Falluja

It's been awhile since I've read the blog (had to take care of a few things), and I'll say it's come along pretty well. It'll be my first post, so bear with me. I don't write as elloquently as many of you, but I share alot of the same views.

I was reading something on MSNBC.com about Falluja.

WASHINGTON - Now that U.S. and Iraqi forces control “Jihad City,” (a.k.a Fallujah), what should we expect next in the war with Iraq’s jihadist insurgency? One certain result will be the continuation of U.S.-Iraqi efforts to stabilize the country ahead of January’s national elections. Another certainty is that the jihadists, in spite of their setback in Fallujah, will persist in their efforts to enflame the country and obstruct the electoral process.

Those bastards need to get it through their thick skulls that in the long-run, this is probably one of the best things that could happen to them. It seems they are too tied-up in their sick religious fanaticism and anti-west ideaologies to see the simple fact that they need a stable government in place (that isn't going to butcher people by the gross) to improve their country.

The Jihadist plan Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born terrorist the U.S. blames for many of the attacks against its forces in Iraq, can be expected to attempt some kind of attack inside Fallujah to upstage the Iraqi government’s victory there. They will step up efforts to punish those who will collaborate with government that emerges in the city, and ultimately this may be the struggle that determines whether the military victory was a temporary setback for the jihadists or a permanent solution. In al-Qaida’s myriad chat rooms, the retaking of Fallujah is order No. 1. This does not mean an assault that takes on the Marines. Rather, it means “re-terrorizing” the city. For the jihadis, chaos = victory.

Alot of the hand-wringing lefties need to realize that the only thing these people understand is naked, brute force. They don't respect treaties, accords, or any type of appeasements. It isn't in their nature to take up a reward to turn over a high-ranking member of their organization. To quote Gen. Curtis LeMay: "My solution...is to bomb them into the stoneage." Of course, it wouldn't take too much bombing.

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