02/08/10
From American Thinker
Viet Nam, Holder, Obama, and the Christmas Day
Terrorist
By Robert Bowie Johnson, Jr.
On Christmas Day, Attorney General Eric Holder decided to prevent the obtaining
of crucial enemy intelligence from airline terrorist Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab
by granting him the "right" to remain silent. The implicit negative consequences
of that decision pertaining to our future safety reminded me of a stark and
positive contrast to Holder's dangerous way of dealing with captured enemy
combatants.
In April of 1968, I was a young infantry captain operating near the coast of
Quang Nam Province in South Viet Nam. We captured prisoners who meant us
grievous harm. Go back there with me for a few minutes, see how we handled that
kind of situation, and then we'll return to today and examine Eric Holder's
actions with that context in mind.
An enemy sapper battalion, with a method of operation akin to those of today's
terrorists, had caused us many casualties and much fear. Operating at night,
using pipe bombs, teams of enemy sappers blew gaps in the roads we traveled and
booby-trapped the ways around those gaps. Sometimes they booby-trapped the gap
itself.
Too often, the sappers planted high explosives under the roadways and waited in
concealment for a convoy to enter the kill zone before detonating their bombs.
Traveling those roads became a terrifying experience.
Our colonel resolved to attack the enemy battalion's base camp and destroy these
sappers. On the first day of our regimental operation, I radioed my superior
that my unit had captured three enemies. Within fifteen minutes, a major
choppered in to pick up the prisoners -- a very dangerous act for him and the
pilot, as we were still in contact with the enemy.
We threw our bound prisoners into the chopper, and it flew off hugging the
landscape to avoid enemy fire. The major did not take the prisoners to an ACLU
lawyer in the hopes that within a month or so, their parents could be contacted,
at which point said parents could hopefully persuade their captured children to
talk.
Well-trained military intelligence officers conducted the interrogations,
knowing which prisoner to focus on and how to question him. They forced the most
vulnerable prisoner to reveal where the sapper battalion's main defenses were,
and when the enemy intended to mass there.
Our colonel immediately prepared what is known as a T.O.T., or Time-On-Target.
The shells of all our big guns within range (105s, 155s, 175s, and even naval
batteries from what I believe was the battleship New Jersey) were plotted to hit
the enemy position simultaneously. It was our turn to terrify the sappers.
The effect of this massive artillery barrage exceeded our expectations. We met
no resistance when we swept through the area, finding more than thirty enemy
killed by shrapnel from the airbursts. Better yet, we found that their command
bunker had been penetrated by a shell with a delayed-action fuse, killing all
ten of its high-ranking occupants. The terrorizing attacks on our region's
roadways ceased.
That was a textbook tactical situation where the prompt interrogation of
captured enemy combatants led to successful battlefield results, ultimately
saving the lives of many American soldiers, perhaps mine included. We treated
prisoners as intelligence assets to be promptly exploited, not as criminal
suspects absurdly presumed to be innocent prior to some kind of moronic trial
for show.
Let's go back now to the current strategic situation, where the safety of every
American civilian is at stake, and where the Attorney General and the President
of the United States, the Commander-in-Chief of our armed forces, are
responsible for preventing the immediate interrogation of an enemy combatant
from taking place.
Terrorist Abdulmutallab's failed bombing attempt on the civilian U.S. airliner
on Christmas day led to his immediate capture. Before even an hour had passed,
Attorney General Eric Holder, acting under the authority of Barack Hussein
Obama, provided an attorney for this enemy combatant, forbidding the gathering
of enemy intelligence crucial to the safety of the American people from future
terrorist acts.
Holder's decision to protect Abdulmutallab from interrogation has facilitated
enemy efforts to continue surprise terror attacks against American citizens at
home and abroad. Thus, Holder and Obama have given a measure of aid to our
enemies.
Whatever cripples our efforts to close with and destroy our enemies empowers
those enemies to kill and maim us. Knowing that their captured comrades will not
be subject to standard military interrogations doubtless comes as a great relief
to our sworn enemies. Al-Qaeda leaders know full well that the granting of
constitutional rights to their fellow terrorists helps keep secret the time,
nature, and place of their future attacks. Thus, Holder and Obama have given not
only aid to our enemies, but a measure of comfort as well.
Holder and Obama cannot take back or justify what they have done. However hard
they may try, their propagandists cannot tinsel over Holder's and Obama's
dereliction of duty by cleverly embellishing their excuses. By protecting the
terrorist from immediate interrogation, Holder and Obama delivered a
sledgehammer blow to the framework of our national security. Who knows how much
crucial information on planned enemy strikes has been lost as a result of their
ineptitude and betrayal of the public trust?
Upon taking office, Holder solemnly swore that he would "support and defend the
Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic."
Yet instead of supporting and defending the Constitution against foreign enemy
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, Holder shielded the terrorist from interrogation,
using our founding document as his pretext for doing so. There is no provision
in the U.S. Constitution for granting constitutional rights to enemy combatants.
By granting Abdulmutallab such rights, Holder has violated his oath of office.
In the event that anyone has missed the point, here is the crux of the matter:
Instead of acting to protect us from enemy combatants, Eric Holder acted to
protect an enemy combatant from revealing what he knew about planned terrorist
operations directed against us. In doing so, Holder has demonstrated an
unfathomable indifference to our national security and person safety.
If Obama and Holder had been a major and a captain in my outfit in Viet Nam,
they would have compromised our mission, caused casualties to mount, and caused
morale to plummet. Think of yourself as a soldier operating today against our
enemies in Iraq or Afghanistan. Would you want Obama or Holder in your immediate
chain of command? No, you would not.
The sad and tragic truth for us today is that these two incompetents are running
the whole show.
Mr. Johnson, a West Point graduate and an airborne ranger infantry veteran of
Viet Nam, is the author of The Parthenon Code: Mankind's History in Marble and
Noah in Ancient Greek Art. He is also the inventor of the board game "Obozo's
America: Why Bother Working for a Living?" His websites are welfaregame.com and
solvinglight.com.
Page Printed from:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/02/viet_nam_holder_obama_and_the.html
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Is it incompetence or is it treachery? If you could try a government official for criminal stupidity, Washington would be a ghost town. I honestly believe there is sufficient evidence available to try Holder and Obama, among others, with high treason against the United States of America. After conviction and execution, they should be buried on the national mall in Washington. The U. S. Treasury could collect significant revenue towards the towering national debt by charging citizens a fee to piss on their graves.
EnemyoftheState