Where Life Meets Politics!

Archives for the day Monday, December 8th, 2008

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed said Monday he will confess to masterminding the Sept. 11 attacks, throwing his death-penalty trial into disarray and shocking victims' relatives who watched from behind a glass partition.
The Marine Corps left troops in Iraq vulnerable to deadly roadside bombs by failing to answer an urgent request from battlefield commanders for blast-resistant vehicles, according to an internal Pentagon investigation obtained by The Associated Press.

I have a new article in the Review of Faith and International Affairs about the Amman Message, an effort spearheaded by the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought, a nominally non-governmental institute that receives significant backing from Jordan's monarchy. The Amman Message seeks to address some of the most controversial topics within Islam today (including terrorism, women's rights, and freedom of religion), and tries to do so by forging a scholarly consensus among disparate Muslim jurisprudential schools. My article focuses on a consensus statement on takfir that was produced in 2005, and a document that is currently being developed about jihad and the Islamic law of war.

An excerpt:

The benefits of the two documents analyzed above are manifest. The takfir document, endorsed by a broad array of scholars with towering reputations, advances a number of relevant arguments designed to diminish the sectarian fighting that has gripped places like Iraq, and to undermine extremists’ claim that they have the power to declare takfir on other Muslims. The jihad document, which may ultimately garner a similarly impressive array of signatures, condemns many of the tactics employed by terrorist organizations, as well as the idea that Muslims are inherently at war with the non-Muslim world.

The documents’ shortcomings are also clear if one reads them critically. One failure is that they do not clarify some of the most controversial issues—for example, the jihad document’s lack of discussion about Iraq and Israel. Another shortcoming is that the documents frequently employ vague language that can give rise to many questions. This can be seen in the takfir document’s failure to specify what terms such as “real Tasawwuf” and “necessarily self-evident tenet of religion” mean, or in the jihad document’s silence about the claim there is no such thing as an Israeli civilian. These failures are likely inherent to the process of consensus-building that the Aal al-Bayt Institute has chosen. More ambitious statements, though they would surely be more welcome to Western ears, might not garner the kind consensus that the Amman Message seeks. What the documents might have accomplished, however, should not detract from the fact that they do make a contribution.

Surely, the Aal al-Bayt Institute has had its misfires in addition to its successes. Its penchant for attaching unprecedented historical significance to virtually all of its output can be off-putting. The very first sentence of True Islam’s introduction, penned by Prince bin Muhammad, reads: “Over the course of the two years 2005-2006 CE, 1426-1427 AH, there occurred a series of events of great historical importance to the worldwide Islamic nation (Ummah), events without parallel for fourteen centuries, ever since the time of Imam Ali bin Abi Talib." ....

These misfires aside, Aal al-Bayt has already succeeded in releasing one important document, and the jihad document will also be significant upon its release. Moreover, Aal al-Bayt has created an important mechanism for bringing together representatives of divergent Islamic theological schools.

To read the full article, click here.

An F/A-18D Hornet preparing to land at a Marine base crashed in a densely populated San Diego neighborhood Monday. The pilot ejected safely, but three people on the ground were killed and one is missing.
An F/A-18D Hornet preparing to land at a Marine base crashed in a densely populated San Diego neighborhood Monday. The pilot ejected safely, but two people on the ground were killed and three houses were destroyed.
An F/A-18D Hornet preparing to land at a Marine base crashed in a densely populated San Diego neighborhood Monday. The pilot ejected safely, but two people on the ground were killed and three houses were destroyed.
An F-18 military jet crashed in a San Diego neighborhood Monday near a busy highway as it approached a Marine base, sparking at least one house fire. The pilot ejected, but it wasn't immediately clear whether the pilot or anyone on the ground was injured, officials said.
Jesse Nieto, the father of a USS Cole terror attack victim, was asked to remove anti-muslim stickers from his car when driving on Camp Lejeune, N.C. -- one of which read "Islam = terrorism," another showed a cartoon boy urinating on a turban-wearing man. In November, Nieto filed a lawsuit contending the base violated his free speech and equal protection rights.

How is it that two years after being there and talking to my own Brigade who is in charge of Task Force Phoenix, can they still be making these same mistakes and doing these same things. I am not sure if this makes me sick or just bewildered. Still trying to figure it out. Click and read below to see what I am talking about. The problem is not with the Brigade command, but with all the levels of leadership and all the S-shops full of sr. leaders who either have never been downrange or are not even in the Army.

I said it in 2006 and I have said it since. Every person that works in the staff should be forced to be downrange the first 4-6 months of their tour. After that time, they can then move back to Kabul and be on the staff. If this could happen, then there would be many more people knowing what they are talking about when they open their pie-hole.

http://afghanistanshrugged.com/2008/12/04/a-tale-of-two-wars.aspx

Pakistani security personnel have arrested the alleged planner of the November 26 Mumbai terrorist attacks in a raid on a suspected militant camp, media reports and officials said on Monday.
 

DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed herein are those of the author(s), myself included, and not intended as a directive or recommendation. Your ability to in turn express your opinions are just one of the rights I defended as a United States Army soldier. I respect and encourage that right. I ask only this; if you disagree with any of the material presented, either by the author or by posters, take a deep breath and think before you post. Be introspective. Be concise. Form a complete, well thought, and above all polite response before posting. The inability to communicate politely and succinctly on emotionally charged issues will do nothing to promote productive sharing of viewpoints. We must speak rationally and intelligently to each other as individuals before we can ever hope to do it as a country. To do anything less is to denigrate each other, hide away the truth, and perpetuate that which we seek to overcome.