Showing posts with label Taliban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taliban. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

Israel Matzav: Taliban helping Hamas construct IED's?

Taliban helping Hamas construct IED's?

The IDF believes that the Taliban is helping Hamas and its allies to construct IED's.

The tests, which were carried out by the technology department of the IDF Ground Forces Command, revealed that the bombs were very similar to the improvised explosive devices used against U.S. and British forces by militants in Iraq and Afghanistan, such as the Taliban.

The army found that the assembly of the bombs had also significantly improved, and that they contained substances which had not been used before in such devices in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Among the substances discovered in the bombs was tungsten, a metal that can improve the ability of the devices to penetrate armored vehicles.

The IDF has consulted with representatives from the U.S. and British Army on the matter. A comparison of the devices deployed in the Palestinian territories and in Iraq and Afghanistan revealed similar methods of assembly.

Yes, there really is only one war on terror. But after the Bush administration tried to pretend that Israel was not a part of it, the Obama administration is now trying to pretend that it does not exist.

Aren't you all glad now that we left Gaza and expelled all its Jews four years ago? What could go wrong?


Israel Matzav: Taliban helping Hamas construct IED's?

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

Love of the Land: Hezbollah Isn’t a Model for Afghanistan

Hezbollah Isn’t a Model for Afghanistan


Michael J. Totten
Contentions/Commentary
14 October 09

In a new Web exclusive, Michael J. Totten deconstructs the argument that turning the Taliban into a version of Hezbollah should be the focus of our efforts in that war-torn country. Here’s a preview:

According to the Washington Post, some White House foreign-policy hands may be willing to call it a day in Afghanistan if the U.S. military can beat the Taliban down into something that resembles Hezbollah. I suppose I can see why this appeals to those who know just enough about the Taliban to think it’s possible, and just enough about Hezbollah to think it’s desirable.

Hezbollah is moderate and almost reasonable compared with the Taliban. It participates in democratic politics and even conceded the most recent election to Lebanon’s “March 14″ coalition. Not even its worst fanatics throw acid in the faces of unveiled women as the Taliban does. Its secretary-general, Hassan Nasrallah, doesn’t require women to wear headscarves, let alone body-enveloping burkhas, in territory he controls. While the Taliban destroyed ancient Buddha statues in Bamyan with anti-aircraft guns in 2001, the Roman Empire’s Temple of Bacchus, where Western imperialists used to hold pagan orgies, remains an unmolested tourist attraction bang in the middle of Hezbollah’s Bekaa Valley stronghold. Oh, and Hezbollah hasn’t killed any Americans in Lebanon lately.

So, yes, Afghanistan would be a better place if it suffered the likes of Hezbollah instead of the Taliban. But prosecuting a war for that outcome would be bonkers. Hezbollah is an Iranian proxy militia and a Lebanese guerrilla army that starts wars with the country next door and violently assaults its own capital. It’s also a global terrorist network with cells on five continents. … [read on]

Related: Legitmizing Terrorist Organizations Will Not Make ...



Love of the Land: Hezbollah Isn’t a Model for Afghanistan

Love of the Land: Legitmizing Terrorist Organizations Will Not Make Them Placid Rulers

Legitmizing Terrorist Organizations Will Not Make Them Placid Rulers


JINSA Report #930
jinsa.org
09 October 09

[The Nobel Committee gave the Peace Prize to President Obama because he can visualize a world without nuclear weapons -or because he isn't President Bush. Big deal. Since they gave it to Yasser Arafat, it hasn't been worth "a bucket of warm spit," to paraphrase John Nance Garner.]

The more important story in today's paper is the public emergence in the Administration of the idea that "political wings" of terror organizations should be recognized as legitimate. Accordingly, the Taliban wouldn't need to be defeated, just de-fanged. The Washington Post cites a "senior administration official" saying, "The Taliban is a deeply rooted political movement in Afghanistan, so that requires a different approach than al Qaeda." Hezbollah's political ascendance in Lebanon was referred to by "some inside the White House" as a positive transformation from a terrorist organization to a political party. Hamas, no doubt, is not far behind.

Press Secretary Gibbs pointed out, "There is clearly a difference between" the Taliban and "an entity that, through a global, transnational jihadist network, would seek to strike the U.S. homeland...the Taliban are, obviously, exceedingly bad people that have done awful things...Their capability is somewhat different, though, on that continuum of transnational threat."

There are three underlying assumptions: 1) there are separate and identifiable political and military "wings," the former of which can be persuaded to give up the latter; 2) no matter what crimes an organization commits-against its own people or other people-if some portion of its leadership agrees to participate in politics, the United States will accept it as legitimate; and 3) if it doesn't threaten Americans at home, we don't care who else it threatens.

The first is demonstrably untrue. Chickens have "wings," terrorist organizations have a political leadership that uses military force to impose itself on its own people and make war on others. Hezbollah and Hamas emerged as political players precisely when they had the military force to impose themselves on the Lebanese and Palestinian people respectively-and to make war on Israel. Fatah, before Hamas, did the same. It is unclear in the case of the Taliban who the political leaders are and how/why they should give up their arms. The Taliban is enormously unpopular inside Afghanistan; its ability to terrorize the locals is the only reason it is taken seriously by the United States in the first place.

The second speaks ill of the U.S. government. We used to be (sometimes rightly) accused of cozying up to dictators and ignoring the people they abused at home. The Bush administration tried the opposite approach in Iraq-freeing the Iraqi people from a dictator who was killing people in horrifying numbers, to judge from the mass graves uncovered. Critics condemned "nation building" as colonialist and our efforts in Iraq as "occupation." The current administration has returned to American form-declining to meet the Dalai Lama as a nod to China; playing footsie with Venezuela, Nicaragua, Egypt and Cuba; and now suggesting we could live with the Taliban even if the Afghans would be returned to the decade-long nightmare from which the United States rescued them in 2001.

The third is shortsighted in the extreme, for two reasons: First, because they haven't doesn't mean they won't. There was a time before al Qaeda could strike us in our homeland. Hezbollah, until 9-11, had killed more Americans than any other terrorist organization-and never killed one of us here at home. Terrorist organizations are parasites that need organisms upon which to feed as they grow in size and capability. The United States is not just at war with al Qaeda, or the Taliban-or Hezbollah, for that matter. We are at war with terrorists and the states that harbor and support them. To the extent that we help terrorist organizations BECOME the states that harbor and support terrorist organizations, we ensconce permanent sources of nutrition for the parasites. Lebanon cannot escape Hezbollah; the Palestinians will never escape Hamas if the United States and the EU engage it; Afghanistan will never escape the Taliban if we legitimize them in government.

Which is the second reason that considering threats only to the American homeland is shortsighted. The ideologically like-minded come together to attack "the other." Hezbollah, armed and trained by Iran, threatens the Lebanese people, Israel, Egypt and Jordan. Hamas, increasingly allied with Iran, threatens Jordan as well as Israel. Venezuela and Iran support the FARC, which threatens Colombia. The Taliban, with its military and ideological links to al Qaeda, threatens the Afghan people and Pakistan.

If we consider threats to our friends or allies to be irrelevant to us, at some point they will find it worthless-or dangerous-to be our friends or allies.

Love of the Land: Legitmizing Terrorist Organizations Will Not Make Them Placid Rulers
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