Dr. Obama's Prescription: More Troops for Ebola than Islamic State
Photo Credit: BreitbartYou think Ebola is scary now, just wait until Doctor Obama gets through with it.
Declaring the deadly viral epidemic a national security threat, the president who invented Obamacare is dispatching our military to West Africa. Into the jungled Hot Zone he plans to send some three thousand U.S. troops trained to fight soldiers of war and enemy combatants.
No hedging, hemming or hawing. That’s 3,000 sets of boots on the ground.
Nearly twice as many as the president will admit he is committing to combat the Islamic State group in Iraq.
Of course, that does not count the number of boots on the ground that will be dispatched into Iraq after one of our courageous fighter pilots gets shot down or has to eject over enemy territory.
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Photo Credit: AFP / Zoom Dosso You think Ebola is scary now, just wait until Doctor Obama gets through with it.
By AFP.
A second deployment of United States troops arrived in Liberia on Sunday as part of an eventual mission of 3,000 soldiers helping its beleaguered health services battle the Ebola outbreak.
The contingent will be focused on training local health workers and setting up facilities to help Liberia and its neighbours halt the spread of the epidemic, which has left more than 2,600 dead across west Africa.
“Some American troops came soon this morning. They arrived with tactical jeeps,” a source at Roberts international airport, near Monrovia, told AFP.
The source was unable to give the size of the unit, which arrived in one aircraft, but the US has already announced it was planning to send 45 troops over the weekend.
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The Washington Post reports today that al Qaeda’s successful attack on the Algerian natural gas plant has greatly boosted al Qaeda’s prestige in Africa. Along the way, the Post notes rather casually:
BAMAKO, Mali — The four-day hostage crisis in the Sahara reached a bloody conclusion on Saturday as the Algerian Army carried out a final assault on the gas field taken over by Islamist militants, killing most of the remaining kidnappers and raising the total of hostages killed to at least 23, Algerian officials said.