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Monday, March 27, 2006

Immigration is the hot topic in Washington this week. Senator Specter has a bill he is trying to hammer out that would legalize the 11 million illegal immigrants estimated to be living and working in this country today. McCain and Kennedy have a similar bill, while the House has passed a much tougher bill. Let the sausage making continue.

There are reports that Abdul Rahman will be (or has already been) released. Apparently, authorities in Afghanistan are trying to determine if Rahman is mentally ill.

Strategypage has this analysis of the recent violence in Iraq...

Deaths from revenge killings now exceed those from terrorist or anti-government activity. Al Qaeda is beaten, and running for cover. The Sunni Arab groups that financed thousands of attacks against the government and coalition groups, are now battling each other, al Qaeda, and Shia death squads. It's not civil war, for there are no battles or grand strategies at play. It's not ethnic cleansing, yet, although many Sunni Arabs are, and have, fled the country. What's happening here is payback. Outsiders tend to forget that, for over three decades, a brutal Sunni Arab dictatorship killed hundreds of thousands of Kurds and Shia Arabs. The surviving victims, and the families of those who did not survive, want revenge. They want payback. And even those Kurds Shia Arabs who don't personally want revenge, are inclined to tolerate some payback. Since the Sunni Arabs comprise only about 20 percent of the population, and no longer control the police or military, they are in a vulnerable position.

This new pattern may explain the recent U.S./Iraqi action against the Sadr's militia.

Bill Crawford has another installment of his link-filled compendium of good news from Iraq.

Here is an interesting interview, via Instapundit, of the author Claire Berlinski, about the intellectual, social, economic and political ferment in Europe.

Charles Krauthammer makes a compelling argument as to why allowing the Iranians, under their current leadership, to acquire nuclear weapons is far more dangerous than the North Koreans (or anybody else, for that matter).

We're now at the dawn of an era in which an extreme and fanatical religious ideology, undeterred by the usual calculations of prudence and self-preservation, is wielding state power and will soon be wielding nuclear power.

We have difficulty understanding the mentality of Iran's newest rulers. Then again, we don't understand the mentality of the men who flew into the World Trade Center or the mobs in Damascus and Tehran who chant "Death to America"--and Denmark(!)--and embrace the glory and romance of martyrdom.

This atavistic love of blood and death and, indeed, self-immolation in the name of God may not be new--medieval Europe had an abundance of millennial Christian sects--but until now it has never had the means to carry out its apocalyptic ends.

That is why Iran's arriving at the threshold of nuclear weaponry is such a signal historical moment. It is not just that its President says crazy things about the Holocaust. It is that he is a fervent believer in the imminent reappearance of the 12th Imam, Shi'ism's version of the Messiah. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been reported as saying in official meetings that the end of history is only two or three years away. He reportedly told an associate that on the podium of the General Assembly last September, he felt a halo around him and for "those 27 or 28 minutes, the leaders of the world did not blink ... as if a hand was holding them there and it opened their eyes to receive" his message. He believes that the Islamic revolution's raison d'etre is to prepare the way for the messianic redemption, which in his eschatology is preceded by worldwide upheaval and chaos. How better to light the fuse for eternal bliss than with a nuclear flame?

Read the whole thing.

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