Well, in anticipation of Tax Day, I decided to give readers a gift.
From April 14th to April 19th you can either celebrate or drown your tears with a copy of Perfect Pawn, the first book in the James Maguire series, for only $0.99.
Whether you like mystery, crime, romance, or thriller genre books, you'll find something that appeals to you in Perfect Pawn.
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Monday, April 13, 2015
April Update
I hope that everyone has been enjoying my latest book:
Bishop's Gate. As the old saying goes: 'there is no rest for the wicked,' and,
being a writer of some truly wicked characters, I suppose that adage applies to
me.
This past weekend I completed the rough manuscript for the
2nd Alex Taylor novel. It is now onto my esteemed editor, for what I like
to call the 'corrections & suggestions' phase. After that, there will be another round of writing as we
clean up the draft. I'm hoping for a summers release of the book.
If you don't know Alex Taylor yet, then I suggest you read Small Town Secrets before you read Bishop's Gate.
While both series' are standalone, it will make a lot more sense if you read them in order.
In the meantime, it is now onto Book #4 in the Maguire
series. I wonder what trouble I can stir up this time around.
Friday, March 27, 2015
Bishop's Gate Available in Print
For those of you who like the feel of an actual book in your
hands, the weight is over. Bishop's Gate is now available in print.
The price is $16.99, which is slightly higher than the previous book, but remember, there is almost 100 pages more.
You can get it direct through Createspace (which is an Amazon Company) via the following link: Createspace: Bishop's Gate
The price is $16.99, which is slightly higher than the previous book, but remember, there is almost 100 pages more.
You can get it direct through Createspace (which is an Amazon Company) via the following link: Createspace: Bishop's Gate
Once again, I thank you for your continued support.
Monday, March 9, 2015
So you think you understand the Middle East?
Good for you, because I can tell you that many people don’t.
What is funny to me is that a lot of people, who don’t understand the dynamics
that are involved, are very happy to tell you what is going on.
Most of the time I just shake my head and walk away, there’s
simply no point in arguing with folks who get there news delivered in talking
point format. If you think that the current state of affairs in the Middle East
can be summed up in 140 characters or less, you need to spend more time in a
book!
One of the central themes of my last two books, Queen’s Gambit and Bishop’s Gate, is the very real
threat of terrorism that we face. If you watch the news, you might not truly
understand the complexities of what is going on. So I thought a bit of a
refresher course would be in order. Please, understand that this is an
introductory look at the subject and is in no means meant to be
construed as comprehensive.
The Middle East, like Ireland, is complex and should be
studied at length.
For the purposes of this we are going to look at things
beginning in the early 1900’s. At the time, the Ottoman Empire controlled the
Middle East, this would soon come to an end thanks to WW I. By 1917, the
British Empire had made three different agreements with three different groups
promising three different political futures for the Arab world. The Arabs
insisted they still get their Arab kingdom that was promised to them through
Sharif Hussein (McMahon-Hussein Correspondence). The French and British
expected to divide up that same land among themselves (Sykes-Picot Agreement).
And the Zionists expected to be given Palestine as promised by the
Foreign Secretary for Britain (Balfour Declaration).
As you can see, things were not off to a good start from the
beginning.
After the war, the League of Nations (the forerunner to the
United Nations) was created and one of its roles was to divide up the conquered
Ottoman land. It was the League who ‘created’ the Arab world we know today. The
borders were drawn arbitrarily, without any regard for the people living there.
No consideration was given to ethnic, geographic, or religious issues. These
lands were supposed to be ruled by the British or French until such time as
they were able to stand alone. The differences between Iraqis, Syrians,
Jordanians, etc. were entirely created, as a method of dividing the Arabs
against each other.
The situation in Palestine was even worse. The British
government created the British Mandate of Palestine and allowed the Zionists to
settle there. However, they set limitations on the number, because they did not
want to anger the Arabs already living there. This condition continued to
fester until 1947 when the United Nations dissolved the British Mandate of Palestine
and created a partition plan for Palestine. Under this resolution it required
the withdrawal of the British Empire and created independent Arab and Jewish
States. It also established the Special International Regime for the City of
Jerusalem.
Of course the plan was accepted by the Jewish people and
rejected by the Arabs. Immediately after the resolution passed, civil war broke
out.
Recently I heard a college educated woman say that the Jews
came in and stole the land from the Palestinians. Here is a news flash; the
Jewish people have lived in this area since 2500 BC. The ‘nation’ of Palestine
is a modern creation.
While the U.N. resolution passed, it was not without issues.
Every Arab nation voted against it. Here are some examples of the sentiment
that existed:
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Said, said: "We will smash the country with our guns and
obliterate every place the Jews seek shelter in". He also called for ‘severe measures’ to be taken against all
Jews in Arab countries.
General Secretary of the Arab League, Azzam Pasha, said: “Personally I hope the Jews do not force us
into this war because it will be a war of elimination and it will be a
dangerous massacre which history will record similarly to the Mongol massacre
or the wars of the Crusades."
Egyptian King Farouk said that in the long run the Arabs
would soundly defeat the Jews and “drive
them out of Palestine.”
So, despite the creation of five Arab states (Lebanon,
Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Jordan), the Arab world still demand the
creation of an Arab Palestine state. Clearly, they had drawn the famous ‘line
in the sand.’
After the resolution passed, the surrounding Arab
states, Egypt, Transjordan, Iraq and Syria invaded
what had just ceased to be Mandatory Palestine. They immediately attacked
Israeli forces and several Jewish settlements. During the civil war,
the Jewish and Arab
communities of Palestine clashed (the latter supported by
the Arab Liberation Army) while the British, who had the obligation to
maintain order, organized their withdrawal and intervened only on an
occasional basis. The conflict then turned into what is known as the 1948
Arab–Israeli War.
The one year conflict triggered significant demographic
changes throughout the Middle East. Around 700,000 Palestinian Arabs fled
or were expelled from the area that became Israel and they
became Palestinian refugees. In the three years following the war, about
700,000 Jews immigrated to Israel with one third of them having fled, or
having been expelled, from their previous countries of residence in the Middle
East.
Despite what many believed would be a one-sided battle, the
Jewish people did not get the memo. They fought as if their very lives depended
on it, and it did. In the end, not only had the Jewish people retained the area
that the UN General Assembly Resolution (#181) had recommended for
the proposed Jewish state, but they also took control of almost 60% of the area
allocated for the proposed Arab state.
So there you have the ‘basic’ primer for the problems
between the Arabs and the nation of Israel.
Now, you would think that would be enough, but you would be
wrong. You see, when they turn their attention away from Israel, they seem to
be inclined to have issues with one another as well.
Iran – The
current make-up of Iran is much different than it was. Following WWII the
country was led by the Shah of Iran. However, the oil crisis of the 70’s
created an economic recession which led to the Islamic revolution in 1979. The
new regime proceeded to storm and occupy the US Embassy in Tehran in what is
known as the Iran Hostage Crisis from November 4, 1979, to January 20, 1981.
The current regime is a theocracy, under the rule of the country’s supreme
religious leader, the Ayatollah. Iran is a predominantly Shia Islam country.
This toppling of the Shah led to concerns in Iraq, that its new Shia neighbor
might be a problem.
Iraq – This
country has known nothing but turmoil since it was a British mandate. From WWI
to the 60’s, the country was in a constant state of flux, with one coup d’état
after another. Then, in 1979, Saddam Hussein, a Sunni, ascended to the top
slot. Hussein initially welcomed the overthrow of the Shah in Iran and sought
to establish good relations with the Ayatollah Khomeini's new government.
Khomeini had other ideas. He openly called for the spread of the Islamic
Revolution to Iraq and took to arming Shiite and Kurdish rebels against
Saddam's regime and sponsoring assassination attempts on senior Iraqi
officials. This led to a series of military conflicts between the two countries,
including the use of Weapons of Mass Destruction, throughout the 80’s.
When Saddam Hussein was ousted from power Iran began to make
its in-roads. They actively engaged against US military forces, providing some
of the most lethal IED’s encountered.
The current Iraqi Prime Minister, Haider Al-Abadi, is a Shia Muslim, and
is enjoying a new relationship with Iran, including military assistance in
fighting ISIS.
Lebanon – Has
also experienced upheaval since its inception. When they went to war against Israel,
100,000 Palestinian refugees fled to the country because of the war. Israel did
not permit their return after the cease-fire. With the defeat of
the PLO in Jordan, many Palestinian militants relocated to Lebanon,
increasing their armed campaign against Israel. The relocation of
Palestinian bases also led to increasing sectarian tensions between
Palestinians and the Christian Maronite’s as well as other Lebanese factions.
In 1975, following increasing sectarian violence, civil war broke out in
Lebanon. It pitted a coalition of Christian groups against the joint forces of
the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), left-wing Druze and Muslim
militias. In June 1976 Syria sent in its own troops, ostensibly to restore
peace.
In 1982, the continued PLO attacks from Lebanon on Israel
led to an Israeli invasion. A multinational peacekeeping force of
American, French and Italian military units, joined in 1983 by a British
contingent, were deployed in Beirut, after the Israeli siege of the city, to
supervise the evacuation of the PLO. In 1983, following the Beirut bombing, the
peacekeeping forces withdrew. Lebanon continues to be used a launching spot for
rocket attacks by Hezbollah on Israel. Hezbollah is a Lebanon based terrorist
organization that has become a major political payer in Lebanon. It was
conceived by Muslim clerics and funded by Iran. Its leaders were followers
of Ayatollah Khomeini, and its forces were trained and organized by a
contingent of 1,500 Iranian Revolutionary Guards that arrived from
Iran with permission from the Syrian government.
Syria – Is
another country that has known nothing but upheaval since it was a French
mandate. From WWI to the 60’s, the country was in a constant state of political
turmoil. After the Suez Canal Crisis, Syria signed a pact with
the Soviet Union. This gave the Soviets a foothold for Communist influence
within the government, in exchange for military equipment. This caused
considerable unease in their neighbor to the north, Turkey. While the current
president, Bashar al-Assad, is an Alawite Muslim, he has close ties to the
Iranian regime. Iran sees the survival of the Syrian government as being
crucial to its regional interests. Syria provides a crucial thoroughfare to
Hezbollah in Lebanon and Iran see’s al-Assad's Alawite minority led
government being a crucial buffer against the influence of Saudi Arabia and the
United States. In the on-going conflict in Syria, Iran has provided enormous
military resources, including strategic assistance, from its vaunted Qods force
in the fight against the rebels, of whom ISIS is a large part. ISIS (or ISIL,
or IS) is a Salafi Islamic group fighting to impose a global Islamic caliphate.
Many believe that the group’s roots are founded in the Muslim Brotherhood. It
adheres to global jihadist principles and follows the hardline
ideology of al-Qaeda, whom they separated from in 2014.
Have you noticed the one compelling and underlying issue
among all of this? Yes, Religion.
The other issue is Iran. Since 1979 they have been at the
forefront of sowing the seeds of discontent. They have been slow and
methodical, playing a game of chess and moving their pieces with a keen
tactical mind. The threat posed by a potential nuclear Iran is almost
unimaginable. I don’t get the warm and
fuzzies thinking about a nuclear powered Iran and I am sure that Israel
feels the same way. Iran has been adamant that they want Israel gone. This is
not an ‘old’ Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threat. The new Iranian President, Hassan
Rouhani, said in an interview that: "Israel
is a wound on the body of the world of Islam that must be destroyed."
Also, if I hear one more person say that Iran needs it for ‘energy’,
I think I’ll scream. Iran holds the world's fourth-largest crude oil reserves
and the world's second-largest natural gas reserves. Instead of pursuing
nuclear energy, made they should abandon that route and have the sanctions
lifted, which would allow them to better pursue these energy ventures.
Like I said, this is only a basic primer, to show you that
the issues are much more complex than some will say. Religion drives the
majority of conflicts, whether it is directed at Israel or whether it is direct
at internal sectarian issues. The folks in D.C. may be loathed to say it, but
it is a religious war we are dealing with. It always has been and we won’t do ourselves
any favors by pretending it isn’t. The conflict between Arab and Jew dates back four thousand years.
So the next time you’re watching the news, and you hear some
talking head say that in order to fix the problems we must look at the
socio-economic issues, turn it off and go pick up a book.
Monday, March 2, 2015
No Guns Allowed - What are you thinking ?
I think I woke up on the silly side of stupid and entered
the Utopian world of No Guns Allowed.
Have you seen these little signs that have popped up all
over? They are quite adorable, if you believe in that sort of nonsense. I guess
that I am just a cynic.
Over the course of a day I encountered these little gremlins
in a series of different places: a hospital, DMV, the bank, and a pizza shop.
You see them popping up at malls, schools, movie theaters, hotels. Heck, even
private citizens are putting them up outside their homes. Not the brightest of
ideas, but hey, to each his own. I did get a pretty good chuckle out of the
fact that the Mall of America in Minnesota has ‘no gun’ signs up.
I wonder, in light of the recent threat to the mall, made by
the terrorist group Al Shabaab, if the State Department should notify them that
they will have to select a different target? Maybe Jen Psaki can send them a
tweet. #PickAnotherMall
In the end, I finally threw my hands up in disgust and made
a beeline straight to my sanctuary, far away from the lunacy that seems to grip
society today. In fact, the grip seems to be more like a full-on death throttle,
threatening to kill off any sort of resistance to their peace, love and harmony position.
It’s kind of ironic, isn’t it?
Reminds me of those warm and cuddly folks over in the Middle
East and their mantra: Convert, or Die.
Now before you start screaming about how you are just trying
to protect innocent people, let me stop you. First, if that’s the best you can
do, you need to go back to whatever school of higher learning you attended and
demand a refund of your parent’s money. That’s just stupid, right out of the
gate. Unlike you I have real world experience, earned during a twenty-two year
career in law enforcement.
You’re not protecting people; you’re promoting your agenda.
Let’s be honest, you don’t like guns, plain and simple. You think they are
barbaric instruments that have no place in a civil society. The problem is that
you place responsibility on the wrong thing. You believe that the tool is the
problem, instead of looking at the person wielding it. You don’t have an answer
for that, so you shift the focus away to something you can vilify.
During the course of my career, I encountered a number of
people that were truly evil, and many more, who I would describe as ambitiously
evil, those who had no qualms about using violence to further their criminal
activities. These people were not encumbered by such niceties as obeying the
law, respect for individual rights and properties. No, they believed that their
particular needs, real or imagined, provided them the right to take from
others. They did it with whatever tool was available at the time,
whether it was a gun, knife, hammer, or physical force.
This is not a new trend, in fact it dates back to the
earliest days of man, when Cain set upon his brother, Abel, and killed him out
of jealousy and anger. I don’t recall any firearms being around at that time,
and I don’t believe there was a big outcry of ‘No Stones.’
In the end, the actual culprit was not the weapon, but the
person wielding it. The same is true today.
However, just like in the biblical days, man doesn’t seem to
have an answer for man’s inhumanity to man. Not that we haven’t tried, ad
nauseum, in terms of correctional rehabilitation, psychiatric care, and at-risk
outreach programs. Yet the fundamental issue is that some people just don’t get
along well with others. I’ve seen this many times over, and yet civil society
has no answer. We believe that a term of imprisonment is sufficient to
‘correct’ a person’s behavior, but what about the person who likes his behavior
and doesn’t want to change? To them, jail or a psychiatric facility is simply an imposed time-out, a place to wait until they can be unleashed on society again.
Do you think these folks worry about your silly little
signs?
Do you think someone intent on robbing a bank; is going to
simply walk away, his crime spree ground to a halt, because of a ‘no gun’ sign?
Do I need to answer that? Seriously?
The simple fact, based on my real world experience, and not
some hippie-happy utopian fairytale is that criminals are not hampered by such
niceties as the law. The politicians know this, the courts know this, and,
honestly, so do you.
But you are not really interested in that, are you?
No, the truth is that you don’t like guns. You want them
banished because they offend your sensibilities. They force you to recognize
that there is evil in the world. An evil you pretend does not exist and one
that I dealt with on a daily basis for twenty-two years. You believe that, because some professor taught you that guns were bad, grotesque, things that
had no place in civil society. The same professors who taught you that prisons
are inhumane and that those who are incarcerated are good people who were made
into criminals, because of the socio-economic pressures that were imposed on
them by a privileged society.
Yes, there are some that become criminals by virtue of
necessity, but it has been my experience that those folks rarely use a weapon
to further their crime. No mom is pulling out an MP-5 to heist a gallon of milk and a loaf of bread. No, it is the ones who have embraced the violent
criminal lifestyle that use a weapon and they are not impeded by laws. If they
were, we’d have no crime.
No, the sad truth is that these signs are hung up by idiots,
who believe that this small placard will protect them from the wolves of
society. That somehow this little plastic shield will keep them from harm.
Jeez, why didn’t we think of this hundreds of years ago? Think of all the wars
we could have prevented, just by hanging one of these signs at the border
crossing. I’m sure Hitler would have turned away at the Polish border if there
was a ‘No Invasion’ sign. In fact, why didn’t Wyatt Earp think about that? He
could have just hung a sign saying no guns in Tombstone and could have avoided
the whole O.K. Corral fiasco…… oh wait, he did. Guns were outlawed in Tombstone
in 1878, three years before the gunfight. Yeah, I guess that worked out well.
Here’s the thing, I won’t sacrifice my freedom and safety,
because you’re not comfy with my gun. The fact that you will never know
that I have one, unless I have to defend myself or you, means nothing. Your signs
indicate to me that you do not value me as a customer, just my money. So I will
not give you either. I think of it as doing you a favor. The less money you
have, the less you have to lose when the armed criminal comes in and rips you
off.
I pray that nothing befalls you. Unlike the criminal, I
believe in and respect laws. I wish that we lived in a peaceful world where
there was no need for guns, the police or laws. I wish we were more civil with
one another, but we aren’t.
And therein lies the rub: Society has no answer for the
criminal element.
Politicians make more laws, that criminals will not follow,
and businesses put up signs, that criminals will not follow.
When the folly of these things becomes known, then the next
step is to ban firearms from legal owners.
In 2008, during a campaign event in Lebanon, Virginia,
then Sen. Barrack Obama said: "I believe in the Second Amendment. I
believe in people's lawful right to bear arms. I will not take your shotgun
away. I will not take your rifle away. I won't take your handgun away.”
On February 13th, during another infamous late Friday
information dump, the ATF revealed that it is proposing to put the ban on
5.56 mm ammo on a fast track. The reason for this, the ATF contends, is that
the ammo can be used in semi-automatic handguns and that they pose a threat to
police. So the agency now proposes to reclassify it as armor-piercing and not
exempt, meaning that they will be banned from production, sale and use. This
would then be signed into effect through a presidential executive order. I guess
he was right; he doesn't want to take away your rifle, just the ammunition for it.
You would think that I, a veteran member of law enforcement,
would be behind such a well-intentioned rule. But I see past the line
of drivel they are spewing. This is simply a ruse. One of those ‘surely
you’re not opposed to common sense laws, designed to protect our law enforcement
officers, are you?’ charades.
The ATF has not even alleged, much less offered
evidence, that even one such round has ever been fired from a handgun at
a police officer, despite the fact that there are millions upon millions of
rounds that have been sold and used in the U.S.
So why are they doing this?
It’s like the ‘no gun’ placard. They don’t have an answer
for the real problem, so they go off chasing unicorns. It makes them feel
better.
This isn’t about doing anyone any good; it is about pursuing
their agenda of outlawing firearms. They don’t like them, and if you don’t
agree you’re one of those knuckle-dragging, violence mongers who can’t be
trusted to know what is best for you. I guess the fact that I served in law
enforcement for over two decades means nothing.
Here’s a novel idea, you hold onto your beliefs. If you
don’t like me and my guns, I will respect that and not patronize your
establishment. At the same time, I demand that you respect my rights, protected
under law. If you don’t like guns, I won’t force you to own one, but do not be
so misguided to believe that you can tell me that I cannot own one.
Follow me on Twitter - @Andrew_G_Nelson
Follow me on Twitter - @Andrew_G_Nelson
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Bishop's Gate - Now Available
I am pleased to announce that the 3rd installment in the James Maguire series, Bishop's Gate, is now available on the Kindle e-Book platform.
As you read this book I would like to remind you that the draft of this book was written a year ago. So as you consider the timeliness of the topics discussed, remember that many of these subjects had yet to happen.
As you read this book I would like to remind you that the draft of this book was written a year ago. So as you consider the timeliness of the topics discussed, remember that many of these subjects had yet to happen.
Monday, February 23, 2015
ISIL, Terrorism, War, Religion and America's Tepid Response
In my book, Queen’s Gambit, one of the central issues is the
threat posed to this nation by radical Islam. It is a theme that is carried
over in my forthcoming book, Bishop’s Gate.
I wrote the outline for Bishop’s Gate last January. One of
the amazing things that I discovered was how, more than a year later, many of
the things I had written about would come to fruition and be significant issues
that we are dealing with, even now.
Several days ago, U.S. State Department spokeswoman, Marie
Harf, made the following statement:
“We cannot kill our
way out of this war,… We need in the medium to longer term to go after the root
causes that leads people to join these groups, whether it’s a lack of
opportunity for jobs.”
Immediately, there was a backlash that resonated through the
political world like a California wildfire in August.
Later she doubled down, saying that her comments might have
been too nuanced for some to
understand.
I guess I am not as intellectually astute as Ms. Harf.
In her defense, there seems to be a mindset within this
current administration that believes it can simply redirect the attention away
from the real problem and create a new narrative that they are more familiar
with, i.e. if we redistribute wealth and provide those downtrodden would-be
jihadists with more financial opportunities, then they won’t take up arms
against us.
Really? Maybe your comments weren’t so much nuanced as they were naïve.
Perhaps Ms. Harf can explain to me how she believes that radical Islamic extremists, pursuing their religious ideology, can be converted into peace loving, hedonists, simply by giving them a 9-5 job. What part of radical Islamic extremist are you a little fuzzy on?
It's about religion, not about the credit limit on your Visa card.
Several weeks ago the President made the following statement
at the National Prayer Breakfast:
“Lest we get on our
high horse and think this is unique to some other place, remember that during
the Crusades and the Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name
of Christ. In our home country, slavery and Jim Crow all too often was
justified in the name of Christ."
Now, I’m really not sure why he felt that it was an
appropriate time to bring that up, but he did raise an interesting point that I
think a lot of people missed in the ensuing outrage, including the President.
Man’s pursuit of religious dogma can, and often does, cause
him to commit unspeakable acts of barbarism in the name of God.
Many people in this country, and around the world, do not
want to believe that the current battle we are fighting is a religious war. They,
like Ms. Harf, and probably many others in this administration, want to believe
that there is some other root cause. That Jihadi
Johnny wasn’t nurtured enough as a child or that Falafel House isn’t hiring. Those are issues they can accept. Those
are the neat little socio-economic issues they can champion. It’s sort of like
social media diplomacy.
You know: #OccupyAleppo or some other little catchy slogan, in
140 characters or less.
The first problem is: they know it’s a lie. The second
problem is: they have no clue how to address it.
It’s time to start being honest. We are at war with radical
Islam. Why is that so hard to accept? Notice, I didn’t say we are at war with
Islam, just an extremist segment of it.
Does this administration believe that we will offend the
Muslim world by saying that? I think they do. Yet, when I saw the response of
King Abdullah II of Jordan, to the slaying of his pilot by ISIL, I wonder why
this administration can’t admit it. We are at war. Why do I say that? Because,
and here is a news flash for those of you who just woke up, they are at war
with US!
I’m sorry, but just because you do not want to accept it,
doesn’t mean that they don’t believe in what they are saying. In 2014 the
Islamic State (otherwise known as ISIS or ISIL) declared a worldwide caliphate.
In doing so, they claim religious, political and military authority over
all Muslims, worldwide, and that the legality of all emirates, groups,
states, and organizations, becomes null and void by the expansion of their authority
and the arrival of their troops into those areas. They also said that they
would “humiliate U.S. soldiers in Syria”
and “raise the flag of Allah over the
White House.”
Does any of that seem ambiguous
to you? I’m thinking worldwide is a fairly self-explanatory as is flying their
flag over the home of the President.
The sad thing is that they are only one of many who believe
that they are at war with us. Pick any Middle Eastern terrorist group, look at
their fundamental beliefs and you will see a remarkable trend. They all believe
that the United States is their enemy, and not just any enemy, but the Great
Satan.
Does it sound like they are just longing for a cost of
living raise or an extension on unemployment benefits? If these economic issues
were correct, then why do we see citizens of western nations going there to
fight, instead of coming here for jobs?
The vast majority of Americans need to turn off the Real Housewives of Wherever, or American Idol, and start to educate
themselves. If you have no idea what the difference is between a Shia and
Sunni, you are part of the problem. Do you understand the ideology of Hamas,
Hezbollah, Muslim Brotherhood, Al Qaeda or Ansar al-Sharia?
If you don’t, then how can you even begin to comment on the
current threat we are facing?
The enemy we are facing believes that they are engaged in a
holy war against the west, what we call it does not matter to them. All that
matters to them is how we fight it. I keep hearing how this nation is war
weary, and that might be true. This might not be a fight we want to wage, but
that doesn’t mean we won’t have to.
Consider pre-WWII German. The signs were all there:
Re-arming of the German military (1935), Annexation of the Rheinland (1936),
the Flower Wars: Austria (1938), Sudentenland (Czechoslovakia 1938), Memmeland
(Lithuania 1939), and the German-Romanian Economic Treaty (1939).
By the time Germany invaded Poland in 1939, even Helen
Keller could have read the tea leaves. The appeasement and admonitions did
nothing more than to embolden Hitler, convincing him that Europe had no stomach
to fight, and he was right. They only prolonged the inevitable. If we had put a
stop to it early on, he would never have been strong enough to inflict the
level of damage that he did throughout the whole of Europe.
In fact, unlike our allies, the one thing that we, as
America, didn’t have to face at that time was a direct attack on our soil
(Before some of you scream, Hawaii didn’t become a state until 1959).
9/11 proved that we don’t live in that world anymore.
Whether we are war weary, whether we don’t have the stomach
to fight, means nothing to our enemies. They
have the desire. They are not fighting for a single piece of land, or the
invasion of another country. No, their goals are much loftier, a worldwide
caliphate where you will bow to Allah or die. It really is just that simple.
Whether we choose to fight means nothing to them, they will
fight us, and they believe that they have God on their side in this battle.
Make no mistake about it, this IS a religious war. It may be, as the President
has said, a perversion of Islam, but it exists nonetheless.
More often than not I take exception with the policies and
principals of the President, but I do agree, in part, with what he said at the National
Prayer Breakfast. Human beings can, and do, perpetuate terrible atrocities in
the name of religion. I also believe in the quote, often attributed to Edmund
Burke, “The only thing necessary for
the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."
I don’t want to shed the blood of another member of the
United States Military, in some God forsaken sandbox around the world, but I do
know that we will one day have to re-fight this battle that we irresponsibly
walked away from.
Whether we fight it there or here is the only question.
I am not naïve to think this battle will not come, and there
is nothing nuanced about the threat we face. I just pray that when the battle
does come, that we have leadership that has the resolve to end the threat, once
and for all.
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