Nick Gillespie | April 5, 2006
From the AP, via Forbes:
An extremist group posted an Internet video Wednesday that it said showed a U.S. pilot being dragged along the ground, burning, after the crash of his Apache helicopter. The video, posted by a group that called itself the Shura Council of Mujahedeen, claimed that its military wing had shot down the craft, which the U.S. military said went down Saturday.
More here.
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These bastards just don't get it: this doesn't make me afraid.
It doesn't make me more determined to pull out of Iraq. It doesn't
make me hate Bush more.
It makes me want to make sure the Army sticks around long enough to
put their heads on pikes. Abusing bodies - freaking
degenerates.
The Shura Council of Mujahedeen?
What the fuck? Talk about the Judean Popular People's
Front....
Poor bastard if it's true.
Uh, OK, what has someone done with joe?
Reminded him that, regardless of your differences over how we got
there, we are in fact the good guys in Iraq?
If found true, is the MSM media going to show this video?
Of course, they weren't afraid to show US pilots getting dragged
through Mogadishu, but since then things seemed to have changed.
You don't see pics of those jumping off the Towers, nor extensive
Abu Gharaib pics for fear of "enabling outrage" or whatever.
Phil,
You drinking GOP Kool Aid now?
Yeah I oppose the war. Does that mean I'm not supposed to get angry
when an atrocity is carried out against our troops? That I'm
supposed to sympathize with a gang of theocrat thugs?
If you recall, I posted something quite similar the day of the
London bombings.
Abusing bodies - freaking degenerates
Why is it that, no matter how you use the word 'freaking' - it
never, ever sounds angry?
RC,
The peaceful civilians of Iraq are the good guys in Iraq. The
troops following their orders are the good guys in Iraq.
If by "we," you are referring to the United States goverment, whose
policy decisions put those troops and civilians in harms way, then
no, "we" are not the good guys.
Support the troops.
These bastards just don't get it: this doesn't make me
afraid. It doesn't make me more determined to pull out of Iraq. It
doesn't make me hate Bush more.
You really think those videos are for *you*? This is a Toby Keith
video for murderous Islamists. They want it aired every five
minutes on Al Jazeera. They could care less if Americans see it,
much less agree.
You drinking GOP Kool Aid now?
Huh? WTF is that supposed to mean.
Yeah I oppose the war. Does that mean I'm not supposed to get
angry when an atrocity is carried out against our troops? That I'm
supposed to sympathize with a gang of theocrat thugs?
Uh, you're making a lot of leaps here, joe. In fact, one might say
you're battling a rather large army of strawmen. I didn't say
either of those things.
Just curious why you're suddenly on that bandwagon for dealing out
extra brutal punishment for abusing dead bodies. What, the actual
act of shooting the 'copter down doesn't merit "heads on pikes,"
but abusing the corpse does? Come on. You're better than that.
That's GOP Kool-Aid: "Fucking animals! String 'em
up!"
If you recall, I posted something quite similar the day of the
London bombings.
Yeah, well, you also supported the London cops blowing away an
innocent man with a series of head shots, but I don't hold that
against you.
RC: . . . we are in fact the good guys in Iraq?
I guess that depends on who you are, no? Some Iraqis -- even those
that are neither insurgents nor terrorists -- sure don't seem to
think so. But I'd hate to throw sand in your
Black-Hats-vs-White-Hats machine gears, so forget I said
anything.
Just curious why you're suddenly on that bandwagon for
dealing out extra brutal punishment for abusing dead bodies. What,
the actual act of shooting the 'copter down doesn't merit "heads on
pikes," but abusing the corpse does? Come on. You're better than
that. That's GOP Kool-Aid: "Fucking animals! String 'em
up!"
I agree with Joe. And why exactly should he be 'better than that',
whatever that is. I think there is a difference between shooting
down helicopters (legal act of war) and dragging around the dead
bodies (an illegal act of war).
Isn't it the Geneva Convention?
PS No one mention G-Bay.
I disagree Mike. A video of a soldier being dragged through the streets of Somalia caused us the question why we were there to begin with. I in no way condone this act but is a very good tactic for a technologically overmatched enemy.
Just curious why you're suddenly on that bandwagon for
dealing out extra brutal punishment for abusing dead bodies. What,
the actual act of shooting the 'copter down doesn't merit "heads on
pikes," but abusing the corpse does? Come on. You're better than
that. That's GOP Kool-Aid: "Fucking animals! String 'em
up!"
I agree with Joe. And why exactly should he be 'better than that',
whatever that is. I think there is a difference between shooting
down helicopters (legal act of war) and dragging around the dead
bodies (an illegal act of war).
Isn't it the Geneva Convention?
PS No one mention G-Bay.
This is a Toby Keith video for murderous Islamists.
WTF? I can honestly say that I have never watched a Toby Keith
video but I think it is a prettty good bet that if he ever made one
that showed some Taliban getting incinerated by a JDAM or blown in
half by a chain gun I would have heard about it.
"Some Iraqis -- even those that are neither insurgents nor
terrorists -- sure don't seem to think so."
Well, a lot of Germans and Japanese didn't look at the U.S. as
being particularly nice guys either. Your point is?
"I disagree Mike. A video of a soldier being dragged through the
streets of Somalia caused us the question why we were there to
begin with. I in no way condone this act but is a very good tactic
for a technologically overmatched enemy"
No, it caused Bill Clinton to pull out and paint an accomplished
mission that inflicted 500 dead on an enemy, captured the person
they were there to get at the cost of 18 dead Americans to be
perceived as defeat worldwide and probably caused Bin Laden to
think that if he could just kill enough Americans on American soil,
the U.S. would pull out of the middle east altogether.
Further, even if it were effective, what if the U.S. followed the
John Pershing theory of suppressing a Muslim insurgency and started
dipping bullets in pigs blood and chopping up dead insurgent bodies
with pig guts and burying them. It worked like a charm in the
Philippines in the early 20th Century. Pretty good technique for a
country fighting an insurgency. Since you seem to have no problem
with them abusing our dead, I guess you would have no problem with
the U.S. doing the same.
"I think there is a difference between shooting down helicopters
(legal act of war) and dragging around the dead bodies (an illegal
act of war).
Isn't it the Geneva Convention?
PS No one mention G-Bay."
Mike,
Frankly, I don't care what happens to my corpse after I'm dead, so
dragging corpses doesn't offend me. Insurgents illegally committing
acts of war asnd trying to kill US military personnel is far more
offensive to me.
That joe finds this reprehensible enough to get mad strikes me as a
bit funny considering how much spleen he usually vents at anyone
above the rank of E-5, or anyone in the Bush Administration charged
with conducting what is essentially a very complex anti-insurgency
campaign.
Illegal combatants (insurgents) who violate the Geneva Conventions
by failing to act in accordance with the GC by shooting down
aircraft (while not in uniform, not part of a standing army, etc
etc etc ad nauseum) aren't acting in accordance with Geneva. That's
why the insurgency is made up of ILLEGAL combatants.
Lastly, here's a quick primer for you on detention of illegal
combatants:
Gitmo - Legally cleared actions. Abu Ghraib - Bored sadists
illegally committing abuses. Neither of those qualify as the US
conducting military or detention operations in a way that violates
Geneva.
Phil,
I'm just a little surprised that you would find it odd that a war
opponent would object to atrocities commited against our troops.
The idea that the two concepts are incompatible is GOP Kool
Aid.
Killing soldiers in combat is not immoral. We do it, they do it,
and none of the combatants on the ground who do that is committing
a crime. That's war, and while it's sad, I can't blame a combatant
for acting like a combatant in combat (although I can blame his
leaders for putting him in that position). But abusing dead bodies
is crime. That's not acting like a combatant; it's acting like a
ghoul.
Distinguishing between war and war crimes is not "GOP Kool Aid."
It's a meaningful distinction that knows no party. Nor is wanting
to see those who commit such crimes against our troops punished
specific to Republicans, conservatives, or war hawks. Although
quite a bit of Republican propaganda has been created to allege
that it is.
"Yeah, well, you also supported the London cops blowing away an
innocent man with a series of head shots, but I don't hold that
against you." When the story first hit the wires, it was reported
that the man was wearing a bomb vest. For the record, I still
support shooting people in bomb vests who go into the subway in the
head several times.
I'm in the middle of reading "1776," rob, and you just wrote a justification for the execution of virtually the entire Continental Army upon capture. At one point, the only "uniform" they had was a "sprig of green" in the band of their hats.
I'm just a little surprised that you would find it odd that
a war opponent would object to atrocities commited against our
troops.
Luckily, I don't find it odd. Who said I did? I simply see some
daylight between "objecting to atrocities" and "lynch them
camel-fuckers," that's all. (Colorful paraphrasing mine, of course,
but not so far from the hyperbole of "heads on pikes" as to be
meaningless.) Just didn't sound like the kind of thing you'd
say.
FTR, they make non-piss-covered Cheerios now.
When the story first hit the wires, it was reported that the
man was wearing a bomb vest.
Er, well, no, it was reported that he was wearing an "unseasonably
warm and bulky jacket" and didn't respond to police requests to
stop. I don't recall any reports claiming he was wearing a bomb
vest -- or even that police claimed he was -- but I'm
certainly willing to be corrected.
John:
I said I don't condone these actions. That doesn't mean they don't
work. As the stronger of the two sides the United States using
these tactics would be met with outrage from inside our nation and
outside. Our soldiers would never partake...
People often don't take time to ponder facts like 500 dead versus
18 dead. All it takes is the correct picture or video to hit their
emotions and change their perception of how well we are going. The
insurgents know this and it is a tactic they have to use because
they cannot defeat in man to man combat.
The peaceful civilians of Iraq are the good guys in
Iraq.
Agreed.
The troops following their orders are the good guys in
Iraq.
A little ambiguity here. Who is "their" referencing? If you mean to
say our troops in Iraq are the good guys when they follow orders
coming down their chain of command, I'm wit' ya generally
speaking.
If you mean only those troops in Iraq taking commands from peaceful
Iraqis, um, not so much. I mean, if the US government at the top of
the US chain of command isn't the good guys, as you say below, how
can the people executing its orders by good guys?
If by "we," you are referring to the United States goverment,
whose policy decisions put those troops and civilians in harms way,
then no, "we" are not the good guys.
The peaceful civilians were already in harm's way, joe, just
because they lived in Saddam's Iraq. The purpose of the troops is
to go in harm's way so we don't have to, back here at home.
Support the troops.
I do.
But I doubt they feel very supported by someone, like you, whose
'support' is so couched and conditional and convoluted, and
basically amounts to telling them that everything they are doing is
wrong and they should abandon it immediately.
I don't think you can so easily separate supporting the troops
carrying out the mission from supporting the mission itself.
At one point, the only "uniform" they had was a "sprig of
green" in the band of their hats.
Well, that may not be much of a uniform, but it is a uniform.
Combatants who do not distinguish themselves form civilians are in
violation of the GC as well as those units (mobs?) without a chain
of command to higher authority.
Phil,
If my posts over the last couple of years have seemed much more
dovish, it's because of the circumstances.
The "unseasonable jacket" story was actually a downgrading from the
initial reports, which included wires sticking out and a bomb vest.
Though it should be said, it took less than a day for the reports
to change.
RC, I meant following orders from the legal chain of command.
"if the US government at the top of the US chain of command isn't
the good guys, as you say below, how can the people executing its
orders by good guys?" Quite easily - the troops have an obligation
to obey legal orders. We can't have them decided whether or not to
obey their superior officers and civilian authorities based on
their individual judgements about the wisdom of those orders. The
commitment of our armed forces to follow their orders is the reason
we don't have a guy in epaulets and sunglasses serving as President
for Life.
"I don't think you can so easily separate supporting the troops
carrying out the mission from supporting the mission itself." I
feel sorry for you, then. Until you straighten out this shortcoming
in your poltical outlook, you are doomed to forfeit your capacity
to think critically about any action that involves military
personnel. I hear you say you support the troops, but with the
criticism you've posted of the Army Corps of Engineers' mission and
project, I guess you don't really support the troops.
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/gazette/2005/11/taliban-corpse-burnings-report-us-army.php
Taliban corpse burnings report [US Army]
9:50 PM ET
Investigation into the Gumbad incident, executive summary, US
Central Command [US Army investigation into US military burnings of
the bodies of deceased Taliban fighters at Gumbad, Afghanistan,
concluding that the bodies were burned for hygienic purposes and
recommending disciplinary action without criminal charges as the
soldiers involved were unaware their actions were wrong, as Islam
bans cremation]. Released November 26, 2005. Read the full text of
the executive summary [PDF] from US Central Command. Reported in
JURIST's Paper Chase here.
Lurker Kurt,
OK, prior to Washington's order to put the sprig in their hats,
many of them where wholly indistinguishable from civilians. Illegal
combatants?
And what about the US Special Forces who went into Afghanistan,
blended in with the locals, grew their beards, and donned local
garb? Since I'm sure you would agree that the United States
military is responsible for prosecuting war crimes committed by our
soldiers, where do you suggest the trials be held?
"I'm in the middle of reading '1776,' rob, and you just wrote a
justification for the execution of virtually the entire Continental
Army upon capture. At one point, the only 'uniform' they had was a
'sprig of green' in the band of their hats" - joe
joe - Glad to hear you're reading some military history. Too bad
you're drawing the wrong conclusions from your reading. The
Continental Army fought as a recognizable standing Army, including
uniforms whether they were no more than a sprig or an armband or
not, and was recognized as one by the British for the reasons
Lurker Kurt points out. It's apples and oranges, joe, comparing the
Iraqi insurgency as tho they are operationally and morally
equivalent. Not to mention more than a bit creepy.
"I hear you say you support the troops, but with the criticism
you've posted of the Army Corps of Engineers' mission and project,
I guess you don't really support the troops." - joe
God, please let this be sarcasm on joe's part!
A guy who doesn't understand the difference between the US Army
Corps of Engineers mission and that of the US military is also
someone to feel sorry for. Especially if that guy is a city planner
who will probably rely on the USACE at some point. A little
education for you on the USACE, which has very little to do with
the combat mission on the ground and in the skies of Iraq beyond
designing and managing construction projects:
"The Corps is made up of approximately 34,600 Civilian and 650
military members.... Our mission is to provide quality, responsive
engineering services to the nation including:
- Planning, designing, building and operating water resources and
other civil works projects (Navigation, Flood Control,
Environmental Protection, Disaster Response, etc.)
- Designing and managing the construction of military facilities
for the Army and Air Force. (Military Construction)
- Providing design and construction management support for other
Defense and federal agencies. (Interagency and International
Services)."
650 military members vs. 34,600 civilians for a mission that really
only has one peripheral plank to the US military. The USACE is
essentially a construction outfit for the federal gov't who
oversees a bunch of civilian sub-contractors.
Likening criticism of the USACE to criticism of the US military in
Iraq is like criticizing an NFL team for MLB team's performance.
Apples and oranges, in other words.
I've only seen the still pictures from the SITE Institute (can't get my work PC video software updated), but the March 19, 2000 timestamp makes me suspicious as to the authenticity of this video, as does the fact that the helicopter shown in the right picture on that page appears to show an out-moded UH-1 Huey (it seems to have skids) instead of a current UH-60 Blackhawk (wheels). I can't debunk it as of now, but I have reason to have doubts.
Joe, did John ever apologize for accusing you of supporting and enabling Sadaam Hussein?
"OK, prior to Washington's order to put the sprig in their hats,
many of them where wholly indistinguishable from civilians. Illegal
combatants?" - joe
Not illegal combatants. Geneva didn't even EXIST back then, and the
Law of Armed Conflict was considerably different as well. Today is
your apples and oranges day, joe - you keep trying to apply today's
standards to things they didn't apply to in the past. I expect a
follow-on argument that Washington should have been arrested and
tried for unlawful detainment of his slaves, and that he should
have been pulled in front of the then non-existent Hague
Court...
But that doesn't matter, because according to the provisions of
Geneva, even non-uniformed armies who fit the following criteria
meet the Geneva standard:
coverage for "members of other militias and members of other
volunteer groups." But to gain coverage four requirements must be
met. These are basically: 1) a command structure; 2) a fixed and
recognizable sign; 3) carrying arms openly; and 4) following the
laws of war.
http://www.crimesofwar.org/expert/pow-elliott.html
I recommend reading the whole article, joe. The 16th paragraph is
the answer to your Special Forces question, as considered by a
retired Army Judge Advocate General Lt. Col. back in 2002.
OK, prior to Washington's order to put the sprig in their
hats, many of them where wholly indistinguishable from civilians.
Illegal combatants?
Well, if the GC and the Laws of War had been in effect in the 18th
century, they would have been.
And what about the US Special Forces who went into Afghanistan,
blended in with the locals, grew their beards, and donned local
garb?
I think you are mixing apples and oranges here and part of it is my
fault. When I said "Combatants who do not distinguish themselves
form civilians " I meant to imply combatants who deliberately hide
amongst non-combatants. The SF who went into Afghanistan joined up
with the Northern Alliance, who where combatants, and stayed in
their camps, separate from civilians.
I can't prove it, but I assume that when the SF donned local garb,
there was a tiny U.S. flag sewn onto it or someone used a sharpie
and wrote "U.S." on their clothing, thus making it a uniform.
If the SF donned completely civilian clothes and where trying to
pass themselves off as civilians and had been captured by the
Taliban, they could have been summarily executed because they would
have become illegal combatants and where not elligible for GC/LoW
protection.
joe - More succintly on the Special Forces uniform question, via
a news conference held with, among others, W. Hays Parks, Special
Assistant to the Army JAG conducted on April 7, 2003...
"Q: Yeah, can you help us, we've been struggling with this one over
the last several days, and that is the issue of in uniform and out
of uniform. Just as a specific issue, American forces do operate
out of uniform in some settings. In Afghanistan, virtually all of
the special operators operated out of uniform. Why is that
considered a war crime, or is it only operating out of uniform in
combination with other kinds of behavior?
PARKS: Let me first make a slight correction. Most of the Special
Forces in Afghanistan operated in uniform, full uniform. There were
some who worked in what we referred to as a non-standard uniform
that was at least a partial uniform so they could be identified.
They also carried their arms openly.
The basic distinction between those types of operations where there
was no attempt to conceal their combatant status, and what we're
saying with the Fedayeen Saddam in Iraq is that they are purposely
concealing their combatant status, concealing their weapons,
wearing no part of a uniform, wearing no distinctive device, in
order to engage in acts of treachery or perfidy, as I referred to
earlier. They are purposely using the soldiers' -- the U.S.
soldiers' respect for civilians as a way to conceal their intent
and engage in treacherous killing of coalition forces. So there is
a big difference between the two."
http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/2003/t04072003_t407genv.html
"Well, if the GC and the Laws of War had been in effect in the
18th century, they would have been." - Lurker Kurt
Actually, LK, that's not true, per my previous couple of
posts.
The Continental Army met all 4 criteria - 1) a command structure;
2) a fixed and recognizable sign; 3) carrying arms openly; and 4)
following the laws of war.
Al Qaeda and the insurgency in Iraq definitely does not meet the
last three.
Of course, since the US grants illegal combatants the protections
of Geneva anyway, this is probably splitting hairs that the US has
decided not to split based on our national principles...
Thanks Rob,
I kind of thought the Continental Army would have been ok
especially because of a command structure and carrying arms openly
but didn't have a copy of the Laws of War handy.
BTW, I think today's phrase that pays is "Apples and Oranges".
:-)
Great minds think alike, Kurt! All this apples and oranges talk has me hungry... I'm off to lunch!
rob,
"The Continental Army fought as a recognizable standing Army,
including uniforms whether they were no more than a sprig or an
armband or not, and was recognized as one by the British for the
reasons Lurker Kurt points out." No, not really. For much of the
war, there were many soldiers dressed entirely in civilian gard
(which is why Washington had to give the "sprig of green" order),
and the British didn't recognize the "rabble" or "mob" as a
standing army.
"It's apples and oranges, joe, comparing the Iraqi insurgency as
tho they are operationally and morally equivalent." As vehemently
as you clearly with me to, I never compared any of the Iraqi
insurgents to the Continental army morally. I'll leave the task of
comparing civilian-slaughtering terrorist to the Patriots to the
Reaganites.
I know what the Army Corps is, thanks. They are still under the
command of the military, the top people in organization are
uniformed military, and, just like the soldiers in Iraq, they are
carrying out the orders given to them by the Pentagon, the civilian
leadership (both executive and legislative) and their unit
commanders. Nice little diversion with the irrelevant details, but
on the question that matters for this debate, they are
indistinguishable.
But you did answer the question about US Special Forces in
Afghanistan - I was unaware they were including some insignia when
they dressed up as locals.
Les,
John never acknowledged any error in referring to me as a longtime
supporter of Saddam Hussein. But, then again, he never worked up
the stones to even repost on that threat.
rob,
"joe - Glad to hear you're reading some military history" You have
no idea how amusing this statement is.
joe - Maybe you won't agree, but I think the SF uniform question
has been thoroughly answered at 1:45 and 1:54 p.m.
Also, I sense some snark in your comment "'joe - Glad to hear
you're reading some military history' You have no idea how amusing
this statement is."
I wonder why that's amusing to you... I've served - both as
enlisted and officer - a total of 10 years on active duty. I'm also
nearing completion of a Master's Degree in Military History, so I
can't wait to hear the punchline that makes my comment seem funny
to you.
"the British didn't recognize the 'rabble' or 'mob' as a
standing army." - joe
And yet they fought them as, and accorded them the same status as,
a standing army. (See surrender to GENERAL Washington - which was
actually conducted on behalf of Cornwallis by his subordinate, Gen.
O'Hara and by Washington's subordinate, Gen. Lincoln).
This is much akin to claiming the Confederate Army was a rebellious
mob, which Lincoln did to raise funds and armies to fight the South
(not to mention suspend habeus corpus and prosecute sedition and so
forth) while the armies fought one another in a manner according
the status of armies of warring nations. (See surrender by GENERAL
Lee).
rob,
I thanked you for a very good response to the SF insignia question.
If that's the case, then that's that.
The "punchline," the reason I find that comment amusing, is the
condition of my bookshelves. You responded as if I'm finally
getting around to reading some military history. Meanwhile, the
wife keeps after me for all the large black and red books with
swastikas on them throughout the house. I didn't intend that quip
as a commentary on your background or education.
As far as General Washington goes, the British did come around to
recognizing the Continental Army as an army by war's end, but did
not initially. They even refused to address him as General
Washington, sending letters to him in New York addressed first to
"Mr. Washington," and then, when that letter was refused, to "Mr.
Washington, etc. etc." There was a change over time in the British
response - which makes sense, since those British gentlemen would
certainly never surrender to the officeless leader of a mob.
Joe,
I still you are an enabler of Saddam. If it were up to you, he
would still be in power. You are no less of an enabler than
Hitler's apologists were in the 1930s. Its not like you would go
shoot someone yourself, but the fact is you think the world is
better off with him than without him, if that is not support then
the term doesn't mean a whole lot. Its not a question of stones,
its a question of having a life instead of posting on these damned
boards all the time, which I do too much anyway.
The Iraqi people and all Muslems are barbarians. They desecrate dead bodies and during their "religious" holiday flagellated themselves. Even children!! until they were covered in blood. I would like to see a cartoon of their Prophet Mohammud with a pile of Shit on his head then we could call him PMS or so as not to be disrespectfull MR. PMS :)
John, joe's right. No one cares. Your assertions are as insightful and fact-based (and purely emotional) as those of 9/11 conspiracy nuts.
What a bunch of pussies ya'll are. It's your war and now your complaining about how you dearly beloved troops are being treated. Deal with it!
US troops should be draged naked! Rememer the whining when Iraqi
TV showed US POWs? Where was the outrage when US troops were
trading grisly photos of dead and mutilated Iraqis for access to
porn? see:
http://markcrispinmiller.blogspot.com/2005/09/barbarism-update-september-26.html
joe,
Sorry I got a bit defensive - we've certainly been snarky enough to
one another in the past that it probably isn't TOO surprising that
I mis-read your post. My bad.
Fair points all, regarding the status of the Continental Army. I'd
argue that they fit the Geneva Convention criteria to be treated as
(at least) a militia while the insurgency and Al Qaeda simply
don't. (Even tho Geneva didn't exist back then - the C.A. certainly
met the higher, modern standard.)
Sounds like your personal library and mine have a few things in
common - my fiance' gives me no end of grief about all the "heavy,
hard-cover door-stops" I tend to leave lying around the house.
Being Jewish I think the swastikas tend to make her nervous, tho
now that she's a better shot than I am I think she has very little
to worry about from the average U.S.-version skin-head or
neo-Nazi.
John - joe may be a lot of things, but he's no supporter of Saddam
or any other tyrant (ok, MAYBE Castro...). For example, you should
hear him go off on the current administration - and they're not
even in Saddam's league!
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