Tuesday, August 25, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News







from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals
The Stories Behind the News


Link to Sultan Knish








The Inhumanity of Being Humane to Terrorists


Posted: 24 Aug 2009 07:47 PM PDT


Most people who have gone to the movies think they know General
Patton's famous speech to the Third Army. They think they know it but they
don't, because the speech was too harsh and obscene for the eponymous film
and was censored so that it could receive a PG rating. But war, real war,
is not rated PG. It has no rating at all.



"When a man is lying in a shell hole, if he just
stays there all day, a German will get to him eventually. The hell with
that idea... My men don't dig foxholes. I don't want them to. Foxholes
only slow up an offensive. Keep moving. And don't give the enemy time to
dig one either. We'll win this war, but we'll win it only by fighting
and by showing the Germans that we've got more guts than they have; or
ever will have. We're not going to just shoot the sons-of-bitches, we're
going to rip out their living Goddamned guts and use them to grease the
treads of our tanks. We're going to murder those lousy Hun cocksuckers
by the bushel-fucking-basket. War is a bloody, killing business. You've
got to spill their blood, or they will spill yours. Rip them up the
belly. Shoot them in the guts... I believe in the old and sound rule
that an ounce of sweat will save a gallon of blood. The harder WE push,
the more Germans we will kill. The more Germans we kill, the fewer of
our men will be killed. Pushing means fewer casualties. I want you all
to remember that."




If you recoiled at this excerpt from Patton's uncensored
speech, congratulations, you may safely consider yourself a child of the
postmodern West. A West that no longer understands that war is an ugly
thing, that it must be fought hard and relentlessly to achieve victory.
The uncensored speech is just one of the many relics of World War II that
would not pass muster today. While reporters pay tribute to the mythology
of the "Greatest Generation", the actual war itself has long ago been
smeared, tarred and feathered, from both the left and the right, who decry
the firebombing of Tokyo, the bombing of Dresden, the atomic bombs dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki as monstrous war crimes. Unfortunately this
historical revisionism did not begin last week, hardly had the shooting
died down in occupied Berlin, than Communist sympathizers like John Dos
Passos rushed in to declare that the military occupation was amoral and
that the only way we could redeem ourselves was to withdraw as quickly as
possible, while Nazi sympathizers like McCarthy did his best to lynch the
military over the rough interrogations of SS officers who had massacred
American troops at Malmedy.

One by one the major figures who had
helped win the war, McArthur, Curtis LeMay, Patton, Sir Arthur Harris,
were dismissed as terrible men with no concern for human life. In the
modern moral lexicon, Hiroshima and Dresden came to seem as awful as
Auschwitz, the Adreatine caves, Bromberg, Nanking, Iwo Jima, Katyn Forest
and the Blitz. In the moral weakness that came after, the atrocities of
the perpetrators of WW2 faded, while the measures used to force them to
surrender were highlighted in stark colors. History, which is normally
written by the winners, was instead written by the losers, and the men who
understood how the war had to be fought and won became its villains. WW2
itself was celebrated but the men who commanded the operations that won it
were viewed as butchers. And all too few stopped themselves to ask how a
moral war could be won immorally.

And where has that gotten us
now?

Almost exactly 60 years after Patton made his speech to the
Third Army, the British Army found itself faced with militia attacks by
the Mahdi Army in the Iraqi city of Basra. The army withdrew, dug itself
into virtual foxholes and when asked about the requests of the Basra
residents for help, a Major Ian Clooney replied with words almost as
deathless as Patton's. "I can understand what the Iraqis are saying, but
confronting violence with violence is not going to work."

Major
Clooney's remarks are as important as Patton's, perhaps even more so,
because they signify where the Western idea of arms is at now, as opposed
to where it was some sixty years ago. We have gone from greasing the
wheels of our tanks with their guts, to believing that confronting
violence with violence is not going to work. And if violence is bad and
never solves anything, then why bother having an army at all? A great many
people are confused about that same subject as well. And that confusion is
what has cost more lives than anything else.

The fundamental truth
of war is that to win it, you must kill the enemy. You must crush them and
break them in order to destroy their morale, shatter their ranks and end
any threat that they pose. And if you are not willing to do that, then
even if you possess greater strength and numbers, sooner or later you will
lose the war, as yesterday's soldiers become tomorrow's insurgents, and
the wars you thought you won are reborn as tomorrow's conflicts.

Can we do that today? What a silly question. There is
not one single country fighting Islamic terrorism that can even define the
problem as being Islam. Certainly not England or America, both of which
insist that Islam is the Religion of Peace. Not Russia, which still
believes it can use Muslim terrorists as pet cobras, or China, which is a
good deal more nervous about its own violent Muslim Uyghurs, than about
the non-violent Tibetans. Not Israel, not Australia, not Canada. No
one.

Instead of pushing forward, we pull back. And when some of our
men presume to push forward, we drag them out for trails, we wail about
the inhumanity of being inhuman to terrorists and get down on our hands
and knees to look around for the moral high ground we are so sure that we
have lost. And just to be certain that we are being noble enough, we can
drag out the CIA interrogators who helped break captured Al Queda
terrorists into the spotlight and put them on trial, because they pushed
them too hard. And while we can forgive downed airlines, burning towers
and thousands of dead Americans-- putting bugs on a captured terrorist,
that my friends is one thing we cannot forgive.




The CIA interrogators mind you did not
behead captured terrorists, the way the terrorists beheaded their Western
captives. They did not insert rubber balloons inside them and inflate
them, as Hizbollah terrorists did to a CIA station chief in Beirut. They
did not replicate Saddam Hussein's rape rooms, which he neglected to show
off to Sean Penn or Dan Rather, when they paid their supportive visits to
him. All they really did was extract that extra "ounce of sweat" which
saved gallons of blood in the field.

But we don't believe that
violence solves anything anymore. Not even threatened violence. That is
why Osama bin Laden survived long enough to plan and executive the attacks
of September the 11th. That is why he may still be alive today. Just as
during WW2, German POW's received better treatment than African-American
enlisted men-- so too today, Al Queda terrorists receive better treatment
than the murdered Americans whose ashes are left to the landfills and to
annual commemorations by a government unwilling to do everything possible
to find and execute their killers.

There are volumes written on our
inhumanity to the terrorists, few of those same people writing those
volumes want to hear about the inhumanity of the terrorists toward us. And
there is good reason for that. In order to fight for the rights of
terrorists, one must also believe that their lives have the same worth as
ours.

A leading animal rights activist was once famously asked if
she was driving and saw a boy and an animal on the road, leaving her with
the choice of swerving to hit one, in order to miss the other. She replied
that she was unable to make the choice. They were both equal in her eyes.
In the eyes of those who worry over being inhumane to terrorists, the boy
and the terrorists are equal. They could not make the choice between one
or the other. And this universalization lifts them beyond any allegiance
to a country or a citizenry, only to a definition of common humanity that
has no meaning in war.

A pig is not a dog and a boy. A terrorist is not a
criminal or an American. To equate them all is to render all national
allegiances null and void. And on those grounds to reject violence as a
force that cannot solve anything, for in the eyes of the universalists, a
terrorist has just as much right to live as we do. And for as long as and
wherever such a view prevails, the war on Terror cannot be won, it can
only be prolonged, as we dig into our foxholes and wait for the next
attack against an enemy we dare not push, for fear of losing that shiny
medal we pin to our chests, the highest civilian honor, the gleaming
fool's gold, of the moral high ground. Until we can say that the life of a
single one of our children is worth all the guns to the head and bugs on
and bullets in the bodies of terrorists, we will go on losing this
war.

Is it more inhumane to be inhumane or humane to terrorists? It
is a question that too few enjoy asking because it sets out a clear
choice. We can coddle the terrorists, or we can push them. We coddled them
for years until 9/11 happened. Now we have gone back to coddling them
again. But there will be more than only a moral price to pay for that, but
a bill presented written in the blood of Americans. Because those who
focus on the inhumanity of being inhumane to terrorists, choose instead to
be inhumane to their country and their fellow citizens.










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