Archive for June, 2006

Israeli Targeted Killings Work

Friday, June 16th, 2006

By Andrew L. Jaffee

Today, Hamas announced it was “willing to urge militants to renew a ceasefire” just days after it suspended that ceasefire. Conclusion: Israel’s security measures, including targeted killings of Palestinian terrorists, work. Hamas, Islamic Jihad, PFLP, al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade, etc., all know very well that an Israeli target is on their foreheads, and the IDF can pick them off at will. From the BBC:

Earlier, Israeli officials said threats from Israel had stopped Hamas militants from firing rockets.

A senior Israeli defence ministry official, Maj Gen Amos Gilad, told Israeli Army Radio on Thursday that attacks by Hamas had fallen after threats from Israeli officials.

“We sent clear messages… and at the end the firing of the rockets stopped,” AP quoted him as saying.

Israeli media reports said Mr Haniya had asked his Hamas group’s armed wing to stop the attacks, but Hamas officials denied this.

As to the deaths of 8 Palestinians killed at a picnic on a Gaza beach — which Hamas used as a pretense for suspending their “ceasefire:”

Israel is not responsible for a blast that killed eight Palestinians enjoying a picnic on a Gaza beach last Friday, Defence Minister Amir Peretz says.

He said an inquiry had shown an Israeli shell could not have caused the blast, as had initially been alleged. …

The investigation focused on six artillery shells fired by the military. The army says it is certain five landed about 250 metres (820ft) from the beach where the Ghalia family were sitting.

One shell apparently misfired, but the explosion which ripped through the Ghalia family’s picnic was at least eight minutes afterwards, the army says.

Concluding his investigation, General Klifi said on Tuesday: “The chances that artillery fire hit that area at that time are nil.”

Who are we to believe, a sovereign democracy, or a group of terrorists advocating genocide?

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Banned radical Sheikh invited to address young Canadian Muslims

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

By Canadian Coalition for Democracies (CCD)

Ottawa, Canada, Thursday, 15 June, 2006 - The Canadian Coalition for Democracies (CCD) is calling on Immigration Minister, Monte Solberg, to refuse entry on security grounds to Sheikh Riyadh Ul-Haq of the United Kingdom. Ul-Haq is scheduled to visit Canada at the end of June to speak to various Muslim groups in Toronto and Montreal.

“Sheikh Ul-Haq has preached hatred of Hindus and Jews while glorifying martyrdom and jihad,” said David Ouellette, director of CCD. “Canadians may have just narrowly escaped the kind of massacre that occurred in the London transit system last year, a massacre perpetrated by young British Muslims radicalized by such racist, violent rhetoric.”

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Implicitly, Shmimplicitly (OR The Oslo Syndrome II)

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

By Andrew L. Jaffee

The BBC keeps trumpeting the fact that Palestinians have a “statehood plan” that “implicitly recognises Israel.” Implicitly? Can’t the Palestinian collective even just say it? “Yes, Israelis have the right to live.” Are we to trust the intentions of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who is planning a referendum on his “statehood plan” after all that has happened? Are we to trust the BBC’s heralding of this plan, knowing what we do know of Abbas, and the sordid history of Palestinian politics? No and no, respectively.

Remember what happened when Palestinians last “recognized” Israel under Oslo? Many put lipstick on the Arafat pig via Oslo, “gave peace a chance,” and Israel was rewarded with the “most sustained wave of Palestinian suicide bombings in Israeli history.”

Abbas is a member of Arafat’s old guard, Fatah. Regarding Abbas’ referendum, the Beeb claims:

Meanwhile a document appeared - hammered out by Hamas and Fatah members serving time in Israeli jails - which said Palestinians should work to establish a state in the territories that Israel has occupied since 1967.

This is the formula that Fatah has long accepted and Hamas has long opposed.

It also said “resistance” should be limited to the occupied territories, thus by implication excluding attacks on Israel itself.

Fatah has “long accepted” the recognition of Israel? Fatah’s own al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade kept killing innocent Israeli civilians with firebombs packed with nuts, bolts, nails, and screws all throughout Oslo.

Abbas has echoed Hitler’s declaration, “Today Germany, Tomorrow the World”, according to the BBC:

“Today Gaza, tomorrow the West Bank and Jerusalem,” he said.

And the new Palestinian government under Hamas hasn’t changed its commitment to exterminate all Israelis.

Instead of concentrating on Abbas’ referendum, the politically correct may just want to consider that Palestinians are in the midst of a civil war. Even the BBC concedes this, though doesn’t mention the words (”civil war”):

Tensions have worsened between the two sides since Mr Abbas called a referendum on a statehood plan which would implicitly recognise Israel, whose right to exist Hamas rejects.

At least 20 people, mostly militia members, have been killed in clashes between the two factions in the past two months.

…and…

Gunmen loyal to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas have set fire to the offices of the Hamas prime minister and parliament in Ramallah.

Security personnel and militiamen fired shots then rampaged through the offices in protest at earlier Gaza clashes.

Hamas MP Khalil Rabei was briefly kidnapped, but later released.

Hamas and Mr Abbas’s Fatah factions have been involved in a power struggle since the Palestinian elections in January, which were won by Hamas.

Earlier on Monday at least two people were killed and more than a dozen injured in Rafah in the Gaza Strip, amid escalating tension between the rival political groups.

The Ramallah rampage erupted hours after Hamas gunmen attacked a building belonging to the Fatah-dominated Preventive Security agency in Rafah.

I predict that Abbas’ referendum will be about as useful as were the Oslo accords. It is time for the BBC and the rest of the mainstream media to recognize what really matters: Palestinians are fighting a civil war — one between an older, secular (socialist-based) terrorist group, Fatah, and another Islamist terrorist group, Hamas. Some choice: leadership by murderers or leadership by murderers.

Israel cannot be expected to deal honestly with the winner, no matter which side wins.

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Taxpayer-funded cheerleading for terrorism

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

by Bill Levinson

It is bad enough that the International Solidarity Movement is sending activists to interfere with Israeli security operations, advocate terroristic violence, and even meet with actual Hamas terrorists, as admitted by ISM leader Huwaida Arraf. These activities are actually being sponsored by the American taxpayer in the form of deductible 501(c)(3) tax-exempt contributions.

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The “Revolutionary Myth” Keeping Socialism Alive

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

By Andrew L. Jaffee

I tire of discussing the merits of socialism and communism with my left-wing friends. Despite their hypocritical practices, like drawing retirement benefits from pension funds invested in the stock and bond markets, they cling to the myth of “revolution,” and talk the talk of disdaining the capitalist system in which they live so comfortably — but not one of these people walk the walk, and practice what they preach. While most talk of “socialized medicine,” the “plight of the Palestinians,” etc., etc., none of them would give up their pensions, or leave their private property built on the lands of the Kickapoo or Shawnee tribes who once called my hometown their hometowns. So what is the “revolutionary myth” my leftist friends cling to? I turn to Richard Karlgaard who posted a great piece on Forbes a few days ago entitled “Why Isn’t Socialism Dead?”

“Why are the people in Bolivia and Venezuela responding so enthusiastically to the socialist siren-songs of Evo Morales and Hugo Chávez, instead of heeding the eminently rational counsel of [free-market proponent] Hernando de Soto? Why are they clamoring to give even more power and control to the state, instead of seeking to free themselves from the very obstacle that stands in the way of any genuine economic progress?

“It may well be that socialism isn’t dead because socialism cannot die. As [the early 20th-century French revolutionary writer Georges] Sorel argued, the revolutionary myth may, like religion, continue to thrive in ‘the profounder regions of our mental life,’ in those realms unreachable by mere reason and argument, where even a hundred proofs of failure are insufficient to wean us from those primordial illusions that we so badly wish to be true. Who doesn’t want to see the wicked and the arrogant put in their place? Who among the downtrodden and the dispossessed can fail to be stirred by the promise of a world in which all men are equal, and each has what he needs?

“The whole point of the myth of the socialist revolution is not that human societies will be transformed in the distant future, but that the individuals who dedicate their lives to this myth will be transformed into comrades and revolutionaries in the present. In short, revolution is not a means to achieve socialism; rather, the myth of socialism is a useful illusion that turns ordinary men into comrades and revolutionaries united in a common struggle–a band of brothers, so to speak.”

Karlgaard notes socialism’s track-record, which should be enough to turn anyone off to this failed economic, political, and social system:

The milder forms of it have yielded economic stagnation where and whenever tried: England in the 1970s; France today. The more impatient strains–”socialism in a hurry,” as Lenin reputedly called communism–did nothing but plunder economies and destroy lives. Their fine leaders ordered the deaths of more than 100 million people–Lenin and Stalin (40 million), Mao (60 million) and Pol Pot (2 million), not to mention that syphilitic dictator of the German National Socialist Party, Adolf Hitler (11 million directly, another 35 million through the war he started).

By all rights socialism should be dead, sealed in a steel vault and buried in Hell. Yet the disease lives. You might even say it’s spreading when you look at the ascent of Hugo Chávez in Venezuela, Evo Morales in Bolivia, Ken Livingstone in London and the “progressive” American Net-based left (which says Hillary Rodham Clinton is too far right). What accounts for socialism’s reappearance? To discover the answer, we must ask another question. Why do so many people around the world hate its opposite–free-market capitalism?

When arguing with my leftist friends, I’ve made the mistake of thinking that presenting facts may sway them from their shaky belief system. But Karlgaard notes some facts that still may hit home, perhaps only at the subconscious level:

Old news, but worth repeating (since the mainstream U.S. press is in denial): U.S. GDP growth for the first quarter clocked in at a whopping 4.8%. Remember that this figure is typically revised upward weeks later. Look for a final tally of 5.0+%. Gosh, what else is there to say about the roaring U.S. economy? Oh, yes. Unemployment is safely below 5%, and–wonder of wonders–even the New York Times admits that wages are rising faster than inflation.

And the bad news? Let’s see. Could it be the crunch in U.S. manufacturing jobs, such as in the auto industry? Actually, no, says heartland economy expert Jack Schultz. In 1990 there were 955,100 Americans employed in the auto sector, compared with 956,200 in 2005. Thank you, Toyota, Nissan, Honda and BMW. The stock market likes what it sees. The Dow has been flirting with its high of 11,723, set in January 2000.

No matter how you look at it–from business starts to job growth to salaries to share prices–the American form of free-market capitalism delivers the goods. But you’ll never convince socialists and their fellow travelers on the trendy Left that anything good has occurred. Or that freedom–in the form of reduced regulation and taxes–is responsible.

Finally, Karlgaard mentions that capitalism has some pretty decent myths of its own:

Harris says free-market capitalism needs a “transformative myth of its own” to fight the myth of revolutionary socialism. But don’t we have that? I thought that’s what entrepreneurial heroes were all about. Bill Gates and the Google boys are still heroes to millions of Chinese and Indians, if not to the French or Bolivians.

But I say, “Good luck,” in trying to win any arguments with leftists when discussing the armchair “revolutionary myth” topic.

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Does the Police Department Profile? Should It?

Tuesday, June 13th, 2006

by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun*
June 13, 2006
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3668
* Cross-posted with permission

Does the New York Police Department profile for potential terrorists - does it stop, arrest, search, or otherwise investigate a person on the assumption that his racial or ethnic identity makes him more likely to commit a certain type of crime?

The NYPD, like every Western law enforcement agency, indignantly denies profiling. Its spokesman, Paul Browne, said in August, “Racial profiling is illegal, of doubtful effectiveness, and against department policy.”

But it does, in fact, profile.

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“Never Again,” Again!

Tuesday, June 13th, 2006

By Steven Shamrak

After the Shoah – Holocaust — the words “Never Again” had a special and powerful meaning for the Jewish people. The Holocaust survivors, who had just arrived in Palestine, went to battle against well-armed Arabs with wooden sticks, due to the lack of weapons. Jews all over the word vowed not to allow the systematic killing of the Jews again.

Almost sixty years passed. The words have become just another empty and meaningless slogan, that politicians and apathetic community leaders are using during feel-good ceremonies. The unimaginable has happened! The Israeli government assumed the role of the concentration camp Capo and is collaborating with its enemies, instead of pursuing the Jewish national goal, the return of all Jewish land - Eretz Israel. The government is preparing ground for giving up more Jewish land to the enemies who are killing and ready to kill even more Jews.

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Will U.S. Democratization Policy Work? Democracy in the Middle East

Monday, June 12th, 2006

by Lorne Craner
Middle East Quarterly*
Summer 2006
http://www.meforum.org/article/942
* Cross-posted with permission

After 9-11, the Bush administration concluded that decades of U.S. support for non-democratic leaders in the Middle East led not to stability but rather contributed to terrorism.[1] While U.S. government support for democracy promotion is not new, such sustained attention and allocation of resources marks a new emphasis on democratization.

Because of the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, too often critics misconstrue U.S. democratization policy as military in focus. During the past quarter century, over eighty countries have become democracies, yet only in five of them—Grenada, Panama, Serbia, Afghanistan, and Iraq—did U.S. military intervention play a role.[2] These examples and the post-World War II experiences of Germany and Japan demonstrate that democratization can occur through use of force, but it is not the preferred or prevalent method. Washington’s primary commitment to Middle East democratization support remains in the realm of coordinated diplomacy and international programs.

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Bubba Dubya? A curiously Clintonian turn in U.S. foreign policy

Sunday, June 11th, 2006

by Michael Rubin
Weekly Standard*
June 19, 2006
http://www.meforum.org/article/941
* Cross-posted with permission

On September 20, 2001, President George W. Bush put the world on notice. “We will pursue nations that provide aid or safe haven to terrorism. Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.” Unanimously, senators and congressmen gave Bush a standing ovation.

Now, faced with falling poll numbers, and wanting the affirmation of the foreign policy elite here and abroad–from the Quai d’Orsay to Auswärtiges Amt and Turtle Bay–the president seems to have reversed course. He still speaks about democracy and the war against terror, but increasingly his administration charts the path of least resistance and paper compromise so dominant during the Clinton years. This may please diplomats, but it does not ensure national security. It’s déjà vu all over again in the White House.

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Interview: ‘I watch with frustration as the Israelis don’t get the point’

Sunday, June 11th, 2006

by Ruthie Blum
Jerusalem Post*
June 9, 2006
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3667
* Cross-posted with permission

In Israel last month to receive the “Guardian of Zion” award from Bar-Ilan University’s Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies, Middle East scholar and author Daniel Pipes pulled no punches. In his acceptance speech at the King David Hotel before a distinguished gathering of academics, politicians, business people and the media, Pipes did something that - while perhaps, par for his own lonely course of late - was unconventional to say the least. It certainly strayed from the pro forma podium fare that was the focus of his predecessors’ professions of dedication to the Jewish state and its capital. Rather than emphasizing his heart-felt connection to the land and people of Israel, he gave a lecture on “The Muslim Claim to Jerusalem.”

With the customary articulateness and the scholarly adherence to historical data that are the trademarks of his writings - among them a weekly column in these pages - Pipes produced empirical evidence to demonstrate that any and all Arab claims to “al-Quds” are, and have always been, merely utilitarian. Period.

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DEBKA: Jordanians Key to Zarqawi Elimination

Saturday, June 10th, 2006

DEBKA describes the awesome efficacy of Jordanian intelligence in helping the U.S. nail Abu Musab al-Zarqawi:

The final breakthrough in the long pursuit of the most blood-stained terrorist of them all, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, came from Jordan.

The source was Ziyad Halaf al Karbouli, also known as Abu Hufeiza, one of the lowlifes Zarqawi employed to attack and rob the convoys plying Baghdad’s main supply route across the Jordanian border and murdering their Iraqi or Jordanian drivers. Foreigners riding along were taken hostage. DEBKA-Net-Weekly reveals that he was picked up – not by chance, but in consequence of a well-laid Jordanian sting operation set up and executed by King Abdullah’s old unit, The Riders of Justice of Jordan’s 71st Commando Brigade - and on his orders.

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Al-Zarqawi is Dead, What is Next?

Friday, June 9th, 2006

By Kamal Nawash

Al-Zarqawi, the most-wanted terrorist in Iraq who waged a relentless campaign of beheadings and suicide bombings, was killed when U.S. warplanes dropped bombs on his hiding place in Baqouba, Iraq.

In response to his killing, President Bush stated that the elimination of Zarqawi is “a severe blow to al-Qaida” and that it was a significant victory. Al-Qaida in Iraq on the other hand confirmed al-Zarqawi’s death and posted on their website: “The death of our leaders is life for us. It will only increase our persistence..”

So what will be the significance of Zarqawi’s death? Will Zarqawi’s death cause the insurgency to subside?

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At least he (DID) suffer

Friday, June 9th, 2006

By Andrew L. Jaffee

Have anger and a desire for justice been “casualties” of war, or is the loss of these emotions endemic to a society that has become too soft and complacent in its opulence, comfort, and security? I hate to indulge in psycho-babble, but anger and a desire for justice are healthy feelings, especially in the right context (there’s that context word). So I took some comfort when I found that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi did survive a little while after two American bombs were dropped on him. He had a chance to suffer from his wounds and perhaps see his violent life flash before his eyes. Apparently, Nick Berg’s father, whose son had his head sawed off by Zarqawi, is denying any sense of justice — even anger.

Zarqawi ruthlessly planned and ordered the murder of thousands of Iraqi civilians. Therefore, I take some comfort in knowing that he suffered — though his tiny bit of suffering pales in comparison to the lives he claimed, and of the heart-break that the survivors of his deeds will live with for the rest of their lives. From the BBC:

Militant leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was still alive when Iraqi police got to the scene of the air strikes that targeted him, the US military says.

But the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq died of his wounds shortly afterwards, Major General William Caldwell said. …

Zarqawi had “mumbled something indistinguishable and… very short” before he died, the US spokesman said.

I turn to Christopher Hitchens to summarize father Berg’s feelings (or lack thereof):

It hasn’t taken long for the rain to start falling on this parade. Nick Berg’s father, a MoveOn type now running for Congress on the Green Party ticket, has already said that he blames President George Bush for the video-beheading of his own son (but of course) and mourned the passing of Zarqawi as he would the death of any man (but of course, again).

I also leave it to Hitchens to counter the notion that “Zarqawi wasn’t all that important:”

Not so fast. Zarqawi contributed enormously to the wrecking of Iraq’s experiment in democratic federalism. He was able to help ensure that the Iraqi people did not have one single day of respite between 35 years of war and fascism, and the last three-and-a-half years of misery and sabotage. He chose his targets with an almost diabolical cunning, destroying the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad (and murdering the heroic envoy Sérgio Vieira de Melo) almost before it could begin operations, and killing the leading Shiite Ayatollah Hakim outside his place of worship in Najaf. His decision to declare a jihad against the Shiite population in general, in a document of which Weaver (on no evidence) doubts the authenticity, has been the key innovation of the insurgency: applying lethal pressure to the most vulnerable aspect of Iraqi society. And it has had the intended effect, by undermining Grand Ayatollah Sistani and helping empower Iranian-backed Shiite death squads.

Not bad for a semiliterate goon and former jailhouse enforcer from a Bedouin clan in Jordan.

Nick Berg wasn’t just “decapitated,” his head was slowly and deliberately cut off by Zarqawi with a knife. I watched the video myself, a couldn’t help noticing the twisted religious sentiments of Zarqawi and friends: They chanted “Allah Akhbar” (”God is Great”) while sawing Berg’s head off.

Just what is wrong with father Berg? It is the fact that he is “a MoveOn type now running for Congress on the Green Party ticket,” as Hitchens points out. Soft, complacent, and very afraid. Zarqawi’s terror works — at least on father Berg.

We in the West are fortunate to have inherited the God of Abraham. That God was sometimes angry, just like we get angry sometimes, and rightfully so (like after 911, 311, 711, Bali, etc., etc.). The West has constructed something magical. In essence, a Goldilocks philosophy, not too hot and not too cold. No religious dictatorship, as Zarqawi advanced, but neither a wasteland desolate of any morality and core beliefs. How unfortunate it would be if the forces of weakness, i.e. unbridled secularism, were to cleanse the West of its heritage.

Hat-tip to Donnel

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Top Iraqi Security Posts Filled… Finally

Thursday, June 8th, 2006

By Andrew L. Jaffee

After weeks of political wrangling, Iraq’s new government has filled the top posts of the defense, interior, and national security ministries. The announcement came after it was revealed that al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and 7 of his lieutenants were killed by an American airstrike. Finally, two significant signs of progress in Iraq — in one day. Here are profiles of the new ministers, from FOXNews:

The new ministers are Iraqi Army Gen. Abdul-Qadre Mohammed Jassim, a Sunni Arab, for defense and Shiites Jawad al-Bolani for interior and Sherwan al-Waili for national security. …

Al-Mifarji, who is not affiliated with any Sunni Arab party, told the 275-member body that he graduated from the Iraqi military academy in 1969 and was thrown out of the military and Saddam Hussein’s now outlawed Baath Party in 1991 after he criticized the invasion of Kuwait — which led to his conviction by a military court in 1994 and a seven year prison sentence. …

Al-Bolani, the new interior minister, is an independent member of the dominant Shiite United Iraqi Alliance. He is an aeronautical engineering graduate from Baghdad’s University of Technology, and said he was an engineer in the Iraqi air force until 1999.

Al-Waili is a member of the Iraqi Dawa Party, which is not related to the Dawa party of which the prime minister is a member. He graduated from Iraq’s military school of engineering in 1979 and was jailed after the Shiite uprising of 1991 in Basra, southern Iraq. He later served as head of the provincial council in southern Nasiriyah, and then as undersecretary for public works and as an adviser for regional affairs in the national security ministry.

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“Today Zarqawi has been terminated”

Thursday, June 8th, 2006

By Andrew L. Jaffee

“Today Zarqawi has been terminated,” Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki announced at a televised news conference with the top U.S. commander in Iraq, General George Casey, prompting applause and cheering from Iraqi journalists.

…states today’s SwissInfo. It seems that sometimes American F-16s can solve problems. Though our “Death from Above” cannot solve all Iraqi problems, like the seeming unwillingness of citizens to take control of their own nation. But the loss of Murderer #1 may throw al-Qaeda into turmoil long enough for the new Iraqi government to get its sea-legs (I hope).

Note the “applause and cheering from Iraqi journalists.” I get the feeling many Iraqis are breathing a sigh of relief. And we must not underestimate Zarqawi’s (former) influence. Again, SwissInfo:

“Zarqawi didn’t have a number two. I can’t think of any single person who would succeed Zarqawi,” Rohan Gunaratna from the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies in Singapore said. “In terms of effectiveness, there was no single leader in Iraq who could match his ruthlessness and his determination.”

Note that 7 of Zarqawi’s beheading, throat-slashing, bombing, civilian-killing aides were also killed by the American bombs.

Some “martyrs.” They were willing to send others to sacrifice their lives and kill civilians in homicide bombings, but they didn’t do so themselves. A terrorist middle-management approach?

Good riddance.

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