Lot’s of reactions to the U.S. military strike that killed Iranian terrorist mastermind Qassem Suleimani.
Here’s an appraisal of Suleimani’s value by Gen. Stanley McChrystal from a few years ago:
Suleimani is no longer simply a soldier; he is a calculating and practical strategist. Most ruthlessly and at the cost of all else, he has forged lasting relationships to bolster Iran’s position in the region. No other individual has had comparable success in aligning and empowering Shiite allies in the Levant. His staunch defense of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has effectively halted any progress by the Islamic State and other rebel groups, all but ensuring that Assad remains in power and stays solidly allied to Iran. Perhaps most notably, under Suleimani’s leadership, the Quds Force has vastly expanded its capabilities. His shrewd pragmatism has transformed the unit into a major influencer in intelligence, financial, and political spheres beyond Iran’s borders.
It would be unwise, however, to study Suleimani’s success without situating him in a broader geopolitical context. He is a uniquely Iranian leader, a clear product of the country’s outlook following the 1979 revolution. His expansive assessment of Iranian interests and rights matches those common among Iranian elites. Iran’s resistance toward the United States’ involvement in the Middle East is a direct result of U.S. involvement in the Iran-Iraq War, during which Suleimani’s worldview developed. Above all else, Suleimani is driven by the fervent nationalism that is the lifeblood of Iran’s citizens and leadership.
Suleimani’s accomplishments are, in large part, due to his country’s long-term approach toward foreign policy. While the United States tends to be spasmodic in its responses to international affairs, Iran is stunningly consistent in its objectives and actions.
The Quds Force commander’s extended tenure in his role—he assumed control of the unit in 1998—is another important factor. A byproduct of Iran’s complicated political environment, Suleimani enjoys freedom of action over an extended time horizon that is the envy of many U.S. military and intelligence professionals. Because a leader’s power ultimately lies in the eyes of others and is increased by the perceived likelihood of future power, Suleimani has been able to act with greater credibility than if he were viewed as a temporary player.
Ben Shapiro says that Suleimani’s death is great news:
On Thursday, in the most audacious and brave move of his presidency, President Trump ordered the killing of Iran’s top terrorist, Qassem Soleimani — a man who was also the top general of the country. Commentators have compared Iran’s loss of Soleimani to the loss of the Defense Secretary, head of the CIA, and the head of the FBI simultaneously. Soleimani was the man closest to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and some speculated that he would succeed Khamenei at some point. Now, he’s been reduced to pulp.
His death makes the world a significantly better and safer place. Soleimani was responsible for the killing of hundreds of American troops in Iraq (by State Department estimates, 17 percent of all Americans killed in Iraq were Soleimani’s handiwork), the arming of Hezbollah in Lebanon with tens of thousands of rockets, the Houthi terrorism in Yemen, the building of Islamic Jihad, and a bevy of terror plots all around the world, including the latest assault on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. Speculation that this represents an “act of war” is utterly baseless — Soleimani is a terrorist who was killed while abroad, in Iraq, planning further acts of terrorism.
Suggestions that the Trump administration is responsible for “escalation” with Iran — after months of Iranian aggression in international waters and in foreign countries, after downing an American drone and attacking an American embassy — are absurd and morally disgusting. When Nancy Pelosi tweets that it is “disproportionate” to kill a terror leader planning action against Americans and our assets and allies, she’s not just reflecting moral confusion — she’s evidencing moral foolishness of the highest order.
Snip.
it’s obvious that President Trump was attempting to restore a deterrence against Iran that had been completely disintegrated by the Obama administration. History didn’t begin with Trump, and Iranian aggression didn’t start with the end of the Iran nuclear deal. Far from it. Iran has become more powerful and aggressive thanks to the overt planning of the Obama administration.
President Obama’s preferred strategy with Iran was wishful thinking and bribery. The Obama administration openly lied to the American people, claiming that there was a “moderate” faction inside the Iranian government that would be elevated through signing them checks and ushering them into the world economy. That was utter nonsense, as national security aide Ben Rhodes later admitted. The Obama administration engaged in the worst sort of appeasement, guaranteeing billions of dollars in economic growth to a regime dedicated to the destruction of American interests around the world and hell-bent on regional domination.
When Trump entered office, after years of increased Iranian aggression in the region, he pulled out of the bribery arrangement. Iran increased its aggression, including targeting American interests and allies directly. Trump ignored that or responded minimally for years. Then the Iranians attacked an American embassy. That was the final straw, and Soleimani was on the chopping block.
The fact that the Trump administration was unwilling to pay off the world’s worst terror regime, that the terror regime never stopped pursuing terrorism, and that the Trump administration responded — all of that Trump administration action is not only perfectly reasonable, but perfectly moral.
For all this talk of the killing being “unlawful” from the ruffled petticoats crowd, remember that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard in it’s entirity, including the Qods Force, has been designated a terrorist group by the State Department. Legal scholar Alan Dershowitz, has also noted that it was lawful:
The targeted killing of Soleimani was a lawful, proportional, preemptive military action against a combatant enemy who had killed and was planning to kill Americans. See my book: Preemption: A Knife that Cuts Both Ways.
— Alan Dershowitz (@AlanDersh) January 3, 2020
Insta weighs in. He notes that an Iranian resistance leaders hailed the killing as “an ‘irreparable blow’ to the Iranian regime.” (Caveat: Resistance leaders and disgruntled ExPats are always saying things like this. Remember how Ahmed Chalabi said Iraqis were just itching for a chance to rise up against Saddam Hussein en mass when we invaded?)
Trump Derangement Syndrome has gotten so bad that Democrats can’t even celebrate the death of a terrorist mastermind:
Given the indisputable terrorist activities of IRGC, with Soleimani at the helm, it would seem that celebrating his death would come naturally, in the same way that commentators on both sides of the aisle expressed relief and joy that Osama bin Laden had finally been captured and killed in 2011. According to the Pentagon, at the time of his death, Soleimani was in the process of planning future attacks on Americans diplomats and service members currently in the region, his death being treated as a means of foiling those plans and possibly deterring future ones from taking shape.
But reactions to the killing from media talking heads were predictably pathetic, given that they immediately assume the direct opposite of Trump’s position on any given issue, no matter the level of intellectual gymnastics such maneuvers require.
Unsurprisingly, Trump’s targeted killing of the terrorist leader has been deemed a litany of unseemly adjectives, including “reckless” and “incoherent.” Perhaps the most breathtakingly stupid reaction has been the notion that this attack somehow represented the first strike or an “act of war,” as if Iran and its proxies had not been targeting U.S. bases, seizing control of oil tankers, and laying siege on our embassy in Baghdad these last few months.
CarpeDonktum is just savage:
(Hat tip: Ace of Spades HQ.)
And the tweets! So many tweets! Evidently killing murderous Islamic terrorists just brings out the best in Twitter. Whoever popped up to do the Suleimani parody account is on fire:
Well:
1) It's very hot
2) All the beer is warm
3) All the virgins are men
4) This Adolf guy won't shut up
5) Lot of pissed off suicide bombers saying this wasn't what they signed up for https://t.co/7fYCqWfTds— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
Stop asking me to find politicians you dislike down here. I still can't even find one of my nuts.
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
The good news: There's no kids down here, so Epstein can't do shit
The bad news: He thinks I'm hot
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
On the bright side, I lost a lot of weight today
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
A missile https://t.co/kkDySv0luj
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
I may be an evil, murderous Quds mercenary, but at least I still have a soul.
How dare you. https://t.co/lEXhxG1Onc
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
Rose I'm still not going to fuck you calm down https://t.co/7m80eQLmAH
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
Stop asking if there's goats down here.
This is hell, not heaven.
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
They've got to build a whole new skyscraper down here just to fit everyone who made the new Cats movie.
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
Can someone check on Ben Rhodes for me? He shouldn't have to grieve alone.
— Qasem Soleimani (@Qasam_Soleimani) January 3, 2020
Speaking of which:
"No question that Soleimani has a lot of blood on his hands…and that's why Obama and I had to give him all those pallets of cash!"
— BattleSwarm (@BattleSwarmBlog) January 3, 2020
Everyone is asking how hard it is to locate Iranian officials but all you have to do is tap John Kerry's cell phone
— Jack Posobiec 🇺🇸 (@JackPosobiec) January 3, 2020
STOP SWIFTBOATING THIS AMERICAN HERO https://t.co/kYrlyD2jhY
— Kurt Schlichter (@KurtSchlichter) January 3, 2020
Perhaps it would have been a better idea to send him $1.7 billion in unmarked bills, in pallets on planes in the dead of night, so he could kill more Americans? https://t.co/t5Mj2SMyq5
— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) January 3, 2020
Don't forget @JoeBiden and Obama did this! pic.twitter.com/cHvqazxsSn
— Janice (White Woman) (@jcdwms) January 3, 2020
Naturally, for CNN this is a chance to strike at Donnie Two-Scoops:
like @charlescwcooke said, this is not the behavior of a news network. this is the behavior of a politcal activist group with press credentials. https://t.co/CFS4pONfen
— 𝚒'𝚖 𝚊 𝚑𝚒𝚐𝚑𝚠𝚊𝚢 𝚝𝚜𝚊𝚛 (@BecketAdams) January 3, 2020
I know you think you're dunking on @realDonaldTrump, but this makes him look like a fucking boss. https://t.co/BbAAYrd7fd
— Jason Howerton (@jason_howerton) January 3, 2020
RT @sprengbt pic.twitter.com/jfkLetbJLx
— Adam Baldwin (@AdamBaldwin) January 3, 2020
Soleimani has the blood of upwards of 600 American troops on his hands, how could Pelosi possibly think putting him in the ground is 'disproportionate'?
— Seth Mandel (@SethAMandel) January 3, 2020
Iran sabotages 6 oil tankers in Strait of
Hormuz
Trump downplays itIran shoots down US drone
Trump downplays itAttacks Saudi Oil field
Trump does nothingIran attacks US embassy
Trump finally respondsAmerica haters: WHY DOES HE
WANT WAR?!— United States Space Force Ⓥ (@SpaceCorpsUS) January 3, 2020
Qassem Soleimani masterminded Iran’s reign of terror for decades, including the deaths of hundreds of Americans. Tonight, he got what he richly deserved, and all those American soldiers who died by his hand also got what they deserved: justice. https://t.co/1wkjtvj2QA
— Tom Cotton (@SenTomCotton) January 3, 2020
POTUS has the authority to eliminate an imminent threat without congressional approval. No one at this point knows if the alleged threat is real. It's not like Soleimani has never attacked US interests in the middle east before. 20 incidents in 2019 alone including US embassy pic.twitter.com/1ScQ9m8NGA
— Joanna Three Point Ohhhh (@JoAnna888) January 3, 2020
But what? We didn’t have authorization? Check the War Powers Resolution. There is clear authority to protect US forces. (2/3)
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) January 3, 2020
But what? We should just keep letting the IRGC/PMF attack Americans while you move your red line back? Maybe we should pay them off with a pallet of cash?
This kind of thinking is absurd and driven by partisanship and cowardice. (3/3)
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) January 3, 2020
Why would the President of the United States inform Democrats about a Strike our Military Leaders wanted to make?
Dems have literally lied, made up Fake Dossiers, leaked to the media, and Impeached him over hurt feelings.
Now they want to work with him?? Since when??
— Matt Couch 🎙 (@RealMattCouch) January 4, 2020
Terribly kind of him to tell us whom to bomb next. #OperationalEfficiency https://t.co/104dAZhxmF
— Whitest Whine / Miss Karl Lagerfeld (@WhitestWhine) January 4, 2020
Finally: “Democrats Call For Flags To Be Flown At Half-Mast To Grieve Death Of Soleimani.” ” Flags were spotted flying at half-mast around the country, notably at The Washington Post, The New York Times, and in front of several celebrities’ homes. The celebrities went out and bought an American flag for the first time just to fly it at half-mast for this important time of grief.”
Tags: Alan Dershowitz, Ben Rhodes, Ben Shapiro, CNN, Dan Crenshaw, Democrats, Foreign Policy, Iran, Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Jihad, Media Watch, Military, Obama Scandals, Qassem Suleimani, Qods Force, Ted Cruz, terrorism
[…] and then only 43 for the entire rest of the year. Funny how things settled down shortly after we dirtnapped Iranian terrorist mastermind Qassem Suleimani. It may also have had something to do with the Trump Administration’s successful pursuit of the […]