Posted on 02/09/2002 3:08:47 PM PST by The Right Stuff
Disarming Dubya
by Jennifer King, Senior Editor
February 8, 2002
"The Heretical Housewife"
Although never a big TV watcher, Ill confess that since September 11th, Ive had FOX News (logo, right) on just about 24/7. Primarily for two reasons. One, so I never miss the delightful Rummy doling out verbal spankings to the uninformed media hacks. Two, so that I can catch the wonderful speeches that Dubya has been making at a variety of venues across the nation.
These speeches follow virtually the same gameplan, and yes, Dubya does still mangle his syntax on a fairly regular basis. However, what shines through at every speech is the true sincerity and humility of George W. Bush. Dubya surrounds himself with locally important pols, business owners or whoever happens to fit into the theme of the day. He invariably points them out, and thanks them for coming. He graciously gives them the spotlight. He appears modest and self-effacing.
Having once met George W. Bush, and having seen him speak recently in Daytona Beach (last week, pictured right), I think this humble attitude is really a part of the mans character. Humility truly has to be one of the more difficult attributes to attain, especially in our success driven society. Surely, it must be even more difficult to remain humble while surrounded by hordes of wildly cheering, flag waving fans. Yet, at one lull in Bushs recent speech, a lady shouted out, We love you! And Dubya looked genuinely touched. He sheepishly smiled, and said, Well, I dont know what to say. Thank you.
This humility, and the plain speaking honesty of this President have endeared him to the American people. Bushs popularity is puzzling to the media elites, who are scratching their collective pointy heads over his continuing high approval rate numbers, but I believe the answer is simple.
George W. Bush himself really seems like a nice guy, an average Joe, someone who you could have over for dinner and a movie. Also, Bush is very pro-American in a way that we havent seen since Ronald Reagan. He is proud of our country, continually calling it the greatest nation - and he is proud of his fellow Americans, understanding that Americas strength and power stem from the determination of her people.
For far too long, we have been force-fed a diet of anti-Americanism from those on the Left. From the media outlets to Hollywood to the universities, weary Americans have been beaten over the head with the leftist caricature of the evil, bigoted American. Bill Clinton, the archetypical Left-winger, is still giving speeches to the faithful blaming the 9/11 attacks on American greed.
George W. Bush, who has actually held down a job outside of the public sector, understands that the world terrorist problem is much more complex. Unlike Madeleine Albright, Bush understands that you cannot rely on meaningless treaties signed by dishonorable people. He understands that you must enforce peace through unwavering use of force.
President Bush has rightly seen that it is up to America to wage this war for freedom and liberty over tyranny and terrorism, and that it is our job to win it. He has told us repeatedly that we can, and we will.
The American people believe him. Dubya has given us back our national pride, and he has strengthened our faith in the basic righteousness of our country and her place in history. For that, Americans revere him. And he accepts that adulation, with grace. And, with humility. ***
© 2002 Jennifer King COPYRIGHT © 2002 BY THE AMERICAN PARTISAN. All writers retain rights to their work.
By Brian Murphy Associated Press Writer Published: Feb 9, 2002
MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AP) -
Each stab of the shovel brings up more disturbing finds: skulls, bones covered by bits of clothing, clumps of hair. When United Nations investigators resume inquiries - perhaps as early as next month - this pit in a corner of a vast stone quarry may reveal an important part of a wider story of alleged atrocities by the Taliban and by the U.S.-backed alliance that toppled them.
The pit, about six miles west of Mazar-e-Sharif, was used by the Taliban as a mass grave for members of the Hazara minority who were systemically killed after the northern city fell in 1998, Hazara leaders allege.
The Hazara are followers of the Shia branch of Islam, which is dominant in Iran and a few other places, but which the Sunni Muslims who made up most of the Taliban considered a flawed version of Islam.
Hazara leaders claim their group, about 10 percent of Afghanistan's population, suffered the worst atrocities at the hands of the Taliban. They claim as many as 15,000 Hazara were killed in a religious-motivated slaughter in Mazar-e-Sharif and other parts of the country.
There is no independent source yet to measure the Hazara claims. The Taliban prevented international investigations in Afghanistan, but the new U.N.-brokered interim government has promised full access to inquiries.
Asma Jehangir, the U.N. special investigator for extrajudicial executions, said she hopes to begin work in Afghanistan next month. The U.N. Human Rights Commission, meanwhile, is expecting a report by late March from its special investigator for Afghanistan, Kamal Hossain.
The Hazara claims, Jehangir noted, are just a piece of a complex web of alleged battlefield atrocities, ethnic reprisals and revenge slayings.
The United Nations and other rights groups have also cited accusations aimed at anti-Taliban forces, including the alleged execution of as many as 2,000 Taliban in 1997 in Mazar-e-Sharif and the killings of about 100 retreating Taliban fighters in November.
More recently, forces of warlord Rashid Dostum, an ethnic Uzbek, have been accused of persecuting ethnic Pashtuns in northern Afghanistan. Pashtuns, the biggest ethnic group in the south, were the backbone of the Taliban.
Jehangir said existing evidence gives some credibility to Hazara claims of a directed campaign by Taliban death squads.
"Ethnic reprisals have been going on everywhere," she told The Associated Press. "But there are some indications that it was much more serious when the Taliban took over (Mazar-e-Sharif), and the Hazara may have been among the main targets."
Last year, New York-based Human Rights Watch called for an inquiry into reports that the Taliban massacred as many as 300 Shiite civilians in central Bamiyan province. At the time, the Taliban denied the charges.
Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, has urged a comprehensive U.N. investigation "so that past abusers, Taliban or otherwise, are held accountable."
"Our experience in numerous contexts, including Sierra Leone, Haiti and the Balkans, is that arrangements that allow past perpetrators to escape accountability often lead to new instability and more violence," Roth said last month.
The evidence in the quarry is fragmentary, but appears to fit with witness accounts.
They claim Taliban soldiers spent days in September 1998 tossing bodies - mostly men but also some women and children - into a pit about 20 feet on its sides and 16 feet deep. Hazara leaders believe the site could contain hundreds of bodies.
"The smell was horrible," said Jahn Mohammad, 17, an ethnic Tajik who worked at the quarry. "The Taliban left after some days and we came and covered the bodies. It was impossible to count them. The pit was very full."
Another Tajik, a 22-year-old farmer named Nasir, said the Taliban brought the dead piled on a flatbed truck and "just threw the bodies into the pit one by one."
"The Taliban saw me and didn't bother me because I am Tajik," said Nasir, who goes by one name as do many Afghans. "It was clear they were after Hazara."
Golum Abbas Akhlaki, the political chief of the main Hazara group, Hezb-e-Wahadat, plunged a shovel into the loose soil. Each scoop turned up bits of human remains.
"When we dig up the entire area, then we will know the real count," he said. "It will be a big number, I am sure of that."
Akhlaki has identified other alleged Hazara mass graves around Mazar-e-Sharif: a trench where he claims about 50 Hazara men were executed by firing squad and a farmer's field that he alleges holds up to 100 bodies.
At each site, bones, clothes and personal items such as mirrors and combs were visible or resting just below the surface.
Akhlaki claims the Taliban did not bury all their victims, saying wild dogs and other animals tore the corpses apart.
Abdul Gol, a 60-year-old Hazara, said he witnessed Taliban gunmen rounding up Hazara young men. "They were all killed. The Taliban shot them and left the bodies. We were afraid to come out and bury the bodies. Dogs were fighting over them."
Near the Mazar-e-Sharif airport, a few dozen people have moved back to the ruins of Qizilabad, a Hazara village that once had about 750 families. Villagers claim the Taliban conducted house-to-house searches in 1998 and killed at least 70 young men before looting the homes and mosques.
Most villagers fled to Iran or Pakistan, said Mohammad Ismail, 60, who returned last month.
"These graves contain eight, nine, ten bodies each," said Ismail, standing before a row of more than a dozen mounds. "We just put the dead in big holes before leaving."
In one of the looted mosques - stripped of even the electrical wiring - the walls are covered with the names of Taliban militiamen who apparently took part in the attack.
"Goodbye, Shiites. Long live the Taliban," one message said.
You've captured the essence of the man, and for that I thank you.
PLEASE, keep me in your flag list.
Signed;
A fan.
And how might they -- and you -- consider the killing of 3000-or-so American civilians in an illegal, undeclared act of war?
Is this how you get your jollies, from peeing in the punch bowl?
GO GET 'EM W!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
An arrogant SOB:
What about the 3000+ they murdered here on September 11, 2001? Seeing as how I nearly was one of those, I take particular exception to the anti-war whiny wussies.
Thank you, Lord, for PRESIDENT George W Bush!
Thanks for this post, Right Stuff, and thanks for the ping, lawgirl!
I'm with you, mombonn!
Wolfstar, you are right on target! President Bush is so much like President Reagan in strength of conviction, character and dignity, but in so many ways he is more like us......like a brother, or a friend. And yet I believe, as a result of his own prayers, and the prayers of millions of others, he is also above us, because he has been anointed by God to lead America in its time of need, and is being obedient to God's call.
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