There are thousands of them if not tens of thousands. They
call themselves journalists, correspondents, analysts, commentators and
contributors to print and electronic outlets.
In reality, however, they are nothing more than mouthpieces
engaged in the lucrative business of amplifying what is stuffed in their mouths
by a handful of lobbies. They perform for the benefit of organized crime and
syndicates pretending to be political gurus on a mission to “save” the world.
A couple of the contributors –– one named Thomas Joscelyn,
and the other Bill Roggio –– got together and wrote their latest installment
under the title: “Credulity as Policy” and the subtitle: “A misbegotten
'ceasefire' in Afghanistan.” It was published on June 8, 2018 in The Weekly
Standard.
What distinguishes these two characters is that they belong
to the syndicate known as the Jewish lobby whose ultimate aim is to ascertain
the triumph of Jewish supremacy; a dream they hope to attain by slandering
those they command the American military to go exterminate. You see, my friend,
this game is supposed to unfold according to the saying which goes like this:
If you find a sucker strong enough to kill everybody for you, that's when you
become king. And the Jews who found the Americans, dream of becoming kings of
the world.
Well, the reason for their current state of wrath is that a
move to start a peace initiative was started in Afghanistan, and they –– who
scuttled the Middle East peace process for decades –– heard the clarion call
summon them to repeat the performance in the Far East. And so, they thrust
themselves forward on a rampage to slander everyone and everything that suggest
peace is preferable to a constant state of tension; of apprehension and fear;
of skirmishes and outright wars.
That's because the Jews firmly believe that as long as there
is quiet in the world, they make no more gains than they do in a stock market
that goes neither up nor down. But when there is turmoil in the world, they
play one party against the other, and reap pounds of flesh from each side. It
is like selling long when the market is going up, and selling short when it is
going down. They get it coming and going.
Here is a sample of what the two knuckleheads are saying:
“Ghani, President of Afghanistan, announced that his forces
would enter into a ceasefire with the Taliban. The jihadists may use the lull
in fighting to plan the next wave of assaults. General Nicholson endorsed
Ghani's move. The ceasefire is desperate and delusional. The more we listen to
America's commanders, the clearer it becomes they do not understand the enemies
they face. Nor do they have a plan for victory. The military argued they could
train Afghans to push back the insurgents. 10 months later, we know that is not
close to true. In praising Ghani, Nicholson cited an open letter from the
Taliban as evidence that they are serious about negotiating peace. He claimed
that the Taliban outlined the elements of a peace proposal. They did no such
thing. There are other reasons to be skeptical; many Taliban leaders remain
ensconced in Pakistan and they refuse to forswear al Qaeda. Perhaps Ghani's
gambit will bear fruit. Given this history, we wouldn't count on it”.
As can be seen, the moment it was announced there will be a
ceasefire, the Jewish response was to throw cold water on it in this form: “The
jihadists may use the lull in fighting to plan the next wave of assaults.” That
is, no matter how solid and plausible the ceasefire plan may be, it will not
work because the other side is so evil and operating in bad faith, he'll
exploit the lull instead of negotiating peace. You’d think the two writers
believe that the Taliban are a bunch of Israelis at the table fake-negotiating
peace with the Palestinians.
But opposite the evil Taliban sit America's commanders
having no idea what they are doing, say Joscelyn and Roggio. The proof they
offer is that it's been 10 months since those commanders promised they will
have trained Afghan forces well enough to push back the insurgence but failed
to do so. And speaking of delusion, they say that General Nicholson sees things
that do not exist … like a fictitious peace proposal in a Taliban letter.