WhatFinger

Paul E. Vallely

Paul E. Vallely , MG US Army (Ret), is Chairman of Stand Up America USA. Paul's latest book is “Operation Sucker Punch – Blood for Our Future”. He is the co-author of “Endgame- A blueprint for Victory in the War on Terror”.

Most Recent Articles by Paul E. Vallely:

The signs of Sharia in Dearborn Michigan

This is a remarkable video showing "how they fight". The issue is not the Arabs at the 2009 Arab Festival , but the Islamic component. Note the coordination between security and unmarked security, the intimidation, the clash between cultures, and the lying to the police misrepresenting the facts. This video is....a warning of things to come.
- Wednesday, July 8, 2009

“Forgotten Peacekeepers” Just Launched from Stand Up America Publishing

imageYou can the book purchase at [url=http://www.standupamericaus.com]http://www.standupamericaus.com[/url] Special Price for our Armed Forces and Veterans and Families Buy now – Hot off the press! “Forgotten Peacekeepers” is an interesting read through a critical and historical time. It would make a perfect educational piece for family discussion of all ages for around the dinner table.”
- Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Moral and Political Values, Conservative Commentary and Action

- Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Paul Vallely and John Barnhart As a matter of practice, email is a very private thing and as Executive Editor of American Daily Review I would not normally publish the personal thoughts of someone else from their email on which I was copied. Even if it was simply to pass on what has all the makings of a good article.
- Friday, April 3, 2009

Mexico, Closing in on Chaos

A U.S. Department of Justice report by the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC) says that Mexican drug gangs pose the biggest organized crime threat to the United States. The report, the annual National Drug Threat Assessment 2009, evaluates the threat posed by illegal drugs by examining availability, production and cultivation, transportation, distribution, and demand. The study estimates that Mexican and Colombian drug trafficking organizations make and launder between $18 billion and $39 billion in wholesale drug profits annually. Mexican drug smugglers control most of the U.S. drug markets, smuggling most of the cocaine available in the U.S. across the U.S./Mexico border.
- Monday, March 30, 2009

“JAGged” by Chain of Command

Captain Roger Hill- Brigadier General (Ret.) Richard O'Meara, Lt. Gen. Thomas McInerny (U.S. AirForce Ret.), Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely (U.S. Army Ret.) The Secretary of the Army should intervene in the case of Capt. Roger Hill, disciplined and subject to discharge under other than honorable conditions because of the use of "excessive force" interrogating enemy agents who infiltrated his unit. All charges against Captain Hill should be dismissed and the judicial action taken against him should be rescinded as unfounded based upon the clear intent of the accused and the obvious failure of his chain of command to provide urgently needed support during combat operations, not to mention the unprincipled actions of the prosecution attorneys.
- Friday, March 6, 2009

Funding Palestinian Terror

- Lt. Gen. Thomas McInerny (U.S. AirForce Ret.) & Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely (U.S. Army Ret.) The United States plans to offer more than $900 million to help rebuild Gaza after Israel's offensive operation and to strengthen the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, U.S. officials said on Monday.
- Thursday, March 5, 2009

Mexico – Closing in on Chaos

A U.S. Department of Justice report by the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC) says that Mexican drug gangs pose the biggest organized crime threat to the United States. The report, the annual National Drug Threat Assessment 2009, evaluates the threat posed by illegal drugs by examining availability, production and cultivation, transportation, distribution, and demand. The study estimates that Mexican and Colombian drug trafficking organizations make and launder between $18 billion and $39 billion in wholesale drug profits annually. Mexican drug smugglers control most of the U.S. drug markets, smuggling most of the cocaine available in the U.S. across the U.S./Mexico border.
- Sunday, February 22, 2009

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