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Clinton Blackmailed by Yeltsin over Monica?

  That's what is being suggested in Yeltsin's new autobiography, and a year before the scandal broke in the US.

For more, go here.

hat tip:  tothepointnews
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Castro Already Dead?


National Review Online thinks so.

          Go here


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Some People Like their Cages--Iraq Lost?

 
"...the implicit repudiation of the very mythos of the war: that it was a liberation, and that all men yearn to be free in the Western liberal sense. Some peoples very much like their cages, whether it be Ba’athist or Islamist, and will fight for admission to them. It was the unwillingness to concede the error of this point that first drove the President to refuse the hard path to victory in favor of his policy of attrition and groundless hope. Now that things have come this far, with a Congress shortly to be lost and an American people who no longer trust him, he does not even have the option to try. The pity of it all is that those who pay the inevitable price will be the very Iraqis whom he hoped to free."

-Joshua Trevino writing in the Brussels Journal, 10/25/06

For the complete article, go here.
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November Prediction


Remember...  Democrats win polls, Republicans win elections.


(Read Dick Morris' 10/24/06 take.)
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AN IRAQI VACATION?

Clever, methinks...
                 http://americandigest.org/mt-archives/006456.php


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IMINADINNERJACKET SHOWING A SOFTER SIDE?

Many have long suspected Iran's crazed and dangerous leader of being mentally ill.  Only today, he threatened Israel and Europe with annihilation.  Are these the statements and actions of a sane man?  Or is he just misunderstood?


                             Watch the video. You decide.

Hat tip to: activistchat
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Brooklyn's Take on Hugo Chavez

Fantastic, funny take on everyone's favorite Latin dictator, Castro protege, and Mussolini imitator, Hugo Chavez.  Take it away, "The Kid from Brooklyn"  http://www.thekidfrombrooklyn.com


http://www.thekidfrombrooklyn.com/video_disp.asp?videoid=1381



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Tiny Belgium Ground Zero

Re. National Review Online (http://www.nationalreview.com)  October 19, 2006 7:16 AM. Asking for Extremism.  The European political center refuses to deal with the problem of Islamic Extremism.
By Emanuele Ottolenghi

Jews may be the traditional canary in the European coal mine, but Ottolenghi shows us how tiny Belgium is becoming ground zero in the battle for Islamic domination of Europe.  Readers interested in keeping tabs on Islam's gains in Europe would do well to check out the Brussels Journal, www.brusselsjournal.com.  Led by Paul Belien, an adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute, this site tries to keep the lamps lit by bravely confronting the growing anti-intellectual, anti-rational, anti-Christian, anti-Jewish, anti-Western tide threatening Belgium in particular,and Europe in general. Recent election results are particularly eye-opening, with new immigrant Muslims capturing a large number of seats in local Belgian elections.   Here is the link to Belien's 10/19/06 NY interview with http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eetv0pyOICE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Vr5uVwey-g
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UmWjpG6BTqo


The above links are to youtube videos of the interview--must see T.V.


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ITALY/FRANCE TO SELL SOPHISTICATED MISSILES TO HEZBULLAH


Newsflash...  from www.debka.com


DEBKAfile Exclusive: Italy to sell Lebanon sophisticated ground-to-air Aster 15 missiles to stop Israel’s aerial surveillance of hostile movements

October 17, 2006, 12:26 PM (GMT+02:00)

Israeli aircraft monitor illegal Hizballah movements and arms smuggling - in the absence of any Lebanese army and UNIFIL preventive action to implement UN Resolution 1701.

According to DEBKAfile’s Rome sources, prime minister Romano Prodi has instructed his defense ministry to negotiate with the Fouad Siniora government the quick sale of an Aster 15 battery, the only Western surface-to-air missile with an active guidance system capable of last-minute corrections of targeting at the moment of interception.

As a joint Franco-Italian product, the sale also needed - and obtained - approval from French president Jacques Chirac.

Our sources report the Aster 15 will be accompanied by Italian instructors to guide Lebanese troops in their use. Since 50% of those officers are Shiites loyal to Hizballah or Amal, the Shiite terrorists are looking forward to gaining access for the first time to top-of-the-line Western anti-air missile technology.

On Oct. 13, Lebanese chief of staff General Michel Suleiman informed his officers posted on the Lebanese-Israeli border of the Beirut government’s “indefatigable efforts” to obtain anti-air missiles to hit patrolling Israeli aircraft. He added that very soon, Lebanon would also acquire long-range anti-tank rockets to prevent Israeli tanks again crossing the border.

Commanders of the French UNIFIL contingent have threatened to fire on Israeli warplanes in Lebanese skies, according to Israel defense minister Amir Peretz in a briefing to a Knesset panel Monday, Oct. 16.

Israel has so far refrained from protesting to Rome against the Aster 15 sale - any more than it has to Washington, the UN Security Council or UNIFIL over illegal Hizballah movements and arms-smuggling.

The Aster 15 is manufactured by France’s Aerospatiale and Thompson-CSF; its guidance system by the Alenia/Finmeccanica of Italy. Launched from seaborne or land bases, it is designed to hit “maneuverable targets” - aircraft, helicopters, drones or missiles. With a warhead of 3.20 kilos of explosives, the missile has a range of up to 30 km and a maximum speed of 3,600 kph. Aster 15’s two stages are a solid propellant booster and a “dart” equipped with a seeker, a sustainer motor, a proximity fuse and a blast fragmentation warhead.

Most significantly, the French-Italian projectile is the only Western surface-to-air missile with an active guidance system capable of last-minute corrections of targeting at the moment of interception. In the hands of the Lebanese army (and its Hizballah component), the Aster 15 will directly jeopardize Israel’s aerial surveillance of Hizballah and other hostile movements in Lebanon.

DEBKAfile’s political sources once again note the Olmert government’s virtual concealment of the impending threat, its blind eye to UNIFIL’s impotence and its failure to raise an outcry against the missile’s impending delivery to Beirut. Israel’s leaders are strongly motivated by their need to stick to the empty boast of military gains in the Lebanon War and the portrayal of the international force’s deployment in the South as a diplomatic triumph.

In contrast, the teams investigating the IDF’s performance in the war are coming up daily with findings of gross mismanagement. The Israeli missile ship hit by an Iranian anti-ship C-208 cruise missile July 14 - for the loss of four men - was found in the latest report to have omitted to activate the ship’s four missile defense systems, including the Barak anti-missile missile. The ship sailed dangerously close to the Beirut coast with none of the 80 officers and crew manning lookout or attack positions. The panel concluded that there was nothng to stop Hizballah sinking the frigate by ramming it with an explosives-laden boat



Copyright 2000-2006 DEBKAfile. All Rights Reserved.

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U.S. Now World’s Fireman, Not Policeman



It’s high time for the U.S. to go back on offense in the war against Islamic extremists and their anti-U.S. allies and sympathizers.  For too many years now, following the fall of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, we’ve been twisting in the wind, the object of pot shots taken by men hiding in Pakistani caves, an optometrist in Damascus, U.N. gnomes, and a trio of mad brothers in Tehran, Pyongyang  and Caracas.  Adding fuel to the fire are our traditional global adversaries, China and Russia, and the fire ant French.  Not only has the sheriff been run out of town, the bad guys seem to be getting all the weapons, the townfolk are in hiding (men included), and the fireman exhausts himself putting out one blaze after another while our enemies roar with laughter and coordinate future actions. It’s time to re-write the script.

The proliferation of sophisticated weapons to our adversaries, including weapons of mass destruction, along with modern communication tools and widespread dissemination of technical knowledge, will force the U.S. to adapt to a new global reality. Without the aid of allies who are the main powers in their regions, our vision for the world cannot be realized, and global peace and prosperity cannot be attained.  We cannot be the regional power everywhere.  Take Iran, for example.  A nuclear armed Iran allied with the U.S. would be a godsend for the U.S., a counterweight to the Russians, Chinese and Arabs.  In theory then, we are not against Iran having nuclear weapons, we’re against this Iran having nuclear weapons.  Does the U.S. worry about India’s nuclear arsenal, or Britain’s (France’s may prove to be another matter in the years to come)?  Yet we continue to focus on non-proliferation, and want no additional nuclear club members.

Perhaps it’s time to talk plainly with some of our allies about the limitations of American power in today's world.  We need to confront countries like Japan, India, S. Korea, the Philippines, Turkey,  Australia, Canada, Poland, and Columbia, and make it clear to them and others exactly what we’re up against, and ask them to step up to the plate and take a far bigger role in their regions' security.  We’ll provide them with the weaponry, conventional and nuclear if need be, and require that they act as the first line of defense in regional struggles and conflagrations, a trip-wire in reverse for American intervention.  Not only will this free the U.S. from so much multi-tasking, it will make our adversaries think long and hard before casually tweaking the American nose.

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N.Korea Goes Nuclear

                               They did it. In spite of Clinton's deal. 

A good take on where we are now, from Stanley Kurtz, NRO contributing editor:







It’s the Nukes, Stupid
North Korea’s test.

By Stanley Kurtz

What will it take to wake up the West? Will a nuclear explosion beneath a North Korean mountain be enough? The threat of nuclear terror has been rumbling beneath the surface since 9/11, yet still we’re in denial. Make a deal? President Clinton tried that and failed, accepting a bogus deal, with a porous inspections regime. North Korea flouted the agreement at the first opportunity. Keep negotiating? At this point, the prospect that North Korea is simply positioning itself for negotiations is dim. More likely they’ve given up on the hope of another Clinton-style bonanza (on which they would have simply cheated again), and have decided instead to defy the world, with all the attendant risks. Those risks are huge. If the U.S. and China cooperate now in seriously sanctioning North Korea, the regime could collapse. That would be both welcome and deeply dangerous. On the other hand, if the U.S. and China refuse to cooperate in sanctioning Korea, and break with each other instead, we face yet another sort of destabilizing regional conflict. On top of all this, American interdiction of ships bound for North Korea could lead to war. On the other hand, failure to interdict would reveal the weakness of our position, and would make it that much easier for the North Koreans to smuggle out weapons and nuclear material to terrorists and the rogue regimes of the Middle East. Japan is likely now on course toward a nuclear capability. Japan may also race to gain the capacity for a preemptive missile strike on North Korea’s missile facilities. That in turn could set off a war in which the North launched an artillery barrage against Seoul. Will this put spine into South Korea, or simply send it running further away from the United States?

Korean bombs, missiles, and expertise will sail, fly, run, and walk to the Middle East. Were Saddam still in charge, he would have been first in line at North Korea’s nuclear supermarket. And all the reverberating regional and worldwide consequences of Korea’s nuclear breakout will be replayed, with even more dangerous effect, once Iran gets a bomb of its own. Just as Japan will now arm in preparation for a possible preemptive strike against North Korea, Turkey, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia will shortly arm themselves with nuclear weapons against Iran. Sanctions regimes and confrontations on the high seas in East Asia risk escalating to war, as will the proxy terror strikes against the world’s Persian Gulf oil jugular sponsored by a newly nuclear Iran. And as the sheer number of nuclear states increases, it will become impossible to trace the state supplier of a nuclear terror strike. That, in turn, will free up rogue elements in Muslim states to hand off a bomb to al Qaeda or Hezbollah.

The failure to find WMDs in Iraq, the shrieking of America’s doves, and the constraints of international diplomacy have all prevented the Bush administration from speaking honestly and openly to the American people about the true nature of the threat we face. And pretty much everyone else has taken their eyes off the ball. Iraqi WMDs? Not nearly as important as what Saddam could and would have bought and built with the help of North Korea and A. Q. Kahn. Troubles in Iraq? Not nearly as important as the deterrent effect of an America willing to brave 3,000 casualties for the sake of proving our willingness to take down rouge states. Democratization? Important in the long term, but a sideshow compared to the nuclear knife at our throat. A free-spending Republican Congress? Not nearly as important as the danger of an administration paralyzed by a dovish Democratic congress at this moment of grievous danger. Capital Hill sex scandals? Not nearly as important as keeping the Capital and all its pages from being blown sky-high by Osama’s lackeys.

Oh, right. It’s all just a Rovian plot. What will it take to wake this sleeping nation up? It’s the nukes, stupid. It’s the nukes, smarty. It’s the nukes, Mr. President. It’s the nukes, Democrats. It’s the nukes, Republicans. It’s the nukes, Pat Buchanan. It’s the nukes, Michael Moore.... It’s the nukes.

Stanley Kurtz is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center




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The Lights Dim in Europe

A must read is:

    Traitors to the Enlightenment

Europe turns its back on Socrates, Locke, et al.  By Victor Davis Hanson. In the National Review Online, October 2, 2006. For the full article, go to:
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=M2JlMzJhNjIxZGZkYjdmZGU0ZGUyOWM3MzEwMTk0ZWQ
My comments:

When the spirit of western civilization crossed the Atlantic in 1492 and took up permanent residence in the US during WWI, Europe's days were numbered. Europe's creaking collapse and quiet surrender was foretold by Spengler(and reiterated by Hanson), although its demise was swifter than probably imagined, and all the more stunning for it. Perhaps we in America envisioned Europe surviving as a sort of permanent Euro-Disney, an open-air continent-sized museum where castles and cathedrals became luxury hotels, with its former culture kept on life-support in affordable, hygenic, shrink-wrapped tourist-sized bites.  Alas, the barbarians will have their due, and the lights have begun to go out. As Hanson said, "the Europe that believes in everything turns out to believe in nothing."

But history continues. The human actions that now retard European civilization will one day promote it elsewhere. Mankind should be grateful that the civilization dying now in Europe survives for the time being in the US. Soon, however, it must find another source of sustenance and support.  There's another ocean left to cross.  Will the spirit of western civilization find a home in Asia?

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