This is good stuff - just when I thought we wouldn't be able to take the war to the monsters in their own countries because of the socialists/communists in our own government, a bomb takes out one of the big guys in the world wide terrorists network.
The liberal Democrats can not be pleased about this as these people are heroes to liberals. Jimmy Carter loves mass killers and tyrants of any strip. The Democrats rely on terrorist to defeat the US military in Iraq and elsewhere - the socialists can not gain a foot hold in this country as long as we have a all voluntary army.
This attack is long over due - I hope who ever did this, it would be great to find out that is was the US military, will strike again and soon, but I'm afraid we don't have the will to actually take the offensive against such people - congress would be horrified - just the thought of killing one of the worst butchers of humanity in all of the world would be devastating to the liberals in our government. Reid would faint on the floor of the senate. Jimmy Carter would have a heart attack.
But somewhere there is someone that has taken the burden upon themselves to strike a blow for what's right in this world : Pay back time for the good guys!!
Hallelujah - keep the faith, the battle is jointed
Mughniyeh's Death: Keystone Kops in Damascus
February 18 2008
There is something deeply satisfying about the flawlessly executed assassination of Islamofascist terror master Imad Mughniyeh, writes *Youssef Ibrahim*. “Sometimes a single bullet, or mini-bomb, blazes a path to clarity. This upset shook a Syrian edifice of invulnerable macho terror, showing a way to widen a breach.”
By Youssef M. Ibrahim
Celebrating a car bomb is not the politically correct thing to do. Yet there is something deeply satisfying about the assassination of Islamofascist terror master Imad Mughniyeh before the stroke of midnight the other day in the central command post of Islamofascist movements inside Damascus, Syria.
Whoever planned it scored a blow so hard, so disturbing, it brought the secret services of Iran, Syria, Hamas and Lebanon’s Shiite Hezbollah all together into Syria’s capital where they are now trying to figure out what happened.
In a chaotic eulogy, the man’s boss Hezbollah’s chief Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, practically promised war on Israel -the presumed doer-, America, and the West. Following nearly 24 hours of silence, the Syrian official media acknowledged the bomb in its bosom; decrying it as a ”flagrant violation of international law” the first time such concern for civility has been demonstrated by a regime steeped in murder.
Iran, the undisputed Godfather to Hezbollah and hostage taking, dispatched its foreign minister and its Revolutionary Guards Corps commander of the Quds force to commiserate. In Beirut two rallies of a hundred thousand each took place simultaneously the day after, one marking the 3-year anniversary of the murder of Prime Minister Hariri presumably by Syria, and another with uniformed Hezbollah mourners marching behind Mughniyeh’s coffin led by his mother screaming ”Look what they did to my boy”. (Never mind the same Mrs. Mughniyeh lost two more boys, Jihad and Fouad, in 1984 and 1985, to car bombings of their own that went bad).
Is this much ado about one terrorist? Not this case and not this one. Sometimes a single bullet, or mini-bomb, blazes a path to clarity. This upset shook a Syrian edifice of invulnerable macho terror, showing a way to widen a breach.
In short order the man in charge of Hezbollah’s special operations for nearly three decades, wanted in 42 countries, a killer of hundreds of Americans including Marines, CIA folks and diplomats, a man whose reach wrecked a Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires as well an American oil workers’ housing complex in Saudi Arabia, a multinational terrorist born in Lebanon, who resides in Tehran and travels under deepest Syrian cover, was blown away as he stepped out of an intelligence meeting in a plush Damascus residential neighborhood of his mentor state. And no one left a note.
The Islamofascist association is right to be upset. This is the sort of thing that can spread. For years car bombs made in Damascus have blown up Lebanese nationalists starting in 2005 with a spectacular murder of a Prime Minister and 22 others. He was followed to the grave by scores of Lebanese other victims, parliamentarians, journalists, civil servants and army generals at regular intervals, plus a three month war with ”Fattah Al Islam” a Syrian-trained Islamofascist Palestinian group sent to wage war in Lebanon’s refugee camps last year.
For President Bashar Assad the Damascus call last week was the first time he got return postage. Now new vistas open along with— macabre as it is— a new path, namely that bombings are a game good guys can play too, and very close to where President Assad lives and plans his.
It had all seemed to be too much of one-way traffic in these past years anyway. Even Arabs were pining for a slap back, by Israel or some Lebanese. A verity reported not often enough is that Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas, all grate badly the Arab underbelly and have for some time.
In the summer of 2006 the Arabs were all cheering on the Israeli army in its botched war on Hezbollah I the first weeks. Similarly in Gaza, Arabs look at the Israeli army retaliation against Hamas and its economic squeeze of Gaza favorably. A similar situation exists today over Syria with many hoping someone (Israel again?) will take it down. Hence the suppressed Arab cheers for that Damascus bombing —whoever planted it.
Arab pundits never shy away from noting that for all its talk of militancy about Israel, and its proxy wars waged via Palestinians or Hezbollah, Syria has never fired a shot ”in anger” to liberate its own Golan Heights taken by Israel way back in 1967.
Syrian bravado notwithstanding, Damascus’ terror mask melted a bit the other day with the knowledge there is a lot more where this came from. Syrian calling stations are plentiful at home, in the Persian Gulf region and in Europe as well as in Beirut, where the same sender can deposit new calling cards.
We may not know who did the deed, but it was so well done we know it can be done again. So why not sit back and watch Bashar Assad’s best men taken out for another dance?
Youssef M. Ibrahim, a former Middle East correspondent for the /New York Times/ and Energy Editor of the /Wall Street Journal/ is a freelance writer and Mideast political risk consultant based in New York.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
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