Before Congress adjourned last week on another of its lengthy holidays,
Speaker Nancy Pelosi repeated a phrase she has previously used about the war
in Iraq. She again referred to it as "the Bush policy of unending war in
Iraq."
She got it partly right. It is an unending war, at least until one side
vanquishes the other side. There will be no truce in this war; no "38th
Parallel" as with the two Koreas. This war will be unending, not because of
the "Bush policy," but because of the Islamofascists whose jihad they
believe is a direct order from their "compassionate and merciful" God. Some
compassion; some mercy.
Were the dominant surrender wing of the Democratic Party to have its way,
American troops would immediately come home, causing all of Iraq to devolve
into murderous chaos. There would be religious retribution against those who
not only worship differently from the majority, but also the murder of
"collaborators," meaning those who voted, assisted in the writing of Iraq's
constitution and helped the U.S. while trying to help themselves.
As the Pentagon reportedly drafts scenarios related to U.S. troop
withdrawal, the enemy plans for victory. Al-Qaida's number two (an
appropriate designation for those who can remember junior high humor), Ayman
al-Zawahiri, has urged his supporters to extend the "holy war" to other
Middle Eastern countries. Zawahiri sent a letter to the leader of al-Qaida
in Iraq, claiming al-Qaida is defeating U.S. forces and urging followers to
expand their campaign of terror. Clearly, Zawahiri sees this as an unending
war. He is not planning a pullback of his forces, but urging them on.
In Lebanon, a country that until last summer's disastrous war between Israel
and Hezbollah had enjoyed a level of peace and prosperity, Islamic forces in
the siege at the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp reportedly have spent months
digging underground bunkers in advance of an anticipated battle they promise
will last "two years or more." The Sunday Telegraph reports Shihab
al-Qaddour, the deputy leader of the Fatah al Islam group (another number
two), said his band of several hundred "battle-hardened" fighters had built
extensive subterranean fortifications. Fatah's military commander is quoted
as saying his group is "ready to blow up every place in Lebanon."
Unending.
The SITE Institute, which monitors jihadist Web sites from its base in the
U.S., reports a flood of support for Fatah al Islam from members of Internet
forums affiliated with al-Qaida since fighting broke out a little more than
a week ago. Democrats repeatedly say we should only be fighting al-Qaida, so
does that mean we should invade Lebanon? Since al-Qaida is in Iraq,
shouldn't we continue the fight there until we and the Iraqis prevail?
This political battle in America isn't about al-Qaida and it isn't about
victory, otherwise Democrats would be trying to help their country win in
Iraq, not just for the sake of Iraq, but for their country's sake. Instead,
the liberal and controlling wing of their party cares more about political
victory here than ending this war with victory for Iraq, establishing a
second democracy in the region and teaching the jihadists a lesson they will
not soon forget.
Wars are frustrating. People die. Mistakes are made. The United States has
made many mistakes in previous wars, but the nonstop media weren't
broadcasting them in real time, as they are in this one. And where is the
media balance depicting honor and heroism?
The Iraq war is not like Vietnam. We can't pull out until stability is
achieved and the terrorists lose. Vietnamese communists didn't come after us
when that war ended, but Islamic terrorists will and are coming after us.
They will be emboldened to kill more than the 3,000 who died on September 11
if we don't demonstrate resolve at least equal to theirs.
Among America's past enemies, only Japan had a religious motivation for
fighting us. Douglas MacArthur rightly separated religion from state when he
was in charge of Japan's reconstruction. That is a worthy objective in this
war, but first we have to win it, or it will truly be unending until they
win it. |