The headline in my local weekly paper was strikingly idiotic:
“Ending War through Diplomacy.”
The article spoke only of the current war against terrorism. I think we need to remind ourselves exactly who it is we’re at war with: terrorist thugs who, well, terrorize. Such evil-minded individuals aren’t prone to sit down for a polite discussion.
People forget that we’re not at war withIraq -- we’re at war inIraq. We’re not fighting a nation or a government with a designated leader. We’re fighting terrorists who scurry among Middle Eastern countries and hide out in caves.
Yes, they get cover and support from rogue dictators and are led by individuals we can identify. But you don’t negotiate with mass murderers like Osama bin Laden and Ayman Al-Zawahiri. These are fanatics who strap bombs on children, target civilians in neighborhood markets, and burst into universities and seminaries and blow people away. You don’t hunt them down to have a chat. You hunt them down so you can rid the world of them and their evil.
Of course, protecting our nation and freedom isn’t easy or cheap. As Congress prepares to work on its annual budget blueprint, we need to make sure they include the funds required to train and equip our military to do the job. Our brave men and women deserve better than to be put at risk because we didn’t budget enough money.
Polls suggest that many Americans think we already spend too much on defense -- never mind adding more. Others think it makes up the largest part of the federal budget. Quick: How much of gross domestic product do you think we spend on defense?
25 percent of GDP? 50 percent?
The actual number is less than 4 percent. Bet you’ve never heard that from the establishment media or liberal leaders.
To put the amount in perspective: It’s less than the 4.6 percent we spent during the Gulf War, significantly lower than the 11.7 percent we invested during the Korean War, and a fraction of the 34 percent we spent during World War II.
Former Sen. James Talent of Missouri, a distinguished fellow at The Heritage Foundation who served on both the Senate and House armed services committees, recently offered this sobering assessment in a major article for National Review:
“Because of decisions over the last 15 years -- driven more by budgetary than by military considerations -- the Army is too small, the Navy and Marine Corps may well be too small, and much of the equipment in all the services is too old and increasingly unreliable. Without a substantial increase in procurement spending … the U.S. will be unable to modernize its forces to the degree necessary to preserve its security with the necessary margin of safety.”
This is frightening, to say the least. National security, after all, is Job 1 for our elected leaders, and many of them clearly don’t get it. Ronald Reagan did, and that’s one of the reasons so many Americans admired him. He was willing to spend what it took to ensure our safety. Reagan knew that without “freedom from fear,” our other freedoms mean little. He was the one who proved, once and for all, the validity of his policy of “peace through strength.” He also understood that the first duty of government is to “provide for the common defense.”
Today, far too many politicians seem to think the first role of government is to provide a comfortable way of life for every American. The truth is, the very notion of life in America is at risk without a strong fighting force.
As Heritage experts explain, there are two critical realities which must be addressed now:
We face serious security threats today and can see others on the horizon. “The U.S. needs to fund defense programs that will protect the American people and U.S. friends and allies against the ongoing threats from hostile states (e.g., Iran and North Korea) and looming threats like the one posed by a hostile China,” writes Heritage Foundation defense expert Baker Spring in a recent paper.
The coming crisis in entitlement spending threatens to crowd out other priorities. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid all have claimed bigger and bigger portions of the federal budget since the 1960s -- and this growth has generally come at the expense of our defense budget. Adequately funding our defense will become impossible if the “Big Three” entitlement programs continue on autopilot. Heritage experts consider 4 percent of GDP adequate to meet tomorrow’s military threats.
As Thomas Paine once wrote, “Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigues of supporting it.” We can’t expect to protect ourselves and stand by our allies by pinching defense dollars. It’s time to stop pretending that we can.
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I hesitate to call what is going on in Iraq a war. We fought a war, removed Saddam and now we are now "occuppying" Iraq. Now we face an underground resistance that wasn't there until we came. So we cannot win the war in Iraq - it doesn't exist. And we need to take a hard look if this occupation is really in our best interests and answer why did we ever take our eyes off of Bin Laden? Click here to reply to this post
Wipe them out and replace it with what?
Posted On: 03/17/08 10:38:37 AM
Age 48, CA
The current state of our Churches has seen it's better days. Make them burn their Quarans and replace it with what? The Emergent church? The flop & twitch in the isle ultra carismatic church? The liberal condom tossing & same sex marriage church? Catholic? Ptotestant? or how about the conservtive evangelical church where we spout morality only to have the same divorce, abortion, teen sex, teen pregnancy rates as the heathen world? Click here to reply to this post
Wipe out the enemy?
Posted On: 03/17/08 10:31:29 AM
Age 48, CA
Somewhere I once read "You have heard the Elders say you shall love your friends and hate your enemy. But I say unto you Love your enemy and pray for those who persecute you." I myself speak not as a pacifist but as a warrior who refuses to draw his sword under your pretense. Being a 26 year veteran hardly makes one a pacifist. My stand is not in conflict with my militaristic tendencies, quite to the contrary, it is because of it. I do not need to call anyone my enemy until he is actually shooting at me. Even then, I fight not to wipe him out but to win him over. The greater my fighting skills, the more merciful I can be without getting killed.
One is only a "Terrorist" if someone is terrified of him. Weather one has a .45 caliber response to an Islamofacist who tries to force you to bow towards Mecca or simply a pacifist who willingly goes to his execution rather than submit, it should not be possible to terrorise a Christian with the threat of physical violence. The word "Terrorism" simply should not exist in the Christians vocabulary. Click here to reply to this post
she's right
Posted On: 03/13/08 06:53:44 PM
Age 55, WA
Everybody forgets that we faced problems with terrorism back to the 70's wth Airline hijackings. Remember the pilot with the pistol packing beardie behind him in the cockpit? We did nothing. This was exacerbated by Jimmy Carter's handling of the Shah and the ensuing Embassy debacle.
Talent's remarks about budgetary decisions point a direct finger at Bill Clinton. He wasted the peace dividend with leadership that said "Make the problem go away."
We owe a debt of gratitude to George W who took the problem by the horns and finally did something about it.
We are entitled to live lives free from terror and I'm behind any and all efforts to exterminate it. Click here to reply to this post
Have no faith in a corrupt self serving military
Posted On: 03/14/08 10:57:23 AM
Age 48, CA
Being a 26 year veteran, I cannot share your faith in the military. The Pentagon is eager to reverse the post cold war drawdown and needs a new boogieman. Worse yet, instead of meeting the threat, they are trying to sell weapons that were questionable even during the Sovoet Threat and are totally useless today. Some examples: The Virginia class submarine, the F-22 fighter, the B-2 Bomber, the F-35 fighter, and the Zumwalt class destroyer. Each advocate for these programs frantically cry out that we will all be bowing towards Mecca if we failt to keep our mouths shut and checkbook open and buy these latest wonder weapons. All the while, we are scrapping ships which are less than halfway through their service lives while asking for money to build new ones. Demanding money we don't have has usually been the way of liberals but now we have conservatives uttering the same nonsense.
Currently, we have the worst of both worlds. Our military is too large to defend only our own interests and too small to enforce the empire the neocons want. We need to establish a realistic foriegn policy and right size the military to defend it. In short, Close the chceckbook and shut it down! Re fit existing ships to meet the need and alow them to serve their full service lives. Scrap the F-22 and build new and improved versions of the F-15 and F-16. Shift more defense to the Guard and reserves. This way, those who call for war will have to present their own bodies in which to fight. Click here to reply to this post
Take the bull by the horns?
Posted On: 03/14/08 10:43:04 AM
Age 48, CA
Invading another cvountry and imposing a puppet government. 6 years, 4,000+ dead, 30,000+ wounded, 1.2 trillion dollars, and we still can't subdue a nation the size of Calif. Who has whom by the horns?
Anyone who allows him or herself to be terrorised by the threat pf physical violence has a weak faith at best, an outright false faith at worst. It should not be poosible top terrorise a Christian.
The Shah was an American puppet who did not have what Thomas Jeeferson described as "The consent of the governed. Propping up puppet government is about as un Biblical as one can get. Click here to reply to this post
Perfect Love casts out fear
Posted On: 03/13/08 11:03:27 PM
Age 61, MO
"There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear; because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love." (1 John 4:18). Do not look to George W. Bush or any politician or worldly person for freedom. Christ is the only freedom you will ever have. George Cancilla Click here to reply to this post
Propaganda Is not Sweet as Honey and makes my Stomach Sour.
Posted On: 03/13/08 12:53:36 PM
Age 35, ID
Here we go again. Iraq never attacked us, never had Al-Quada, never had terroists that were a threat to us. As far as the so-called weapons of mass destruction, we only new they had weapons because we supplied them to Iraq when we were allies with Sadaam. We are so worried about Iran and criticize Russia for their alliance with them, while we are in bed with Saudi Arabia (The very country where Bin Laden is from and 17 of the terrorists who attacked us were from). We borrow money from China to lend to Musharaff/Pakistan a rogue dictator who overthrows democracy in His own country and protects taliban terrorists. We send taxpayer money to most of the Middle East and Israel while we say we support Israel and then send Americans over there to die for Israel at the hands of the evil people we send aid too.
This is fear tactic 101. I agree that we should fund our defenses and the best way to accomplish that end is to pull our money out of all these countries, bring our troops home to defend our country and not some other countries oil supply.
THe truth is that Israel needs no protection because they have over 200 nuclear warheads that could vanquish the entire middle east.
Look at our economy Ma'am and understand that this ridiculous occupation in Iraq is wiping our nation out financial. That is the intent of Islam. The same way Bin LAden wiped out Russia's economy in Afgahnastan. Iraq was never a threat and neither is Iran. This is all political propaganda. As we are warned in scripture the deception will be so great even the elect would be swayed if not for the Hand of God.
Wake up and smell the roses and stop beleiving the lies laid down all around you.
Take care, ESM - http://puritancrier.googlepages.com Click here to reply to this post
Paying the price
Posted On: 03/13/08 12:03:25 PM
Age 61, MO
This article grossly misrepresents the economic and security condition of the United States. It over simplifies what needs to be done, and panders to the emotions of the people. It disregards an already burgeoning national debt and rapidly deteriorating internal economic growth, due, in large part, to an over abundant military industrial economic footing. There would be adequate money for military defense if the government would withdraw from policing the world. George Cancilla Click here to reply to this post
Wrong!
Posted On: 03/13/08 10:26:58 AM
Age 48, CA
We are at war to prop up a puttet governemnt in Iraq. There was no terrorism there until WE invaded and tried to set up our godles ways. The very fact that you are "Terrorised" shows your lack of faith. It should not be poosible to terrorise any Christian with the threat of physical violence. It is also unBiblcal to cower behind a corrupt self serving military industrial complex. The real truth is that our own abortion clinics kill far more of our babies than any Islamofcists, our own gangs shoot more of us than any terrorist group, our own drug dealers poison more of us than any nations chemical weapons, and our own sexual imorality infects more of us than any biological weapons program. The truth is that the military industrial complex is desparate to justify it's existence and continues it's wasteful spending. Our own godless decadence is far more threatening than any so called trerrorist group. Click here to reply to this post
Right!
Posted On: 03/14/08 03:07:14 PM
Age 61, MO
I couldn't agree with you more. It is senseless to think about defense budgetting until the satanic stench emanating from government officials in DC is deodorized. Admiral Fallon resigned because he would not carry out a "Gulf of Tonkin" type incident in the Persian Gulf to give this administration more impetus to attack Iran. George Cancilla Click here to reply to this post
My experience
Posted On: 03/14/08 07:05:21 PM
Age 48, CA
I left the submarine service after 13 years because it had no reap purpose for being. Our only mission was to pass another petty inspection. Once, we had to scrub a toilet until midnight because it failed inspection because there was dust floating on top of the water. Even when we were on a "Real mission" Our drill schedule took precidence over the actual mission. I did another 13 years in the Reserves as an EOD Diver.
Following 9-11, we were called up for deomestic harbor security. Our mission was to resond to any suspected attack, dive under the ship or pier, find the bomb, and disarm it. When we were not doing this, we would be on anti swimmer patrol using specially trained dolphins. Our job was to play the role of the bad guy and get used for target practice. So, my legacy in this war on terror was to get beaten up by a dolphin. One day, our Commodore came over and gave the following lecture. "We might be at war but the navy isn't invited! You were called up by mistake since there is no intel that the enemy has an underwater attack capability!" One of our guys responded "What about land based ordinance? We can do that too!" He responded "We only have 12 Navy EOD techs ashore right now and had to beg the Army to let them play! Currently, you are a bigger asset to the enemy due to the money you all cost! The sooner you are demobilised, the better!" From that day forward, we were treated like tresspassers while waiting for our orders to return home. That following weekend, we were called up to do a hull search because there were no active duty units able to respond. I myself was facing madatory retirement and knew as soon as we were demobilised I would have to prepare to retire. I tried to submit a package to stay on but was turned down. As the iraq war drew closer, there was once again a change of heart and my retirement papers were rejected. Then, i was ordered to retire again. After submitting my papers again I was offered anoterh reprieve from manditiry retirement but replied that since i did not believe in starting this war I would refuse. I retired in Nov. 2002. Click here to reply to this post