20 July 2011

Required Reading: "Syria: Descent into Darkness"

Via Hotair:

Over at Front Page Magazine, Rick Moran has a rather grim update on the current state of affairs in Syria. The situation there is far more complicated than the canned sound bites from CNN could ever convey, with a variety of factions in play on each side and a dictator who, from all appearances, isn’t planning on leaving any time soon. But the violence continues unabated.
Violence erupted in three Syrian cities over the weekend as President Bashar Assad continues his efforts to put down incipient revolts against his 11 year rule. But while protests against the regime appeared to be spreading, the government mounted a number of massive demonstrations in support of the dictator in Damascus, as well as Syria’s second largest city, Aleppo.
Most troubling for Assad is the specter of sectarian violence in the city of Homs that raised its head for the first time in the revolt, and the defection of a significant military force in the Iraqi border town of Abu Kamal. This may be a signal that the conscripts that have been ordered to shoot down civilians in the streets are weakening in their allegiance to the regime despite brutal methods to keep them in line.
Homs is only one place where violence is spreading, with the rebels facing very steep odds against Assad’s forces, but as Moran explains, it’s also a microcosm of the complex mixture of ethnic and religious groups vying for power. As it turns out, Assad is actually viewed as a protector against majority oppression by a number of groups, including Christians, who fear the power of the Sunnis. Part of the problem today is that the Sunnis are less than happy with the favorable treatment shown by Assad to his charges.
Homs, a city that was once dominated by Sunnis, has seen Alawites move in during the last 20 years and gradually, the newcomers began taking over the government and getting preferred jobs. That tension escalated when Assad moved his forces into Sunni neighborhoods last month to quell the huge demonstrations that erupted against his rule. Most of the violence occurred in two neighborhoods –one Sunni and one Alawite — that border each other. A resident explained, “The magic is turning against the magician. The regime thought that if it feeds the tribes and allows them to carry AK-47s it will secure their loyalty forever.” He added that the “repression was turning them into insurgents.”
This is an excellent article to read if you want to get up to date on the complex internal struggle playing out today in Syria. The worrying part is that conflicting loyalties and alliances in the international community, combined with traditional antagonistic stances between rival clans make it all the more difficult for anyone else to do anything about Assad’s brutal crackdown. There’s a lot of news coming out of Syria, but none of it is very good.
This is continues to get worse.  Wait for the Department of State presser/statement - unless they unwaveringly raise the specter of SOME sort of tangible U.S. action, we've lost any moral high ground that we might conceivably claim in the future.

18 July 2011

Recommendations

In lieu of the full post (more of an essay, really) that I'm working on, about Western perception of Islam and some of the attendant problems with said perception, I'm going to offer a few summer reading suggestions.

1.  Prayers for the Assassin - A truly unforgettable piece of speculative fiction.  Set 30ish years in the future, the US has become a divided nation; in the North and West, and Islamic republic and in the South, a breakaway Christian nation.  Robert Ferrigno's explanation of how this situation came to be is both convincing and ground-breaking.  Filled with memorable characters, and extremely difficult to put down, this book, and its two sequels are amongst my absolute favorites.

2.  Ender's Game - Again, one of my all time favorites, by Orson Scott Card.  So creative, as far as military strategy is concerned, the book is taught in numerous military academies and most young military officers are very familiar with it.  Gripping plot, unforgettable scenarios, seriously thought-provoking.

3.  The Looming Tower - Written by Lawrence Wright, and received the Pulitzer prize.  I've read it three times now, and Wright's ability to seamlessly navigate the disparate threads of Al-Qaeda's origins, mission, goals and achievements - while balancing the stories of American law enforcement personalities charged with finding OBL - makes for a fascinating read.  Owing much, I believe, to Wright's background as a screenwriter, the book reads more like a novel than history.  He covers everything from Sayed Qtub through modern day in perfect detail; not so much as to render the book inaccessible, but more than sufficient to explain the motivations and personalities of the principal players.  Essential reading for anyone who wishes to understand how and why the September 11, 2001 attacks occurred, and the more general concept and execution of jihad.

16 July 2011

Mark Steyn on Free Speech and Human Rights

Is Mark Steyn (or Andrew Bolt, or Ayaan Hirsi Ali) provocative?  Absolutely.  Do you have to agree with him?  Absolutely not.  Should he be allowed to voice his opinions without fear of prosecution/persecution?  That's what this organization is all about, right?

I would encourage readers to watch the entire clip - Steyn makes several excellent points, and includes a brief rendition of "Kung Fu Fighting", as well.  That last bit makes much greater sense once you've watched the video.

Courtesy of Powerline:


Mark Steyn on Free Speech at the IPA from Institute of Public Affairs on Vimeo.

04 July 2011

More Horror From Syria

As our Secretary of State has recently called Assad a "reformer" (though now uses harsher language - but nothing more) and we've taken no significant action to protect the Syrian people, stories like this continue to surface (courtesy http://quitenormal.wordpress.com - full link here):
Meet 13 year old Hamza Ali al-Khateeb. He was snatched by Assad goons and tortured for weeks before being returned to his family with bullet holes, broken bones, covered in cigarette burns, and minus his genitals.
How long are we going to continue to let this happen?  What options do we have?  How would you feel if your adolescent son or daughter was brutally tortured for speaking out against a vile regime?  Military intervention may not be productive or efficient, but it is increasingly clear that Bashar al-Assad needs to go.  Preferably before an international tribunal for genocide and related charges.  Is the U.S. going to continue to "lead from behind", or are we going to support a dissident movement that, for humanitarian and strategic reasons, is of vast import to our interests?

03 July 2011

Partial Book Reviews AND Brief Excerpt From Andrew McCarthy's Recent National Review Article

This, I believe, should be the reigning thought in both American and European politics, and it is what I am striving to produce here:
Real leadership would also entail diagnosing the Middle East as it truly is. It would acknowledge Islam as a fact of life in the region but understand that this does not mean we have to pretend it is an asset. It is a volatile antagonist with diverse elements — some to be courted, some to be competed with, and some that must be defeated because they are implacably hostile.
Couldn't have said it better myself.  Andrew's books, by the way (particularly Willful Blindness) are well worth reading.  Mr. McCarthy is something of an autodidact regarding Islam, but he has grasped some of the fundamental issues provoking the continual clashes between the West and the Islamic world.  I don't agree with him consistently - I think his reading of Islam is occasionally too simplistic, and ignores native Arab tradition - but largely, I believe he has some very sensible ideas.


In a perfect segue, I'd like to briefly opine on two books I've recently been reading.  Raymond Ibrahim's The Al Qaeda Reader, and Vali Nasr's Forces of Fortune.  I haven't finished either, yet, so I can only (as the post title suggests) give preliminary reviews.


Ibrahim's book is a compilation of previously untranslated essays and treatises (mostly from Ayman Al-Zawahiri, AQ's spiritual go-to) regarding relationships with the West, war, and appropriate Islam conduct during (his words) "Offensive Jihad".  Ibrahim has divided the book into sections for both "Theology" and "Propaganda" - the former intended for an Islamic audience.  It is, for the uninitiated, somewhat daunting.  It is also, however, one of the best introductions to what we commonly term "radical" Islam.  Zawahiri goes about, very quickly, demolishing the idea that AQ's mission is radical - rather, a common occurrence in history.


Nasr's book deserves more attention than I've paid it, thus far.  His analysis of Iranian interests in the Arab world (particularly Ahmadinejad's rise to power) is fascinating, and his thesis that Iranian economic concerns trump their military aspirations is a theory well worth considering.  I'm not completely sold, and I haven't gotten far enough into the book to comment on his dissection of Arab states' agendas.  I'll post a fuller report when I've finished both, and taken some useful notes.


Expect a Fourth of July post tomorrow - there's much to discuss given the world's current state.