Posted on 07/20/2007 7:59:32 PM PDT by bnelson44
But other than the interpreters sudden jitters, I detected no overt emotion among the Iraqis. In fact, they were all calm, professional, and very polite. An Iraqi Colonel was generous enough to offer that he believed it to be just a mistake that God is Great was left off the flag that was used on the slides. But the Iraqis all agreed that nobody was going to sign anything that displayed an Iraqi flag without the phrase God is Great.
This might seem ominous to us. Allah u Akbar! are, after all, words that we have become accustomed to hearing when someone is doing something bad, like burning an American flag, or blowing up Americans. But these issues are more like the intense legal and media battles over the words In God We Trust on the money in our pockets, or the ongoing furor in some sectors over the phrase One Nation, Under God, Indivisible . . . in the Pledge of Allegiance. (Not to mention the dust storms kicked up by the Pledge itself.)
Seeing God is Great written on the Iraqi flag might provoke some to protest Why did we come here just to stand up a country who would write such things on their flag? But I sat there in that meeting, which was completely civil and professional, and I thought about another flag, the one flying over South Carolina. Some people call that flag heritage, while others call it hateful, painful and demeaning. And today in that meeting, I thought about the descendants of slaves who are now top military commanders in the American Army, and in that moment I knew that Iraq could make it.
(Excerpt) Read more at michaelyon-online.com ...
Boys and girls, that feller, right there, is the best reporter in this war.
It ain’t even close.
ping
He is the only one of the thousands who have been over here I have seen tell the truth.
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