Friday, July 27, 2007

Al-Qaeda's Publicist: The Commander-in-Chief

Haven't blogged in a while, not really sure why. I guess I'm too busy reading Harry Potter and taking summer classes. I've been keeping myself informed but the whole news cycle seems like the same old shit day in and day out. --Today, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Alberto Gonzalez all lied about something to cover their old lies about the lies that they originally made about something or other, more people died in a war with absolutely no end in sight, the Pope said we're all going to hell unless we convert to Catholicism, and Paris Hilton did some new idiotic thing that I couldn't give a flying #&$% about.---

That pretty much covers it. Anyways, Dan Froomkin over at Washington Post wrote a great article yesterday about "al-qaeda in iraq" and Bush's misguided obsession with them. Here's a tidbit:

Like any terrorist organization, al-Qaeda wants attention. It wants to be perceived as powerful. And it particularly wants Americans to live in fear.

Could al-Qaeda possibly have found a better publicist than President Bush?

At a South Carolina Air Force base yesterday, Bush mentioned al-Qaeda and bin Laden 118 times in 29 minutes, arguing that the violence unleashed by the U.S. invasion in Iraq would somehow come to America's shores if U.S. troops were to withdraw.

But the majority of that violence in Iraq is caused either by Iraqis murdering each other for religious reasons or by Iraqis trying to throw off the American occupation.

The group that calls itself al-Qaeda in Iraq is only one of a multitude of factions creating chaos in that country, and the long-term goals of its Iraqi members are almost certainly not in line with those of al-Qaeda HQ (which is safely ensconced in Pakistan).

Furthermore, the administration's own intelligence community has concluded that the war in Iraq has helped rather than hurt al-Qaeda.

What effect would a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq really have on al-Qaeda? Is it true that "surrendering the future of Iraq to al Qaida would be a disaster for our country," as Bush admonished yesterday?

Bush's predictions about the region have been uniformly abysmal, so the opposite may be at least as likely. And in that scenario, a U.S. troop withdrawal would rob al-Qaeda of its greatest recruiting tool. It would also free American and Iraqi fighters to hunt down bin Laden and his fellow vermin wherever they are and give them what they deserve -- which is not publicity, but ignominy and extinction.

------------Read the rest at the WP