March 06, 2007
The "Peace" Brigade vs. the Stryker Brigade
By
Michelle Malkin
Last week, I
wrote about the Gathering of Eagles (www.gatheringofeagles.org)—veterans,
active-duty troops, bikers, activists and ordinary
citizens coming to Washington, D.C., on March 17 to hold
a counter-protest against tens of thousands of anti-war
extremists demanding immediate withdrawal of our troops
from Iraq and Afghanistan.
In
Washington State this week, the peace brigade held a
dress rehearsal at the Port of Tacoma—where they showed
support for our troops by
taunting the Stryker Brigade and local police
guarding against obstruction of the convoys headed to
Iraq. More than 300 Stryker vehicles and other equipment
are being moved from Fort Lewis to Iraq in support of
the 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division's upcoming
deployment as part of the ongoing "surge" and
counterinsurgency efforts. The Strykers are equipped
with slat armor to protect the troops from
rocket-propelled grenades.
Yes, the same ilk that purport to care so much about
the troops
not having enough armor and protection stood and
jeered at those deploying to bring more protection to
their fellow soldiers in Iraq.
Such patriots, aren't they?
Members of the anti-military mob shouted
condescendingly at our volunteer soldiers rolling past
them: "Free the troops!" "No justice, no
peace!" "You don't have to go!" One lunatic
with a bullhorn urged Stryker Brigade members to
disobey their commanding officers and sneered:
"Your sergeant is a douchebag!"
Such patriots, aren't they?
These same bullies staged obstructionist protests at
the Port of Olympia in Washington last year—blocking
gates to prevent convoys from passing and attempting to
tear down fencing following the arrival of a large
military ship bound for Iraq. In April 2003, "peace"
protesters
waged similar attacks in Oakland, Calif., where they
attempted to shut down a port involved in shipping
military supplies to soldiers. The Bay Area anti-war
brigade set out deliberately and specifically to prevent
private businesses from fulfilling their federal
contracts with the Department of Defense and U.S. Agency
for International Development related to the war and
post-war reconstruction in Iraq.
Such patriots, aren't they?
A mother of one of the Tacoma soldiers who rode
silently past the spittle-spewers
wrote to me earlier this week after seeing anti-war
video of the mob scene uploaded on YouTube:
"My son was one of the
Stryker soldiers who was moving the equipment to the
port that night.
"These people are
protesting the shipment of Strykers. Strykers are what
keep our
infantrymen alive in Iraq. They are agile, strong,
and the newest ones have very accurate firepower. Once
again, the moonbats say they support our troops, but not
the war. They show it by insulting the troops'
intelligence, calling their NCOs names, and telling them
that they will die for nothing. Nice. I personally like
to tell my son that he will come home alive and we will
be reunited. These protesters sounded more like spoiled,
self-centered, obnoxious brats to me. Yet, at the end of
the line, there stand our troops. They are carrying the
weight of the free world on their shoulders and they get
to hear this mindless drivel before they deploy."
"The last big protest was
at the Port of Olympia last year. The moonbats did
damage to a fence around a yard that protects military
equipment. The Strykers they were protesting that day
were Strykers that were equipped with medical
intervention equipment. The protesters were marching
against medical supplies that our soldiers need
desperately, and once again the very equipment that
keeps our soldiers alive. It seems that there are two
populations of people who hate Strykers:
moonbats and
insurgents."
Question their patriotism? You bet I do.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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