Category: Barack Obama/Joe Biden

  • White House knew three days before about chemical attack

    So looking at the Government Assessment of the Syrian Government’s Use of Chemical Weapons on August 21, 2013 from the White House in regards to the chemical attack in Syria, you’ll come across this paragraph under the heading “Preparation”;

    We have intelligence that leads us to assess that Syrian chemical weapons personnel – including personnel assessed to be associated with the SSRC – were preparing chemical munitions prior to the attack. In the three days prior to the attack, we collected streams of human, signals and geospatial intelligence that reveal regime activities that we assess were associated with preparations for a chemical weapons attack.

    Syrian chemical weapons personnel were operating in the Damascus suburb of ‘Adra from Sunday, August 18 until early in the morning on Wednesday, August 21 near an area that the regime uses to mix chemical weapons, including sarin. On August 21, a Syrian regime element prepared for a chemical weapons attack in the Damascus area, including through the utilization of gas masks. Our intelligence sources in the Damascus area did not detect any indications in the days prior to the attack that opposition affiliates were planning to use chemical weapons.

    So, I wonder who they told, if they warned through their “sources” any rebels or civilians?

    Further;

    We assess with high confidence that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale against the opposition multiple times in the last year, including in the Damascus suburbs.

    So why is this the first time we’re hearing about this? Apparently, according to the White House the Assad regime has been dancing on the “red line” since the President drew the damn thing. But now suddenly, with the failures of every policy that this administration has advanced in the headlines, all of a sudden we a distraction with a shiny object like a limited military strike halfway around the world.

    In related news, the same woman who spent two years trying to defund our troops who were engaged with al Qaeda in Iraq as the Speaker of the House, suddenly sees a “national security” interest in a limited and narrow strike against Syria, according to the Washington Post;

    Pro-war Pelosi

    I guess they figure that a couple of videos of some ‘splodies on televion will make us forget that healthcare costs are rocketing into the stratosphere and we still don’t have any jobs. Time for the troops to yank the President’s fat from the fire once again.

  • Kerry defends decision to use force on Syria

    Ya know what? If I was the president, I don’t think I’d send out someone who more than half of the country polled in a general election expressed distrust to explain my case. Kerry, rightly said that we don’t have to take his word for anything, and I certainly wouldn’t. Kerry’s TV appearance today was based solely on emotion and not even a little bit on proven facts. You can watch the video at this link, if you can stand to listen to that voice.

    All he proves is that which we already know – someone used some sort of poison gas on a large number of people, but he doesn’t offer any proof that it was indeed the Assad regime.

    “I’m not asking you to take my word for it,” Kerry said, urging people to read the report. “This is what Assad did to his own people.”

    Kerry called Bashar Assad a “thug” and a “murderer” who must not be allowed to escape retribution for the attack.

    The intelligence assessment said the U.S. government has “high confidence” that the Syrian government carried out the chemical attack using a nerve agent.

    The report said preliminary findings show 1,429 people were killed in the attack, including at least 426 children.

    I have no doubt that someone used gas on those people, but what I don’t know is who actually pulled the trigger and what we plan to do about it, and how that intended plan will prevent the next attack, and how will preventing that attack make us safer? these are the same questions that Biden, Kerry and Obama demanded of President Bush, but now they seem less inclined to answer those same questions.

    The Bush Administration took two or three dozens of countries in their coalition, the Obama Administration has only the country that wasn’t in that coalition – France. the Bush Administration couldn’t get approval from the Security Council, and regardless of how the UN inspectors report from Syria, the Obama Administration won’t get the Security Council’s approval either.

    At least Hussein presented a real threat to us by supporting terrorists outside their borders and a real threat to the UN pilots enforcing the no-fly zone. Syria threatens Israel and Turkey, but they don’t have a capability to threaten us.

    If our goal is to merely punish the Assad regime, it goes against the principles of waging war. The purpose of military power is to defeat an enemy, not to spank them and send them to a corner wearing a dunce’s hat.

    Kerry admits that there is no military solution in Syria, yet here he is proposing a military solution. No wonder he missed his opportunity to be President.

  • Obama loses momentum in Syria debate

    Last night, the British Parliament voted against a proposal to take military action in Syria leaving the Obama Administration twisting in the wind on that rope, the “Red Line”. The President has said that military operations against the Assad regime must be approved by the community of civilized nations, and he can’t seem to get that. The United Nations Security Council is hamstrung by Russia and China, and their own slowly turning wheels of an investigation into the sarin gas incident last week. And now the UK is out of any coalition the president is trying to assemble.

    The Obama Administration is quick to deny any similarity with the Bush Administration to their dilemma according to Fox News;

    White House spokesman Josh Earnest also rejected the notion that the current situation was in any way similar to the run-up to the Iraq war under the George W. Bush administration.

    “I think that there are some very important differences. What we saw in that circumstance was an administration that was searching high and low to produce evidence to justify a military invasion, an open-ended military invasion of another country, with the final goal being regime change,” he said.

    “What we have seen here, tragically, is a preponderance of evidence available in the public domain that the Assad regime used chemical weapons against innocent civilians. And we don’t have to search high and low for that evidence.”

    Um, in 2003, every nation in the world was convinced that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, everyone knew that he was supporting terrorists (remember the $25,000 bounty he was paying to the families of Palestinian suicide bombers), Hussein’s air defense batteries were taking pot shots at our pilots who were enforcing the UN-mandated no-fly zone. There was no “searching high and low” for evidence. However, there are serious doubts about who actually used those chemical weapons in Syria – and oh, by the way, why isn’t anyone discussing the fact that those chemical weapons probably came from Hussein in the first place?

    The Germans are saying that they don’t plan to take part in any operations in Syria and the French say they’re up for anything, so it’s really looking up for the Obama Administration, isn’t it? The French, who wanted no part in the Iraq war, are ready to pound on Syria, so that’s a real feather in our cap, huh?

  • UN official in May: It was rebels who used sarin in Syria

    Editor’s Note: My bad, the Washington Times article is from May.

    The Washington Times reports that one of the UN inspectors, a rather controversial one, at that, told Swiss TV that the inspectors of the U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria that they suspect the rebels of using sarin gas in that war;

    Carla del Ponte, a member of the U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria, told Swiss TV there were “strong, concrete suspicions but not yet incontrovertible proof,” that rebels seeking to oust Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad had used the nerve agent.

    But she said her panel had not yet seen any evidence of Syrian government forces using chemical weapons, according to the BBC, but she added that more investigation was needed.

    Uh, oh. So who do we punish now?

    AFP reports that UN General Secretary Ban Ki-moon is asking the US to hold off until the inspectors have a chance to brief him. The UN isn’t known for moving too quickly on these matters. I guess he expects them to be out of the country by Saturday, though.

    The Obama Administration contradicts the UN inspector, absolutely convinced that the Syrian government used the gas, says CNN;

    Obama’s declaration to “PBS NewsHour” came at the end of a day that saw Russia and China walk out of a U.N. Security Council meeting as word surfaced Britain planned to pursue a resolution to authorize the use of force against Syria, even as United Nations weapons inspectors were in Syria assessing whether chemical weapons have been used.

    “We do not believe that, given the delivery systems, using rockets, that the opposition could have carried out these attacks. We have concluded that the Syrian government in fact carried these out,” Obama told “NewsHour.”

    John Boehner finally asks what I’ve been asking the last few days;

    “What is the intended effect of the potential military strikes?” House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, wrote the president on Wednesday as the drumbeat of war grew louder.

    Exasperated members of the House and Senate said the president has failed to make a case for U.S. military action against Syria despite the administration’s conclusion that the Syrian government carried out a large-scale chemical weapons attack against civilians last week.

    Apparently, they’re discussing it now. I’m not sure that I trust the word of a rogue UN inspector, but certainly, her assessment has to be considered. And, probably more importantly, what do we do if the al-Qaeda-linked rebels do indeed have a way of using sarin. The answer to that question would have some impact outside of Syria.

  • Well, I feel safer

    Andy sends us a link to an Associated Press article about the Obama Administration’s attempt at grabbing guns. Basically, they’re just more useless gestures so they appear like they’re doing something…much like our foreign policy these days;

    One new policy will end a government practice that lets military weapons, sold or donated by the U.S. to allies, be reimported into the U.S. by private entities, where some may end up on the streets. The White House said the U.S. has approved 250,000 of those guns to be reimported since 2005; under the new policy, only museums and a few other entities like the government will be eligible to reimport military-grade firearms.

    The Obama administration is also proposing a federal rule to stop those who would be ineligible to pass a background check from skirting the law by registering a gun to a corporation or trust. The new rule would require people associated with those entities, like beneficiaries and trustees, to undergo the same type of fingerprint-based background checks as individuals if they want to register guns.

    I’m sure that criminals are setting up shell companies just so they can buy guns in their corporation’s name. But I’m sure that gun grabbers will be applauding this. Actually, like most of the other executive orders that Obama has already signed this year in regards to gun ownership, I’m surprised this isn’t a law to begin with.

    Anyway, to celebrate the new executive order, which doesn’t effect me in the least, I’ve just ordered a Colt Defender in .45 ACP on the *gasp* internet and when I go to pick it up this weekend, I’ll have to go through the background checks that everyone else who didn’t order their gun on the *gasp* internet has to pass. It’s coming from Tampa, thus shifting the balance of fire power north.

  • Syria response to be purely symbolic

    I wish someone in the White House would read von Clausewitz because obviously they don’t understand war at all. This is how one Obama Administration described to the LA Times the upcoming response to Syria’s supposed use of chemical weapons on their citizenry;

    One U.S. official who has been briefed on the options on Syria said he believed the White House would seek a level of intensity “just muscular enough not to get mocked” but not so devastating that it would prompt a response from Syrian allies Iran and Russia.

    “They are looking at what is just enough to mean something, just enough to be more than symbolic,” he said.

    That’s the most juvenile statement I’ve read coming out of that administration, and it proves that their anticipated attack on the Syrian government is all about them and the perception they want the public to have of this administration rather than Assad.

    Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said after a briefing that the administration was “proceeding cautiously.” Obama is “considering a broad range of options that have been presented by our military leaders,” he said.

    Still, a growing number of lawmakers in both parties pressed the White House to seek authorization from Congress.

    Given the collection of boobs that the President has for military advisers, I’m sure the response will be muscular, but nothing will insulate them from being mocked. If I were in Congress, I’d shut up about authorization from Congress. I wouldn’t want my fingerprints on the coming train wreck – there’s nothing that Congress can do to make this thing look good for anyone including themselves.

  • Syria warns of chemical attacks in Western Europe

    While the Associated Press reports that the Obama Administration says that Syria “must be punished” without telling the American public why the US has to be the ones doing the punishing, or what that punishment might end up being, according to Reuters, the Syrian government warns that the US, the UK and France had aided rebels in using sarin gas in Syria and that those same rebels will eventually use the same gas in Western Europe eventually;

    Speaking to reporters outside the Four Seasons hotel in Damascus, Faisal Maqdad said he had presented U.N. chemical weapons inspectors with evidence that “armed terrorist groups” had used sarin gas in all the sites of alleged attacks.

    “We repeat that the terrorist groups are the ones that used (chemical weapons) with the help of the United States, the United Kingdom and France, and this has to stop,” he said. “This means these chemical weapons will soon be used by the same groups against the people of Europe,” he added.

    Actually, I’m not finding any of these parties very credible. The Obama administration should be convincing us why they think that the Syrian government used chemical weapons, instead of “because we said so” which sounds more like “because F-you, that’s why”. No one has come out to tell us why this is a national security issue that must be answered with very limited military action. Historically, limited military strikes have never solved anything except pissed everyone off. Obama spokesdinguses have said that they don’t want the strikes to result in removing Assad from his seat, then what is the desired outcome? That they say “Sorry”?

    No one was worried about chemical weapons in the Syrians’ hands week before last, but now all of a sudden it’s a concern enough to rocket someone’s ass, for little to no effect? I don’t get it. And why is no one asking where Syria got the sarin in the first place?

    Reportedly Putin renewed his support for the Assad regime, so the UN isn’t doing anything useful (not that they would otherwise).

    As someone mentioned the other day in the comments, the Democrats weren’t concerned when Saddam Hussein gassed some Kurds in the 80s, so why are they so hopped up to do something about this? I’m guessing that they’re anxious to be seen as the national security party – like when Johnson sent ground forces to Vietnam to end the meme that the Democrats “lost China” in the 40s.

    I’m just wondering why, since Syria is a bigger threat to Europe, we aren’t just letting the Europeans handle this whole thing while we take notes for them.

  • Bombs away

    In WWII, several new theories of war were developed, most of which are still in practice today.  From the Blitzkrieg, essentially an armored thrust designed to penetrate deep into the heart of the enemy lines and create chaos in the rear area, to the idea of Strategic Bombing, the idea of bombing civil infrastructure to reduce overall military power, we still employ most of the ideas honed in the conflagration that engulfed the world.  The major problem is that we are no longer fighting WWII.  We have seen the severe weakness of the standard playbook in recent years, and unfortunately have failed to recognize and adapt to the changing realities the battlefield presents.

     

    Take the Blitz for instance.  One could aptly call it a spear thrust, because that’s almost exactly what it is.  The support, and the actual fighting formations all move on the same roads at the same pace in the same direction.  When facing down a numerically superior force in a defensive posture, the Blitz works quite well.  However as we saw in Iraq, sweeping aside a numerically superior force was almost laughably easy but securing the areas we had gained was next to impossible with the forces we had available.  Many of the weapons and soldiers that would ignite the insurgency were able to slip into the populace because the US formations were not able to sweep and clear the towns like Nassaryiah or Najaaf that they just swept through.  When the insurgency was finally upon the troops they had to go back and sweep and clear a lot of the same towns that they’d fought through in the initial push.  Whole stockpiles of military munitions were left unguarded, and the failure to provide order and prevent looting showed how totally inequitably the generals had prepared for the Iraq War.  One wonders how many lives on both sides might have been saved if the ground commanders had had both adequate forces, and the wherewithal to say that getting to Baghdad in 30 days was less important than securing Iraq for the long haul.

     

    Then there’s Strategic Bombing.  Perhaps we should have learned in the Korean War, when B-29 formations ran out of significant targets within the first week, that Strategic Bombing doesn’t work if the enemy has no infrastructure.  Advocates of Strategic Bombing often point to WWII, in both Germany and Europe, and also to Bosnia and Kosovo as proof positive that it can work.  But there were other factors that make it clear that it was more a supporting factor than an actual causal one.  For instance during one night when Tokyo was hit with a massive incendiary strike over 100,000 people died, which is more than the combined total of deaths from both atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.  But Tokyo wasn’t the only target hit.  Yokohama, Nagoya, Kobe. . . really every major Japanese city was almost leveled, as was nearly every German city.  Even the London Blitz in 1940 should make it clear that such bombing it not entirely effective.  It is true that such attacks did affect industry, and thus have a supporting role in ending the war, but the Germans had to be almost completely smashed from both sides, and the Japanese had to have super-weapons dropped on them before they gave up.

     

    Even the example of Kosovo is fundamentally flawed.  True the bombing campaign did have an effect, but not as great as we often try to make it sound like it did.  Did Milosevic step aside because American bombers were blowing up his infrastructure with impunity, or was it because the US was starting to mobilize ground forces?  We may never know exactly, but it raises enough of a question that we should not be so readily relying on air strikes as the one stop shop for winning wars.

     

    Perhaps most of all the drone program should prove the inherent fallacy of Strategic Bombing.  Since there is no infrastructure of note for the Taliban and al Qaeda who seem perfectly happy to “rough it” in what is essentially early steel age conditions what targets are there left for the roving war planes?  People.  There’s just one slight problem here.  In simplest language we don’t know who we’re killing.  We don’t know what we’re hitting, and once the missile is launched there’s really no recalling it.  True there are a ton of terrorists that have been killed, but who else have we killed?  Doctors?  Engineers?  Perhaps even the very people that we might be able to use as assets against the propaganda of the terrorists.  Relying on Strategic Bombing in Pakistan, Yemen, Afghanistan, and Libya have lead to the situation spinning out of control, and the view from the top becoming even more confusing than ever.  We simply don’t know whose doing what with whom and for what purpose anymore.

     

    Now with armed intervention in Syria looking ever more likely it seems almost a foregone conclusion that it will take the exact same route as the intervention in Libya.  We have no idea who the rebels are, and no way of gaining even a semblance of control, but we will most likely use a series of low risk air strikes to “help” the rebels.  This will work *eventually* to weaken the Assad forces and potentially even weaken Iranian influence in the region, or it might backfire and create a chaotic churning mass of old rivalries and hatreds that continue to churn for the next decade or more.  The fault lines in the Middle East are not solely along the borders of Israel, but everywhere where there is more than one race, and Syria is perhaps one of the most diverse ME nation.  Arabs will kill Assyrians, Kurds will kill Arabs.  This is to say nothing of the Persians or the half dozen other ethnic groups in the country that will only make it worse.  That is to say nothing of the rift between Sunni and Shi’a.  Worse still, as we have seen in Afghanistan, and Iraq, internal conflicts have a way of spilling over into neighboring nations.  The violence in Syria seems to be corresponding with an uptick in the violence in Iraq.

     

    Libya was at least a stable state before the Qaddafi was targeted.  Now the Libyans don’t even really have a semblance of order, it is controlled by roving militias which might as well be the same as firing the police forces of Chicago and turning it over to the Gangs.  This is to say nothing of the serious military hardware that was just left behind by the Qaddafi regime.  Surface to Air Missiles, (SAMs), anti-aircraft artillery pieces, artillery shells, long range rockets, mortars. . . in the hands of an army such things would be trivial and out dated even, but in the hands of terrorists who neither recognize nor fight for any state, unparallelled chaos could be wrought across the globe.  This is what is in store for us if we intervene in Syria as we did in Libya.

     

    We can no longer afford to kid ourselves that we can win a few wars inexpensively but dropping a few “surgical” bombs in key places.  Air Power will always play a role in warfare for as long as we are able to fly, but we can not pretend anymore that it is the be all end all.   If we are to intervene in Syria it will take an Army and Marine Corps that we simply don’t have anymore.  If we intervene we will need ground forces to secure the weapons left behind, and provide order during the transition.  With the looming draw downs due so sequestration, and the cost of over a decade at war, sending any appreciable ground force into Syria would strain the ground combat services nearly to the breaking point.  Worse still the Navy and Air Force would be unable to support those troops as they too are looking at drastic cuts to their manpower and capabilities.

     

    In all honesty I can not see what anyone hopes to gain by involvement in Syria.  The same people who cited how Iraq was an “Illegal War” seem to be pushing us towards Syria for might the same reasons we got involved in Iraq.  With Us influence on the wane in the last five years, it would be doubtful how many allies we could entice to such a venture.  We could always “go it alone” but as I said before we simply don’t have the forces, or perhaps even more important the political and popular will to do so.  Unfortunately our President has backed himself into a corner by talking about “red lines,” and issuing dire threats to the Assad regime.  Now that it appears that chemical weapons have in fact been used the US must intervene or lose even more face and political clout internationally.  The Drone President can not simply whip out a few strikes from UAVs hold up some dead terrorists and claim victory this time.  As the Bard said; “Let us talk of Graves, of worms, and Epitaphs. . . Let us sit upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of kings; How some have been depose; some slain in war, some haunted by the ghosts of those they deposed.”