Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Thanks for Nothing Anthony

I just commented on today's post by  "A Few Clowns Short".  It kinda put me in the mood to throw in my own two cents about Anthony Weiner, Democratic reprobate & loser. 

We have a Republican field for 2012 expanding exponentially.  We have Paul Ryan's tax bill proposing significant cuts to Medicare.  We have Sarah Palin riding around on a bus acting like a PT to every reporter who asks if she's "a candidate for President."  We have Michelle Bachmann hiring the vicious Right Wing former political advisor to Ronald Reagan, Ed Rollins, as her political advisor in a bid for the Republican nomination.  We have the banks and retailers going at it over debit card charges:  should they have a ceiling or can the banks continue to rake in $95 billion or more dollars in revenue from swipe cards at the retail level?   We have General Petraeus and Secy of Defense Robert Gates retiring but insisting we maintain a strong presence in the Middle East.  Qaddafi refuses to step down.  Our soldiers are still "over there".  Oh yes, and our economy sucks.

What are we talking about?  Anthony Weiner's weiner.  It's front & center and diverting attention from everything that really matters.

He's a jerk.  He should resign.  His wife is to be pitied.  Let's move on. 


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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

One Answer to My Question

I found an answer to the question I posed in yesterday's post, "Now What?".  The writer is a "veteran American journalist" and his POV, in this post, makes sense to me.  Herewith in its entirety:
Libya: A Goal?-Yes, A Way Out?-Yes, Naivety?-Yes

by Dan Ehrlich   Hard Truths...

Those opposed to the UN sanctioned US-EU attack on Libya claim there is no clear goal or exit strategy. Wrong! Our goal has been obvious since the rebellion got rolling last month…to help the rebels overthrow Gaddafi…a man who has long outlived his usefulness to the West.

Unfortunately we seem to imbued with naive liberal style wish fulfillment to initially think the rebels would kick the long-lived potentate out on their own. Once Gaddafi mobilized his forces and began taking back towns won by the rebels two things became evident.

First, he has a lot of popular support, which brings into question the validity of the rebellion and second, once Gaddafi's forces began fighting back, the rebels didn’t have a chance in what has been revealed to be a genuine civil war, with large pro and anti government sentiment.

Enter the US, UK, France and even Qatar, anxious to prove it being chosen as a World Cup venue was a smart decision by FIFA. Realizing the rebels were going to get the shit kicked out of them, and also facing the reality if having continue dealing with Gaddafi, who they had been rooting against, the major oil users figured “in for a penny in for a pound” and attacked Libya.

Remember Libya is the biggest oil producer in Africa and the wealthiest Arab country west of Suez, according to UN stats. It’s important to the stability of the galaxy that this country remains in the Western sphere of influence. Before the chaos enveloping most of the Arab world the West was satisfied dealing with guys such as Gaddafi who offered stability as they raked in the billions to their Swiss bank accounts.
Now, however, a void is growing in the region with no indication who will take over in Libya, Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen and other counties where unrest is growing. In Libya’s case, if this is indeed a civil war, what right do the major powers have to intervene? The reason has been humanitarian concerns for the safety of the population threatened by madman Gaddafi. Of course the real reason is safeguarding the oil for the West.
Our naivety again is revealed in thinking popular revolutions or even civil wars indicate democracy and humanitarian governments forming. We conveniently forget the tribal and religious nature of largely rural landscapes such as Libya and even Egypt where the Infidel has long been the enemy of the true faith.
What leaders in the US and EU must now be trying to figure out is what will come after Gaddafi. The last thing they would hope for is another Iran, something that’s possible but not likely. Iran’s anti Western obsession is based largely on its Shiite faith being a hard-line minority Muslim sect and its somewhat one-sided colonial history with Britain and the USA.
So, our exit strategy will simply be stopping the bombing and seeing if the rebels can unseat Gaddafi, after which being so grateful the new dictator will pledge his love and oil to the West.


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Christina

Christina
by Cole Scott