General McChaos is Canned;
Times Square Bomber Blowback
Faisal Shahzad pled guilty to all ten counts of charges stemming from his failed terror attempt to detonate ex

Obama stood in the White House Rose G arden with Vice President Biden, G eneral Patraeus and other top military brass and “regretfully” accepted G eneral McChrystal’s resignation. Obama said he did so because snide and derogatory remarks from the general and his staff about senior administration officials in a Rolling Stone article were contemptuous. Among many other disparaging comments, McChrystal told a Rolling Stone reporter that he fel
t the new President looked “uncomfortable and intimidated” while meeting with senior military officers just after Obama was inaugurated. In the chaotic turn of events, Obama summoned McChrystal to the White House from Afghanistan where he has been commander of the increasingly unpopular war. A recent ABC / Washington Post poll revealed that people felt the war was not worth fighting by a 53 to 44 margin. An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll had 62% of the American people saying the country was going in the wrong direction and Obama’s approval rating at 45% with 48% disapproval.“War is bigger than any one man or woman, whether a private, a general or president,” Obama said. “As difficult as it is to lose G eneral McChrystal, I believe it is the right decision for national security.” “I welcome debate among my team,” he said, “but I won’t tolerate division.”
McChrystal’s first controversy in the Afghanistan war
was in 2004 when he tried, amid the chaos, to cover up the fact that former NFL star Pat Tillman was killed by “friendly fire”.

McChrystal’s first controversy in the Afghanistan war

Obama stressed that this was a change in personnel, but not a change in policy and did not signal a shift in his overall war strategy in
Even people who approve killing of innocent civilians by drone attacks paid for by our tax dollars should have some understanding of Shahzad’s motives for his failed act of terror which will result in his serving a mandatory sentence of life without parole. When the judge asked “You wanted to injure a lot of people?” Shahzad replied that he wanted “to injure people or kill people.” “One has to understand where I’m coming from.” He considered himself “a Muslim soldier,” and that United States had attacked Muslim lands. T he judge interjected: “But not the people who were walking in T imes Square that night. Did you look around to see who they were?”
Shahzad answered, “Well, the people select the government; we consider them all the same.”
Including the children?” the judge asked.
Shahzad replied, “Well, the drone hits in Afghanistan and Iraq …don’t see children; they don’t see anybody. T hey kill women, children. T hey kill everybody. It’s a war. And in war, they kill people. T hey’re killing all Muslims: I am part of the answer to the U.S. terrorizing the Muslim nations and the Muslim people. And … I'm avenging the attack. Living in the United States , Americans only care about their own people, but they don't care about the people elsewhere in the world when they die."

Mr. Shahzad was unapologetic. “I want to plead guilty, and I’m going to plead guilty 100 times over, because until the hour the U.S. pulls its forces from Iraq and Afghanistan,…and stops the drone strikes and stops the occupation of Muslim lands, and stops killing the Muslims, we will be attacking U.S., and I plead guilty to that.”
Shahzad also answered the judge’s questions about his background and even his family. “I had a wife and two beautiful kids.” They have returned toPakistan to be with his parents.
Shahzad also answered the judge’s questions about his background and even his family. “I had a wife and two beautiful kids.” They have returned to

General McChaos is canned and Shahzad is going to spend his life in jail, but how many more casualties from the longest war in