War on Terror

Fixing the Problem Where It Begins: The Root Cause of Our Difficulties in Iraq

By Justin Katz | November 5, 2006 |

Cliff May offers a bit of clear analysis of evidence in Iraq: I also would argue that the evidence does not suggest that most Iraqis prefer not to be free, that most would rather not choose their leaders, that a majority enjoys a good suicide bombing every day or two. The evidence suggests that a…

Iraq and Domestic Political Considerations

By Carroll Andrew Morse | November 1, 2006 |

The future of Iraq may now center around the Iraqi government’s response to a search for an American soldier in Iraq believed to have been captured last week by a Shi’ite militia. The U.S. military responded to the kidnapping by sealing off and aggressively searching the Sadr City section of Baghdad. On Tuesday, the Iraqi…

It’s Up to the Government of Iraq Now

By Carroll Andrew Morse | October 27, 2006 |

A George F. Will thought about Iraq from the winter of 2004 seems increasingly prescient…A manager says, “Our team is just two players away from being a championship team. Unfortunately, the two players are Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.” Iraq is just three people away from democratic success. Unfortunately, the three are George Washington, James…

To Baghdad Without Virgil

By Justin Katz | October 14, 2006 | Comments Off on To Baghdad Without Virgil

Over on the Autonomist, Rhode Island blogger D. Alighieri is seeing the reality in Iraq for himself. So far, he’s put up video of his bounce in Jordan and a first impression of Baghdad: Yesterday, a car bomb exploded a few miles from here. I watched the black plume boil towards the sky. This place…

Translating Ahmadinejad

By Carroll Andrew Morse | September 21, 2006 |

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s address to the United Nations General Assembly was laced with what might be interpreted as standard progressive rhetoric. Here’s an example…All members of the United Nations are affected by both the bitter and the sweet events and developments in today’s world. We can adopt firm and logical decisions, thereby improving the…

What Was the Pope Trying to Say?

By Carroll Andrew Morse | September 18, 2006 |

Although the furor over Pope Benedict’s University of Regensburg lecture has centered on a perceived insult to the prophet Mohammed, I believe that the remarks were directed at a more recent figure, Sayyid Qutb, an Egyptian writer active in the Muslim Brotherhood in the mid-20th century whose writings are widely read in the Islamic world…