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Archive for July 12th, 2006

Identifying India’s enemies clearly

Posted by Richard on July 12, 2006

In my earlier post about the 7/11 attack on Mumbai, I noted that it wasn’t just about Kashmir, even though a Kashmiri Islamist terror organization seemed to be responsible. Dr. Walid Phares’ new article, The Jihadist War Against India, provides much more detail about the "Laskar" (or "Lashkar") organization responsible and its connections to al-Qaeda, other organizations, and the global Islamofascist movement (bold emphasis added):

The main “movement” that starts in Pakistan and stretches into the Indian province of Kashmir is Laskar-e-Taiba, which was founded in the late 1980s by Hafiz Mohammad Saeed. … In reality, the “Laskars” are another form of Kashmiri Taliban whose aim is to establish an Emirate in the Indian province of Kashmir before joining forces with the Islamists of Pakistan and the Taliban of Afghanistan to create a massive and powerful “Jihadi Principality” in south Asia stretching from Iran to China.

The Laskar Taiba is under the ideological auspices of a Wahhabi-style foundation in Pakistan, the Markaz Dawa ul-Irshad, also created in the late 1980s. Some reports conclude that the “Dawa” is the mother ship, while the “Laskar” is the army, or one of its armed branches. In the jungle of south Asia’s Islamic fundamentalism, networks are intertwined but well connected. … As in the case of Chechnya, the Islamists hijacked the “ethnic cause” and transformed it into a jihadist onslaught. The “Laskar” and their supporters inside Kashmir and the rest of India have in reality moved the center of their struggle from classical separation from India to the establishment of a Taliban regime in northern India, whose real objective would be to radicalize India’s 100-million-strong Muslim community. Reports indicate that this penetration is now embodied by the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), accused by Indian sources of being an associate of the Laskar. Hence, the “Talibanization” of Kashmir’s issue has become the dominant threat to India and by ripple effect also to President Musharref Pakistan. For the second internal enemy to the aggregation of all jihadists from Waziristan to Kashmir is none other but the president of Pakistan. They believe he is “not helping them enough against India,” as they claim on their websites and, obviously, on al-Jazeera.

But above the clouds of the Pakistani-Indian magma, Osama Bin Laden has issued his mortal fatwas against the south Asian “infidel.” In at least their last four messages – audio or video – aired on al-Jazeera or posted on al Sahhab website, Osama bin laden and Zawahiri blasted the Hindus as an abhorred enemy. Lashing out against one billion Hindus in the subcontinent, not distinguishing between governments and individuals, the chief Jihadists ordered their henchmen to shed the blood of the Indian masses on ideological grounds.

Here again, after the U.S., Spain, Britain, Russia, and other target nations of terrorism, India will have to declare the identity of the criminals, not only in term of their names and the names of their organizations, but the name of their ideology and its content. The more jihadists widen their bloody fault lines against the international community, the more they will isolate themselves among “infidels” and Muslims alike.

I’ll say it again — the enemy isn’t terrorism. That’s a tactic. The enemy is a global jihadist movement of Islamofascists. Their beef isn’t about Iraq, or pictures of the prophet, or U.S. imperialism, or Kashmir, or some unspecified slight in Indonesia or one of the hundreds of other places they’ve struck. Their beef is that everyone isn’t a devout Muslim obeying their 7th-century laws — or at least a submissive and respectful dhimmi.

Everyone — Hindu, Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, atheist, whatever — who refuses to convert or submit must either be prepared to fight or to die.
 

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Today, we are all Indians

Posted by Richard on July 12, 2006

According to New Delhi Television (NDTV), Indian government sources said the Mumbai (Bombay) train attack was the work of Lashkar-e-Toiba, a Kashmiri Islamist terror organization with ties to al-Qaeda, working with the Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI). The toll in the series of blasts now stands at 183 killed and 714 injured. (UPDATE: The Breaking News page linked above has changed. The referenced story is now here.)

Obviously, this attack wasn’t about Iraq. But it wasn’t just about Kashmir, either. It was part of the jihadist quest for world domination. A Washington Times editorial said it well:

Years ago, before the onset of the war on terror, Lashkar-e-Taiba enjoyed an undeserved reputation for focusing on Indian targets in Kashmir, which allowed some to conclude that the group should be of secondary interest to outsiders. The reputation was not deserved because the group had in fact begun striking targets outside Kashmir, and because its ideological affinities to al Qaeda, its direct ties to the global jihad and its hatred of Israel, India and the United States were well known. But it allowed the group to hold on to the nominal perception that its aims and purview were primarily regional, and thus primarily a problem for India.

No more. That was all but assured with the nuclearization of the subcontinent, confirmed by the parliamentary attack in 2001 and then by the destabilizing effects of subsequent attacks in Delhi and Bombay, which shattered whatever was left of the "Kashmir-only" image. Today the tragic Bombay bombings — designed to demoralize one democracy’s hub of finance and culture — underscore that fact, illustrating how fully the group has converged with the international jihad.

This attack must not be allowed to ratchet up tensions between India and Pakistan, which many Indians accuse of secret support for the terrorists. One early positive step was the Pakistani Foreign Ministry’s strong condemnation late on Tuesday. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf augmented the message: "Terrorism is a bane of our times and it must be condemned, rejected and countered effectively and comprehensively." Pakistan must help India identify and apprehend the terrorists.

It might even take a cue from Europe. "We are all Americans now," some said after the September 11 attacks. Today, we are all Indians.

That NDTV page has a place where you can post a message of support or condolence for the people of Mumbai. (UPDATE: When the Breaking News page updated, the comments posted to the previous story went away, and I don’t see any archive or other way to access them now.)

I was heartened to see that a number of the commenters "got it" regarding the global war against the Islamists, and invoked Israel and the U.S. as examples to emulate. Here’s a sampling:

Terrorism is greatest threat to humankind in this era. We all collectively should stamp out this evil from society.

My heartfelt condolences for the breaved families. This is the high time INDIA should adopt ISRAEL policy. Eye for an eye.If you kill innocent people we will kill you. …

It’s sad that in a country which always supports peace against violence ,these sort of attacks keep happening again & again.The only way to solve this problem, is the american way of fighting against the terrorism. …

Ours soft state policy towards terrorist has proved fatal. … Can we learn from US and Jews ? Just kill the killer wherever they are.

Why India doesn’t retaliate to these as US did. It became annual act in mumbai, it seems terrosists are making annual function in mumbai by bombing the city

 Its time now for Indian government to follow the path of ISRAEL. … Its time now for INDIA to change its ANTI-TERRORISM policy & therefore its foreign policy too. …

… We should learn from Israel and take stern action against them.

Its high time we gave up being pussy cats and became like Israel.

Hmm. Maybe all of us who take the threat of Islamofascism seriously should adopt the slogan, "We are all Israelis now."
 

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Bad-mouthing the economy

Posted by Richard on July 12, 2006

President Bush presented a mid-session review of the economy this morning. The New York Times, knowing he’d report a healthy, robust economy and predict a rosy future, pre-empted him (funny how pre-emption is OK in their line of work…) with a churlish, negative, divisive, and profoundly dishonest editorial that begged to be fisked.

OK, then:

The release of the White House midsession budget review is an annual event normally marked by a few wonkish observations and the routine updating of various spreadsheets, not by a full-dress presidential dog-and-pony show. But President Bush plans to preside today, with members of Congress and invited guests in attendance. By all indications, including his own in his weekly radio address last Saturday, he plans to turn this into a celebration — just in time for the fall campaign.

How dare Bush celebrate good news when he should be apologizing for being the most incompetent, evil president ever!

This is proof, if anyone still needs it, that this administration is desperate for something to boast about. On Mr. Bush’s watch, triple-digit budget surpluses have turned into annual triple-digit budget deficits. There’s no information in the midsession report to alter that utterly dispiriting fact. Yes, the report is expected to project that this year’s deficit will be somewhat less gargantuan than last year’s — probably somewhere between $280 billion and $300 billion, versus a $318 billion shortfall in 2005. That’s not much to crow about.

“On Mr. Bush’s watch” means the Times starts the clock on Jan. 20, 2001, so it can blame Bush for the 2001-2002 recession. Sorry, but anyone with a lick of economic sense knows that — to the extent federal policies control whether the economy grows or shrinks — there’s a significant lag time. The stage was set — and the downturn began — on Clinton’s watch.

Furthermore, would it be rude of me to remind the Times of an incident that took place later in 2001 a short distance south from it at the tip of Manhattan Island?

But Mr. Bush is likely to gloat, anyway. Earlier this year, the administration conveniently projected a highly inflated deficit of $423 billion. With that as a starting point, the actual results can be spun to look as if they’re worth cheering.

And with Bush’s inauguration as a starting point, the results can be spun to look as if they deserve criticism. But, Bush can reasonably be held accountable only for what happened after mid-2002, when the first tax cuts — the cornerstone of the Bush economic plan — went into effect. By any measure, the results since then have indeed been worth cheering.

As for the deficit, forget the projections — look at the actual numbers. The deficit dropped from 4.5% of GDP ($450 billion) in FY2004 to 2.3% ($296 billion) in FY2006. OMB is forecasting 1.3% ($188 billion) in 2008. Others are more optimistic, seeing a balanced budget in October 2008 (early FY2009) if current revenue and spending trends continue.

The razzle-dazzle won’t end there. As he did in his remarks on Saturday, Mr. Bush is sure to use today’s event to credit tax cuts for a projected “surge” in tax revenue. The Treasury is expected to take in about $250 billion more in 2006 than in 2005, for a total take of $2.4 trillion. Devoid of context, the number looks impressive.

Tax receipts grew 14.5% in 2005, the largest increase in 24 years. Receipts are up almost 35% since the full implementation of the tax cuts in 2003. They’re projected to grow another 11% this year. Given those astonishing numbers, it takes a lot of nerve to put scare quotes around “surge” or dishonestly add the qualifier "projected."

In fact, it is $100 billion less than the $2.5 trillion revenue estimate the administration touted when it set out in 2001 to sell its policy of never-ending tax cuts.

Let me get this straight: In early 2001 (before an attack worse than Pearl Harbor awoke us to the fact that we’re at war), the administration forecast that their tax cuts would grow revenues from $1.9 to $2.5 trillion, and it turns out they missed by $100 billion — revenues only grew to $2.4 trillion. The Times, as I recall, insisted back then that the proposed tax cuts would seriously diminish revenues. And now, it has the nerve to sneer at the Bush administration’s prognosticating abilities?

Even with this year’s bigger haul, real revenue growth during the Bush years will be abysmal, averaging about 0.3 percent per capita, versus an average of nearly 10 percent in all previous post-World War II business cycles. …

I’m not sure I believe those numbers. In any case, the Times is still counting from Bush’s inauguration so it can saddle him with an inherited recession and the consequences of 9/11.

That might be excusable if the recent revenue improvements could reasonably be expected to continue. They cannot. Much of the increase in tax receipts is from corporate profits, high-income investors and super high-earning executives, sources that are just as unpredictable as the financial markets to which they’re inevitably linked.

Well, at least the Times admitted that those increased tax receipts came from corporations and the wealthy. Unpredictable? Can’t be expected to continue? For people who rely on Paul Krugman’s economic insights, I suppose that’s true.

Many of us had no trouble at all predicting that tax rate cuts, especially deep cuts in capital gains and dividend taxes, would stimulate economic growth, corporate profits, and those “unpredictable” financial markets, thus leading to higher tax receipts. They always have, and they always will.

So, the revenue surge is neither a sign that the tax cuts are working nor of sustainable economic growth. …

So, it’s just a random, unpredictable event? Sigh. At least this time the scare quotes are gone.

A growing number of economists, most prominently from the Congressional Budget Office, point out that upsurges in revenue are also the result of growing income inequality in the United States, an observation that is consistent with mounting evidence of a rapidly widening gap between the rich and everyone else. As corporations and high- income Americans claim ever more of the economic pie, revenues rise, even if there’s no increase in overall economic growth.

Ah, the Left’s trump card, class envy, combined with a flat-out lie about economic growth. Annual GDP growth since 2003 has been 4.0%, well above the average since WWII of 3.4%. Since full implementation of the tax cuts in 2003, over 5 million jobs have been created, pushing the unemployment rate down to 4.6%, lower than the average for any of the previous 4 decades.

If Mr. Bush looked behind his headline numbers, he, too, could see that the rich are getting richer while the rest are, at best, only holding ground.

Nonsense, we’re all getting richer. If the rich get richer slightly faster than the rest of us, I don’t begrudge them their gains. I’m getting richer because of the new wealth created by the rich — the factories and stores and houses they build and the jobs they create make my gains possible.

It would make sense to use some of the windfall revenue to enact policies and programs that tilt against growing inequality. Unfortunately, he’s flogging more tax cuts that will deepen the divide.

Windfall revenue? Isn’t this the new revenue that the Times poo-poohed as a trifle in the face of the budget deficits, and assured us couldn’t last anyway? Now they’re ready to spend it on new policies and programs! Why am I not surprised?

Bush is “flogging more tax cuts” that will do exactly what his previous tax cuts did — what tax cuts always do — grow the economy, increase our wealth, and make us all better off. But the Times editorial staff would gladly forego those benefits in exchange for causing pain to the rich. Sad. And sick.
 

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