I Am A Proud Member of Vets For Freedom

For up to date progress in the War In Iraq, please visit Vets For Freedom, an organization I am proud to be a member in good standing of.

Veteran's Suicide Hot Line Number!

1-800-273-TALK (8255) Call this number if you need help!!

A Vast Collection Of Buzzings At Memeorandum

If you wish to catch a buzz without the usual after affects, CLICK TO MEMEORANDUM. (It will not disturb the current page) That will be all. We now return to regular programming.

This Blog Is Moving

Greetings. After this weekend, this Take Our Country Back Blog will be moving to the new web site. Too many conservatives are getting zapped by the intolerant dweebs of the Obama Goons and seeing that this editing platform is a free site, Blogger can do pretty much what it feels like doing. Hence, I now have a paid site and will be migrating the last 1400+ posts shortly.

So, one day, you just may click this page somewhere and it will show up as "private". It has been fun but the intolerant Czarbie Goon Squads are brain dead idiots. They can come play at the new site which I OWN outright.

Sunday, July 1, 2007

War News


Encouraging News…
Encouraging News…
Thursday, March 15, 2007 4:40 AM


…that the Leftinistra are trying desperately to IGNORE!!! Shame, shame, shame…



WASHINGTON, March 13, 2007 – The Baghdad security plan has only been under way for a short time, but the Iraqis are meeting their commitments and early signs are pointing toward success, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said here today.


The most important measure of success in the new security plan is whether the Iraqis are meeting their commitments, such as appointing commanders for Baghdad, providing extra troops, and removing political restrictions from troops in the area, Gates said in an interview with the Pentagon Channel.


“We can measure those things, and those are the areas where the Iraqis have pretty well fulfilled the commitments that they have made,” Gates said.


The Iraqis have appointed a commander and two sub-commanders for Baghdad, and while the initial Iraqi battalions were showing up light on personnel, they are now consistently more than 90 percent manned, Gates said. The long-term success of the plan, such as the rebuilding of Iraqi society, remains to be seen, he said.


Improvised explosive devices and the more lethal explosively formed penetrators are still a major problem in Iraq, Gates noted. He asserted that materials for these bombs are coming out of Iran, although it is not clear if the Iranian government knows about these activities.


Roadside bombs remain the primary form of attack on coalition and Iraqi troops, Gates said. Many of the foreign fighters who come into Iraq are suicide bombers who target Iraqi civilians, he said.


“One of the messages that perhaps we haven’t adequately gotten out is that these foreign fighters are coming into Iraq principally to kill Iraqis, not to kill coalition forces,” he said. “There are clearly some that do, but by and large, they’re killing Iraqis.”


While the conflict in Iraq is the Defense Department’s highest priority, the military remains committed to success in Afghanistan and is prepared to deal with any potential future conflicts, Gates said. Several NATO countries have stepped up their commitments to Afghanistan in the past few weeks, he noted, and the U.S. is working to establish a new combatant command for Africa that will establish important relationships in the fight against terrorism.


The United States has more than two million people in the armed forces, of which 200,000 are deployed to the Middle East, and while DoD faces some equipment shortages, it remains ready to defend against potential adversaries, Gates said.


“No one should … have any misconception that the United States is not fully prepared to take on any adversary anywhere,” he said.

Visitor Tracker