08 October 2004
Federalist Patriot No. 04-40
Friday Digest

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THE FOUNDATION

"In a word, I want an American character, that the powers of
Europe may be convinced we act for ourselves and not for others;
this, in my judgment, is the only way to be respected abroad and
happy at home." --George Washington

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THE PATRIOT PERSPECTIVE

Top of the fold -- John Kerry: More "aid and comfort"...

In recent months, this column has set about to distinguish
manifestly between President George W. Bush and Sen. John F. Kerry
in regard to character, policy matters and competing visions for
our nation's future.

After George Bush's razor-thin and highly contested victory
over Albert Gore in 2000, many political observers argued (and
continue to insist) that there are few distinctions between the
Republican and Democrat parties. Indeed, in regard to some seminal
issues that once distinguished party lines -- most notably central
government spending -- those lines are now blurred. Additionally,
the recent Republican National Convention headlined party moderates
like Rudy Giuliani, John McCain and Arnold Schwarzenegger, who
disagree with significant elements of the Republican Platform,
while also featuring Democrat Zell Miller, who agrees with most
of the GOP Platform. This, understandably, leaves some with the
impression that the two parties have all but merged.

To be sure, there is a semblance between the background of the
presidential incumbent and his challenger. Bush and Kerry are
contemporaries who hail from wealth and privilege, from prestigious
prep schools and Ivy League universities, and from political
dynasties in their respective home states. During their tenures in
national office, both Bush and Kerry have advocated, respectively,
for big and bigger central government spending programs.

But are there notable variances in policy matters between George
Bush and John Kerry? You bet -- which is precisely why this
presidential campaign is being bitterly waged, mostly between
centrist Republicans and leftist Democrats. While the national
party lines may seem fluid, the political lines which separate
Bush and Kerry and their respective ranks are cast-iron.

Volumes have been written about the sizeable chasm separating
the character of President Bush and John Kerry -- the distance
between their values as reflected in their disagreement over public
policies concerning family and faith, their diametrical selection
criteria for federal-bench nominees, and their opposing views
on taxation. While these are important distinctions, their most
significant policy divergence relates to U.S. national security
-- the first order of a president's Constitutional duties, the
palladium without which all other duties become meaningless. And
it is this critical difference which should be foremost in the
minds of voters on 2 November.

Indeed, this difference couldn't have been any clearer than
during the first presidential-candidate debate (see "We will
not waver..." at http://FederalistPatriot.US/alexander/). In
a discussion about the President's obligation to protect the
country with pre-emptive military action, Kerry insisted that such
pre-emption must first pass "the global test." In other words,
any pre-emptive action by a "President Kerry" would first require
a thumbs-up from the likes of France, Germany and the perennially
hostile United Nations.

For his part, George W. Bush has steadfastly advocated Ronald
Reagan's foreign policy dictum -- Si vis Pacem, Para Bellum (to
maintain peace, prepare for war), which has deep roots in our
national foundation. George Washington, in his first address to
the nation (8 January 1790), proclaimed, "To be prepared for war,
is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace."

That resolve notwithstanding, on 11 September 2001, after eight
years of military-budget depredation, foreign-policy ambiguity
and outright appeasement under the Clinton regime (with full
collusion from John Kerry), George Bush and our nation were
dealt a heretofore-unimaginable blow by a suicidal gang of
Islamist cutthroats. As a result, President Bush was forced to
demonstrate not only his commitment to military readiness, but
also his willingness to use the ultimate instrument of diplomacy,
military force, in defense of our nation. Consequently, his
proficiency as Commander in Chief is well established.

John Kerry, on the other hand, has spent much of his political
career denigrating American military personnel and the nation
they defend, while advocating for policies of appeasement --
the same policies that made lower Manhattan, Northern Virginia
and a field in Pennsylvania the front lines in our war with
Jihadistan (see "Jihadistan: A clear and present danger..." at
http://FederalistPatriot.US/alexander).

On its face, Kerry's endorsement of appeasement resembles the
yellow streak of his contemporary Leftist ilk; long gone are the
days of robust, hawkish Democrats like Senator Henry "Scoop"
Jackson. But on closer examination, Kerry's sordid history of
collaboration with Communist regimes for more than three decades,
even in times of war, raises much more serious questions about
his motives and his fitness for the highest office in the land.

Kerry is, indubitably, the Left's most "useful idiot" (as
V.I. Lenin famously labeled Western apologists for socialist
propaganda) in contemporary politics. Ion Mihai Pacepa, the
highest-ranking intelligence officer ever to defect from the
Soviet bloc, said of Kerry's anti-American activities during the
Vietnam War, "KGB priority number one at that time was to damage
American power, judgment and credibility. ... As a spy chief and
a general in the former Soviet satellite of Romania, I produced
the very same vitriol Kerry repeated to the U.S. Congress almost
word for word and planted it in leftist movements."

But Kerry's infamous (and unlawful) coddling of Vietnamese
Communists some 35 years ago (see "Aid and comfort to the enemy:
The Kerry Record..." at http://FederalistPatriot.US/alexander/)
was not his last rendezvous with the Reds. After his election
to the Senate in 1984 (as Ted Kennedy's understudy), Kerry spent
years dismissing claims by POW family groups that some Americans
were still being held in Vietnam and Cambodia. And he has, since,
given aid and comfort to plenty of other Red regimes, including
some in this hemisphere.

For example, in 1985 Kerry courted Daniel Ortega and his Communist
regime in Nicaragua, even traveling to visit his "Dear Comandante"
in Managua. Kerry returned to the U.S., where he advocated a
policy of appeasement rather than continued funding of Ortega's
opponents, the anti-Communist Contras. In 1988 Kerry attempted
to make political hay of U.S. policy in Central America by
using his Senate committee as a launch-pad to accuse George
H.W. Bush of sanctioning a Contra drug-smuggling operation that
was importing cocaine into California. The unfounded charges were,
not surprisingly, timed to coincide with the elder Bush's campaign
against Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, under whom Kerry
had served as lieutenant governor.

In 1996, Kerry accepted a $10,000 campaign contribution in
return for arranging a meeting between Honk Kong businesswoman
Liu Chaohying and a senior Securities and Exchange official
in order to get Chaohying's company listed on the U.S. Stock
Exchange. Chaohying was a lieutenant colonel in Red China's
People's Liberation Army. That same year, Kerry traveled to Beijing
on a "U.S. trade mission." Here it's worth noting that the ChiComs
never forget their useful idiots; the People's Daily, the official
newspaper of the Communist Party of China, has endorsed Kerry's
presidential bid.

But Kerry's fondness for despotic regimes did not subside in the
'90s. In March of this year, Kerry was asked on a campaign stop
in Florida about his affiliation with Cuba's Fidel Castro and
his oppressive regime. Given the number of Cuban expatriates
in Florida who fled Castro's slave island, Kerry answered,
"I'm pretty tough on Castro. ... I voted for the Helms-Burton
legislation to be tough on companies that deal with him." (Would
someone kindly cue the laugh track?)

Helms-Burton, you may recall, strengthened the U.S. embargo
against Cuba after Fidel's fighter jets shot down two single-engine
civilian aircraft over international waters, killing four Cuban
ex-pats. The small planes belonged to Brothers to the Rescue, an
organization of small aircraft owners who volunteered their time
flying over the waters between Cuba and the Keys, and alerting
the Coast Guard when they came upon Cuban refugees on makeshift
rafts who needed rescue.

However, Kerry voted against Helms-Burton, and he later clarified
his support for Castro by arguing that the embargo should be
lifted. "The only reason [Cuba is treated differently from other
Communist nations] is the politics of Florida," said Kerry. Of
course, the ever-opportunistic Kerry wasn't campaigning in Florida
at the time of that "clarification."
Indeed, John Kerry has a well-documented record of anti-American
activities, especially aiding Communist regimes. But the "aid
and comfort" he gave to North Vietnamese Communists in 1971
(while still a U.S. naval officer, and while Americans were
still fighting, dying, and being held captive by that regime)
is the most grievous of these transgressions.

His treasonous actions in 1970-1971 are the subject of an
indictment that will be delivered to Senate President Dick
Cheney, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and Attorney
General John Ashcroft on 12 October.  The indictment
[http://www.PatriotPetitions.US/Kerry] notes both Kerry's
UCMJ and U.S. Code (18 USC 2381) violations, and it calls for
his disqualification for public office in accordance with the
Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment, Section 3, which states:
"No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress,
or elector of President and Vice-President...having previously
taken an oath...to support the Constitution of the United States,
[who has] engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same,
or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof."

Why issue this indictment now? Because John
Kerry chose to make his Vietnam war record the
centerpiece of his presidential campaign (see "Kerry's
Quagmire..." http://FederalistPatriot.US/alexander/). In response,
more than 160,000 signatories of the aforementioned indictment
have made it the centerpiece of their campaign to disqualify him
from public office.

Clearly, there will be no determination on these charges until
after 2 November, but Kerry will be held to account for his
treasonous actions -- for there is no statute of limitations
on treason.

For those who would argue that Kerry's anti-American activities in
1971, which clearly cost American lives in Vietnam, do not reflect
the nature of the man today, we refer you to this statement from
Kerry from the first debate. On the subject of our troops engaged
in Iraq, Kerry remarked, "It is vital for us not to confuse the
war -- ever -- with the warriors.  That happened before."

Indeed, it did happen before, and it is happening again today.

Kerry can't have it both ways. There is a direct correlation
between his undermining of U.S. and Allied resolve in the
war against terrorism -- specifically on the Iraqi warfront
with Jihadistan -- and American and Allied causalities on that
front. Those forces, including countless Iraqis, are being injured
and killed in larger numbers because of the political dissent
Kerry and his ilk are fomenting.

During Tuesday night's vice-presidential debate, John Edwards
unwittingly provided the evidence for this very correlation:
"We lost more troops in September than we lost in August; lost
more in August than we lost in July; lost more in July than we
lost in June."

As the hand-wringing of the Kerry/Edwards ticket grows stronger,
so too does the spirit of the enemy. And while the net effect
can certainly be felt in American and Allied casualties in Iraq,
it may also yet be felt more dramatically in al-Qa'ida's efforts
to ensure the election of its useful-idiot appeasers.

Perhaps the most instructive question that can be asked regarding
U.S. national security, the protection of Americans and our vital
interests, is this: Given the chance, would Saddam Hussein, Abu
Musab Al-Zarqawi, Osama bin Laden, Kim Jong-Il, Mohammad Khatami,
Moammar al-Ghadafi and Hu Jingtao vote for a) George Bush, or b)
John Kerry? How would Jacques Chirac, Gerhard Schroeder and Kofi
Annan vote?

Editor's Note: A Correction, sort of...

In Patriot 04-29, we mistakenly stated that the Communist Party
USA (now there's an oxymoron) had "endorsed" Comrade Kerry for
president. The CPUSA website has since corrected the record by
saying, "We do not endorse the candidates of other political
parties. We have refrained from fielding our own candidate so as
not to distract from the main effort of defeating Bush and the
ultra-right extremist agenda."

_________________________________________________

There are only FOUR weeks left before the election. Let 'em know
where you stand! We have great items at our Patriot Shop located
at http://patriotshop.us
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Quote of the week...

"It wasn't easy for my opponent to become the single most liberal
member of the Senate. You might even say, it was hard work. But he
earned that title -- by voting for higher taxes, more regulation,
more junk lawsuits, and more government control over your life. And
when the competition includes Ted Kennedy, that's really saying
something. ... Last week in our debate, he once again came down
firmly on every side of the Iraq war. He stated that Saddam
Hussein was a threat and that America had no business removing
that threat. Senator Kerry said our soldiers and Marines are not
fighting for a mistake -- but also called the liberation of Iraq a
"colossal error." He said we need to do more to train Iraqis, but
he also said we shouldn't be spending so much money over there. He
said he wants to hold a summit meeting, so he can invite other
countries to join what he calls 'the wrong war in the wrong place
at the wrong time.' He said terrorists are pouring across the
Iraqi border, but also said that fighting those terrorists is a
diversion from the war on terror. ... Senator Kerry is proposing
policies and doctrines that would weaken America and make the
world more dangerous. My opponent announced the Kerry doctrine,
declaring that American actions in the war on terror must pass a
'global test.' ... My opponent's doctrine has other consequences,
especially for our men and women in uniform. ... My opponent says
he has a plan for Iraq. Parts of it should sound pretty familiar --
it's already known as the 'Bush plan.' ... Iraq is no diversion;
it is the place where civilization is taking a decisive stand
against chaos and terror -- and we must not waver." --President
George W. Bush sharpening his sword in advance of Friday night's
second debate -- and not a minute too soon!

Memo to W: In tonight's Town Hall debate with JFK, please find
an opportunity to make the following statement: "Why hasn't my
opponent signed a Standard Form 180? All of my military records
have been released -- even the ones fabricated by CBS. What is it
about his military records that he's afraid to make public?" In his
1971 congressional testimony, Kerry admitted that he committed
war-crimes. Kerry also admitted to treasonous collaboration
with the enemy by directly meeting with the NVA in Paris in
1971 -- while he was still a Navy officer. His anti-American
exploits during the war are already well-documented. So, what
is he hiding? Mr. President, ABC News debate moderator Charlie
Gibson is, shall we say, unlikely to ask Kerry that important
question. It's up to you.

Open query...

"[F]irst they voted to commit the troops, send them to war.
John Edwards and John Kerry.  Then they came back, and when the
question was whether or not you provide them with the resources
they needed -- body armor, spare parts, ammunition -- they voted
against it.  I couldn't figure out why that happened initially,
and then I looked and figured out that what was happening was
Howard Dean was making major progress in the Democrat primaries,
running away with the primaries based on an antiwar record.  So,
they in effect decided they would cast an antiwar vote, and they
voted against the troops.  Now, if they couldn't stand up the
pressures that Howard Dean represented, how can we expect them
to stand up to al-Qa'ida?" --Vice President Dick Cheney

In other news...

The external investigation into SeeBS News' use of fabricated
documents in a "60 Minutes" story about President Bush's Air
National Guard service will not be completed until -- surprise,
surprise -- after the election. The reason: "so that it doesn't
affect what's going on," says Les Moonves, co-president of
CBS parent company Viacom. In other words, the Leftmedia will
continue to serve as cheerleaders for the Kerry campaign, while
completely ignoring any news that might help the President, this
"investigation" notwithstanding. That CBS fears it might "affect
what's going on" by reporting the truth of its findings certainly
puts the lie to any notion of an objective media.

>From the Bush campaign journal...

The vice presidential debate on Tuesday was certainly more riveting
than the Bush/Kerry debate last week. Dick Cheney was the clear
winner, having shown presidential quality, poise, integrity
and confidence, while John Edwards ... well ... didn't. Cheney
asserted his knowledge of policy, while Edwards merely parroted
lines used by the other John last week. Cheney also offered
strong arguments for the administration's policies by supporting
them with facts, facts, and more facts -- all while debunking
the random, out-of-context statistics regurgitated by his young
and inexperienced opponent. (For a complete rundown of Edward's
distortions, link to http://kerry-04.org/fact_check.php)

More than any other, this exchange summarizes what is wrong
with Kerry/Edwards: Edwards insisted, "We've taken 90% of the
coalition casualties." VP Cheney replied, "[T]he 90% figure is
just dead wrong. When you include the Iraqi security forces,
that have suffered casualties as well as the allies, they have
taken almost 50% of the casualties..."

"Mr. Vice President, the coalition casualties, are American
casualties," fired back Edwards.  Cheney responded, "Classic
example. He won't count the sacrifice and the contribution
of our Iraqi allies. It's their country. They're in the
fight. They're...putting their [lives at risk] to take back their
country from the terrorists and the old regime elements that are
still left. They're doing a superb job. And for you to demean their
sacrifice, that strikes me as beyond the pale. They shouldn't
count because you want to be able to say that the Americans are
taking 90% of the sacrifice. You cannot succeed in this effort
if you're not willing to recognize the enormous contribution the
Iraqis are increasingly making to their own future. We'll win when
they take on responsibility for governance, which they're doing,
and when they take on responsibility for their own security,
which they increasingly are doing."

Mr. Cheney also noted, "Our most important ally in the war on
terror in Iraq, specifically, is Prime Minister Allawi. He came
recently and addressed a joint session of Congress that I presided
over with the Speaker of the House. And John Kerry rushed out
immediately after his speech was over with, where he came and
he thanked America for our contribution, for our sacrifice, and
pledged to hold this election in January, went out and demeaned
him, criticized him, challenged his credibility. That is not the
way to win friends and allies. You're never going to add to the
coalition with that kind of attitude."

President Edwards?  Think about that one.

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>From the JFK DEMO-lition derby...

There go those tolerant, inclusive, open-minded liberals
again.... The Republican campaign headquarters in Orlando was
assaulted by protestors from the AFL-CIO Tuesday. They caused
quite a disturbance, vandalized signs and posters, and several
face assault charges. "We want to send a clear message to Bush,"
one protestor said. That clear message is apparently, "We can't
help but be violent, ignorant hypocrites." A spokesperson with the
AFL-CIO said that the Orlando protest did not go as planned. Do
you think?

The incident in Orlando followed another assault in Knoxville
earlier in the day Tuesday, when an unknown gunman fired several
shots into a local Bush-Cheney campaign office. On Wednesday,
a Bush campaign office in Kentucky was hit. In Maryland, large
"Bush/Cheney" campaign signs have been burned -- but the campaign
is leaving the sign remains in place as they aptly demonstrate
the spirit of Kerry/Edwards ilk.

The BIG lie...

"Mr. Vice President, you and the president are still not being
straight with the American people." --John Edwards with a tired
line being repeated by Kerry-Edwards et al., every time they find
an open mike.

This week's "Alpha Jackass" award:

"I can do a better job of protecting America's security because the
[global] test that I was talking about was a test of legitimacy,
not just in the globe, but elsewhere." --John uFo Kerry on the
"global test," now apparently expanded to include more than just
planet Earth. Now that's multilateralism.

DEMO-gogue campaign quotes...

"Does that mean allies [France and Germany] are going to trade
their young for our young in body bags? I know they are not. I
know that." --John Kerry, finally admitting that -- Non! Nein! --
France and Germany aren't about to send troops into the fray even
if he becomes president.

News from the Swamp...

In the Executive Branch, L. Paul Bremer, former head of the
Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, offered a critique
of the invasion plan for Iraq in remarks that were off the
record -- until Kerry got wind of them.  Bremer's comments about
the administration's not having enough troops on the ground to
prevent looting and to control the escalating violence contradict
statements made by military commanders, the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Bremer himself during his tenure
at the coalition authority.  At the time, all of them believed
troop levels were sufficient -- of course, hindsight is 20/20,
and military historians note that military planning is the first
casualty of war.

Kerry sopped up Bremer's words, endeavoring to exploit them in
his ongoing attack on Bush's prosecution of the warfront in Iraq.
Kerry continues to repeat his mantra that the president has
not been straight with the American people about Iraq...a tall
indictment from a man who isn't even straight with himself
about Iraq.

Bremer, however, had a few words in response to Kerry's
"out-of-context" use of his remarks: "The press has been curiously
reluctant to report my constant public support for the president's
strategy in Iraq and his policies to fight terrorism," writes
Bremer, ironically enough, in The New York Times.  "I have been
involved in the war on terrorism for two decades, and in my view
no world leader has better understood the stakes in this global
war than President Bush."  Regarding Kerry's use of his remarks,
Bremer continues, "Mr. Kerry is free to quote my comments about
Iraq.  But for the sake of honesty he should also point out that
I have repeatedly said, including in all my speeches in recent
weeks, that President Bush made a correct and courageous decision
to liberate Iraq from Saddam Hussein's brutality, and that the
president is correct to see the war in Iraq as a central front
in the war on terrorism."

In other Executive Branch news, President Bush signed into law
this week the fourth tax cut enacted during his administration,
extending the $1,000-per-child tax credit and continuing to ease
the burden on the middle class and married couples.  An added
bonus was a $13-billion tax break for business to help pursue
research and development.

In response, Candidate Kerry reiterated his pledge to raise
taxes on those making over $200,000 a year. He still wants us
to believe that he won't raise taxes on the middle class, but
it's obvious he'd not stop at bilking the rich. After voting to
raise taxes 98 times during his career in the Senate and promising
budget-busting plans for health care and other domestic programs,
why should anyone believe otherwise?

On the Hill, much like their counterparts in the Senate, House
Republicans are increasingly confident about their holding and
possibly expanding their majority this November.  "The odds just
keep getting better to keep the House," noted Rep. Tom Reynolds
(NY), chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee
this week.  With the Republicans holding 214 solid seats compared
to the Democrats' 187, it is highly unlikely that the Democrats
will be able to make much of a dent, despite the glassy-eyed
optimism of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Candyland).
In fact, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has
already conceded some races, cutting back ad buying in 11 media
markets.

Even with the likelihood of Republicans' maintaining control
of the Senate, several leadership changes are in store come
2005. Thanks to the GOP's self-imposed 6-year term limits
for committee-leadership positions instituted during the
term-limit-popular 1990s, the top spots in some of the most
powerful committees will be changing hands. Commerce, Budget,
Appropriations, and Judiciary will be seeing some new faces. While
there's still speculation about who will shift where among the
Republican senatorial hierarchy, this won't translate into a
change of strategy, ideology, or policy.

One committee we'll keep our eye on is Judiciary (Arlen Specter),
which is expected to see a lot of action next year. First,
Republicans are going to make another attempt to ban the
filibustering of judicial nominees made so popular by Senate
Minority Leader Tom Daschle. Second, one or more Supreme Court
vacancies are expected to open over the next presidential cycle. To
say the least, we expect the fight for the ideological direction
of America's highest court will not be pretty.

On Wednesday, the Senate voted overwhelmingly, 96 to 2, in favor
of reorganizing the national-intelligence community. Based on
major recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, Senators moved
to establish a cabinet-level national-intelligence director who
would oversee the government's 15 intelligence agencies, as well
as a national counterterrorism center. An interesting side note
on the Senate vote: the only two Senators who didn't vote were
John Kerry and John Edwards. Surprised? Neither were we. The same
two men who have railed against the administration for not doing
enough to fight the war on terror couldn't even take time away
from their campaign to vote on such pivotal legislation.

On the House side of the 9/11 legislative equation, it's unlikely
that passage will happen with the unanimity that the Senate
enjoyed. Partisan debate still rages over immigration provisions
that would make it easier to deport illegal aliens and harder to
grant driver's licenses and foreign-student visas. When the two
versions meet in conference, there will be much to reconcile,
including just how much budgetary and personnel authority the
NID will have.

Also in the House, Demo-Rep. Charles Rangel's bill calling for
reinstitution of the draft (as you recall, last week Kerry was
trying to pin this one on President Bush) failed Wednesday 402-2.
In fact, Rangel was not even one of the two who voted "aye"
on his own bill (Demos Murtha and Stark, for the record).

On the National Security front...

Director of Central Intelligence Porter Goss is facing a radical
change in job description if the 9/11 Commission's recommendations
became law.  But even before his likely reduction in the rank
order of intel's chain of command, he is still feeling the heat
of his new job.

Goss drew the ire of his colleagues at Langley as well as
congressional critics this past week for appointing four staffers
from his days as head of the House intelligence committee.
This move exacerbated worries about bringing partisanship into
the CIA, which was at the forefront of Demo concerns during Goss's
confirmation hearings.

Michael Kostiw, Goss's pick for Executive Director and former
staff director of the House terrorism subcommittee, withdrew his
name from consideration after it was revealed he shoplifted a
package of bacon -- Congress' favorite food group -- in 1981.
Absurd as that sounds, it demonstrates the seriousness of the
turf war that still rages in the CIA.  Perhaps opponents of Goss
should look inward if they are really serious about combating
partisanship at Langley.

>From the warfront with Jihadistan...

On Wednesday, Charles Duelfer, the head of the Iraq Survey Group
(ISG), released the group's final report.  Among its key findings,
the ISG estimates that Iraq most likely destroyed its previous
chemical/biological weapon stockpiles, while its nuclear-weapons
program had decayed since the end of Desert Storm.

Naturally, Kerry and his minions proclaimed once again that
President Bush all but lied about the rationale for Operation Iraqi
Freedom.  Overlooked by the Left-lot, the report also states that,
regarding the above weapons, Hussein had preserved key elements
of his WMD programs so they could be reconstituted within a month
of UN inspectors' exit; Iraq's chemical industry infrastructure
allowed it continue a modest amount of dual-use research; and
perhaps most ominously, regarding biological weapons, Iraq still
had significant dual-use labs in its biological-weapons program,
and still possessed biological seed stocks, still possessed its
bio-scientists. What is more, if needed, Hussein planned on their
all-out use, including the striking of all Israeli cities.

The report notes that Iraq was developing long-range delivery
systems, potentially for WMD; that it had corrupted the
Oil-for-Food program to evade UN sanctions; and that Saddam
actively worked to divide the UN Security Council.  Interestingly,
there are very few hard facts in the report, which employs phrases
such as "ISG judges," "ISG found no evidence," and "ISG has not
been able to establish."  Overall, the ISG appears to have done
a relatively thorough job, but it's the lack of documentation on
the alleged destruction of Saddam's previously documented WMD that
is unsettling, especially since items such as biological-weapon
seeds can fit a car trunk.  The true, final status of many of
Saddam's former WMD is currently unknown.

As for undercutting the President's war rationale, the report does
nothing of the sort.  The President took the Coalition to war based
on the best intelligence at the time, which stated that Saddam had
WMD stockpiles. (We're struck by the fact that the Kerry campaign
and media are now attacking Mr. Bush's use of a generally agreed
upon intelligence report with information taken from...another
intelligence report!)  Even the intelligence services of the Axis
of Weasels believed that.  If our intelligence services had been
allowed to crawl all over Iraq for a year or two prior to the war,
as the ISG just did, then the pre-war intelligence would have
been very different.  What the report does point out, however,
is how very difficult it is to get good intelligence from inside
a tyrannical regime.

All of the above still begs the question, what is it that we
DON'T know about the WMD programs of Iran and North Korea who
have openly admitted to having nuclear programs? After all,
President Bush is being criticized for relying on "faulty
intelligence" -- which happened to be the BEST intelligence
available -- faulty in that the most recent intelligence reports
contradict earlier intelligence reports. Such is the business
of intelligence estimates.  Had President Bush (and John Kerry)
ignored the Iraqi intelligence estimates they received in 2001 --
had those reports been proved accurate after Iraq's WMD found its
way to some U.S. urban center compliments of al-Qa'ida operatives
-- then what would Kerry's argument be today?

Ah, and about all those repeated assertions by John Edwards last
week that there is no hard evidence directly linking Saddam to
al-Qa'ida, there is plenty of evidence of Saddam's intelligence
operatives' ties to al-Qa'ida. In a dictatorship, this constitutes
a distinction without a difference.

On the Homeland Security front...

Conspiracy theories abound over plans to shore up Election
Day security nationwide.  Coordinating with the states, which
will have the authority to police and protect polling sites,
the Homeland Security Department faces criticism from those who
believe this is a subtle scare tactic by the administration to
keep minorities in the cities from voting.

Despite what liberals believe, the threat of terrorist attacks
meant to sway elections in their favor is very real.  We've seen
it time and again, most notably the bombing in Madrid on 11 March
of this year, the result of which meant the defeat of American ally
Jose Maria Aznar's party at the polls and the subsequent pullout of
Spanish troops from Iraq.  The actions being taken by the various
agencies -- Homeland Security, the Justice Department, the FBI
counterterrorism strike force, and the states -- are to prevent
such an attack from happening here precisely so that Americans
can cast their vote without being swayed by outside forces.
We conclude Democrats are just making up excuses in advance for
the losses they expect at the polls next month.

>From the "Non Compos Mentis" Files...

In best Democrat tradition, a dozen of the tribe, led by Rep. Eddie
Bernice Johnson of Texas, wrote to Kofi Annan last summer,
requesting that he deploy monitors to the United States for our
presidential election.  To placate the Dems, the State Department
invited 100 monitors of the Vienna-based Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).  They hope to catch Republican
soccer moms intimidating minority voters, incorrectly purged voter
rolls, and irregularities in voting machines, among other things.
That the 2002 Help America Vote Act (HAVA) reforms have not yet
been fully implemented concerns monitors.  Any skullduggery they
find could delay results of affected elections for months.

Just what we need -- next thing you know, we'll have the Carter
Center certifying our elections!

>From the "Village Academic Curriculum" File...

Prisons, by definition, are designed to control the behavior
and lifestyle of the folks who've chosen to make them their
home. From dusk 'til dawn, everything an inmate engages in
is monitored and maintained according to strict regimen. In
recent news, Martha Stewart will fulfill her sentence at West
Virginia's Alderson Federal Prison Camp. It comes as no surprise,
then, that according to Collegiate Network reports, Alderson's
design for his prison camp was modeled after the layout of
Bucknell University. To the seasoned Patriot, one thing is
clear: Prisons and universities are designed, by and large,
to control behavior and outcome. But there is hope. Bucknell
University is one among our 20-plus cadre of Collegiate Patriot
campuses. Help us wrest control of our schools from leftist Ivory
Tower Wardens by supporting The Collegiate Patriot Project,
https://secure.federalist.com/support/cpsupport.asp  For now,
Martha will have to sit tight; our Prison Patriot Project is
still on the backburner.

Around the nation...

The Detroit City Council has proposed an economic "development"
plan that will help solve racial tension in the city. Or not. The
$112,000 plan would create a business district called "African
Town," (perhaps a knock-off of China Town) composed of black-owned
businesses for blacks. Immigrants from Mexico, Asia and the Middle
East are stealing resources, jobs and other opportunities from
the black community, according to the city council's report, and
city leaders must put a stop to this economic shift. The proposal
segregates and discriminates, two behaviors we thought were very
much despised by the Left. Unless, of course, they themselves are
committing them in the name of "affirmative action." Councilwoman
JoAnn Watson, who introduced the effort to the council, said,
"We see this as another complement to the exciting development
going on in the city." Hmmm...we can only imagine what an exciting
development "Caucasian Town" would be.

Around the world...

The United Nations is going the way of the League of Nations. It's
just taking a lot longer. Nations, including the U.S., want
to keep the moribund institution alive even if its ideas are
already dead. The League of Nations ended when nation-states
lacked common courage. The UN will end, finally and formally,
when the lack of common purpose among nation-states becomes so
rotten that the smell drives all the diplomats from Manhattan.

The spying stinks when Israel this week arrests 13 UN employees
with links to terrorism.  The hypocrisy smells when the UN Security
Council votes 11 to one (U.S. veto) with three abstentions (U.K.,
Germany, Romania) to condemn Israel for killing a top terrorist
of Islamic Jihad after two rocket attacks from Gaza murdered
Israeli children.

The corruption rots from the inside out when the Special Committee
(France, Russia, China, Syria) overseeing the Oil-for-Food program
blocked the U.S. efforts to stop Saddam Hussein from misusing
$10 billion from 1995-2003.  State Department official Patrick
F. Kennedy testified there was some measurable success of getting
food to civilians -- and a lot of corruption.

The UN nuclear agency, the International Atomic Energy Agency,
demonstrated it can neither see nor smell when it missed
nuclear proliferation in North Korea, Iran and Libya. The UN
passed a resolution for Pyongyang to cooperate and use nuclear
technology for energy, not weapons. Then, North Korea rejected
the UN resolution. The UN, like the League of Nations, did
nothing. The UN continues to ignore Iranian violations. To wit,
the UN was utterly surprised in December 2003 to discover that
Libya's Moammar Gadhafi even had a nuclear-weapons program.

At some point the majority of Americans will stop caring
whether the media, other Leftists, ill-informed teachers and
unknowing children keep singing "Imagine there's no country...a
brotherhood of man..." and speaking of "global tests" for America's
security. Other international organizations can do every good
work imagined by liberals for the UN. Other coalitions of common
purpose, alliances of the willing led by the U.S. can impose and
preserve the peace where and when it is a vital interest. Someday,
the rotting corpse of the UN will be buried -- before it spreads
more disease, we hope.

And last...

Thursday's Washington Post featured this bold headline above the
fold: "U.S. 'Almost All Wrong' on Weapons" and attributed the quote
to Iraq Survey Group chief Charles Duelfer. Apparently The Post
is now using Dan Rather's sources, because in a tiny correction
in the back of Friday's A section, The Post's editors noted that
Mr. Duelfer did NOT say, "We were almost all wrong." (At least
they admit it when they are wrong!) In due penance, The Post's
headline Friday morning was more accurate: "Many Helped Iraq
Evade U.N. Sanctions On Weapons."

Lex et Libertas -- Semper Vigilo, Paratus, et Fidelis!  Mark
Alexander, Publisher, for the editors and staff.  (Please pray on
this day, and every day, for our Patriot Armed Forces standing
in harm's way around the world in defense of our liberty, and
for the families awaiting their safe return.)



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