accusing troops of near-daily attacks against innocent Iraqis. While John Kerry and his war-crimes contingent, together with their media lemmings, will see this as a confirmation of U.S. atrocities and the hopelessness of the situation in Iraq, the reality of Maliki's remarks is far different. Maliki's denouncement represent a calculated move—likely with U.S. assent—to hold together the country's fragile new governing coalition, which is dependent on keeping the Sunnis at the table in the face of media-fed popular discontent. It's one more example of domestic constraints driving international relations in the Muslim world.

"These savage media attacks received their biggest shot in the arm with Congressman John Murtha's pronouncements describing the incident as though he were an eyewitness: "There's no question in my mind about what happened here... They killed four people in a taxi and then, in addition to that, they went into the rooms and killed them. [I]t's something that we cannot excuse." Even if—God forbid—Murtha is correct, his use of our troops as a lever to slam the Commander in Chief, publicly condemning the American military in wartime, is absolutely unforgivable. His accusations place our soldiers in even greater jeopardy as tempers run high on the "Arab street." In short, Murtha & Co. have once again given aid and comfort to the enemy at this critical time. We pray the good citizens of Pennsylvania remember this treason come November.

~ Editor, Patriot Post.

160 posted on 06/27/2006 10:44:47 AM PDT by PsyOp (Fear, not kindness, restrains the wicked – Metus improbos compescit, non clementia. – Syrus, Maxims.)
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