Slipping beneath the radar screen
Hizballah’s deputy secretary general, Naim Qassem, has reportedly threatened to “carry out additional kidnappings of Israel Defense Forces soldiers.”
Read story here.
Let’s not forget, this is the same terrorist leader who – in his book, “Hizballah: The Story from Within” – justifies the use of suicide bombers:
“The weapon of martyrdom is the main and pivotal weapon on which we can rely. …” — NQ
Lovely.
What makes Qassem particularly dangerous – aside from the fact that he is second-in-command of one of the world’s most dangerous terrorist armies – is that there are some political leaders in this country who have tried to convince the American public that Hizbollah is nothing more than a political party in Lebanon; and very few Americans as a percentage have even heard of Naim Qassem.
The Defense Rusts
Excellent piece on military spending in
INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY:
“After a Missouri Air National Guard F-15 came apart in early November, the Air Force grounded its fleet of 450 F-15Cs. At a time when Russia was resuming its long-range bomber patrols that it had curtailed after our victory in the Cold War, the Canadian air force volunteered its F-18s to patrol the skies over and near Alaska.
We ought to be ashamed, just as we ought to worry that no presidential candidate has made an issue of a steady decline in military capability. The Democrats will say this is because we have spent too much on Iraq. Even if true, that’s no reason to spend too little defending against other threats.
Our lack of capability is a direct legacy of the Clinton years. While President Bush has reversed Clinton’s failure to confront America’s enemies, he has not had time while fighting the war on terror to reverse the damage done to the military Clinton loathed.
As China builds and Russia rearms, we face other threats than just al-Qaida. …”
Read more here.
A very big gun
… that fires without traditional “explosive” propellant.
According to DoD, U.S. Navy Set to Break Electromagnetic Railgun Record:
The Office of Naval Research will test fire an electromagnetic railgun (EMRG) at the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, Va. on Jan. 31, 2008, between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. EST. The gun will be fired at over 10 megajoules of energy – a power level never before achieved by an EMRG.
“Hezbollah’s dark hand”
Yesterday’s piece in the Washington Times by Tom Harb, secretary general of the Committee for United Nations Security Council Resolution 1559:
“…Groups like Hezbollah, al Qaeda and others continue to wage such blood-and-fire campaigns against civilian populations. They know it works because the threat alone is often enough to manipulate the press, too, thus frightening them so that they will act, or react, in a certain way as well.
“Today, however, terrorist groups have become more sophisticated and their tactics do not always begin with something so overtly terrorizing. In the case of Hezbollah, there is a new and far more sinister weapon in its arsenal which begins with the media itself and utilizes Hezbollah’s ability to influence and even control it….”
Read it here.
The growing threat of Hezbollah
Following are three separate articles published yesterday on the growing threat of Hezbollah:
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My Townhall.com column for January, “Hezbollah’s bags of cash.”
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My piece, “Making murder look clean,” at WorldNetDaily.
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My piece, “Connecting the dots,” at World Defense Review.
I was also quoted Sunday in Al Seyassah (one of Kuwait’s leading newspapers, also published in Lebanon and Egypt).
Translated text follows:
“I’m convinced Hezbollah is directly involved — one way or another — in Friday’s assassination of Internal Security Forces Capt. Wissam Eid,” says W. Thomas Smith Jr., a former U.S. Marine and current director of the Counterterrorism Research Center of the Family Security Foundation (an American public defense information organization). “This was an operation coordinated and conducted out of Hezbollah’s so-called ‘operation room,’ which is directed by Syria and Iran. This was an effort to eliminate any connection between all the assassinations since the murder of Mr. Rafik al-Hariri in 2005.”
Smith adds, “Even if any of these latest assassinations — conducted against top political, military, and now a key national police official — were determined to be the work of another terrorist cell or organization based in Lebanon, they could not have been accomplished in the meticulously planned and coordinated manner in which these killings have been executed without the direct operational support of Hezbollah.”
More to come, including Tom Harb’s piece, “Hezbollah’s dark hand” in yesterday’s Washington Times.
WTSjr
Welcome to NationsDefense
Good morning. I’m W. Thomas Smith Jr., and this is the initial entry of our new military/defense blog, NationsDefense.
Stand by for news, analysis, and updates from myself and others.
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Recent
- Hezbollah trying to demoralize the Lebanese Army
- Sounds of soldiers training
- First military pilot flies F-35 Lightning II
- Al Qaeda No. 3 Commander Killed
- More on Qassem
- Slipping beneath the radar screen
- The Defense Rusts
- A very big gun
- “Hezbollah’s dark hand”
- The growing threat of Hezbollah
- Welcome to NationsDefense
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