Iraq myths (edited)
(edit) since I posted this, Aaron has shown that this guy Miniter is wrong. Regarding the Mexican border argument, Aaron said:
So, Miniter seemed to be "in the know", but now it looks as if he may be all talk.
My original post:
In an interview by World Magazine, author Richard Miniter takes on 7 popular myths about 9/11, Iraq, and terrorism, providing evidence that each one is false.
The myths are:
Read the entire interview here.
In the month of November alone, four Al-Quaida operatives were arrested on the Mexico-US border. Three were known Muslims trying to cross the border. The fourth was an Al-Qaida member living in Mexico just south of the border monitoring security activities.
My original post:
In an interview by World Magazine, author Richard Miniter takes on 7 popular myths about 9/11, Iraq, and terrorism, providing evidence that each one is false.
The myths are:
- Russian nuclear suitcase bombs may be used by terrorists (they no longer exist)
- There was no tie between Iraq and al-Quaeda (there are a number of links)
- Poverty causes terrorism (it's an upper-middle-class activity)
- Halliburton made a fortune in Iraq (it made a terrible profit and is trying to sell its Iraq unit)
- Racial profiling is important to stop Muslim terrorists (more Muslims are westerners, asians, and/or women; profiling relationships would work better)
- Al-Quaeda terrorists infiltrate the U.S. via the border with Mexico (no al-Quaeda operatives have been captured crossing from Mexico, compared with several from Canada, because Canada has a Muslim community and other advantages)
- A post-9/11 world is more dangerous for Americans (the risk is about the same)
Read the entire interview here.