Archive for the 'syria' Category

Palestinian diplomat: no terrorism linked to Islam

Posted in Israel, Terrorism, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, war, wordpress, Religion, syria, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, U.N., Iran, Hamas, Palestine, Pelosi, Islam, Muslim, Abbas, Fatah on May 20th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Here’s something you never heard before. Someone claiming there is no link between terrorism and Islam. Have you ever heard a quote like this before? “Islam advocates tolerance, moderation and coexistence,” he pointed out. That was Zohair Al-Wazir from Palestine. And here’s a shocker. He says Israel’s state terrorism against Palestinians is the real deal. Can this guy even spell jihad? If the Sunnis and Shia’ are killing each other, where’s the tolerance, moderation and coexistence?

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Palestinian diplomat raps attempt to link terrorism to Islam

VIENNA, AUSTRIA, May 19 (NNN-KUNA) — Palestine’s permanent envoy to the United Nations (UN) and Ambassador to Austria Zohair Al-Wazir condemned any attempts to link terrorism and Islam on Friday.
“The Palestinian people are a stark reminder of life under occupation and state terrorism as practiced by the Israeli against them, their sanctities and lands over long decades,” Al-Wazir told KUNA on the sidelines of the first anti-terrorism forum here.

Peaceful My Ass

Jihad Watch

Posted in Israel, Terrorism, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, war, wordpress, Religion, conspiracy, News Media, oil, syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, America, North Korea, Nuke, United States, India, Iran, Hamas, Palestine, Africa, Pelosi, Foreign Affairs, Islam, Muslim, Abbas, Fatah, Military, Kim Jong il on May 10th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Just a brief note to readers, the following excerpt is from Jihad Watch. I don’t mind admitting this was my first visit there. At least it was the only visit I remember and after being there today I am confident I would not have forgotten. The story at the top of the page when I was there is linked below. It is what compelled me to publish this tiny post as encouragement for those who have never been there to check it out.

The piece hits home with me. Like so many others I am weary of the treatment some stories get based on an impression of who should be presented sympathetically and who should not. Most of us suspect that is due to media bias. If that is the case it should be criminal to attempt to mislead people rather than share the facts and let the viewers draw their own conclusions. Critics of this position will contend the viewer is always free to draw their own conclusions. But we all know the power of suggestion and the subtle influence of marketing techniques employed by advertisers, media outlets and politicians. So to put it simply, that boat don’t float.

Anyway, if you haven’t before we recommend you test drive Jihad Watch. If you have been there then you don’t need our recommendation.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Cue standard “Muslims fear backlash, deplore terrorism” story

This one is by Cydney Long for Philadelphia’s CBS3.com (thanks to all who sent this in). Let’s see — have we touched all the bases? Muslims shocked by terror charges? Check. The jihadists don’t represent all Muslims? Check. Islam is a religion of peace? Check. Qur’an good? Check. If you blame the religion you’re blaming all Muslims? Check. Good, Cydney! You get an A+ for this one!

(CBS 3) VORHEES, N.J. Muslims in the region are bracing themselves for a possible backlash in response to the terror plot arrests.

The Far Left Danger of Reid and Pelosi

Posted in Bush, Terrorism, Iraq, war, wordpress, Politics, campaign, election, GOP, Democrats, Gore, liberal, Kennedy, Clinton, syria, disclosure, ethics, oversight, Britain, hillary, kerry, Freedom, Pelosi, Reid, Edwards, Foreign Affairs, Congress, Stem Cell Research, Military on May 9th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

This post on Senator Harry Reid opens with evidence to support the position that not only does he lack the ability to determine when it is time for politics and when is it time to support the troops. He also lacks the class to fulfill his obligation for proper respect for visiting heads of state or other dignitaries He has no problem with Nancy Pelosi’s poor judgment on ‘diplomatic’ missions to Syria but he cannot see his way clear to attend a state affair in honor of the Queen of England.

Harry Reid Passes on White-Tie Affair With British Queen

KLAS-TV, NV - May 7, 2007
Nevada senator Harry Reid decided to not accept his invitation, but many others will be there. It was a day of high pomp and pageantry and the weather …

But with Harry there are always bigger fish for us to fry. Like his adverse affect on the American people and worse, the troops serving in defense of our country. There is a headline out there and at least one blog reference to an op-ed post that makes very little sense. For those of you on the right or independents, here is some more fodder for why many on the left are proving they have lost their minds.

Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi can make bipartisan history on Iraq

By Brent Budowsky
May 09, 2007
George Washington must be banging his fist in heaven at the damage inflicted from home on American troops in Iraq.
Enough. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) can change American history by standing hard for 60-to-90-day funding for the war, requiring a new vote by August, and leading a landmark new policy supporting troops and vets.

Sen Harry ReidFirst of all, the initial link was to a post on one of TPM’s user areas with a blog reference from a user who linked to the above op-ed at The Hill.com. The reason it was interesting on first glance was trying to guess how the Dems could make bipartisan history on Iraq. After reading the TPM poster’s comment it was still a mystery. This inquiry was not made any easier by the poster with a link to their site and a bad link to the Hill. Leaving an extra ‘/’ at the end of a link would normally be excused as a simple typo. But in this case it only served to suggest there was little that would make sense in all of this bipartisan history talk.

After reading the op-ed at the Hill, the author of the opinion is just as much in error as the person posting the comment at TPM. Excuse the assumption that a comment at TPM and a link to an op-ed the commenter found appealing are all three left biased. Especially when the resume’ history given by the author of the op-ed includes work for various Democratic party entities.

Speaker PelosiThe dribble presented by the sources above draw the conclusion that Reid and Pelosi can get credit for fixing everything the way the left wants it, renaming it patriotic and in support of the troops and convincing the public and the other side of the aisle that this is the right thing to do. That these two people contend they actually believe their own words is one of the most incredible collections of madness on display lately. If this is the standard fare that one can expect from those who support the Democratic party, it should be easy to eliminate their newly found majority in the next election.

There are some scary folks out there on the left. This would not be the first mention of that fact. But it is the first time this blog has not dismissed it as just a little craziness around the fringe. The comment at TPM could have been discounted as just such a fringe anomaly. But an op-ed posted at the Hill is more disconcerting that people in actual jobs and positions within the Democratic ranks share the insanity of Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi.

Fortunately, there are numbers growing to combat this insanity. A recent effort widely reported and responded to as well as being mentioned on this blog is the We Win, They Lose initiative. In addition, one group that has been around for a while and is openly against Harry Reid is Oppose Senator Harry Reid. These are just two of the recent additions to the sane world that seek to overcome the dangerous ideas of the fringe left. Again, we would like to declare we are non-partisan, independents. But that does not preclude taking action opposing insane positions on the left or supporting sane initiatives on the right. We only wish that there were more cases of the reverse but lately that is not the case.

Here is a story written about Oppose Senator Harry Reid:

Harry Reid the Target of Activist Group

By Josh Hart
May 8, 2007
Harry Reid, the name-calling US Senate leader has come under fire from a group that wants to challenge US Senator John Ensign (R-NV) to end his silence on Reid’s ‘the war is lost’ mantra that gained so much attention earlier. The group plans protests against Reid in Nevada and DC calls him ‘an embarrassment to Nevada.’

Both political parties are capable of wrongdoing. The problem with allowing the Dems wrongdoing is that it is much more dangerous than that of GOP mistakes. GOP wrongdoing can be fixed. The same cannot be said of the wrongdoing supported by the Dems. Complete lack of support for the troops and success with the war in Iraq is a widely held position in the Democratic party. It is held by all 2008 Democratic party candidates. By failing to openly oppose her husband’s wrongdoing in office Hillary Rodham Clinton shows her complicity, not any admirable quality of the phrase ’stand by your man’. If they commit bad acts, you don’t stand behind them unless you concur.

Edwards and Obama also fail to support the troops. The Dems support partial birth abortion and oppose the Supreme Court decision in Gonzales v Carhart. This has changed this writer from a long time pro-choice stance to that of entirely against Roe v Wade, etc. This would indicate their support of embryonic stem cell research would result in turning abortion clinics into stem cell farms. All of which I thought laughable in the past. Their response to the Supreme Court decision uncovered their true intentions with an indisputable admission of guilt.

The sins of the GOP thus far can be resolved and any damage repaired. But the dangerous path the Dems seek has begun to scare the hell out of me. I still find it hard to believe they could be this far off base. Their other viewpoints on national security, border control, defense, health care, education and Global Warming, etc., have helped to shine light on an ideology that must be confronted. It will be tough to remain independent if the Dems cause the need to regularly favor their opponents. Party politics is still unpleasant on either side. The GOP is just not as dangerous as current Democratic party philosophy.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Trackposted to The Virtuous Republic, Perri Nelson’s Website, The Random Yak, Adam’s Blog, Big Dog’s Weblog, Stuck On Stupid, Cao’s Blog, Leaning Straight Up, The Amboy Times, The Florida Masochist, Conservative Cat, Rightlinx, Allie Is Wired, third world county, stikNstein… has no mercy, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Pirate’s Cove, Planck’s Constant, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, Wake Up America, Right Voices, Gone Hollywood, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Sen Chuck Schumer’s 2005 War Manual

Posted in Terrorism, Iraq, war, wordpress, syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, North Korea, Iran, Military, Sen Chuck Schumer on April 30th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

It is often helpful to look back from time to time and view the opinions and positions as well as public statements of our elected officials. We offer a copy of a press release from about a year and a half ago. This is from Senator Chuck Schumer and includes a letter to President Bush regarding the Iraq war. Although Senator Schumer’s understanding of war hasn’t seemed to improve since then, the passages highlighted in red are certainly interesting and a contrast to Democratic leadership in 2007.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 11, 2005

Schumer Urges Bush To Appoint Distinguished Delegation Of Former Military Leaders To Examine Iraqi Troop Training/Deployment And Report To Public

Sen Chuck SchumerToday Sen. Chuck Schumer will send a letter to President Bush urging him to immediately appoint a distinguished delegation of retired military leaders to go to Iraq, examine the failures in troop training and deployment, and make a public report to the Congress and American people quickly. Schumer suggested that former military leaders like General Tommy Franks, General Norman Schwarzkopf, and Secretary Colin Powell should go to Iraq to make a first hand assessment about why the President’s troop training plan is not going well. From all reports there is only one single battalion out of 97 that are ready to fight on its own in Iraq - that is only 750 troops.

Schumer said, “The lynchpin in the President’s plan for victory is training enough Iraqi troops so that they can stand up and the U.S. forces can finally stand down – so it is critical to know what is going wrong. A distinguished delegation of former military leaders like General Tommy Franks, General Norman Schwarzkopf, and Secretary Colin Powell should be sent by the President to report back to the American public as soon as possible so we can fix these serious problems.”

Schumer’s letter to the President follows:

December 11, 2005

The Honorable George W. Bush
President of the United States
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, DC 20500

Dear President Bush:

As you know, the training and deployment of Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) capable of defending Iraq from outside influences and policing against domestic insurgents is a key objective of our ongoing efforts in Operation Iraqi Freedom, and one that must be completed before we can end our military presence. Like you, I recognize that America must succeed in Iraq and in order to accomplish that goal I steadfastly support the establishment of a competent and capable ISF.

I am troubled by recent reports that the establishment of such forces is not moving forward as well as was hoped, and by the continuing inability to obtain a definitive assessment of the current status and abilities of the ISF. These matters lie at the very heart of the length and success of American military involvement in Iraq, and it is important for the American people to fully understand how much progress we have made in helping to establish the ISF.

I am deeply concerned that the lack of this information will make it increasingly difficult to chart a proper course in Iraq and may ultimately serve to undermine our chances of success. In order to give America the best chance for lasting victory in Iraq, I urge you to appoint a senior delegation of distinguished retired military leaders to travel to Iraq, assess the situation for themselves, and issue a public report of their findings.

As you have often said yourself, “As the Iraqis stand up, we will stand down.” Unfortunately, information available on the training and readiness of the ISF makes it difficult to predict when this will occur. For instance, in October it was revealed that out of over ninety ISF battalions, the number of fully independent, or “Category One” ISF battalions was revised down from three to one. The fact that two battalions were apparently downgraded would appear to be a significant step backward. In order to prevent any further regressions, it is important to have full and clear accounting of the situation on the ground and an explanation as to how this occurred.

There are also important and unanswered questions as to the actual size and cohesiveness of the ISF. As of mid-November the Department of Defense indicated that there were 211,700 members of the ISF, only about 65% of the number hoped to be reached by August of 2007. If we are to be successful in Iraq, we must clearly understand whether it is possible to complete training those already enlisted, as well as recruit and train the remaining personnel before the deadline.

Similarly, information from the GAO would indicate that there is a significant chance that possibly tens of thousands of those in the police component of the ISF may have deserted. Concerns also abound that the ISF is still 18-24 months away from operational independence and lack a sufficient command structure, and are a target for insurgent infiltration. Obviously, we need to get to the bottom of whether or not the ranks of the ISF are stable and cohesive before we can certify that they have been fully trained and are ready to assume independent responsibility for Iraq’s security.

I agree with you that the stakes in Iraq and that the United States must succeed in its work there. By providing an unvarnished analysis of ISF numbers, capability, and cohesion the delegation I am asking you to appoint could provide the American people with an honest assessment of our progress, inform the Administration and Congress of the best path to take forward, and allow us to move toward the shared goal of bringing our troops home and out of harms way. I urge you to appoint this delegation as soon as possible.

Sincerely,

Charles E. Schumer
United States Senate

Pelosi, Israel, RJC and NJDC

Posted in Israel, Bush, Terrorism, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, war, wordpress, Politics, GOP, Democrats, Religion, syria, Waxman, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, America, Russia, Britain, France, Iran, Hamas, Palestine, Africa, Pelosi, Murtha, Hoyer, Foreign Affairs, Congress, Islam, Muslim, Tony Blair, Abbas, Fatah, Colin Powell on April 13th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Muddle EastThe Middle East is quite the focal point of international politics. The main points of contention are rooted in religion and economics. Based on size and the fact that there are essentially two sides to the argument, Israel and any strong alliances they have are positioned on one side of the argument. Anyone with even a casual interest in the history of events in the region would be willing to agree that Israel is a small country surrounded by nations with opposing viewpoints in religion and economics as well as ideology and prejudices in general.

Israel is, of course, a Jewish nation surrounded by Muslim or largely Muslim nations. The differences between Israel and the surrounding nations can be characterized as being on opposite ends of a spectrum. And most people would probably agree that Israel’s neighbors have in common a strong desire for Israel to go away. Many alliances in the region have been altered with the passing of time and the distinction between allies and enemies has been blurred from time to time. The only exception appears to be Israel and the United States.

Some examples of altered relationships may be useful to consider. Prior to the undoing of the Shah of Iran in the seventies, the United States had a workable relationship with Iran. After the hostage crisis of 1979 and since, that relationship has ceased. Likewise when the former Soviet Union was in a war with Afghanistan during the cold war, Osama bin Laden and the Afghan ‘rebels’ were supported the the U.S. The United States was at one time friendly with the government of Iraq and Saddam Hussein. Obviously, things changed for Saddam. The cold war found the former Soviet Union and the United States typically on opposite ends of the spectrum with regard to relationships in the Middle East.

9-11These trends continued right up until and after the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the announcement of the new war on terror. Some of the relationships based primarily on economic relationships were emphasized during the run up to the war in Iraq. Germany, France and Russia were at odds with the US at the UN not just on philosophical grounds or opposition to an impending war. Commencing a war in Iraq would disturb many ‘economic’ arrangements as well as obvious detriments and concerns.

Which brings us up to this year and the Wild West antics and politics of crazy times and trying to determine what’s next in the Middle East. The recent entrance of members of the United States Congress into matters of diplomacy has caused quite a stir and muddied the waters significantly. As if there wasn’t already enough confusion or actions offering contradictory evidence of positions, here are some more.

Just about the time we were reasonably convinced that the one constant in the Middle East was consensus among members of the Jewish community with the possible exception of Israeli politics, these headlines and stories appear.

Speaker Pelosi’s Statement in Damascus was Reckless, Irresponsible

Contact: Executive Director Matthew Brooks
Thursday, April 5, 2007, Washington, DC… The Republican Jewish Coalition issued this statement regarding House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s statements following her meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Wednesday:

“The Speaker’s statements were reckless and irresponsible,” said RJC Executive Director Matthew Brooks. “Syria is a state sponsor of terrorism and an ally of Iran. Speaker Pelosi’s statement, ‘We came in friendship, hope, and determined that the road to Damascus is a road to peace,’ represents a softness and a weakness in foreign policy that hurts the United States and Israel.”

Actually, the article above from the RJC is what we would have expected as a response over Speaker Pelosi’s trip to the Middle East. And since this blog claims to be non-partisan and independent with a tendency to lean to the right or conservative viewpoint, this being also a ‘Republican’ Jewish Coalition was no surprise. However, the following statement was what started our head scratching.

NJDC Defends Speaker Pelosi from GOP Smear

April 10, 2007 - 9pmWASHINGTON – Today, the National Jewish Democratic Council (NJDC) condemned the Republican Jewish Coalition’s (RJC) misguided television advertising campaign, which smears Speaker Pelosi’s recent Middle East trip. The RJC makes the ridiculous claim that Speaker Pelosi’s trip “weakened America’s security.”

“The notion that the Speaker’s trip to the Middle East had negative ramifications for American national security is laughable,” said NJDC Executive Director Ira Forman. “If RJC wants to do something productive for our national security, they should stand with the majority of Jewish Republicans, Independents and Democrats in opposing the administration’s failed Iraq policy.”

We may be guilty of a lax approach to staying informed about the Middle East. In our defense, the conflicts in the Middle East have appeared to us to be so simple and obvious as to their nature, the need for strict, formal and immense critical research seemed unnecessary. Our consensus was no one was really interested in solving the problems so they will not be solved without opposing ideologies making mutual concessions.

After tripping over the articles already presented here, we found the following:

Pelosi’s father and the Holocaust


When Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the US House of Representatives, stepped to the podium at a Knesset dinner during her visit earlier this month, she made history in more ways than one.
Not only was she the first woman Speaker of the House to address Israel’s lawmakers, Pelosi was also addressing the parliament of a country whose creation her own father championed, at the risk of his career - and perhaps her career, as well.

Speaker Pelosi’s father, the late US congressman Thomas D’Alesandro, Jr., of Maryland, was known as a Roosevelt Democrat. What is not widely known is that D’Alesandro broke ranks with president Franklin D. Roosevelt on the issues of rescuing Jews from Hitler and creating a Jewish State.

Is someone trying to say that Speaker Pelosi’s disregard for established protocol is a genetic flaw? We could accept that but it still does not provide an excuse for her behavior regardless of motive. Here are some more enlightening excerpts from other reports.

Pelosi stand on the war in Iraq bothers Israel lobby
But House speaker insists U.S. commitment to security of Jewish state is unshakable
Edward Epstein, Chronicle Washington Bureau
Wednesday, March 14, 2007

(03-14) 04:00 PDT Washington — Speaker Nancy Pelosi is widely recognized as a strong, second-generation supporter of Israel, but the scattered boos she heard during an appearance before the Israel lobby’s most committed activists highlighted their conflicting emotions over the war in Iraq.

With the first two articles presented, this one just muddies that water a little more. But the following excerpt gives some understandable insight of Nancy Pelosi simply being a political animal afflicted with typical ambitions for power and influence of a arrogant, wealthy, misguided, selfish politician and nothing more.

To adapt, she will have to understand that today’s opponent could be tomorrow’s ally. Few in Congress have such a memory for slights and betrayals. She still bristles at the fact that when she first went to Washington, many in the Democratic establishment didn’t take her seriously and opposed her march up the leadership. As she told Time earlier this year, “They couldn’t control me, so they tried to take me down.” When her former House colleague Martin Frost was running to head the Democratic National Committee after the 2004 elections, she lobbied against him with a determination that all sides attributed to Frost’s challenging her for Democratic leader two years before. Asked about those conflicts, Pelosi refused to discuss them specifically but said, “Anybody who’s ever dealt with me knows not to mess with me.”

That first whip race intensified her rivalry with Hoyer and also cemented her bond with Murtha, who managed her campaign. Not only did he get her the votes to win that job but his support also made it possible for other old bulls in the House to begin to imagine a woman rising to the top

But Pelosi has also found a way to make her gender a weapon in political combat

All that raised a lot of new questions about Pelosi herself—about her judgment, her political instincts and her real ideology. Was her endorsement of longtime ally John Murtha over Hoyer a testament to her loyalty or proof that she is incapable of letting go of old grudges? Was putting her muscle behind the hero of the party’s antiwar wing a sign that she would steer her fractious and fragile coalition over the guardrails on the left? Did her support for a man who is notorious for slipping special-interest earmarks into spending bills prove that she didn’t really mean all that talk about cleaning up Congress? In other words, was Nancy Pelosi really up to the job?

If it is to be attributed to her father’s influence then maybe not all about him is flowery and innocent. The next reference is the bio presented at house.gov and is also used by Infoplease offering the dry facts. That is followed by a report of an insight into Nancy Pelosi’s father and his less displayed political philosophy.

D’ALESANDRO, Thomas, Jr., (father of Nancy Pelosi), a Representative from Maryland; born in Baltimore, Md., August 1, 1903; attended the parochial schools and Calvert Business College, Baltimore, Md.; engaged in the brokerage and insurance business in Baltimore, Md.; member of the State house of delegates in 1926-1933; general deputy collector of internal revenue in 1933 and 1934; member of the Baltimore City Council 1935-1938; delegate to each Democratic National Convention from 1944 to 1968; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-sixth and to the four succeeding Congresses and served from January 3, 1939, until his resignation on May 16, 1947; mayor of Baltimore, Md., from May 1947 to May 1959; defeated for renomination in the March primary election; unsuccessful candidate for election to the United States Senate in 1958; appointed by President Kennedy to the Federal Renegotiation Board, 1961-1969; insurance and real estate broker; was a resident of Baltimore, Md. until his death there August 23, 1987.
Tommyrot in Baltimore
Monday, Nov. 18, 1957
Baltimore’s newspapers went on a rampage last week against a startling proposal by Mayor Thomas D’Alesandro Jr.: special taxes on advertising revenue, their main source of income. No other U.S. city, however hard up, has tried to raise cash by threatening the economic wellsprings of the press.

This ends our sad belief that dirty politics claimed as anything else are still dirty politics and the likelihood of a solution for the conflict in the Middle East in our lifetimes is remote. If you would like to present arguments or alternative opinions, fact, anecdotes or whatever in the comments, knock yourself out. Thanks for reading.
Stanford Matthews
with assistance from C. Harris
and the staff at MoreWhat.com

Trackposted to The Virtuous Republic, Perri Nelson’s Website, Is It Just Me?, Adam’s Blog, basil’s blog, Stuck On Stupid, Cao’s Blog, The Bullwinkle Blog, Conservative Cat, Jo’s Cafe, Conservative Thoughts, Allie Is Wired, Faultline USA, third world county, stikNstein… has no mercy, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Blue Star Chronicles, Pirate’s Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, Right Voices, Gone Hollywood, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Pelosi Helps Syria, Hurts U.S.

Posted in Public Affairs, Terrorism, war, wordpress, Politics, syria, disclosure, ethics, oversight, Pelosi, Foreign Affairs on April 8th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Speaker PelosiNow is as good a time as any to review the decision by Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi to take it upon herself to directly interfere in matters that are not the domain of the House Speaker. There are plenty of documents available on the internet at various locations indicating that this is the case. There are also docs indicating that from time to time other officials have engaged in these activities, some with the approval of the President and some not. In addition there is some evidence that no one has ever been convicted under the Logan Act and not even the person for whom it is named suffered any such loss.

It is however interesting that in 1979/80 the United States Congress introduced a resolution in the House, H Res 704, and one in the Senate, S Res 456, on just this matter. Also interesting are some of the names of sponsors and co-sponsors of the resolutions. Familiar names like Bob Dornan, Dick Cheney, Newt Gingrich, Chuck Grassley, Bob Dole, Pete Domenici, Orrin Hatch, Richard Lugar, Ted Stevens John Warner and a host of others. This took place near the Iran Hostage Crisis. It is specifically connected to the Logan Act, which prohibits the actions like Speaker Pelosi’s, and was enacted in 1799. So it is not like this has not been viewed as bad behavior of perilous potential and something that goes against common sense.

Even with that the post below indicates that Pelosi and her group may not be intelligent enough or will intentionally take risks with this country’s future for political gain. Rahall states the President did not object to their trip. Perhaps they left out some of the plan details. Pelosi should be smart enough to be aware of the history on such matters and know this is a bad idea. There is no excuse for making this large an error so it can only be that Nancy Pelosi will do anything to advance her agenda. That agenda is ill-conceived, careless and not in the best interest of the United States. If the first woman Speaker of the House wishes to make history, perhaps the government should make her the first case ever prosecuted under the Logan Act.

Rahall: Pelosi Personally Told Bush Of Syria Trip And He Did Not Object

Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV), who traveled last week with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) as part of her delegation to the Middle East, said this morning on C-Span that Pelosi told Bush of the trip to Syria a day before they left, and Bush did not object.
Rahall said, “The Speaker had met with President Bush in the halls of the U.S. Capitol just the day before we left and mentioned to him that we were going to Syria. No response at all from the President.”

The following article excerpt may shed some light on two things. It contradicts the claim made by Rahall, above, and offers more support of Pelosi’s lack of preparation for her plans or lack of intelligence or both. Trying to convince anyone that undermining a sitting President is somehow good makes her look like a cat scratching in a sandbox. Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe makes sense compared to Pelosi’s excuse to cover her mistake.

(AP) House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, deflecting White House criticism of her trip to Syria, said Friday she thinks the

mission helped President Bush because it showed the U.S. is unified against terrorism despite being divided over Iraq.Pelosi, D-Calif., met with Syrian President Bashar Assad in Damascus this week against Bush’s wishes.

“Our message was President Bush’s message,” Pelosi said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press from Portugal, where she stopped briefly en route back to the United States.

“The funny thing is, I think we may have even had a more powerful impact with our message because of the attention that was called to our trip,” she said. “It became clear to President Assad that even though we have our differences in the United States, there is no division between the president and the Congress and the Democrats on the message we wanted him to receive.”

Last paragraph of the article above is another case in point for measuring Pelosi’s intelligence. If she isn’t smart enough to not use a phrase like ‘the funny thing is’ when discussing this subject or has not staff to assist her in thinking, the only logical conclusion is the arrogance to do as she pleases regardless of consequence. Either way it is a dangerous proposition for someone in her position. Someone should stop her before she goes to far. But that would be asking too much of the cut and run crowd who have earned their name. Even Senator Sam Levin is beginning to withdraw from that strategy. (pun intended)

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Women in Politics: The Three Conspirators

Posted in Bush, wordpress, Politics, Democrats, syria, Waxman, disclosure, ethics, oversight, Pelosi, Foreign Affairs, Congress on April 7th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

PelosiSo we are not the only ones who understand what Speaker Nancy Pelosi is doing. This article from the Washington Post suggests that ‘by law, Congress must keep out of diplomacy.’ If that is true, then why the hell is the SINO having discussions with a country which the President has clearly defined as off limits? And if the President has given prior approval as may be suggested others have done, it certainly is not evident in his statements on the matter. Can our elected representatives do anything that gives the impression of unity and intelligence?

Speaker’s Role In Foreign Policy Is a Recent, and Sensitive, Issue

By Elizabeth Williamson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, April 5, 2007; A15
The question to former president Jimmy Carter yesterday was: Is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi a better envoy to the Middle East than Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice?

Carter, a diplomat himself, demurred. But his interlocutor had put a finger squarely on a sore spot — some would say in the eye of — the Bush White House. By law, Congress must keep out of diplomacy. In history, House speakers and lawmakers have crossed that line, some with the blessing of the president and some against his wishes.

Foreign policy experts generally agree that Pelosi’s dealings with Middle East leaders have not strayed far, if at all, from those typical for a congressional trip. But in a nation deeply divided over America’s role and standing in the world, the Democratic-led Congress’s push into foreign policy has prompted a ferocious reaction from a White House doubly protective of its turf.

Score another victory for this country’s opponents via Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. This is one more mistake by Nancy Pelosi that will keep our series on Women in Politics alive at least a little longer. Along with her two accomplices from California, Nancy’s 100 hour agenda still to this day has only one item that has become law. It is the House Page Board lame reform as a result of last year’s scandal.

WaxmanHer first accomplice, Diane Feinstein should be investigated by the Democratic oversight champion Henry Waxman. What’s the story on Feinstein and her husband and MILCON and any possible connection to the Walter Reed problems?

And accomplice number two, Barbara Boxer, is about to go on a liberal rampage with the likes of Ted Kennedy and newcomer to our list, Carolyn Maloney and others. As if having her chair the Committee on the Environment and Public Works to echo the Al Gore mantra wasn’t enough, they want to revisit the stupidity of a meaningless ERA that is nothing more than a symbolic repetition of protections already on the books.

Why are the Dems trying so hard to avoid national defense, security, border control, immigration, health care, education, ethics reform, the economy, jobs, corporate governance, lobby elimination rather than reform and a host of other real problems? Your slim majority will last only until the next election if you continue down the same road of party politics as did your opponents the last time they had the majority.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Middle East Peace?

Posted in Israel, Terrorism, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, war, wordpress, Religion, oil, syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, Nuke, United States, Iran, Hamas, Palestine, Foreign Affairs, Abbas on April 5th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Because of the following excerpt and source link to the full article below:

Israel responds to Arab Peace Initiative

Olmert answers the Arab League’s recapitulation of its peace initiative, offering a summit with moderate Arab states and experts discuss the prospects for the Saudi-drafted peace plan.
By Dominic Moran in Tel Aviv for ISN Security Watch (04/04/07)
In their recent summit in the Saudi capital Riyadh the 22 member states of the Arab League voted unanimously to renew the pan-Arab body’s 2002 peace offer to Israel.

You get this from Blog @ MoreWhat.com:

We all know the Middle East has a lot of problems. Every country in the region seems to have a complaint about how things are and an opinion of who is responsible for the problems. It has been a mixture of ‘peace’ talks and terrorist violence for as long as I can remember. And it all appears to be centered on everyone else’s opinion of Israel but largely an argument over land and who has the right to it. As a matter of fact, the endless debate over the ’state’ of Israel and a ’state’ for Palestine or Palestinians gives the impression it is nothing more than a cover for the real problem that a lot of people in the Middle East simply don’t like each other. If you fix the land problem, perhaps you can work on the people problems. Like most conflicts, a solution requires some unpleasant concessions to work. So here is my ridiculously simple and never to be accepted solution to the land problem.

Click for Larger ImageIf you click on the map of the area, certain characteristics immediately stand out. The location of the ‘disputed’ land as defined by the map is situated in Israel. Let’s not argue about that last statement. Just accept it. Currently, Israel is bordered by, in alphabetical order so as not to unintentionally offend anyone’s ego, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

Another obvious characteristic is that nearby Saudi Arabia is a comparatively large piece of real estate. If you look at the eastern border of Jordan you will notice a part of Saudi Arabia that makes a noticeable jagged shape along this eastern border. I suggest that Saudi Arabia donate the piece of land that is formed by drawing a line from the location where the borders of Iraq, Jordan and Saudi Arabia meet to the eastern most part of Jordan’s border south of this first location.

Next, where Jordan borders Israel adjacent to the ‘disputed’ area, Jordan then donates a piece of land which would be a mirror image to the eastern 2/3 of the ‘disputed’ land and Israel donates the eastern 1/3 of the ‘disputed’ land. Now you have a designated area the same size as the disputed land on which to create a Palestinian state. It certainly is simple. It certainly won’t work. But it is also a practical solution to the problem of space and a little give and take to provide that space. If it does not resolve all the philosophical, religious, political and personal preferences of everyone involved, guess what? It is unlikely that anything ever will. But you have to start somewhere if you are truly interested in finding peace rather than demand to have everything your own way.

If you ever got past the land issue, you could consider tolerating each other enough to allow unfettered access to all the places regarded as religiously significant. If it is religiously significant, it should be available to all who are sincerely interested for religious reasons.

And if you would quit blowing each other up, you might just find a profitable way to get along and save yourselves all this grief. And the only reason I submitted this post against my better judgment is that gnawing feeling that even though I am not really personally invested in this conflict I am really tired of no one finding a way to solve it without feeling superior in some way. Damn people, get over yourselves and fix it.

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

Speaker Pelosi: Again, Read the Job Description

Posted in Israel, Bush, Iraq, wordpress, Democrats, syria, disclosure, ethics, oversight, Afghanistan, Iran, Palestine, Pelosi, Foreign Affairs, Congress on April 5th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Speaker Nancy PelosiIt is always nice to find other blogging sources to help us make our points. Our Women in Politics series is no exception. As a brief review, we have been featuring three women in politics from the Democratic party that appear to not be playing the game according to what is best of this nation. Our independent nature requires us to also find some GOP targets as well. That will not be a problem. Those who post at this blog do not have a favorable opinion of party politics. With only two parties large enough to own party influence of politics in this country there is never a shortage of targets to expose for their less than stellar histories. But I digress.

The three women politicians are Senator Diane Feinstein, D-CA, Senator Barbara Boxer, D-CA and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-CA. Do you see a theme here? Well, it just worked out that way. You may have noticed that, you know who, is not on the list. That is not entirely true. As far as we know, she’s a woman, in politics and is deserving of our criticism. We’ll deal with that some more, later. For now we simply wish to share a couple of resources from other blogs regarding Madam Speaker Nancy ‘Air’ Pelosi and her insistence on butting into affairs in a way that is not in her job description per the Congressional Research Service and the opinions of many others.

The links are both titled ‘Israel Calls Pelosi a Liar‘. One is from Faultline USA and one from Wake Up America.

Senator Kerry: Stop Preaching and Start Helping

Posted in wordpress, Politics, blog, syria, Iran, kerry, Foreign Affairs, Congress on March 3rd, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Sen John KerrySenator flip-flop Kerry has the audacity to be politically correct and call a policy change a policy reversal. God knows he doesn’t have the brass ones to refer to it as flip-flopping. Wouldn’t want to start that conversation again.

And Senator Kerry, what will you say if the “direct talks” do not achieve the desired result? Will you say you are then against them before you were in favor? Having more than one approach does not constitute a policy reversal. You have been known to be for something right before you were against something. But in the much repeated statement of the current Presidential Administration, all options are on the table and he is just using one more. If that doesn’t work the other options will be considered.

If the President does not do what you ask, you blame him for what happens. If he does something you want, you characterize it to suit yourself. Why don’t you stop belly aching and try to provide assistance rather than political sound bites?

C. Harris
MoreWhat.com

Dialogue with Iran and Syria Overdue
March 2nd, 2007

This week – in a big policy reversal — the Bush Administration announced that the United States would join talks with Iran and Syria on the future of Iraq. It’s a decision that is long overdue. For a long time now, we’ve needed to engage in direct talks with these countries – if Ronald Reagan was prepared to talk with the “Evil Empire” surely we can talk directly with Iran and Syria.

Will Senator Harry Reid Cut and Run?

Posted in Israel, Bush, Terrorism, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, war, wordpress, Politics, Sean Hannity, Lieberman, Biden, McCain, Democrats, Rumsfeld, Tancredo, Religion, liberal, blog, News Media, Kennedy, Clinton, syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, Specter, North Korea, Nuke, U.N., United States, Russia, Britain, France, China, India, Iran, Hamas, Palestine, obama, hillary, kerry, romney, Freedom, Africa, Pelosi, Murtha, Hoyer, Reid, Edwards, Foreign Affairs, Byrd, Grassley, Congress, Silvestre Reyes, Islam, Muslim, Tony Blair, Abbas, Fatah, Hagel, Legislation, Military, Carl Levin, Putin, Mitch McConnell, Kim Jong il, Australia, durbin on February 24th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Sen Harry Reid If the previous post does not show you that Senator Harry Reid is a contradction then understand he said they would not cut and run in Iraq or raise taxes. Right at the moment the tax thing is secondary. He said they would not cut and run. Senator Reid would you kindly explain the report below if you are not planning on cut and run?

Stanford Matthews
MoreWhat.com

US Senate Democrats Draft Plan to Revise Military’s Iraq Mission
By VOA News
23 February 2007

Democratic Party leaders in the U.S. Senate are working on legislation that would effectively revoke the 2002 resolution authorizing military action against Iraq.

Senate Democratic aides say the proposal, which is not expected to be adopted, would limit the U.S. military’s mission to training Iraqi troops and police forces, securing the country’s borders and combating terrorist forces. Regular combat forces would be withdrawn by next year.

The proposal, drafted by Senator Carl Levin, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and Joseph Biden, who chairs the Foreign Relations panel is set to be presented to other Democratic senators next week.

If accepted, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid would likely attach the proposal to an anti-terrorism bill. If passed by the Senate, which is not likely, the revised authorization would also have to be passed by the House and would be subject to a veto by President Bush.

Democrats and the independents aligned with them hold a slim 51 to 49 majority in the Senate, but hold a more comfortable majority in the House of Representatives.

The 2002 resolution gave President Bush authorization to take military action against Iraq, because of its alleged arsenal of weapons of mass destruction. In a speech last week, Biden said the original resolution is now irrelevant because the WMD program did not exist, and former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein is “no longer there.”

The bill is the latest effort by Senate Democrats to challenge President Bush on his Iraq policy. A vote on a non-binding resolution criticizing Mr. Bush’s plan to deploy an additional 21,000 troops to Iraq failed in the Senate, but was passed in the House last week.

Meanwhile, Democrats in the House of Representatives are considering a proposal by lawmaker Jack Murtha that would link funding of the U.S. military mission in Iraq to strict conditions on troop readiness and training standards.

Some information for this report was provided by AP and Reuters.

Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, The Right Nation, Leaning Straight Up, Maggie’s Notebook, and basil’s blog, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Rep John Kline on Iraq

Posted in Israel, Bush, Terrorism, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, war, wordpress, GOP, syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, America, North Korea, Britain, France, Hamas, Palestine, Congress, Islam, Fatah, Legislation, Military on February 18th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

John_Kline_Official_Photo.jpg

This is a real American. You can read his speech to Congress regarding H Con Res 63 on a tribute page to him in the “Pages” menu to the right on the main page.or click here

The List OT Weekend at The Right Nation

OTA and Linkfest Weekend Who’s Are Ally?

Tech Support Weekend OTA 

Seventeen Republicans and H Con Res 63

Posted in Israel, Bush, Terrorism, Iraq, war, wordpress, Lieberman, GOP, syria, lobbyist, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Osama bin Laden, North Korea, U.N., United States, Iran, Palestine, Freedom, Africa, Murtha, Hoyer, Foreign Affairs, Congress, Islam, Muslim, Tony Blair, Hagel, Legislation, Military, Kim Jong il on February 17th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

logo_RealSecurity.gif

How does H Con Res 63 affect real security, protecting America and
restoring our leadership in the world? It doesn’t. (Stanford Matthews)
Seventeen Republicans joined Democrats in Voting Yes on H Con Res 63
The names link to their information on Project Vote Smart (more on this later)

Representative Michael N. Castle District At-Large - US-House (R-DE)
Representative Howard Coble District 6 - US-House (R-NC)
Representative Thomas M. ‘Tom’ Davis District 11 - US-House (R-VA)
Representative John J. Duncan District 2 - US-House (R-TN)
Representative Philip ‘Phil’ English District 3 - US-House (R-PA)
Representative Wayne T. Gilchrest District 1 - US-House (R-MD)
Representative Bob Inglis District 4 - US-House (R-SC)
Representative Timothy V. ‘Tim’ Johnson District 15 - US-House (R-IL)
Representative Walter Beaman Jones District 3 - US-House (R-NC)
Representative Ric Keller District 8 - US-House (R-FL)
Representative Mark Steven Kirk District 10 - US-House (R-IL)
Representative Steven C. LaTourette District 14 - US-House (R-OH)
Representative Ronald E. ‘Ron’ Paul District 14 - US-House (R-TX)
Representative Thomas E. ‘Tom’ Petri District 6 - US-House (R-WI)
Representative James M. ‘Jim’ Ramstad District 3 - US-House (R-MN)
Representative Frederick Stephen ‘Fred’ Upton District 6 - US-House (R-MI)
Representative James T. ‘Jim’ Walsh District 25 - US-House (R-NY)

Church and State OTA weekend Feb 16-18, 2007 

Hamas and Fatah and What?

Posted in Israel, Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iraq, syria, Osama bin Laden, Iran, Hamas, Palestine, Islam, Muslim, Abbas, Fatah on February 15th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Palestinians say US to shun new coalition

Peace Ever?USA Today
RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) - The United States has informed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas that it will shun a future Hamas-Fatah coalition government because it will not explicitly recognize Israel, Abbas aides said Thursday.

“…Will not explicitly recognize Israel…”, so what’s new?
C. Harris
MoreWhat.com

Pockets Full of Change

Posted in Bush, Terrorism, Iraq, war, syria, Afghanistan, North Korea, Nuke, Iran, Foreign Affairs on February 14th, 2007 by Stanford Matthews

Sadr aides say cleric still in Iraq

Wed Feb 14, 2007 2:05 AM EST
By Dean Yates and Mariam Karouny
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Radical Shi’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr is still in Iraq and has not left for Iran, several of his aides said on Wednesday, after American officials suggested he may have departed to avoid an offensive against militants.

Iraq evicts squatters, seals off borders

Marc Santora / New York TimesBAGHDAD, Iraq — The Iraqi government on Tuesday ordered tens of thousands of Baghdad residents to leave homes they are occupying illegally, in a surprising and highly challenging effort to reverse the tide of sectarian cleansing.In a televised speech, Lt. Gen. Aboud Qanbar, who is leading the new crackdown, also announced the closing of Iraq’s borders with Iran and Syria, an extension of the curfew in Baghdad by an hour, and the setup of new checkpoints run by the Defense and Interior Ministries, both of which Qanbar said he now controlled.

Bush Uses Clinton’s Approach to Secure Korean Accord (Update1)

Bloomberg - 52 minutes ago
Bush, in his January 2003 State of the Union address, criticized the Clinton-negotiated Agreed Framework, saying Kim Jong Il’s government all along “was …

Maybe only for a day or two, but there are changes. Some positive news would be helpful. Gotta love that last headline.
Stanford Matthews