Daniel Greenfield, in his own unique way, cuts right to the heart of an issue. Below is an excerpt from his latest, After Afghanistan, but it is about so much more.
Some wars are lost in a matter of moments, others stretch on
indefinitely. The defeat in Afghanistan crept up silently on the
national consciousness and even though we are negotiating with the
Taliban, the "D" word is hardly used by anyone.
According to Obama, in one of his interminable speeches which all run together and sound the same, there really isn't a war, just a mission, and the old mission is now becoming a new sort of mission, and the missions, all of them, whether in Afghanistan or Iraq, have been successful which is why we are wrapping them up, except that we aren't really. And that's about as clear as the message from the big white building with the neatly mowed lawn out front gets, except for the part about how its occupant singlehandedly parachuted into Pakistan, killed Bin Laden, and then stopped off for some curry and a humanitarian award. [snip]
Both Bush and Obama largely missed the point of September 11, which is
that it matters less how many training camps Al Qaeda has in some desert
where there are more drugs and RPGs than people, but how many
operatives they have in the United States. The terrorist attacks carried
out by Al Qaeda in America all required that their operatives either be
in the United States or have permission to enter it. The truly
dangerous training camps aren't in Mali or in Afghanistan; they are in
Jersey City and Minneapolis. The easiest way to stop the next Al Qaeda
terrorist attack is to end immigration from the Muslim world.
(read it all at Sultan Knish Blog)
Emphasis mine.



















I make it a point to read the Sultan daily, and he never disappoints.
Posted by: Nate | February 21, 2013 at 06:27 PM
Nate: He is one of my daily reads, I especially like his Friday roundups.
Posted by: Debbie | February 21, 2013 at 07:37 PM