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Friday, September 10, 2021
Thursday, September 9, 2021
And introduction to the Taliban's new government
Former Bergdahl platoon member 'horrified' to see ex-Gitmo detainees serving in Afghan government
Josh Korder says Obama's Bergdahl prisoner swap legitimized the Taliban
[That's right folks. Four of the 5-for-1 swap for deserter Bergdahl are now serving in the Taliban run government. Let me introduce them.]
Abdul Haq Wasiq (left) as director of intelligence and Mullah Noorullah Noori as minister of borders and tribal affairs.
We had them locked up at Gitmo and Barry released them despite the fact he was warned "they're too dangerous to release". So there is no two ways about it. Barry played a major role in the overthrow of Afghanistan! Imagine this was Trump (president or not) he would be tormented by the press to no end. Of course they won't lay a glove on Barry.
By the way these dogs were released in 2014. Wonder how many people they killed before Bribem stumbled his way into the Afghan debacle?
Wonder if Barry has any concerns, regrets, after unleashing the Gitmo five upon Afghanistan where the entire country is now ruled by terrorists?
Almost puked when I saw this at the checkout line!
Former U.S. Army sergeant and Bergdahl platoon member Josh Korder blasts decision for the prisoner swap, says he is fearful what the Taliban will do now that they have power
A former member of Bowe Bergdahl's platoon, Josh Korder, expressed his disgust over former Guantanamo Bay detainees securing senior leadership roles in the Taliban's interim government. During an interview on "Fox & Friends First"on Thursday, Korder said he was both "heartbroken" and "horrified" over the news.
"They spent so much time with us, they know our inner workings," Korder said when asked about what the former prisoners are capable of. "The one gentleman is supposed to be the mastermind behind the entire fall of Afghanistan."
"He got up and close and personal with us and probably learned a little bit about our hubris and who we are as a nation, and made this plan to retake Afghanistan," said Korder.
"You can see how successful this plan was; they got it back in 11 days."
Meanwhile, Americans and U.S. allies remain stranded behind enemy lines in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, although it is still unclear just how many people have been left behind.
A series of Republican senators asked the Biden administration to provide a full, detailed account of who exactly was still stranded by Tuesday night, however, the White House missed the deadline.
"I am worried that the silence from Afghanistan right now is those people probably having been killed. That's just the way the Taliban operates," Korder replied when asked about those still stuck in the country.
Korder argued the Bergdahl prisoner swap in 2014 legitimized the terror group, which now runs the country, and that set the stage for a re-positioning of the Taliban on the world stage.
"Frankly, I am horrified. This is just terrible," said Korder.
"It's the absolute worst ending but as soon as we traded those prisoners and legitimized the Taliban, it was over."
And introduction to the Taliban's new government
Bribem not in charge, 'teleprompter person' running the country
Bribem with his handlers just before a press conference.
Five minute video.
Bribem not in charge, 'teleprompter person' running the country
Wednesday, September 8, 2021
No surprise... Trump would choose the devil over Cheney
Trump chooses Cheney challenger in major test of political clout
Wyoming attorney Harriet Hageman is preparing a primary challenge against GOP Rep. Liz Cheney. | (Mead Gruver/AP Photo)
Harriet Hageman, an attorney who lost a bid for governor in 2018, is set to get Trump's endorsement in the primary against Rep. Liz Cheney.
Two years later, she won her primary in the state, a sign she was accepted as a local. Trump, meanwhile, had just been handed one of his biggest defeats in the 2016 primary season when Texas Sen. Ted Cruz won the Cowboy State’s GOP caucus with 70 percent of the vote; Trump finished third, with 7 percent, behind Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.
But in the two general elections to follow, Wyoming was the reddest of Trump states. He carried it by 43 percentage points, a bigger margin than any other state he won.
Cheney's fate?
Some Cheney backers point to Trump’s 2016 caucus defeat in the state as evidence that he might not have as iron a grip in Wyoming. Two years later, his 11th-hour support for billionaire Foster Friess wasn’t enough to put him across the finish line in the primary against now-Gov. Mark Gordon, the race in which Hageman came in third.
But unlike this congressional race, Trump paid relatively little attention to the 2018 gubernatorial race. His support for Friess was largely limited to an Election Day tweet endorsing him.
Cheney supporters like Boyd Wiggam, an attorney who ran for Cheyenne City Council, still hope that the congresswoman can overcome Trump’s endorsement of Hageman, noting that “Wyoming is the kind of place, historically, where people don’t like outsiders telling us what to do.”
And her decision to denounce Trump for his role inciting the Capitol riots — and her refusal to back down from calling out Trump for lying about the election results — could play well in a state with an independent streak, said Wiggam.
Still, Wiggam said, a matchup with Hageman would be tough for Cheney because the challenger is “very intelligent, unquestionably a Wyoming person. If you want to see a rough-and-tumble political battle, you would certainly see a sharp debate between Rep. Cheney and Hageman. They’re not going to pull punches.”
No surprise... Trump would choose the devil over Cheney
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