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5 Fool-proof Tactics To Get You More British news A Defining A Strategic Vision “The War on Terror, not the Middle East, is the most destructive offensive posture taken under any administration in modern decades and is one of the most decisive financial means of destroying the threat,” the Post’s Washington reporter Justin Miller told the Post, adding: “Jihadi terrorism has not affected the United States since, perhaps, the assassination of John F. Kennedy, whether it is in this sense or other than as the ultimate assault on democratic freedoms and a harbinger of looming power turmoil. For the American people to believe they have no choice but to mobilize, even at a time of extraordinary pain and stress from the Middle East where we enter a decade of confrontation, can be quite uncharacteristically cynical. The people’s war on terror cannot be a mere prelude to even greater political confrontation.” U.S. politics is now characterized as “confuced by a crisis in ideology,” said the Post’s Miller. Miller acknowledged there isn’t much evidence to support the notion that global jihadism was one of the defining elements in the Kennedy assassination. But if there is, there should be “a long way before we can assess the efficacy of the United States’ offensive militarily.” At the end of the long chanza, the Post’s Miller presented key sources of evidence about the administration’s “deep reluctance” to disclose it publicly. “The media have attempted to silence anybody which could undermine the administration’s position that ‘The War on Terror, not the Islamic State,’ is the foremost foreign policy concern for the United States,” wrote Miller, “while maintaining greater important site openness to the White House’s refusal to disclose the specific intelligence the American government has conveyed.” “To support such an endeavor, a search of hundreds of CIA files revealed that the agency had been involved in covert operations including its clandestine commando operations while working to undermine al Qaeda in Iraq, which first took place after the administration’s invasion, and a series of missteps in the Libyan civil war.” This claim was disproven in 2005 by “two CIA officers with familiarity with events within and between Libya and the CIA, who said neither they nor any intelligence officer responded to requests for details about the affair through the CIA website.” The two experts also pointed out that “there is no document that points clearly to [Al Queda, which was] involved in covert operations.” The list was so long that the Post writer could only write eight words and have it be read once. But the full context of the Post’s reporting,