Bush-League
Lies
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
I've been resting
much more peacefully since George
Bush pontificated at the National Guard Memorial Building
a few days ago and revealed that our terrorist enemies are too stupid
to breathe. That means, of course, that they're also too stupid
to bomb the daylights out of us. Hence, my sounder sleep.
George listed
ten terrorist plots The Bush League has thwarted. This nice, round
number first surfaced last October to baffle a great many bureaucrats.
As the Washington
Post then reported, "Intelligence officials...said the
White House overstated the gravity of the plots by saying that they
had been foiled, when most were far from ready to be executed."
George also "made it 'sound like well-hatched plans,' said a former
CIA official involved in counterterrorism during that period. 'I
don't think they fall into that category.'" Curiously, "the nation's
color-coded threat index was not raised from yellow, or 'elevated'
risk of attack, to orange, or 'high' risk, for most of the time
covered by the incidents on the list."
Another "counterterrorism
official, who spoke anonymously for fear of angering the White House"
also condemned George's list: "'It's safe to say that most of the
[intelligence] community doesn't think it's worth very much.'"
These quibbles
didn't faze George. He trotted out his Ten Grave But Foiled Plots
again this Thursday and proved we've been running scared from straw
men all these months.
Amazingly,
though, George doesn't get it. He seems to believe his list "shows
we face a relentless and determined enemy that requires unprecedented
cooperation from other nations." Whoa! He's confused guys
so strapped for weapons they have to use our planes against us with
World War II's Axis Powers. "By working together, we stopped a catastrophic
attack." Psst, George, get it straight: you stopped ten catastrophic
attacks.
You see my
point. George still considers these desert jockeys a credible threat.
And so I, a mere serf, will dare to explain why they aren't. I realize
I thereby condemn the Department of Homeland Security, the War in
Iraq, and the multi-hued Terror Alerts to even greater absurdity
than they suffered before, but cie la vie.
Topping George's
list was something CNN
dubbed the "West Coast airliner plot." This scheme would
have attacked "the tallest building in Los Angeles" in a reprise
of New York's World Trade Center. George ponied up all sorts of
particulars on this, coincidentally proving that his administration
is opaque and impenetrable. Absolutely no shred of information escapes
its black hole, as Los Angeles' mayor Antonio Villaraigosa lamented
to AP: "I'm amazed that the president would make this [statement
about a plot against the city's tallest skyscraper] on national
TV and not inform us of these details through the appropriate channels."
Sounding like a jilted lover, he whined piteously, "I don't expect
a call from the president but somebody."
Poor Tony.
He's not used to being treated like us serfs. Sooner or later, he'll
probably start wondering why, if the story's true, he didn't hear
about it previously and in detail. To which there's only one answer:
the more people who understand what's really going on, the more
it undermines national security.
George alleges
the "West Coast airliner plot" would have repeated the tactics of
September 11, 2001 in 2002. Al Qaeda clearly knows nothing
about military strategy, especially the advantage of surprise. You
can only pull a stunt like 9/11 once; thereafter, everyone's laying
for you. By 2002, airline passengers were jumpy as Mexican beans.
They'd have killed anyone aboard who so much as hiccoughed, let
alone four men leaping from their seats to hijack a plane. So exactly
how far would this attempt have gotten? Duh, Osama.
But it's no
wonder Al Qaeda flounders in a sea of ignorance. They're so desperate
for teachers they took lessons on shoe-bombing from Richard Reid.
Remember him? The poor sap tried to ignite his feet six
times on
American Airlines Flight 63 before other passengers subdued him.
Dick has apparently never mastered the complicated art of striking
a match. That didn't daunt Al Qaeda. Frances Townsend, George's
Homeland Security Advisor, told reporters, "You'll all recall that
there was the arrest of the shoe bomber Richard Reid in December
of 2001, and he was instructing the cell leader on the use of the
same technique."
Yo, Fran, if
I might be so bold, let me suggest Dick be freed from prison so
he can resume his career as tutor to terrorists. You may even want
to check with the CIA: perhaps Dick's working for us.
In short, based
on the evidence in George's list, I'd say we can quit worrying that
a bunch of fiendishly clever terrorists will somehow outwit the
Department of Homeland Security and blow us all sky-high. So let's
relax and enjoy ourselves! Sounds as if Al Qaeda's about as intellectually
stunted as any American politician.
On second thought,
keep worrying.
February
13, 2006
Becky
Akers [send her mail] writes
primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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