Please Hit

Folks, This is a Free Site and will ALWAYS stay that way. But the only way I offset my expenses is through the donations of my readers. PLEASE Consider Making a Donation to Keep This Site Going. SO HIT THE TIP JAR (it's on the left-hand column).

Saturday, July 28, 2007

NU?---What the Liberals don't want you to Know

As I walked to the subway last night, I heard a voice behind me whisper, "hey mister." I turned around and saw a disheveled man wearing a long trench coat, "yeah you with the beanie on your head" "I don't need a watch" I said as I turned back to my train home. "I ain't selling watches" he answered as I continued to walk away. Thats when he shouted the word that made me stop, "NU?" he said (Nu? is the universal secret Jewish code ---it can be used as a substitute for any question you want to ask--what many people don't know is that NU was developed in biblical times. It was what the Hebrews that wandered in the desert called the food that fell from the heaven called manna. In that case both NU and Manna meant the same thing "what is this stuff?") Any way since the guy knew the secret code I turned and approached him with the appropriate answer..."Nu?" I said? He put his hand on my shoulder and lead me into an alleyway. The guy began to open his trench coat, I quickly asked "you're not one of THOSE Priests are you?" "No" he said "I'm a Levy....listen I don't have much time." He pulled an piece of paper out of his pocket, "Read this, it's the dirty little secret the Liberal MSM and the Democratic Congress don't want you to know. " With that he started to run down the alley way. "Wait!" I pleaded. "How did you know that I was the Yid With Lid?" The guy in the trench coat stopped dead in his tracks and slowly turned to me. He first pointed to his forehead, then put his hands out to his sides, shrugged his shoulders and said "NU?" As soon as he was out of site I read the paper he gave me, it said:

WINNING IN IRAQ

By RALPH PETERS

July 26, 2007 -- TO a military professional, the tactical progress made in Iraq over the last few months is impressive. To a member of Congress, it's an annoyance.

The herd animals on Capitol Hill - from both parties - just can't wait to go over the cliff on Iraq. And even when the media mention one or two of the successes achieved by our troops, the reports are grudging.

Yet what's happening on the ground, right now, in Baghdad and in Iraq's most-troubled provinces, contributes directly to your security. In the words of a senior officer known for his careful assessments, al Qaeda's terrorists in Iraq are "on their back foot and we're trying to knock them to their knees."

Do our politicians really want to help al Qaeda regain its balance?

Gen. David Petraeus and his deputies sharply prioritized the threats we face in Iraq: Al Qaeda is No. 1, and Iran's Shia proxies are No. 2. Our troops hunt them relentlessly. And we don't face our enemies alone: Iraq's security forces have begun to pick up their share of the fight.

A trusted source in Baghdad confirmed several key developments that've gone largely unreported. Here's what's been happening while "journalists" focused on John Edwards' haircuts:

* Al Qaeda lost the support of Iraq's Sunni Arabs. The fanatics over-reached: They murdered popular sheiks, kidnapped tribal women for forced marriages, tried to outlaw any form of joy and (perhaps most fatally, given Iraqi habits) banned smoking. In response, the Arab version of the Marlboro Man rose up and started cutting terrorist throats.

* Since the tribes who once were fighting against us turned on al Qaeda, our troops not only captured the senior Iraqi in the organization - which made brief headlines - but also killed the three al Turki brothers, major-league pinch-hitters al Qaeda sent into Iraq to save the game.

Oh, and it emerged that the Iraqi "head" of the terrorists was just a front - in the words of one Army officer, Omar al Baghdadi was "a Wizard of Oz-like creation designed to give an impression that al Qaeda has Iraqis in its senior ranks."

* Al Qaeda has been pushed right across Anbar, from the once Wild West to the province's eastern fringes. The terrorists are still dug in elsewhere, from the Diyala River Valley to a few Baghdad neighborhoods - but, to quote that senior officer again, "our forces have been taking out their leaders faster than they can find qualified replacements."

Even the Democrats yearning to become president admit, when pressed, that al Qaeda's a threat to America. So why didn't even one of them praise the success of our troops during their last debate?

But let's be fair: Congressional Republicans, terrified of losing their power and glory and precious perks, haven't rushed to applaud our progress, either. They'll give up Iraq, as long as they don't have to give up earmarks.

* It isn't only al Qaeda taking serious hits. After briefly showing the flag, Muqtada al-Sadr fled back to Iran again, trailed by his senior deputies. Mookie's No. 2 even moved his family to Iran. Why? Though he's been weak in the past, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is now green-lighting Iraqi operations against the Jaish al Mahdi, the Mookster's "Mahdi Army."

With its descent into criminality and terror, the Mahdi Army, too, has been losing support among Iraqis - in this case, among Shias.

And Iraq's security forces increasingly carry the fight to the militia:

* The Iraqi Police Tactical Support Unit in Nasiriyah came under attack by Mahdi Army elements accustomed to intimidating their enemies. Supported by a brave (and tiny) U.S. advisory team, the police commandos fought them off. Instead of a walkover, the militia thugs hit a wall - and got hammered by airstrikes, for good measure. Then the Iraqi police counter-attacked. The Mahdi Army force begged for negotiations.

* In Mosul, Iraqi army and police units stuck to their guns through a series of tough combat engagements, with the result that massive arms caches were seized from the terrorists and insurgents. In Kirkuk, Iraqi police reacted promptly to last week's gruesome car-bombing - in time to stop two other car bombs from reaching their intended targets.

* In Baghdad, the surge isn't only about American successes - Iraqi security and intelligence forces conducted a series of hard-hitting operations against both al Qaeda and Iran-backed Special Group terrorists.

What were you, the American people, told about all this? Well, The New Republic published a pack of out-of-the-ballpark lies concocted by a scammer claiming to be a grunt in Baghdad. Our soldiers, he wrote, spent their time playing games with babies' skulls, running over dogs for fun and mocking disfigured women in their mess hall.

Anyone who knows our troops or has visited Iraq could instantly spot the absurdities in this smear and the soldiers in the unit denied that any of it happened - but The New Republic (which refuses to produce its source) isn't exactly staffed by military veterans.

The editors wanted to believe evil about our men and women in uniform, and ended up doing evil to our troops. (Those editors ought to be sentenced to spend August in Baghdad with the infantrymen they defamed, cleaning out military port-a-johns in the 130-degree heat.)

Is success suddenly guaranteed in Iraq? Of course not. The situation's still a bloody mess. But it's also more encouraging than it's been since the summer of 2003, when the downward slide began.

Gen. Dave Petraeus and his subordinate commanders are by far the best team we've ever had in place in that wretched country. They're doing damned near everything right - with austere resources, despite the surge. And they're being abandoned by your elected leaders.

Maybe the next presidential primary debate should be held in Baghdad.

Maybe its time that the Liberal MSM and Congress were a bit more honest about what is going on in Iraq. NU?


Folks you must see this..it is both honest and Very Very Funny

2 comments:

Susan Duclos said...

How funny. Great piece as usual my friend.

Anonymous said...

Now here's what the Republicans don't want you to know about the war--that is was a sad excuse for keeping KBR and Halliburton from going bankrupt.

I was shocked when I found this out, and you can too through a book recently published called "Betraying Our Troops."

An accountant and an auditor (a Congresscritter, no less) went over to Iraq and looked into the books--they found widespread corruption in the war-service companies (the real reason our troops don't have boots, night-vision goggles, and body armor), that the contractors were getting paid right off the top, and that KBR (among others) would go under if it weren't for the war.

I'm a righty, so this doesn't come as a disparagement of the war itself. Also, there's corruption on BOTH sides of the war aisle, and the Dems just want to bring that money back home so they can control it better (i.e., give it to their own pet projects and contractors).

My husband once told me that the remedy for a sagging economy is a spankin' good war--now I believe him. Has anybody here watched CNBC long enough to notice that credit has dried up ( meaning the Chinese are no longer buying our bonds), that corporate buybacks have stopped, and that merger deals and takeovers have suddenly screched to a halt? That means the economy has been relying on CORPORATE money to keep the markets afloat, because the consumer peetered out long ago.

If it weren't for the war, we'd be in a depression right now. What a way to cover it up, right?