Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Happy New Year




Hebrew
Barukh atah Adonai, Eloheinu, melekh ha'olam
Blessed are you, Lord, our God, sovereign of the universe
Hebrew
asher kidishanu b'mitz'votav v'tzivanu
Who has sanctified us with His commandments and commanded us
Hebrew
l'had'lik neir shel Rosh Hashanah yom tov (Amein)
to light the candles of Rosh Hashanah (Amen)


The Raisin Challah just came out of the oven, the sweetbreads are ready, the honey and spool are on the table, the candles are ready to be lit at 20 minutes to sundown, and the Tzimmes is tzimmering.

A happy new year one and all. May the year 5768 bring peace to Israel, peace to Gaza, peace to Lebanon and peace to Iraq.

Two authors of "The War as We Saw It" killed in Baghdad

Three weeks ago, seven active duty NCO's wrote a powerful op-ed for the New York Times, The War as We Saw It. Yesterday, as General Petraeus was wrapping up his testimony in front of the Senate Armed Services Committee, it was announced that two of the authors of that piece, SGT Omar Mora and SSG. Yance T. Gray, were killed in a truck accident in western Baghdad.

Just hours earlier, as testimony in front of the Armed Services Committee got underway, Senator Hagel of Nebraska asked Petraeus pointed questions about the contents of the of the op-ed.

SGT. Omar Mora was 28 years old, and called Texas City, Texas home. A native of Ecuador, he had just become a United States citizen. He is survived by his wife, Crista, and a five-year-old daughter, Jordan. SGT . Mora, it should be pointed out, was extended to November. His tour was originally scheduled to end last month.

SSG. Yance Gray was from Ismay, Montana, and is survived by his wife Jessica, and infant daughter Ava.

While the op-ed was being written, SSG Jeremy Murphy was shot in the head. He was airlifted to a hospital stateside and is expected to recover.

UPDATE: Decline and Fall has a wonderful tribute post, written by someone with a birds-eye view of the chaos.

Parsing the Petraeus Promenade™

For two days they appeared before open congressional committee meetings, answering questions from the legislative branch. Five of the members they faced are running for the presidency, and one of the inquisitors today will likely be the commander in chief they will answer to come January 2009. Another Senator was the opponent Petraeus sided against in 2004. That Senator did not bring up the infamous op-ed, but Senator Boxer did.

On balance, Tuesday was certainly not Monday. The man-crushes were, for the most part, kept in check - unlike Monday, when I feared that some of the overt, gushing, adoration would get the General in trouble under “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

There were significant moments in the testimony Tuesday. Petraeus went on the congressional record that there was no connection between the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and Saddam Hussein. When pressed, he could not say that America’s involvement in Iraq makes Americans safer.


But there was one question that Petraeus either could not – or would not – answer. It was the one he asked in 2003 as the invasion ramped up. How does this end?”

"Are we going to continue to invest American blood and treasure at the same rate we are doing now, for what? The president said let's buy time. Buy time? For what?" said Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., a Vietnam veteran who also will retire next year.

Most experts argue that stabilizing Iraq requires two things above all: political reconciliation among Shiite Muslims, Sunnis and Kurds, and Iraqi security forces that can stand on their own.

Petraeus and Crocker could promise neither.

As the day wore on, the unspoken consensus emerged that, yeah, George Bush really is a phenomenal fuckwit. And boy, did he ever screw the pooch when he charged headlong into this mess, and it should never have been done, and can’t be undone…All he can do is punt it to the next president and then start trying to cast blame. The men who were sitting in front of congress the last two days are, unenviably, charged with salvaging something from it.

By the end of the day, the testimony made it clear that there will still be a hundred thousand American G.I.’s in Iraq when Bush abdicates to Paraguay on 19 January 2009. And the war in Iraq had been moved front and center in the 2008 election campaign.

Starting today, it's a whole new campaign...