Our MissionOn August 24th, 2009, US Attorney General Eric Holder began to prosecute those CIA agents who undertook difficult intelligence assignments in the aftermath of 9/11.  This purely political decision is damaging not only to the intelligence community, but to the safety of us all, especially in the face of global terrorism.  We, the people, must stand with the unsung heroes who are defending this country and our families from harm.

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Heidi Thiess

Peters pulls no punches when he lambastes the DoD for their internal report of the massacre at Fort Hood.  He finds the report to be sickeningly politically correct, a dangerous mindset that eventually cost 13 Americans their lives.

 

By RALPH PETERS, NYPOST, January 16, 2010

There are two basic problems with the grotesque non-report on the Islamist- terror massacre at Fort Hood (released by the Defense Department yesterday):

* It's not about what happened at Fort Hood.

* It avoids entirely the issue of why it happened.

Rarely in the course of human events has a report issued by any government agency been so cowardly and delusional. It's so inept, it doesn't even rise to cover-up level.

"Protecting the Force: Lessons From Fort Hood" never mentions Islamist terror. Its 86 mind-numbing pages treat "the alleged perpetrator," Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, as just another workplace shooter (guess they're still looking for the pickup truck with the gun rack).

The report is so politically correct that its authors don't even realize the extent of their political correctness -- they're body-and-soul creatures of the PC culture that murdered 12 soldiers and one Army civilian.

Reading the report, you get the feeling that, jeepers, things actually went pretty darned well down at Fort Hood. Commanders, first responders and everybody but the latest "American Idol" contestants come in for high praise.

The teensy bit of specific criticism is reserved for the "military medical officer supervisors" in Maj. Hasan's chain of command at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center. As if the problem started and ended there.

Unquestionably, the officers who let Hasan slide, despite his well-known wackiness and hatred of America, bear plenty of blame. But this disgraceful pretense of a report never asks why they didn't stop Hasan's career in its tracks.

The answer is straightforward: Hasan's superiors feared -- correctly -- that any attempt to call attention to his radicalism or to prevent his promotion would backfire on them, destroying their careers, not his.

Hasan was a protected-species minority. Under the PC tyranny of today's armed services, no non-minority officer was going to take him on.

This is a military that imposes rules of engagement that protect our enemies and kill our own troops and that court-martials heroic SEALs to appease a terrorist. Ain't many colonels willing to hammer the Army's sole Palestinian-American psychiatrist.

Of course, there's no mention of political correctness by the panel. Instead, the report settles for blinding flashes of the obvious, such as "We believe a gap exists in providing information to the right people." Gee, really? Well, that explains everything. Money well spent!

Or "Department of Defense force protection policies are not optimized for countering internal threats." Of course not: You can't stop an internal threat you refuse to recognize.

The panel's recommendations? Wow. "Develop a risk-assessment tool for commanders." Now that's going to stop Islamist terrorists in their tracks.

The Fort Hood massacre didn't reflect an intelligence failure. The intelligence was there, in gigabytes. This was a leadership failure and an ethical failure, at every level. Nobody wanted to know what Hasan was up to. But you won't learn that from this play-pretend report.

The sole interesting finding flashes by quickly: Behind some timid wording on pages 13 and 14, a daring soul managed to insert the observation that we aren't currently able to keep violence-oriented religious extremists from becoming chaplains. (Of course, they're probably referring to those darned Baptists . . .)

To be fair, there's a separate, classified report on Maj. Hasan himself. But it's too sensitive for the American people to see. Does it even hint he was a self-appointed Islamist terrorist committing jihad? I'll bet it focuses on his "personal problems."

In the end, the report contents itself with pretending that the accountability problem was isolated within the military medical community at Walter Reed. It wasn't, and it isn't. Murderous political correctness is pervasive in our military. The medical staff at Walter Reed is just where the results began to manifest themselves in Hasan's case.

Once again, the higher-ups blame the worker bees who were victims of the policy the higher-ups inflicted on them. This report's spinelessness is itself an indictment of our military's failed moral and ethical leadership.

We agonize over civilian casualties in a war zone but rush to whitewash the slaughter of our own troops on our own soil. Conduct unbecoming.

Ralph Peters' latest book is "The War After Armageddon."


Tagged in: Terrorism
Heidi Thiess

Shockingly, it appears that the post-Gitmo "art therapy rehabilitation programs" are not working as well as expected. Terrorists released from Gitmo and sent to Saudi Arabia are placed into programs that encourage positive feelings and the appropriate expression thereof - many times which include crayons and paints. 

No one - and I mean, NO ONE - could've predicted that a terrorist wouldn't reform under such circumstances.  I, for one, am shocked, SHOCKED, I say.

By Brian Ross, ABC News, Dec. 28, 2009


Tagged in: Terrorism
admin

November 22 Oped in New York Daily News by Andrew C. McCarthy, author of Willful Blindness and prosecutor for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing:

EXCERPT:

“From a legal standpoint, it makes no sense to try the Al Qaeda quintet in civilian court. Eleven months ago, these men were prepared to plead guilty in their military commission and proceed to execution. Yet the Obama administration pulled the plug on that commission. This was a transparent sop to the left, which wants to judicialize war-fighting and is repulsed by the intelligence-centric, prevention-first counterterrorism strategy that has protected us for eight years from a reprise of the 9/11 atrocities.


Tagged in: Terrorism
Cao

In late October, according to this article at the Corner at NRO, the Justice Department released reams of newly declassified documents on the CIA's interrogation program.  Among them is a revised, October 2009 version of the DOJ's Inspector General’s report on the FBI’s involvement in detainee interrogations.   This report proves DEFINITIVELY that FBI interrogator Ali Soufan lied about his role in the interrogation of Abu Zubaydah. 

Soufan is a hero of the left for criticizing the CIA's interrogation techniques, Warrick and Finn did so here in this Washington Post Op Ed citing information provided by him.  A full retraction was posted at the Washington Post, although it wasn't called a "retraction", where they admit that valuable intelligence was gathered as a result of the CIA's interrogation techniques.

“Although Abu Zubaydah was not a member of al Qaeda and had limited relations with bin Laden, he was a font of information on the membership of the terrorist group because of his long standing ties with [Khalid Sheikh] Mohammed and North African jihadists” (emphasis added).


Tagged in: Terrorism
Heidi Thiess

BREAKING NEWS (via E. Farris): The Obama Administration was aware months ago that the Ft. Hood shooter was trying to contact Al Qaeda terrorists and did nothing and now refuses to brief the House Intelligence Committee.

As indicated by an ABC News Online article, intelligence sources had a level of knowledge that Hasan was in communication with al Qaeda assets abroad. The source went further, stating that this and information similar but not directly related to such communications became a “political issue” between government agencies and officials “at the policy making levels” of the administration.

According to this source, the now infamous pre-9/11 walls erected within government agencies have returned, “but this time they are higher and stronger.”


Tagged in: Terrorism , Politics , CIA

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