We lost this war the moment we allowed the Afghan’s (and the Iraqis) to write themselves a constitution that made the sharia the law of the land. Winning the hearts and minds of the Afghans is not the job of a U.S. soldier. That’s the job of an Afghan. Neither is (Islamic) nation building anything that we should be engaged in. You go to war to destroy your enemy, not to aid and abet the global jihad.
Related:
- Permission to Stop the Call to Jihad Denied
- Joel Brinkley: Why Is America Fighting and Dying for Proud Pedophiles?
- Child Rapists, Pedophiles and “Respect”
- Bacha bazi is an old Afghan tradition of taking young boys, dressing them up like girls, and making them perform for older men….
Manual warns soldiers in Afghanistan not to talk about jihad, pedophilia, rape etc.
A new Army manual that warns American soldiers in Afghanistan to avoid talking about certain topics has unwittingly acknowledged that Western taboos such as pedophilia are an inherent part of Islamic culture.
“By mentioning that pedophilia and women’s rights and saying that soldiers should not mention such things they are tacitly admitting that those things are indeed part of Islam,” said Robert Spencer, founder of Jihad Watch.
Update:
Total capitulation. “New Army Manual Orders Soldiers Not To Criticize Taliban,” from Judicial Watch, December 11 (thanks to Pamela Geller):
Here is a strong indicator that the Obama Administration’s crusade to appease Islam has gone too far….
According to the Wall Street Journal, a new 75-page Army manual suggests U.S. soldiers are to blame for the large number of deadly attacks on them by Afghan security forces. The manual reportedly says the soldiers may have brought the attacks on themselves because of insensitivity towards Islamic culture.
“Many of the confrontations occur because of [coalition] ignorance of, or lack of empathy for, Muslim and/or Afghan cultural norms, resulting in a violent reaction from the [Afghan security force] member,” the draft report prepared by Army researchers and obtained by the Journal said.
Clare Lopez, a senior fellow with the Center for Security Policy, said the suggestion that U.S. soldiers are to blame for the attacks on them by Afghan security forces is outrageous.
“To suggest that our troops are somehow being murdered because of our insensitivity to their culture is essentially saying it’s our own fault that the troops are being killed because we weren’t nice enough to them,” Lopez said. “The fundamental refusal to acknowledge that the enemy fights because of what he says he fight for, which is Islam, is a failure by our professional leadership from Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta on down. Because of this, we have no strategy.”
This year alone, more than three dozen attacks have killed 63 coalition forces. In an attempt to quell the attacks the Army report has issued a list of “taboo conversational topics.”
The topics include “making derogatory comments about the Taliban,” “advocating women’s rights” and “directing any criticism towards Afghans” or “anything related to Islam.”
WND contacted the Army to request a copy of the manual. Army spokesman Ray Harp responded by saying it would not release a copy, for security reasons. He explained the Army wished to avoid detailing specific tactics, techniques and procedures outlined in the handbook.
Regarding the WSJ copy, Harp said whoever released it was not authorized to do so.
“While the handbook does contain information we do not want freely distributed into the hands of our enemies, it is labeled with the ‘For Official Use Only’ restriction,” Harp said. “While still officially unclassified, we require the information to be protected from an open distribution and it should not have been released to anyone outside of those who needed access to it for official purposes.”
Elaine Donnelly, director of the Center for Military Readiness, says while she has not seen the draft copy, she can understand how it is beneficial for the Army to help teach soldiers about cultural differences. Unfortunately, she said, Congress and military leaders often go too far.
“There is a cultural problem that the military needs to confront, but I’m not sure this manual is the best way to go about it,” Donnelly said. “If the information in it is for our soldier’s protection so as to prevent something from being provocative, it might save a life, but if as the article suggests it is calling for soldiers to be overly deferential, that’s not called for.”
Donnelly noted the example of Navy Lt. Florence Choe, who was shot by an Afghan guard in 2009 for wearing shorts while jogging along the perimeter of the base.
“I’m not saying this was her fault, but if her commanders had taken the time to acknowledge that individuals in that part of the world have a different attitude in regards to women in shorts, it might have saved her life,” she said.
However, Donnelly says there are other taboos supposedly in the report that appear to have gone too far.
The Army manual also advises soldiers to avoid “any criticism of pedophilia” or “mentioning homosexuality and homosexual conduct.”
“In that part of the world homosexuality is condemned, and pedophilia is accepted. It’s not like our culture at all and that needs to be acknowledged. We don’t have to be subservient to be cautious,” she continued. “Unfortunately, often times our leaders want to go overboard, believing it will help our relationships with these countries, but the truth is it doesn’t.”
The Army manual has drawn sharp criticism from Marine Gen. John Allen, the top military commander in Afghanistan. Allen reportedly has rejected a proposed foreword written by the Army using his name.
“Gen. Allen did not author, nor does he intend to provide, a foreword,” Col. Tom Collins, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan said. “He does not approve of its contents.”
Spencer says the ban on criticizing pedophilia has put the military in a difficult position. By attempting to show cultural sensitivity, it is forced to acknowledge that pedophilia is an inherent part of Islamic teaching.
“This draws attention to the fact that despite denials by the U.S. government and groups like CAIR, these things are a part of official Islam,” Spencer said. “However, I don’t expect them to have the honesty to acknowledge the inconsistency.”
He said that by telling soldiers not to speak against pedophilia, the military and the U.S. government is essentially endorsing the behavior.
“We are essentially sending the message that the United States endorses pedophilia by refusing to speak out against it. I don’t see any way around this.”
Clare Lopez, also a senior fellow with the Clarion Fund, said the new manual is another example of how the military is sending the message that Western culture and values are subservient to Islam.
“It’s another step in a process of submission to the appeasement of Islam that the United States leadership including military leadership has been pursuing for quite a while,” she said. “The entire program seems to be geared to appeasing the Taliban and jihadists by giving in to their world view which says Islam should not be offended and letting them decide what is offensive.”
She said the problem is not limited to the Obama administration but began in Afghanistan under President George W. Bush.
“This actually began in 2004 when we helped Afghanistan enshrine Islamic Shariah law in the constitution. Once we did that, we no longer had any purpose being in the country because we gave the enemy everything they asked for,” she noted. “That’s what they fight for, the imposition of Shariah. All of these other measures that followed from that point on have been a further attempt to win their hearts and minds. It hasn’t worked as is evident by the fact they are still killing our soldiers.”
The Army manual is in keeping with policies by the Obama administration to deliberately scrub all training materials that criticize Islam. Earlier this year, the FBI destroyed all of its materials that taught there was an Islamic connection to terrorism.
WND previously reported the Pentagon refused to give assurances that soldiers who burned the Quran would not be turned over to Afghan authorities to face trial.
Cmdr. William Speakes, a spokesman for the Pentagon, said: “It would be premature to speculate at any potential outcomes. Any disciplinary action if deemed warranted will be taken by U.S. authorities after a thorough review of the facts pursuant to all U.S. military law and regulations and in accordance with due process. We have made no commitments beyond that.”
When asked if that meant the only commitment officials were willing to make was that the soldiers would not be tried in an Afghan court, Speakes said: “No. The only commitment we have made is that we will take any appropriate disciplinary action deemed necessary by the investigation. Any suggestions that we have made more detailed commitments beyond what I just told you is inaccurate.”
Spencer said the Army manual sends the message to Middle Easterners that despite statements by our government, they cannot expect any help from America when it comes to fighting for basic human rights.
“Anybody in these Muslim countries that wanted to see freedom of speech, a crackdown on pedophilia, or rights for women were disappointed at the time that we endorsed the Afghan constitution which enshrined these principles in Islamic law,” Spencer said. “It sends the message to advocates of human rights and freedom that the United States is not going to help them and they are on their own.”


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{ 14 comments }
Um. Picture is photoshopped.
No. Its not.
As readers of this site may recall, Paul Avallone served in Afghanistan in 2002 and 2003 on a special forces team — “the lone US military presence in the entire eastern province of Nangarhar” — and returned to Afghanistan as a journalist in 2006 and 2008. Paul drew my attention to yesterday’s posted story on pederasty in Afghanistan by Joel Brinkley and kindly supplied the all too relevant photograph (see post). He also sent in the above photo, which he took of an Afghanistan National Army sergeant
Torked,
Guess these stories are manufactured as well hey>
http://www.examiner.com/law-enforcement-in-national/afghan-pedophilia-a-way-of-life-say-u-s-soldiers-and-journalists
http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/world/2010/12/afghan-sex-practices-concern-us-british-forces
Torked,
Politely .. you are an idiot. Go live amongst these muslim retards and you will see that sexual molestation of young boys is actually quite common. There is NOTHING admirable about islam – absolutely nothing.
More than thirty years ago when I was in the oil business, stories abounded about Muslim truck drivers in the Saudi oil fields who always kept little boys with them for “sex”. It’s nothing new. And that was even before the days of “Islamophobia” …
Next, maybe the Army will concede that the sun rises in the East. We don’t need to Army to validate anything we already know. They’re being ruled by pc numbnuts anyway so it really doesn’t matter what they think or say or not.
Furthermore, except as an excuse for psychopathology, it doesn’t matter whether pedophilia is an inherent part of Islamic culture. Sick is sick. If it’s anti-life, anti-human, anti-child, it’s sick, it’s pathological, it’s damaging. Sexual abuse in an Islamic hell hole has the same effect on an innocent child as it has here. They are f*cked up for life. Don’t ever let anyone vomit the “cultural” excuse on you. It is a lie.
Torked, are ALL the photos shopped? Dude, put some new batteries in that dildo you call a brain.
If you look just into that poor kids eyes.
SMH.
That poor defenseless baby.
There is special place in Hell for people who harm children in this way.
Thanks for that, Pray Hard.
From 1969 into the early seventies I spend a lot of time traveling in those parts; from Turkey onwards every truck-driver had ‘his’ boy, and I’m sure nothing much has changed since. That goes for Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and in India, where Mustards work in the trucking industry.
No, nothing much has changed. The case of an English boy (of Pakistani descent) who killed one of the men who molested him sexually in Pakistan , was convicted of murder and placed on death row, then finally released after a great deal of effort by both the UK diplomatic mission and many concerned citizens (he was pardoned by the then President Musharaf ) highlights this abhorrent behaviour which has been glossed over by the media.
Sorry guys, but spotting photoshopped pics is a hobby for me. not a profession. All I did was state that this photo has many tags make it appear photoshopped. I could be wrong. Prove it. And I did not mean it as an endorsement of Men with Boys. And I never said anything about pedophilia not being an accepted practice in Islamic countries. Someone turned me on to this site about 6 years ago. At the time, intelligent discourse seemed to be the rule rather than the exception. But after having established members of this site quote Biblical passages at me repeatedly as to the reason Christianity will defeat Islam, the intelligence and reason seems to have evaporated. Go ahead, call me more names. I never do that to people who disagree with me. By the way, I believe that America and Europe should deport all “immigrants” who are unwilling to assimilate to their host countries. Send them back to the 3rd world hell holes they came from.
No sarcasm intended, But a Merry Christmas to all of you. I do not celebrate this as a greed-fest of gift giving, but as a celebration of Jesus’ life. Any offense percieved is yours.
Yes, I know you are on our side, Torked, although some of our readers may not see it that way due your ‘photoshop’ comment.
As for the picture, you can take it up with Paul Avallone who took it.
Click on the link above which takes you to Diana West, and you can trace its origin.
As for theological discussions, I leave it up to readers to engage or to disengage.
And a Merry Christmas to you too!
And check the picture closely. Most of the picture shows shadows from a light source that is coming from the upper left. Then some other parts have shadows from a light source coming from the upper right.
So, I found the original picture of this sad little boy. As I stated, this picture has him photoshopped as being in the arms of a jihadist loser.
Fighting lies with lies reduces us to the level of the islamists, just as the WW2 propaganda about the enemy eating babies was, well, untrue propaganda. I do not dispute the fact that pedophilia is rampant in islamic countries, but fighting their lies with lies of our own diminishes us. Just Saying.
In the original picture, the background behind the little boy is sand and rocks. Not green vegetation.
Re: contacting journalists regarding the veracity of their stories or photos. Yes, we all know those reporting the news are totally unbiased and everything they present to us is 100% true all of the time. None of them have a personal agenda. No journalist has ever lied.
The picture is real. The “original” Torked claimed he found is not the original but merely another shot of the same boy. If Torked will look more closely, he/she will notice the angle of the boy in the two pics are slightly different – one being a more square frontal shot. No photoshop, just different shot of same person.
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