Posted by
steve king on Friday, February 09, 2007 3:07:54 PM
The Clinton path to Islamofacist War – Year One: 1993
The Chronology that documents Clinton’s conversion of the US military into humanitarian relief workers (and a lab for social engineering) while on a direct path to the Islamofacist War we find ourselves in today. George Bush haters, get your facts right.
“In less than three years as commander in chief, Clinton
and his team, while increasing the number of overseas
deployments, reduced the total active-duty force from
2.1 million to 1.6 million men and women. The Army
was reduced from eighteen full-strength light and
mechanized divisions to a vulnerable twelve. The Navy
was reduced from 546 to 380 ships, toward a targeted
reduction of 300 – the smallest naval force since the pre-
world war II period.”
“And on his watch, our military was deployed more often
than during any other Presidency in history, not to fight actual wars
but to manage poorly planned and unclear peacekeeping missions
with unclear rules of engagement in places like Somalia, Haiti,
Rwanda, Colombia, Cambodia, Bosnia, and Kosovo all resulting in
little if anything gained in terms of democracy and the development
of civil societies in these countries.”
February 26: In New York, the World Trade Center is bombed by Islamic terrorists. A car bomb planted in an underground garage kills six people and leaves ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND injured. Investigators believe the mastermind of the attack, Ramzi Yousef, is financially connected to Osama bib Laden.
April 12: NATO air forces begin enforcing the UN-mandated no-fly zone over Bosnia, involving sixty US, French and Dutch warplanes.
April 9 – 18: In Iraq, US planes bomb Iraqi antiaircraft sites that had tracked and attacked US aircraft.
April 13: US forces in association with NATO enforce the ban on all unauthorized military flights over Bosnia-Herzegovina.
May 4: In Somalia, Operation Restore Hope is replaced by the UN Security Council Operation UNOSOM II, with enforcement powers and a mandate to disarm warring factions, in Accordance with the Addis Ababa agreements of January 1993. Out of 22,700 multinational troops and logistics personnel, 2,900 are US forces, primarily combat SUPPORT personnel assigned to the UN Logistics Support Command. Restore Hope was established under US command in December 1992 to establish a secure environment for humanitarian relief operations.
June 19: US aircraft fire on an Iraqi antiaircraft site displaying hostile intent.
June 26: The US attacks the Iraqi Intelligence Service Headquarters in Baghdad, launching 23 Tomahawk Cruise Missiles (Clinton’s favorite – as there is almost no risk of US casualties) in retaliation for an attempted assassination of the former US president George Bush while he visited Kuwait. The assassination attempt was hatched by Iraqi agents.
July 9: UN protection forces, including 350 US soldiers, are deployed to participate in the UN protection of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
“There are ways in which a ruler can bring
misfortune upon his army by attempting
to govern that army in the same way as
he administers a kingdom, being ignorant
to the conditions which obtain in an army.”
- Sun Tzu, The Art of War
August 3: An Army Ranger task force of more than 1,100 soldiers is deployed to Somalia as a “quick reaction force”.
August 31: The Oslo Accords are agreed to by Israel and the PLO during secret talks in Norway. After 45 years of conflict, the two agree to recognize each other. Arafat signs a letter recognizing Israel and renouncing violence.
September 13: The Oslo Accords are signed by Israeli and Palestinian leaders at a White House ceremony.
October 3: In Somalia, eighteen American soldiers are killed in a Mogadishu firefight with irregular forces loyal to warlord Mohammad Aidid. Some 500-1,000 of Aidid’s fighters are killed by US troops.
October 7: President Clinton announces that the US will withdraw all combat forces and most logistics units from Somalia by March 31, 1994.
Today, 2007: “Somalia has two rival governments — the weak, internationally recognized transitional government, marooned in the inland city of Baidoa, and the Islamist forces, a popular grassroots movement that controls much of the country, including the battle-scared seaside capital, Mogadishu.” New York Times
Tomorrow – 1994