The "bipartisan" Iraq panel has recommended that Iran and
Syria can help stabilize Iraq. You know, the way Germany and
Russia helped stabilize Poland in '39.
Now that Democrats have won the House, they can concentrate on
losing the war. Despite all the phony conservative Democrats who
got elected as gun-totin' hawks, the Democrats will uniformly
vote to dismantle every aspect of the war on terrorism. They've
started a runaway train and can't stop it now.
The Democratic base is at a fever pitch with visions of storm
troopers listening to their phone calls and ruthlessly torturing
innocent accountants at Guantanamo, where the average inmate has
his own lawyer, his own prayer rug and is wondering what to do
about that extra weight -- known as the "Gitmo 20" -- he's put on
since being captured. They are oddly copacetic about actual storm
troopers' daily harassment of actual citizens at airport security
checkpoints. Liberals have no problem with government oppression
as long as it's mandatory and applied equally to all
Americans.
In a broadcast on the fifth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks,
NBC's Matt Lauer tried to nail down the Manhattan portion of his
audience by aggressively questioning President Bush about the
possible use of "waterboarding" against terrorists like Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Lauer said ominously, "It's been reported that with Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, he was what they call 'waterboarded.'"
At NBC, they apparently expected most Americans to react to
this fact by exclaiming: They did WHAT to Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed? Wait -- are you sure about that? OK, that's it. I will
never vote Republican again!
President Bush refused to discuss techniques used on
terrorists, saying, "We don't want the enemy to adjust." But
Americans "need to know," he said, "we're using techniques within
the law to protect them."
While normal people would be happy if we were using cattle
prods on the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, Lauer was testy
about the possible use of waterboarding against him. "I don't
want to let this 'within the law' issue slip," he said.
"I mean, if, in fact, there was waterboarding used with Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed -- and for the viewers, that's basically you
strap someone to a board, and you make them feel as if they're
going to drown. You put them under water. If that was legal and
within the law, why couldn't you do it at Guantanamo? Why'd you
have to go to a secret location around the world?"
In point of fact, we strap people to wooden boards and make
them feel like they're drowning all the time in this country.
Mostly at theme parks like Six Flags.
Bush again said he wasn't going to talk about techniques. But
Lauer's relentless grilling was getting to him. If he'd been at
Gitmo, at this point Bush would have demanded a lawyer, another
copy of the Quran and a couple of chocolate eclairs.
Lauer continued to pester the president, demanding to know
whether these "alternative techniques you use ... if they are
used, are you at all concerned that at some point, even if you
get results, there's a blurring the lines of -- between ourselves
and the people we're trying to protect us against?"
Hey, I forget: When did Khalid Sheikh Mohammed use aggressive
interrogation techniques against a known mass murderer in an
effort to thwart another 9/11-style attack on thousands of
innocent civilians?
There are few better examples of how out of touch liberals
are. They go right to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and expect Americans
to be outraged that he may have been waterboarded.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was the principal architect of the 9/11
attacks and is believed to have played a role in the 1993 World
Trade Center bombing, the Bali nightclub bombings, the filmed
beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, a
thwarted 2002 attack on a bank tower in Los Angeles, and
Operation Bojinka, a plot to blow up 11 commercial airliners
simultaneously. Oh, and he took home the coveted "world's
craziest terrorist" prize at al-Qaida's end-of-season office
party last year.
I think waterboarding should be a reward for Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed: OK, you've been good, Mohammed, we're only going to
waterboard you today. Let's get you out of those cold electrodes
and onto a nice, warm waterboard, OK?
Now that they're our new best friends, how about we turn to
Iran and Syria for help on our interrogation techniques? |