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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

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JOE BIDEN: A New Approach to Pakistan

Expert Guest Post by presidential candidate Senator Joe
Biden

Today, I delivered a major foreign policy address to the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at Saint Anselm College in Manchester. The events of the last week serve as a reminder of what is at stake if we do not take immediate steps to change the way we interact with the world. On Tuesday, I wrote about my broad goals for a new policy towards Pakistan. Today, I want to explain my new approach to Pakistan in greater detail.

I’ve been saying for some time that Pakistan is the most complex country we deal with – and that a crisis was just waiting to happen. On Saturday night, it did.

President Musharraf staged a coup against his own government. He suspended the constitution, imposed de-facto martial law, postponed elections indefinitely, and arrested hundreds of lawyers, journalists, and human rights activists. He took these steps the day after Secretary Rice and the commander of all American
forces in the region appealed to Musharraf not to take them.

America has a huge stake in the outcome of this crisis – and in the path Pakistan follows in the months and years to come. Pakistan has strong democratic traditions and a large, moderate majority. But that moderate majority must have a voice in the system and an outlet with elections. If not, moderates may find that they have no choice but to make common cause with extremists, just as the Shah’s opponents did in Iran three decades ago.

But unlike Iran, Pakistan already has nuclear weapons.

It is hard to imagine a greater nightmare for America than the world’s second-largest Muslim nation becoming a failed state in fundamentalist hands, with an arsenal of nuclear weapons and a population larger than those of Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan and North Korea combined.

To prevent that nightmare from becoming a reality, I believe we need to do three things:

First, deal pro-actively with the current crisis.

Second, and for the longer term, move from a Musharraf policy to a Pakistan policy that gives the moderate majority a chance to succeed.

And third, help create conditions in the region that maximize the chances of success, and minimize the prospects for failure.

Resolving the Crisis

To help defuse the current political crisis, we must be far more pro-active, not reactive and make it clear to Pakistan that actions have consequences. President Bush’s first reaction was to call on President Musharraf to reverse course. Given the stakes, I thought it was important to actually call him – which is exactly what I did. I also spoke to opposition leader Benazir Bhutto. President Musharraf and I had a very direct and detailed discussion. I told him how critical it is that elections go forward as planned in January, that he follow through on his commitment to take off his uniform, and that he restore the rule of law to Pakistan.

It was clear to me that President Musharraf understands the consequences for his country and for relations with the United States if he does not return Pakistan to the path of democracy. Now, President Bush finally got around to calling Musharraf yesterday. As a few of you may know, I’m running for President and I can tell you this: if I’m elected, I won’t wait five days to pick up the phone to delegate matters of this magnitude to my secretary of state or to my ambassador. There is too much at stake to leave this kind of conversation to others.

If President Musharraf does not restore his nation to the democratic path, U.S. military aid will be in great jeopardy. I would look hard at big-ticket weapons systems intended primarily to maintain the balance of power with India, not to combat the Taliban or Al Qaeda: hardware like F-16 jets and P-3 maritime surveillance aircraft. President Musharraf doesn’t want this aid suspension – and neither does the military establishment whose support he needs. Nor can they afford for this crisis to undermine confidence in Pakistan’s economy, which has already taken a hard hit. So I believe there is incentive for cooler heads in Pakistan to prevail. But if they don’t and if President Bush does not act, Congress almost certainly will.

Building a New Relationship

Beyond the current crisis lurks a far deeper problem. The relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan is largely transactional — and this transaction isn’t working for either party. From America’s perspective, we’ve spent billions of dollars on a bet that Pakistan’s government would take the fight to the Taliban and Al Qaeda while putting the country back on the path to democracy. It has done neither.

From Pakistan’s perspective, America is an unreliable ally that will abandon Pakistan the moment it’s convenient to do so, and whose support has done little more than bolster unrepresentative rulers.

It is time for a new approach.

We’ve got to move from a transactional relationship — the exchange of aid for services — to the normal, functional relationship we enjoy with all of our other military allies and friendly nations. We’ve got to move from a policy concentrated on one man – President Musharraf – to a policy centered on an entire people… the people of Pakistan. Like any major policy shift, to gain long-term benefits we’ll have to shoulder short term costs. But given the stakes, those costs are worth it.

Here are the four elements of this new strategy.

First, triple non-security aid, to $1.5 billion annually. For at least a decade. This aid would be unconditioned: it’s our pledge to the Pakistani people. Instead of funding military hardware, it would build schools, clinics, and roads.

Second, condition security aid on performance. We should base our security aid on clear results. We’re now spending well over $1 billion annually, and it’s not clear we’re getting our money’s worth. I’d spend more if we get better returns–and less if we don’t.

Third, help Pakistan enjoy a “democracy dividend.” The first year of democratic rule should bring an additional $1 billion — above the $1.5 billion non-security aid baseline. And I would tie future non-security aid — again, above the guaranteed baseline — to Pakistan’s progress in developing democratic institutions and meeting good-governance norms.

Fourth, engage the Pakistani people, not just their rulers. This will involve everything from improved public diplomacy and educational exchanges to high impact projects that actually change people’s lives.

This plan would fundamentally and positively shift the dynamic between the U.S. and Pakistan. Here’s how:

A drastic increase in non-security aid, guaranteed for a long period, would help persuade Pakistan’s people that America is an all-weather friend – and Pakistan’s leaders that America is a reliable ally. Pakistanis suspect our support is purely tactical. They point to the aid cut-off that followed the fall of the Soviet Union to our refusal to deliver or refund purchased jets in the 1990s and to our blossoming relationship with rival India. Many Pakistanis believe that the moment Osama bin Laden is gone, U.S. interest will go with him.

When U.S. aid makes a real difference in people’s lives, the results are powerful. In October 2005, after a devastating earthquake, American military helicopters delivering relief did far more to improve relations than any amount of arms sales or debt rescheduling. And the Mobile Army Surgery Hospital we left behind is a daily reminder that America cares.

To have a real impact on a nation of 165 million, we’ll have to raise our spending dramatically. A baseline of $1.5 billion annually, for a decade, is a reasonable place to start. That might sound like a lot – but it’s about what we spend every week in Iraq. Conditioning security aid– now about three-quarters of our package–would help push the Pakistani military to finally crush Al Qaeda and the Taliban.

Aid to the Pakistani people should be unconditioned — that is, not subject to the ups and downs of a particular government in Islamabad or Washington. But aid to the Pakistani military and intelligence service should be closely conditioned — that is, carefully calibrated to results. Like it or not, the Pakistani security services will remain vital players – and our best shot at finding Bin Laden and shutting down the Taliban. Their performance has been decidedly mixed: we’ve caught more terrorists in Pakistan than in any other country– but $10 billion later, Pakistan remains the central base of Al Qaeda operations. We must strike a much better bargain.

A “democracy dividend” – additional assistance in the first year after democratic rule is restored — would empower Pakistan’s moderate mainstream. The Bush Administration’s Musharraf First policy was understandable — at first. Musharraf had broad support, and in the wake of 9/11 he seemed committed to
the fight against Al Qaeda. Six years later, the General is diverting his military, his police, and his intelligence assets from the fight against the terrorists to a crackdown on his political opponents.

The Pakistani people have moved on. Hundreds of thousands have taken to the streets to protest Musharraf’s unconstitutional rule– and hundreds have been killed or gravely injured in the process. The Democracy Dividend would help restore the moral currency this administration has squandered with empty rhetoric about democracy. And it would enable the secular, democratic, civilian political leaders to prove that they–more than the generals or the radical Islamists–can bring real improvement to the lives of their constituents.

Last, we’ve got to engage the Pakistani people directly, and address issues important to them, not just to us. On Afghanistan, Iraq, the Palestinians, Kashmir, Pakistanis want a respectful hearing. We owe them that at least that much.

Ask an ordinary Pakistani to list his top concerns about America and you may get answers unrelated to international grand strategy: our visa policy and textile quotas. Or she might raise Abu Ghraib and Gitmo or water-boarding and other forms of torture the Bush Administration still refuses to renounce. Pakistanis don’t
see these as mere “issues.” They see these things as a moral stain on the soul of our nation. In my judgment, so should we.

Creating the Conditions for Success

This new Pakistan policy cannot succeed in isolation. Conditions in the region and in the broader Muslim world – conditions that the United States can affect – will make a huge difference, for good or for bad. We’ve got to connect the dots – to be, as I suggested at the outset, smart as well as strong.

First, there’s what we should do. To increase the prospects that Pakistan will take the lead in the fight against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, we should rededicate ourselves to a forgotten war: Afghanistan. When we shifted resources away from Afghanistan to Iraq, Musharraf concluded the Taliban would rebound, so he cut
a deal with them.

Redoubling our efforts in Afghanistan – not just with more troops but with the right kind and with a reconstruction effort that matches President Bush’s Marshall Plan rhetoric – would embolden Pakistan’s government to take a harder line on the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

Second, there’s what we should not do. Consider all this talk of war with Iran. It is totally counter-productive to achieving our ends in Iran but also in Pakistan. In Iran, it allows President Ahmadinejad to distract the Iranian people from the failures of his leadership and adds a huge security premium to the price
of oil, with the proceeds going from our consumers to Iran’s government. And in Pakistan and also Afghanistan, anything the fuels the sense of an American crusade against Islam puts moderates on the defensive and empowers extremists. It is hard to think of a more self-defeating policy.

History’s Verdict

History may describe today’s Pakistan as a repeat of 1979 Iran or 2001 Afghanistan. Or history may write a very different story: that of Pakistan as a stable, democratic, secular Muslim state. Which future unfolds will be strongly influenced–if not determined– by the actions of the United States.

I believe that Pakistan can be a bridge between the West and the global Islamic community. Most Pakistanis want a lasting friendship with America. They respect and admire our society. But they are mystified over what they see as our failure to live up to our ideals.

The current crisis in Pakistan is also an opportunity to start anew – to build a relationship between Pakistan and the United States upon which both our peoples can depend – and be proud.

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Clinton Vote on Iran Mimics Iraq Vote

The vote today on the Lieberman-Kyl was a very bad vote. It wasn’t as bad as
the Iraq vote many Democrats in the Senate cast, but it’s certainly how the
Iraq war began. This is an ominous development. I’m with James Webb, as well
as Joe Biden and Chris Dodd, who also voted against the legislation.


Those who regret their vote five years ago to authorize military action in
Iraq should think hard before supporting this approach. Because, in my view,
it has the same potential to do harm where many are seeking to do good. …
.. … We haven’t had one hearing on this. I’m on the Foreign
Relations Committee, I’m on the Armed Services Committee. We are about
to vote on something that may fundamentally change the way the United States
views the Iranian military and we haven’t had one hearing. This is not
the way to make foreign policy. It’s not the way to declare war.

James Webb
(via Think Progress)

There are reports on MSNBC that Obama wasn’t feeling well, but he missed the vote.
That’s unfortunate and he certainly wants to be his best in the debate tonight,
but it doesn’t say much since this is the second time he’s walked around taking
a stand on something important, though obviously missing the vote on Iran today
far outweighs his Cornyn behavior. This is a bad pattern for him whatever the reasons.

As for Clinton, this is the path she took on her way to voting for the Iraq
war. Posture strongly and load up for the worst. It’s not surprising, because
she wants to show toughness. Let’s also remember she is still the junior senator
from New York. Let’s also be honest about something else.

This non-binding resolution was about Iran’s moves in Iraq, but it was also
very much about Israel. We’ve been talking about this a lot lately, which brings
me to something I read recently that is foreshadowing for worse things to come.


But one sentence from the Hillary Clinton press release of September 10 stands
out. (Curiously, the the statement is not up on Clinton’s campaign website.)
In staking out her position on "Standing with Israel against terrorism,"
Hillary Clinton defends Israel’s right to exist with "… an undivided
Jerusalem as its capital." Oddly enough, this places her in direct contradiction
with the plan put forward by a certain President Bill Clinton in December
2000.

He proposed dividing Jerusalem:

The general principle is that Arab areas are Palestinian and Jewish ones
are Israeli. This would apply to the Old City as well. I urge the two sides
to work on maps to create maximum contiguity for both sides. … ..

(snip)

So, candidate Hillary Clinton is running to the right, not only of former
President Bill Clinton, but also of the centrist Israeli Government. In fact,
Hillary Clinton’s press release says nothing at all about a two-state solution,
about a Palestinian state, or even a peace process. (Palestinians do, though,
exist as terrorists and/or as promoters of incitement). … ..

Clinton
vs. Clinton on Israel, by Daniel Levy

The Clinton
Parameters
are important. They are also where Democrats have stood since
his presidency. I have a request for a comment into the Clinton camp, as well
as having asked for the press release quoted from above, or a link, so I can
read it for myself and verify it. I have yet to get a response, though I’ve
had a conversation about it and traded emails as well. I hope to have an answer
for you and when I do I’ll report it. They’ve responded to every single request I have made so far, so stay tuned.

Clinton’s vote today is a harbinger for more saber rattling on Iran. It also
shows she’s learned nothing from her earlier Iraq vote. It is also a sign that
her Middle East policy will likely be weighted towards Israel, which hasn’t
been doing the U.S. or Israel any good at all. There’s only one thing Clinton
and others who voted in favor of Lieberman’s Iran amendment fear more than Iran’s
possible involvement in Iraq, or them going nuclear, and that’s standing up
to the Israel lobby at large. It’s not going to happen. As much as people talk
about change, things surrounding our policy towards Israel stay the same. It’s
dangerous, but no one seems to have the courage to join with liberal Israelis
who truly want piece. Clinton voting with the neoconservatives today was wrong any way you analyze it.

Biden and Dodd voted against the Lieberman-Kyl legislation when all eyes were
on them (full
roll call
). Coupled with Biden’s Iraq legislation today that passed, he’s had one hell of
a day. They both deserve a lot of credit. The Democrats who voted for Lieberman’s
nonsense don’t know what they’re doing, which is how we got into Iraq. Like Iraq, it signals danger and a possibility of one small
step at a time to kaboom.

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Stephen Hayes Fiction Strikes Again


Ho-boy. This guy just never gives up. Prep for this post begins with the
interview between Jon Stewart and Stephen Hayes
. Yeah, yeah, Stephen wrote
a book. Woo-hoo! It’s about Dick. Okay. His promotional tour for it is the stuff
of author’s dreams. “Meet the Press” is rarely offered to progressive authors.
The Hayes propaganda tour continues beyond Fox “News” in The Wall Street Journal. You’ve
got to love his tenacity for ignoring the truth. It’s positively muscular.


Dick Cheney sat transfixed by the images on the small television screen in
the corner of his West Wing office. Smoke poured out of a gaping hole in the
World Trade Center’s North Tower. John McConnell, the vice president’s chief
speechwriter, sat next to him and said nothing.

Then, a second plane appeared on the right-hand side of the screen, banked
slightly to the left, and plunged into the South Tower. “Did you see
that?” Mr. Cheney asked his aide.

A little more than an hour later, Mr. Cheney was seated below the presidential
seal at a long conference table in the Presidential Emergency Operations Center,
better known as the bunker. When an aide told Mr. Cheney that another passenger
airplane was rapidly approaching the White House, the vice president gave
the order to shoot it down. The young man was so surprised at Mr. Cheney’s
immediate response that he asked again. Mr. Cheney reiterated the order. Thinking
that Mr. Cheney must have misunderstood the question, the military aide asked
him a third time.

The vice president responded evenly. “I said yes.” … ..

The
Cheney Imperative

By STEPHEN F. HAYES

Of course, listeners of my radio show (audio – about twenty minutes in) know exactly where I’m going with this
one.

Ah yes, Mr. Hayes paints Cheney as the decisive one on 9/11, commanding that
a plane be shot out of the air. Feel the drama. Sense the… unmitigated
load of crap
.

The Norad tapes prove a completely different reality than the yarn Hayes is telling. But wingnuts have been floating this revisionist 9/11 history for a very long time. However, facts are stubborn things, especially when there’s Norad tape to back them up.


In his bunker under the White House, Vice President Cheney was not notified
about United 93 until 10:02—only one minute before the airliner impacted
the ground. Yet it was with dark bravado that the vice president and others
in the Bush administration would later recount sober deliberations about the
prospect of shooting down United 93. “Very, very tough decision, and
the president understood the magnitude of that decision,” Bush’s then
chief of staff, Andrew Card, told ABC News.

Cheney echoed, “The significance of saying to a pilot that you are authorized
to shoot down a plane full of Americans is, a, you know, it’s an order that
had never been given before.” And it wasn’t on 9/11, either.

President Bush would finally grant commanders the authority to give that
order at 10:18, which—though no one knew it at the time—was 15
minutes after the attack was over. … ..

9/11
Live: The NORAD Tapes

Does The Wall Street Journal care about Hayes’s fictional account
of Dick Cheney on 9/11? Absolutely not. They’re part of the wingnut radio theory
of Republican truth, terror and propaganda: grab the reader or listener by their
emotions and never let go. Craft the image and build the facade big enough and
the public will not only never doubt you, but follow you anywhere. It’s been
effective, because the myth is always more satisfying than the truth, especially during the Bush-Cheney era.

This isn’t the first outing for Stephen
Hayes’s fiction
. With outlets like the WSJ and “Meet the Press,” and let’s not forget Fox “News,”
pimping his fiction, it likely won’t be the last.

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Say What, Hillary?


It leaves you speechless. But then again…

Is Hillary Clinton really talking about her Democratic opponents?


In response to an audience member’s question about the war — one of eight she fielded — Clinton said America faces a dire threat from terrorism.

“To underscore a point, some people may be running who tell you we don’t face a real threat from terrorism,” she said. “I’m not one of them. We have serious enemies who want to do us serious harm.” … ..

Clinton stresses credentials

Or is Hillary Clinton already running in the general, talking about her inevitable Republican opponent? Thoughts?

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Hillary Mimics Bush on 9/11


… But none
of it matters
, we\’re being told. Not even when Terry
McCauliffe
channels
Tancredo
on illegal immigration (… \”these people\”? ….) Oh, but Terry
speaks for himself, not Hillary
. He just raises all of her money. Right.
I get it. Ho-boy.

The beat goes on… .. …

Just when you think it couldn\’t get any worse it does. It\’s bad enough that
we have to listen to Hillary (and Edwards) ramble on about no option is
off the table on Iran
, the most obvious statement any politician can make
that has the added effect of ripping off right-wing talking points. But now Candidate
Inevitable is at it again, this time over 9/11. We\’ve had to listen to Bush flog our national tragedy, but now Hillary thinks it\’s a good
idea that she get in on the act, too.

Earlier today, via John at Americablog.


\”As a senator from New York, I lived through 9/11 and I am still
dealing with the aftereffects,\”
Clinton said. \”I may have
a slightly different take on this from some of the other people who will be
coming through here.\”

Clinton said her view is that the nation is engaged in a deadly fight against
terrorism, a battle that she contends Bush has botched.

\”I do think we are engaged in a war against heartless, ruthless enemies,\”
she said. \”If they could come after us again tomorrow they would do so.\”

Clinton has urged a cap to the number of U.S. troops in Iraq, but has refused
to go along with suggestions that Congress use its power of the purse to bring
the war to a halt. … ..

FoxNews.com

I\’ve not written off anyone for \’08, certainly not Hillary, though I\’ve been
critical of her, that\’s for sure, especially over Iraq. I will also support
whomever we nominate. But flogging 9/11 just like Bush is beyond the pale. Evidently,
Democrats are learning from our losses, but we\’re learning all the wrong things.

Unfortunately, we won\’t be able to ask Hillary
or Obama
about some of our more pressing issues as the early debates unfold,
because they believe they\’re above having to debate this early in the contest.
First excuse is that they have day jobs. Real reason is that there\’s nothing
to gain by jumping in early in the debate season, because as front-runners they
can only lose.

This brings me to Tom Vilsack, whom
I interviewed
earlier today (podcasts available). He admitted he\’s not a rock star, but is \”rock
solid.\” If we had real public financing of campaigns I believe Tom Vilsack
would be getting more attention. We talked about Harold Ford, Jr. and the DLC,
and Vilsack did laugh today when I said Hillary\’s idea to cut off funding for
the Maliki gov. and the Iraqi troops was the worst idea I\’d heard. There are
many bad ideas, Tom reminded me. Maybe, but Hillary\’s is by far the worst.

It\’s true Hillary is a big target right now. But it\’s not because people like
me are gunning for her. She\’s setting herself up. It\’s equally true that the
criticism may bounce right off of her and we\’ll get her anyway. However, even
with all of our disagreements, the slams on Fox \”News\” channel\’s \”Hannity
& Colmes,\” compliments of Dick Morris pimping for Rudy, still make me mad. Hillary as a \”monster.\” (podcast)
But it didn\’t stop there. Morris said flatly that Hillary and her team were
responsible for the Obama madrassa slur. Colmes\’s whispered protestations didn\’t
mention Fox\’s own John Gibson or their role in spreading the slanderous story
that resulted in Obama freezing out Fox. Hey, but that\’s par for the course
for Fox (podcast).

Still, if Hillary wants better press from progressive bloggers it would be
helpful if she quit sounding like a Republican on foreign policy issues. It
begins with not using 9/11 like Bush. But as Markos said earlier today, it worked
for Bush. It could work for Hillary, too.

Photo Note: Hint, it\’s Oscar season… She\’s handsome (it\’s a compliment for a middle aged women). Definitely not too young. Not liberal enough. Has a great chance. She\’s PERFECT?

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The Iran Game

IRAN VIDEO
Bombs are about to start dropping
and Andrea Mitchell fact checks Karballa rumors.


It\’s the 28th anniversary of the Iranian revolution so why not beat the drums of the dumb war.

On misinformation channel one we\’ve got Tucker talking to Arnaud de Borchgrave,
editor in chief to UPI and editor at large for the Washington Times,
which should tell you where he\’s slanted. Except for the fact that he\’s got
specifics. Watch
it.

Next we have a report from Andrea Mitchell today that clarified a few things,
namely the misinformation on the KarbalLa attack. Every cable network speculated
that it was carried out through the involvement of Iran.


The second official said: \”We believe it\’s possible the executors of
the attack were Iranian or Iranian-trained.\” – CNN

NBC news and Mitchell provide some very rare push back on the White House bluster.
Watch
it.

We don\’t know anything for sure. Oh, except that Mr. Bush has put Admiral Fallon
in charge and sent carrier groups to the Middle East, all to watch Iran. Whether
watching turns to reach out and touch Iran we\’ll have to wait and see. And though
there will be no boots on the ground, everyone is speculating about bombs overhead.

One thing we do know is that the language coming out of the White House sounds
eerily similar to something
we\’ve heard before
. Cue the video…


BUSH: The Iraqi people cannot flourish under a dictator that oppresses them—threatens
them.

Our struggle is not with the Iranian people. As a matter of fact, we want
them to flourish.

Iraq is land rich in culture and resources and talent.

\”Countdown\”
with Keith Olbermann

Fast forward a few years, cue Bush video on Iran…


And the Iranian people are proud people, and they‘ve got a great history
and a great tradition.

If we fail to act in the face of danger, the people of Iraq will continue
to live in brutal submission. The regime will remain unstable. The region
will remain unstable, with little hope of freedom and isolated from the progress
of our times.

One of the things that the Iranian government is doing is they‘ve begun
to isolate their nation, to the harm of the Iranian people.

Hopefully this can be done peacefully.

I believe we can solve our problems peacefully.

All options are on the table.

All options are on the table.

\”Countdown\”
with Keith Olbermann

Now let us compare, with analysis and a little reality, please.


OLBERMANN: The accusations are well known, but does it shock you to hear
just how close the president‘s rhetoric about Iran is compared to his
past rhetoric about Iraq?

LEVERETT: No, because in many ways the rhetoric in the run-up to the war
on Iraq worked. The president singled Iraq out to justify military action
there on three particular issues, Iraq‘s links to terrorism, including
what were alleged to be direct links to al Qaeda, its weapons of mass destruction
capabilities, and it‘s regional meddling, that was making the region
unstable.

And if you look at the rhetoric on Iran right now, Iran is being singled
out for basically the same things, its links to terrorism. The president basically,
in the State of the Union Addressee, equated Iran as a Shia version of al
Qaeda. Of course, there is the nuclear issue and concern about the Iran‘s
weapons of mass destruction ambitions. And then the president is accusing
Iran of regional meddling, being the principal source of instability in the
region, much as he did with Iraq in the run up to the invasion of Iraq in
2005.

\”Countdown\”
with Keith Olbermann

The rhetoric has been unleashed.
The stage
is set
. When will the bombing begin?

Congress, you out there? Or can\’t you do two things at once.

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SOMALIA STRIKE: Ignorant Intelligence

–updated below–


Let’s face it. We’re clueless.

Pick your truth admidst the juggling “reporting.”


A senior al Qaeda suspect wanted for bombing U.S. embassies in East Africa
has been killed, a Somali official said Wednesday as witnesses said U.S forces
launched a third day of airstrikes.

Also Wednesday, Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister said American troops were
needed on the ground to root extremists from his troubled country, and he
expected the troops soon.

The death of al Qaeda suspect Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was detailed in an
American intelligence report passed on to the Somali authorities. Mohammed,
one of the FBI’s most wanted terrorists who has evaded capture for eight years,
was allegedly harbored by a Somali Islamic movement that had challenged this
country’s Ethiopian-backed government for power.

“I have received a report from the American side chronicling the targets
and list of damage,” Abdirizak Hassan, the Somali president’s chief of
staff, said. “One of the items they were claiming was that Fazul Abdullah
Mohammed is dead.”

Somalia:
Al Qaeda militant killed

Or maybe you believe this “reporting.”


A senior al-Qaeda suspect wanted for bombing American embassies in East Africa
was killed in a U.S. airstrike, a Somali official said Wednesday, a report
that if confirmed would mean the end of an eight-year hunt for a top target
of Washington’s war on terrorism.

In Washington, U.S. government officials said they had no reason to believe
that the suspect, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, had been killed. The officials
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the information’s sensitivity.

Somali
official: U.S. airstrike kills key al-Qaeda suspect

So let me get this straight.

We’re waging a “global war on terrorism,” but in Somalia, the Horn
of Africa, where we absolutely know there is a failed state in Somalia, not
to mention warlords everywhere, we have no intelligence to tell us whether our
own AC-130 gunship strike got the main bad guy, Fazul
Abdullah Mohammed
. Our Special Forces and Delta Force teams are risking
their lives, but we have no intelligence on what actually happened?

This is Mr. Bush’s idea of fighting terrorism? That and escalation in Iraq,
that is.

Blind, armed and ignorant. That’s our fight against terrorism.

Or is there more to this story than meets the eye? Maybe it’s like Iraq as far as intelligence goes. We don’t know what Bush won’t tell us and he won’t tell us anything. Same in Somalia? Nice foreign policy, at least as far as protecting the presidential posterior.

Stay tuned for more misinformation, right after the main show tonight. I’ll let you know when we’ve got some facts.

UPDATE (4:20 p.m.): Newsweek has a very interesting article, Gates Cleans House. Here’s a snippet, but read the whole piece.



Airstrikes this week on alleged Al Qaeda figures in Somalia may prove to be one of the last counterterrorism operations associated with a controversial Pentagon general who has overseen the deployment of secret U.S. Special Ops teams against suspected terror plotters, defense experts close to the Pentagon and intelligence community tell NEWSWEEK. … snip

While Cambone’s departure has been announced, Boykin’s has not. A Defense Department spokesman would not confirm Wednesday that Boykin was planning to retire, but he declined to deny it either. “There have been no announcements about his retirement,” said the spokesman, Maj. David Smith. A U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity owing to the sensitivity of the subject, said that Boykin currently was still on the job. But word around the Pentagon was that Gates would ask Boykin to go, this official said. Consultants who work with the intelligence and Special Operations community said it was all but certain that Boykin was following Cambone out the door. “If you’re getting rid of Cambone, you almost certainly have to get rid of Boykin,” says Philip Giraldi, a former CIA counterterrorism official who stays in touch with the community. “They’re hand in glove. Gates feels it all went out of control, that they’re doing too many things in too many places.” … snip

Critics of the covert program say that Gates and Cambone’s replacement, Lt. Gen. James R. Clapper, are concerned that too much collateral damage may work against U.S. interests. Giraldi says the U.S. Special Ops teams operate too often without accountability, not even notifying the local U.S. Embassy of their presence. In one case in East Africa a clandestine team was arrested by the host government and had to be bailed out by the ambassador, Giraldi says. Adds Arquilla, an advocate of dropping small teams into countries rather than launching airstrikes: “There’s a growing realization in the Pentagon that the more collateral damage is done, the worse is our position in the ‘battle of the story’—in other words, every time we kill innocents our story is much less compelling and the clash of civilizations story is much more compelling.”

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U.S. STRIKES Al Qaeda in Somalia

–UPDATED 1.10.07–

UPDATE (1.10.07): AP reports, “In Washington, U.S. government officials said they had no reason to believe that the suspect, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, had been killed. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the information’s sensitivity.”

Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was the target, a top al Qaeda leader in Africa.
Responsible for the embassy bombings in ’98.
News video & analysis of strike.


BREAKING NEWS: NBC is reporting
that U.S. airstrikes are underway targeting al Qaeda in Somalia.

Here’s more
from CBS
.


The targets included the senior al Qaeda leader in East Africa and an al
Qaeda operative wanted for his involvement in the 1998 bombings of two American
embassies in Africa, Martin reports. Those terror attacks killed more than
200 people.

The AC-130 gunship is capable of firing thousands of rounds per second, and
sources say a lot of bodies were seen on the ground after the strike, but
there is as yet, no confirmation of the identities.

The gunship flew from its base in Dijibouti down to the southern tip of Somalia,
Martin reports, where the al Qaeda operatives had fled after being chased
out of the capital of Mogadishu by Ethiopian troops backed by the United States.

More soon…. see updates.

UPDATE (11:00 a.m. – 1.9.07): Reuters“After the disastrous 1992-94 U.S. mission, chronicled in the film “Black Hawk Down,” Washington had kept clear of intervention in Somalia for a decade. But the CIA was widely reported to have been bankrolling warlords who controlled Mogadishu before being ousted by the Islamists last June.” But still no news on who was killed.

UPDATE (12:30 a.m. – 1.9.07): Okay, let’s hash this out a bit. Meles Zenawi is our Prime Minister in Ethiopia. He’s our guy that we in fact backed to invade Somalia and topple the UIC, the Union of Islamic Courts. That’s what the Bush administration wanted because they see the UIC as Islamists pushing Taliban like existence on the people of Somalia. Never mind what the TGF are doing. Below is an article that Ian offered, which I’m going to share. The TGF stands for Somali Transitional Federal Government, which is a fancy way to say a bunch of thugs who are basically doing Zenawi’s bidding in a country that is not his own. This won’t last because Zenawi has troubles of his own, but I digress.



Undoubtedly, Zenawi, under instructions from his US benefactor, has succeeded to remove the UIC from power, for the time being at least, but he has not been able to decapitate the UIC. The UIC forces hastily abandoned Mogadishu to spare civilian population from death and destruction and dispersed their militia and heavy weaponry around the country to fight another day. Conversely, the so-called extremist elements within the UIC, which Ethiopia and the US longed to capture or kill, are still out there in the wilderness, thumping their noses at Melez Zenawi.

As part of its on-going war against what George Bush described as “Islamo fascists”, Washington gave Addis Ababa the green light to invade Somalia and topple the UIC, which it [Washington] views “a new Taliban and al-Qa’ida sympathisers who were turning Somalia into a haven for terrorists including those responsible for the US embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998,” according to The Australian.

“Washington encouraged Addis Ababa to go ahead. They provided the same sort of diplomatic cover they did for Israel going into Lebanon last summer, and for similar reasons — to keep a foothold in the region,” said analyst Michael Weinstein according to The Daily Nation.

(snip)

The TFG may be recognised by some 88 countries but, in the eyes of the Somali people, it is a discredited and reviled government associated with warlords. Most, if not all, of the blood–thirsty warlords who wreaked death and destruction across Mogadishu and its environs for the past one-and-a-half-decades were cabinet ministers that belonged to the TFG.

Ethiopia’s Zenawi: Betting on a losing horse

Also see Mash’s post, which points out a very important detail, which we talk about a lot around here. The fact that people of any country in chaos will choose the devil that provides peace and security over the angel who cannot every time. However, the UIC are actually doing some good for the Somalis. As Ian also points out, think Hezbollah in Lebanon. From the same article…



On the contrary, the UIC forces brought about peace and stability throughout much of central and southern Somalia. They re-opened Mogadishu airport and seaport for business, both of which closed for more than one-and-a-half decades. They cleaned and collected mountains of garbage from the streets of Mogadishu, restored law and order, expelled all blood-thirsty warlords who killed, maimed and destroyed the lives of thousands upon thousands of Somali people and sold innocent muslim clerics by the dozen to the US as part of the CIA extra-ordinary rendition. The UIC authorities removed all barricades erected by TFG warlord-ministers in the main roads between townships and cities. More importantly, they evicted all squatters who occupied properties owned by other people and returned them back to their rightful owners.

If there were any blunders and mistakes to which the UIC authorities fell victim, it was that they have over reacted with their approach to certain sensitive and contentious issues, such as the banning of Khat where thousands of people’s livelihoods depended on, their empty rhetorical threats against Ethiopia [though Ethiopia occupied Somali territories] and the break-away republic of Somaliland where they could have won friends rather than enemies.

Such is the stark difference between the TFG and the UIC. It simply defies the conventional wisdom as to how the people who suffered so much for so many years under the warlord-ministers of the TFG would suddenly welcome back and offer support to their tormentors.

Obviously, this strike and the subsequent silence about it opens up many lines of questioning. Not the least of which is did we get Fazul Abdullah Mohammed? If we did not then it’s likely there is much more to this strike than meets the eye. In fact, If we did not get Fazul Mohammed, I’d say there are serious questions as to what exactly the strike was to truly accomplish. Catch my drift? One thing is certain, however, and that is Zenawi will lose and Al Qaeda will have another haven, with the U.S. losing out in the end. Read Ian and Mash for more.

UPDATE (4:48 p.m.): The Ethiopians, evidently, chased an East African cell of Al Qaeda group out of Mogadishu. We have been working with the Ethiopians directly on Al Qaeda and other national security interests we have in common. AC-130 gunships, which are attached to Special Forces in the area, acting on information from a Predator drone, then let loose on this Al Qaeda cell today. Bodies have been found, but they have not been identified, so it’s not certain if Fazul was hit. Fazul has been active in east African and Kenya since his twenties. Fazul speaks four languages and is considered one of the best tacticians in Al Qaeda. If Special Forces and the U.S. military got Fazul in this attack, it would be considered a huge win, according to Bob Windrem of MSNBC.

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Bill Clinton Blasts Wallace on Fox ‘News’

One thing is certain. If Clinton had gotten the word that our country was under attack, he wouldn't have sat on his ass for 7 minutes trying to figure out what it meant.

No wonder Keith Olbermann made the comment he did yesterday about Wallace “sandbagging” Clinton on Fox “News” Sunday. I can't wait to see Brit Hume cluck, then try to save Wallace from disgrace. Good luck with that one. The wingnuts jumped on the tiny clip of Clinton last night. Watch the Olbermann
interview with President Clinton
if you want real perspective.

I've got one phrase for the wingnuts: BIN LADEN DETERMINED TO ATTACK
INSIDE U.S.

Also, why didn't Chris Wallace ever ask Condi the Incompetent about this PDB
when he had the chance? Wallace is in the bag for Bush.

Bush was on vacation when he received the PDB and he stayed on vacation after he
got it.

What about the Bush
and Cheney lies about Flight 93
? Wallace never asked Bush or Cheney about this whopper. A lie is okay on their side.


…In his bunker under the White House, Vice President Cheney was not notified
about United 93 until 10:02—only one minute before the airliner impacted
the ground. Yet it was with dark bravado that the vice president and others
in the Bush administration would later recount sober deliberations about the
prospect of shooting down United 93. “Very, very tough decision, and
the president understood the magnitude of that decision,” Bush's then
chief of staff, Andrew Card, told ABC News. Cheney echoed, “The significance
of saying to a pilot that you are authorized to shoot down a plane full of
Americans is, a, you know, it's an order that had never been given before.”
And it wasn't on 9/11, either.

President Bush would finally grant commanders the authority to give that
order at 10:18, which—though no one knew it at the time—was 15
minutes after the attack was over.

But comments such as those above were repeated by other administration and
military figures in the weeks and months following 9/11, forging the notion
that only the passengers' counterattack against their hijackers prevented
an inevitable shootdown of United 93 (and convincing conspiracy theorists
that the government did, indeed, secretly shoot it down). The recordings tell
a different story, and not only because United 93 had crashed before anyone
in the military chain of command even knew it had been hijacked.

At what feels on the tapes like the moment of truth, what comes back down
the chain of command, instead of clearance to fire, is a resounding sense
of caution. Despite the fact that NEADS believes there may be as many as five
suspected hijacked aircraft still in the air at this point—one from
Canada, the new one bearing down fast on Washington, the phantom American
11, Delta 1989, and United 93—the answer to Nasypany's question about
rules of engagement comes back in no uncertain terms, as you hear him relay
to the ops floor. … …

9/11 Live:
The NORAD Tapes
(emphasis added)

There wasn't one meeting about Al Qaeda in the months leading up to 9/11, until,
that is, Septemer 4, 2001.

The terrorist czar position was demoted to below a principal's position by
Condoleezza Rice. Oh, and speaking of Ms. Incompetent, why won't the Bush administration
release the speech she was to give the day after 9/11? It's considered classified.
Why is that? Because it was going to be about anything but terrorism.

And there's also the fact that the Bush-Rummy-Franks trio allowed Bin Laden to escape after the battle of Tora Bora. That is a fact. Just ask Gary Berntsen or read Thomas Ricks's FIASCO.

Then all you have to do is look at how we got from 9/11 to Iraq.

Think Progress
has part of the interview culled from a rough draft of the full
piece
. Chris Wallace thought Clinton would just take it. He didn't. He hit
back hard. Wallace looks like one of those little boys in the playground who
decides to take on the smarter kid, but doesn't know what he's up against and
gets his little pompous ass kicked.

WALLACE: When we announced that you were going to be on Fox News Sunday,
I got a lot of email from viewers, and I got to say I was surprised most of
them wanted me to ask you this question. Why didn’t you do more to put
Bin Laden and al Qaeda out of business when you were President? There’s
a new book out which I suspect you’ve read called the Looming Tower.
And it talks about how the fact that when you pulled troops out of Somalia
in 1993, Bin Laden said “I have seen the frailty and the weakness and
the cowardice of US troops.” Then there was the bombing of the embassies
in Africa and the attack on the USS Cole.

CLINTON: OK..

WALLACE: …may I just finish the question sir. And after the attack,
the book says, Bin Laden separated his leaders because he expected an attack
and there was no response. I understand that hindsight is 20/20.

CLINTON: No let’s talk about…

WALLACE: …but the question is why didn’t you do more, connect
the dots and put them out of business?

CLINTON: OK, let’s talk about it. I will answer all of those
things on the merits but I want to talk about the context of which this arises.
I’m being asked this on the FOX network…ABC just had a right wing
conservative on the Path to 9/11 falsely claim that it was based on the 9/11
Commission report with three things asserted against me that are directly
contradicted by the 9/11 Commission report. I think it’s very interesting
that all the conservative Republicans who now say that I didn’t do enough,
claimed that I was obsessed with Bin Laden. All of President Bush’s
neocons claimed that I was too obsessed with finding Bin Laden when they didn’t
have a single meeting about Bin Laden for the nine months after I left office.
All the right wingers who now say that I didn’t do enough said that
I did too much. Same people.

Clinton takes on Fox News bias:

WALLACE: Do you think you did enough sir?

CLINTON: No, because I didn’t get him.

WALLACE: Right…

CLINTON: But at least I tried. That’s the difference in me
and some, including all the right wingers who are attacking me now. They ridiculed
me for trying. They had eight months to try and they didn’t…I
tried. So I tried and failed. When I failed I left a comprehensive anti-terror
strategy and the best guy in the country, Dick Clarke… So you did FOX’s
bidding on this show. You did you nice little conservative hit job on me.
But what I want to know..

WALLACE: Now wait a minute sir…

CLINTON:…

WALLACE: I asked a question. You don’t think that’s a legitimate
question?

CLINTON: It was a perfectly legitimate question but I want to know
how many people in the Bush administration you asked this question of. I want
to know how many people in the Bush administration you asked: Why didn’t
you do anything about the Cole? I want to know how many you asked: Why did
you fire Dick Clarke?
I want to know…

WALLACE: We asked…

CLINTON:…

WALLACE: Do you ever watch Fox News Sunday sir?

CLINTON: I don’t believe you ask them that.

WALLACE: We ask plenty of questions of…

CLINTON: You didn’t ask that did you? Tell the truth.

WALLACE: About the USS Cole?

CLINTON: Tell the truth.

WALLACE: I…with Iraq and Afghanistan there’s plenty of
stuff to ask.

CLINTON: Did you ever ask that? You set this meeting up because you
were going to get a lot of criticism from your viewers because Rupert Murdoch
is going to get a lot of criticism from your viewers for supporting my work
on climate change. And you came here under false pretenses and said that you’d
spend half the time talking about…

WALLACE: [laughs]

CLINTON: You said you’d spend half the time talking about what
we did out there to raise $7 billion dollars plus over three days from 215
different commitments. And you don’t care.

Clinton on his priorities and the Bush administration priorities:

CLINTON: What did I do? I worked hard to try and kill him. I authorized
a finding for the CIA to kill him. We contracted with people to kill him.
I got closer to killing him than anybody has gotten since. And if I were still
president we’d have more than 20,000 troops there trying to kill him.
Now I never criticized President Bush and I don’t think this is useful.
But you know we do have a government that thinks Afghanistan is 1/7 as important
as Iraq. And you ask me about terror and Al Qaeda with that sort of dismissive
theme when all you have to do is read Richard Clarke’s book to look
at what we did in a comprehensive systematic way to try to protect the country
against terror. And you’ve got that little smirk on your face. It looks
like you’re so clever
…

WALLACE: [Laughs]

CLINTON: I had responsibility for trying to protect this country. I tried
and I failed to get Bin Laden. I regret it but I did try. And I did everything
I thought I responsibly could. The entire military was against sending special
forces into Afghanistan and refueling by helicopter and no one thought we
could do it otherwise…We could not get the CIA and the FBI to certify
that Al Qaeda was responsible while I was President. Until I left office.
And yet I get asked about this all the time and they had three times
as much time to get him as I did and no one ever asks them about this. I think
that’s strange.

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Pakistan and Extremism

Pakistan and Extremism
guest post by Mash

[Via Raw Story] President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan claimed on Tuesday that terrorism and extremism had been brought to Pakistan by the West. According to the Daily Times of Pakistan, Musharraf blamed the West for bringing terrorists and extremists to the region and Pakistan as a result of the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan:



President General Pervez Musharraf has blamed the West for breeding terrorism in his country by bringing in thousands of mujahideen to fight the Soviet Union in Afghanistan and then leaving Pakistan alone a decade later to face the armed warriors.

Musharraf told the European Parliament’s foreign affairs committee on Tuesday that Pakistan was not the intolerant, extremist country often portrayed by the West, and terrorism and extremism were not inherent in Pakistani society. “Whatever extremism or terrorism is in Pakistan is a direct fallout of the 26 years of warfare and militancy around us. It gets back to 1979 when the West, the United States and Pakistan waged a war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan,” Musharraf told EU lawmakers.

Musharraf apparently either does not know his history or was deliberately misleading the European Parliament. My guess is that Musharraf is pretty well versed in the history of extremism in Pakistan and was deliberately shifting blame to the West. No military man in Pakistan can ignore the intimate relationship between the Pakistani Army, the Pakistani Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and Islamist extremists in Pakistan – they have a long and troubled history together.

The nation of Pakistan has its roots in a form of Islamic fundamentalism known as Deobandi. The Deobandi movement began as a reformist movement in India against British oppression. Over time, part of the Deobandi movement coalesced around the idea of a Muslim state in the Muslim-majority parts of British India. From that movement, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, translated as “The Land of the Pure”, was born on August 14, 1947. According to journalist Bertil Lintner, the Deobandi movement in Pakistan “through its network of religious schools, or madrassas, developed into a breeding ground for Pakistan-centered Islamic fundamentalism. Over the years, the Deobandi brand of Islam has become almost synonymous with religious extremism and fanaticism.” It is in the Deobandi madrassas in Pakistan that the Taliban movement has its beginnings.

Though originally opposed to the creation of Pakistan, the deobandi and Islamist political party in British India, Jamaat-e-Islami, eventually embraced the idea of Pakistan. Their original goal, to form a Islamic state in all of India, now became the creation of a strict Islamic state in Pakistan. The Jamaat-e-Islami has been a breeding ground for extremism in Pakistan from early in its founding. In 1971, when war broke out between East Pakistan and West Pakistan, the Jamaat-e-Islami branch in East Pakistan joined the fighting on the side of the Pakistani army. The Jamaat-e-Islami were opposed to the secular nationalism of the Bengalis and therefore sided with the Pakistani military to try to preserve an Islamic state. The Jamaat-e-Islami took active part in the genocide of 3 million Bengalis in 1971. Jamaat formed notorious paramilitary units known as al-Badr and al-Shams to hunt down and execute secular Bengali intellectuals – most notably journalists, teachers, students, bureaucrats, scholars, doctors and poets. After the formation of Bangladesh at the end of the war in 1971, the Jamaat leadership in Bangladesh who had orchestrated the killings fled to Pakistan.

Jamaat-e-Islami and other Islamist parties in Pakistan received a significant boost in 1977 when Pakistani strongman General Zia-ul-Haq seized power in a coup d'état. In 1979, Zia-ul-Haq instituted Islamic Sharia law in Pakistan by enforcing what is known as the Hudood Ordinance. Since 1979 the Pakistani military and intelligence services have relied on the Islamist forces in the country for support and legitimacy.

After the Afghan conflict the ISI actively financed and supported both the Taliban and the Kashmiri militants. The Pakistani ISI formed the Islamist terrorist group Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, a militant wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami, to counter groups in Kashmir who are seeking independence. According to GlobalSecurity.org:



Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) is one of the largest terrorist groups operating in Jammu and Kashmir and stands for the integration of J&K with Pakistan. Since its formation the HuM has also wanted the islamization of Kashmir.

The HM was formed in 1989 in the Kashmir Valley with Master Ahsan Dar as its chief. Dar was later arrested by security forces in mid-December 1993. It was reportedly formed as the militant wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI) at the behest of the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), Pakistan’s external intelligence agency, to counter the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), which had advocated complete independence of the State. Many of the early Hizb cadres were former JKLF members.

The HM is closely linked to the Jamaat-e-Islami, both in the Kashmir Valley and in Pakistan. Overseas, it is allegedly backed by Ghulam Nabi Fai's Kashmir American Council and Ayub Thakur's World Kashmir Freedom Movement in the USA. The HM had established contacts with Afghan Mujahideen groups such as Hizb-e-Islami, under which some of its cadre is alleged to have received arms training in the early 1990s.

The HM is reported to have a close association with the Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence and the United Jehad Council, and other terrorist organizations operating out of Pakistan. Hizb chief Syed Salahuddin also heads the UJC.

The nexus of groups like the Jamaat-e-Islami, the Pakistani military, and the ISI have nurtured and sustained terrorism and extremism in Pakistan since its inception. The 1979 Afghan war simply imported more militants into an already ripe and welcoming breeding ground.

It serves Pervez Musharraf, the Pakistani military and the ISI quite well to try to bury the long and sordid history of collusion between the military and the extremists. However, we ignore this nexus at our peril. To a very large extent extremism and terrorism in South and Central Asia has its roots in the Islamist movement in Pakistan. The very enemy we fight, al Qaeda, breathed its first breathe in Pakistan and now finds sanctuary within its borders. While George W Bush keeps his myopic and confused gaze upon Iraq and his Vice President profusely praises Musharraf, the extremism that we are presumably combating continues to thrive in Pakistan.

Five years after 9/11/2001, it is perhaps time to ask the General in Pakistan some tougher questions and expect some more introspection from him.

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TERROR GUY Meets Reality

TERROR GUY Meets Reality –updated–

Al-Jazeera airs videotape of bin Laden planning 9/11.
Where were you, George?

Al-Jazeera has just aired a new videotape showing Al Qaeda prepping for 9/11.

Happy Anniversary, United States.

Jihadists, we've got marketing, boys.

Oh, and Mr. Bush, say bye-bye to John Bolton.

This has been out since early this morning, but I've been juggling all sorts of
information coming in. What's going on with the Bolton nomination? Suffice it
to say that there doesn't seem to be any plan to revisit the nomination any time
soon. But no one seems to know the bottom line. Update: It was indeed Chafee who scuttled Bolton.

But Bolton is just one of the reasons Americans are unhappy with our current
state of foreign affairs. The latest Al Jazeera tape won't make anyone feel any better
or safer either.


Do Americans feel safer now than before 9/11? For many, the answer is no,
according to a CBS News/New York Times poll. …

… Compared with five years ago, 39 percent of Americans say they feel less
safe now, compared with only 14 percent who say they feel safer. Forty-six
percent say they feel the same.

More also say the threat of terrorism has grown since 9/11 than said
so a year ago. Forty-one percent say the threat has increased since the attacks,
an 11 percent jump from last year. Just 14 percent say the threat has decreased,
while 43 percent say the threat has not changed.

Many
Americans Feel Less Safe

Oh, and just in case you weren't aware, today MSNBC was the only one of the
big three cable outlets NOT to carry Terror Guy's political prattle today. Just maybe Dan
Abrams is going to go his own way on at least some of this stuff. Instead, during part of the
speech, Abrams programmed Frank Gaffney and James Bamford debating the fictional
ABC tabloid 9/11 trash
instead. It was a fitting juxtaposition, I must say.

So since we're talking 9/11, has anyone seen bin Laden lately? Oh, right, he's in Pakistan. I keep forgetting the role of our “friends” in this drama, which is anything but fictional.

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ISRAEL – LEBANON: Bush Administration Aided Israel

ISRAEL – LEBANON: Bush Administration Aided Israel –updated–

This headline should come as no surprise to anyone.

According to Seymour Hersh, who was interviewed on CNN today, the Bush administration
was actively involved in Israel's attempt to obliterate Hezbollah, which missed
the mark by a mile
. Hersh's article comes out tomorrow. Below is the video of
Hersh on CNN
. Hersh talks about the taking of Israeli soldiers as a “pretext” for Israel to act. Cheney's office surfaces again, according to Hersh, as they see the Israel attack on Hezbollah as a “prototype” for what the Bush administration wants to do in Iran.

VIEW the VIDEO



… The Bush Administration, however, was closely involved in the planning
of Israel’s retaliatory attacks. President Bush and Vice-President Dick
Cheney were convinced, current and former intelligence and diplomatic officials
told me, that a successful Israeli Air Force bombing campaign against Hezbollah’s
heavily fortified underground-missile and command-and-control complexes in
Lebanon could ease Israel’s security concerns and also serve as a prelude
to a potential American preëmptive attack to destroy Iran’s nuclear
installations, some of which are also buried deep underground.

Israeli military and intelligence experts I spoke to emphasized that the
country’s immediate security issues were reason enough to confront Hezbollah,
regardless of what the Bush Administration wanted. Shabtai Shavit, a national-security
adviser to the Knesset who headed the Mossad, Israel’s foreign-intelligence
service, from 1989 to 1996, told me, “We do what we think is best for
us, and if it happens to meet America’s requirements, that’s just
part of a relationship between two friends. Hezbollah is armed to the teeth
and trained in the most advanced technology of guerrilla warfare. It was just
a matter of time. We had to address it.” …

(snip)

The Western diplomat told me his embassy believes that Abrams has emerged as a key policymaker on Iran, and on the current Hezbollah-Israeli crisis, and that Rice’s role has been relatively diminished. Rice did not want to make her most recent diplomatic trip to the Middle East, the diplomat said. “She only wanted to go if she thought there was a real chance to get a ceasefire.” …

WATCHING
LEBANON

Washington’s interests in Israel’s war.

Oh, and I want to add some other thoughts… If you think this latest U.N. resolution will disarm Hezbollah, then you're likely part of the crowd that believed in U.N. Resolution 1559. A Chapter 6 U.N. resolution is better than nothing, because so many innocent people are dying, but it comes with no military teeth. However, the real bottom line is that without the Lebanese government getting help from the entire international community, which depends on America leadership and a change of course that actually puts us talking with Iran and especially Syria, the bloodletting between Hezbollah and Israel won't stop for long. Any way you cut it, Israel, Bush and the entire AIPAC neocon community, along with Christians United for Israel, lost this war and they lost it badly.

UPDATE (12:12 p.m.): The neocon wingnuts are circling the wagons because of rumors — they are just rumors, mind you — that Lebanon is about to fall. A Lebanese cabinet meeting was postponed at the last minute, thus bringing on wild speculation. Right-wingers are trying to get the story out there ahead of any potential disaster of Siniora's government falling, because they can't afford the reality taking hold. That reality is that Israel and President Bush would be responsible for Lebanon falling, because they put a far flung plan to demolish Hezbollah ahead of Lebanon and the people of that country. Neocon wet dreams of taking out Hezbollah in airstrikes were put above of keeping Siniora's government strong. The people were second, whose hope relied completely on Siniora's government surviving Olmert's catastrophic assaults on Lebanon, which was backed wholeheartedly by President Bush. Time will tell if Siniora's government can hold on, but there is no doubt that the Lebanonese government has been significantly weakened by Olmert's assaults, and Bush's hands off diplomatic policies.

UPDATE (1:30 p.m.): Stirling Newberry on The Fall of the Israeli Empire.

UPDATE (3:30 p.m.) Ian Welsh talks about The Twilight of the Decapitation Military, dealing with Israel's reality, which had their airforce failing miserably against a “light infantry unit,” as Ian phrases it.

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Israel – Lebanon, and the ‘War on Terror’

VIDEO: Charles Pena on terrorism.

Who can forget this screen capture by Markos earlier this week? Fox “News” and their minions were out in full force. After Lamont beat Lieberman the rhetoric ratcheted up. Unfortunately, it's been a cavalcade of extremists on parade. Fauz foreign policy strength masquerading as the real thing. But as we watch Olmert flailing in Lebanon, coming on the heels of Bush's foreign policy ineptitude launching a civil war in Iraq, we're finding out that there is a lot more to this strong on national security stuff than just babbling, bullets and bluster. It takes more than guns, sophisticated weaponry and extremist talk like “axis of evil,” or Joe Lieberman's extremist rhetoric to make us safe, as Mr. Lieberman officially joins George's club against the generals. Unfortunately, the extremists have it all wrong, on Iraq, Israel-Lebanon, the Palestinian issue, which remains in the shadows for the moment, but especially on the “war on terror”.

We're learning today that the Brits wanted to continue the terror plot investigation
operation longer, but Bush & Co. wanted them arrested immediately. Why is
this a problem? First, it's not enough to arrest people. You have to gather
enough evidence to actually convict them. If Bush and others pushed Britain
to pull the trigger on their investigation early and the suspects walk, it will
be a significant blow to the fine police work that unearthed this plot. We'll
have to see how it unfolds, but this is no small matter. It's the difference
in how you fight the dangers in this world and prosecute our enemies, as well
as how you battle the terrorists who are now legitimate parts of governments
in the Middle East.

There's another problem. It's that “failure of imagination” thing
again. Experts
are slamming Bush
on being “reactive” instead of “proactive”
in the way he fights the dangers we face in this world. It's not enough
to label an entire group of people “Islamofascists” and go on a preemptive
war rampage, hitting all targets but the one who attacked us in the first place. Coming up with fancy labeling like the “war on terror” just doesn't do it, as we've seen. Besides, you simply can't win in the Middle East through war alone.

Charles Pena,
foreign policy expert and MSNBC analyst, also lends his voice to this blog,
which he did very recently on Lebanon.
Today he emailed me that he would be talking about the “un-war” on
terror today and I was able to catch it on video. (By the way, Chuck will also be on Air America today at around 7:15 p.m./Eastern.)

As Charles states, police work and investigative work are the backbone of how
to catch terrorists. It's not about going to war. But in the end we will have to figure out why Muslims
hate us and are willing to die in attacks against this country. Olmert, or someone else in Israel, has the same challenge.

It's a lesson Bush has yet to learn. He's about the image, the picture and the posturing, as this shot of him here illustrates (h/t Christy at FDL). Their propaganda was primed and ready to go the minute they got the Brits to pull the trigger, too early some fear.

Israeli Prime Minister Olmert has joined bush in the feckless foreign policy
club.

Perhaps that's the reason Tzipi
Livni
has had a falling out with Olmert, which I thought I'd add to the
mix today. She was a Lieutenant in the Israel Defense Forces, in the Mossad
for four years about 20 years ago. Mash, who does terrific foreign policy guest
posts here on Sundays, and I were exchanging emails about Livni just this morning.
(By the way, he'll have a terrific post up tomorrow regarding a radical Islamic
group out of London.) Anyway, last week Haaretz covered the Livni – Olmert dust
up for all to read.


… Livni has been planning the trip for several days. She planned to address
the council,speak to colleagues and meet the Jewish community. But Olmert
said “No.” His reasons were that Livni asked for his approval too
late, that there was no point going after the resolution was drafted, and
that Foreign Ministry professionals objected. But that was just the cover.
Olmert brought his lingering animosity to Livni out into the open.

A short time after the fighting erupted, Olmert pushed Livni out of his close
circle.

When he read she was displaying “independence,” he sent Shimon
Peres for diplomatic talks overseas. Thursday, one of his aides said: “Livni
has been telling journalists for three days that she's going to the UN, but
remembered to get Olmert's approval an hour and a half before taking off.”

Livni objected to continuing with the military operation, which, she believes,
had consummated itself in the first two days. She voted against bombarding
Hezbollah headquarters in the Dahiya neighborhood in Beirut for fear of escalation.
Since then, she has supported the decisions, but kept a low profile. She did
not run from one television studio to another to justify the war and muster
support for ground operations. She sought a diplomatic solution.

She suggested starting a political process at the same time as the military
one, and sending an international force to South Lebanon. Olmert was not keen
at first, but ultimately clutched at her suggestions like a life belt to get
out of the military entanglement. …

Olmert bars Livni
from attending UN Security Council sessions

Livni
was a prime supporter of Sharon's disengagement plan and helped form the Kadima
Party
when Sharon broke away from Likud
(also see here).

What a picture Livni and Rice would make together. You write the caption.

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ISRAEL – LEBANON: Between a Rocket and a Resignation

UPDATE (8.12.06, 10:20 a.m.): Israeli troops reach the Litani River. And in the don't hold your breath department… as in the Israelis won't withdraw just yet.

The Litani River is shown in red.


UPDATE (7:11 p.m.): Cue Bibi, he's (no doubt) waiting in the wings.


By the time you read this post, who knows what could have happened between
Israel and Lebanon,
but let's begin.

Right now, Israel has to save face by showing “superiority on the ground,”
as former General Wesley Clark said this morning on Fox.

Russia has a resolution that demands a 72-hour humanitarian ceasefire.

France is going to put forth their own draft U.N. resolution at 3:00 p.m./EDT,
minus the Chapter 7 language that Israel wants, which would allow for military
action. It looks like they'll get Chapter 6 language instead, which does not
authorize force or allow it to fire on Hezbollah, even if fired upon. Also,
Fox just reported that Shaaba
Farms
is included in the current draft resolution, which is a deal breaker
for Israel.

Bolton will be there to push back for Bush.

Meanwhile, the Lebanese army is being sent to southern Lebanon.

However, one thing seems certain. Prime Minister Olmert needs a significant
military victory on the ground or he is finished. Haaretz agrees. So, Israel's
ground offensive into Lebanon has begun. I think it's another bonehead play; so does Billmon.


… However, one thing should be clear: If Olmert runs away now from the
war he initiated, he will not be able to remain prime minister for even one
more day. Chutzpah has its limits. You cannot lead an entire nation to war
promising victory, produce humiliating defeat and remain in power. You cannot
bury 120 Israelis in cemeteries, keep a million Israelis in shelters for a
month, wear down deterrent power, bring the next war very close, and then
say – oops, I made a mistake. That was not the intention. Pass me a cigar,
please.

There is no mistake Ehud Olmert did not make this past month. He went to
war hastily, without properly gauging the outcome. He blindly followed the
military without asking the necessary questions. He mistakenly gambled on
air operations, was strangely late with the ground operation, and failed to
implement the army's original plan, much more daring and sophisticated than
that which was implemented. And after arrogantly and hastily bursting into
war, Olmert managed it hesitantly, unfocused and limp. He neglected the home
front and abandoned the residents of the north. He also failed shamefully
on the diplomatic front. …

Olmert
cannot remain in the prime minister's office

Negotiations continue, but, as far as I see it, there's no real passion for
a ceasefire due to the fact that Olmert has led Israel into an embarrassing,
possibly politically devastating, military situation that he blew from the beginning.
Now operation save face is in its most critical phase. The IDF has got to push
back hard against Hezbollah.

One thing I did hear this morning is that Hezbollah has fired very few rockets
into Israel today. What that means only time will tell.

Via Stratfor


Israel's fight against Hezbollah is not going particularly well at the moment.
As such, sentiment in Israel is beginning to turn against the government of
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. The person who has the most to gain from the government's
problems — Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu — has remained strangely silent.
While the Olmert government will probably still launch a major ground offensive
toward the Litani River and into the Bekaa Valley, Netanyahu remains in the
background, ready to take advantage of the conflict's end — whether that
ending is a success or failure. … – compliments
Sean-Paul

developing… but the humanitarian crisis continues, as Bill Kristol spins the best he can on Fox, against any U.N. action at all. Bombs away, Israel, seems to be the conservative line. Too bad for all the Lebanese, not to mention the long-term reality for a two-state solution. Idiots, all.

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Sunny Saturday with the Middle East at War

By on 05 August 2006

Sunny Saturday with the Middle East at War –updated

UPDATE (11:00 a.m.): The headline is now U.S., France OK U.N. Mideast truce pact. I can't wait to hear the cluck-cluck-cluck of Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity. The French saved our bacon, and Israel's too on this one. …Let me also add that the idea of disarming Hezbollah is one thing, but to make this work the Hezbollah fighters need to be integrated into the Lebanese army, no easy task. Nothing else will work, because they must have a stake in the “new” Lebanon, which will also make the Siniora gov. stronger. As for Nasrallah, he isn't going anywhere. Oh, and one more thing, AMEN! TO THIS.



The draft, obtained by The Associated Press, “calls for a full cessation of hostilities based upon, in particular, the immediate cessation by Hezbollah of all attacks and the immediate cessation by Israel of all offensive military operations.”

(snip)

One crucial element is an arms embargo that would block any entity except the Lebanese government from buying weapons.

That is presumably meant to block the sale of arms to Hezbollah from Iran and Syria, believed to be the militia's main suppliers.

Other principles spelled out in the resolution include the disarmament of Hezbollah; the creation of a buffer zone from the U.N.-demarcated border between Israel and Lebanon north to the Litani River; and the delineation of Lebanon's borders, especially in the disputed Chebaa Farms area. … AP

UPDATE II (1:30 p.m.): I've been going through some Stratfor information, via Sean-Paul, and came upon something very interesting. As an fyi, all power has been knocked out in the Kiraoun area at the southern end of the Bekaa Valley, but there's more. Cue show tunes: “Something's Comin'.”



… A week ago, Israeli foot patrols in Lebanon were spotted using llamas, an especially quiet beast of burden that can go several days without eating while carrying about as much weight as one Israeli soldier can carry. This, combined with an airstrike on a power station supplying an area of the southern Bekaa Valley, signals Israel is about to make a significant move.

At first glance, it appears like an odd role-reversal when Israeli reconnaissance units are leading pack animals into battle while Hezbollah fighters are wielding modern anti-tank weapons. But as U.S. special operations forces calling in airstrikes from horseback in Afghanistan showed, mountain and fourth-generation warfare present new challenges that must be met on the ground. …

Israelis hit Lebanese Christian areas.



A strange thing happened on the way to Senator Chris Dodd helping his friend
Joe Lieberman yesterday. Appearing on “Hardball,” Dodd said he delayed
his trip to Iraq to help Joe save his flailing campaign. However, in the interview,
Dodd seemed more interested in saying the war was a disaster and we should pull
out now, than talking about Joe Lieberman. It was telling, especially when Dodd repeated over again that he disagreed with Lieberman on Iraq. Message sent
and received, Mr. Dodd, our message to you, that is.

Meanwhile, our Middle East policy is in shambles and even the RNC
is running from Bush. It's bad, people. But Paris all
over again?
You remember the Paris peace talks to settle Vietnam, right?
Yeah, those talks. Same type of screw up, different war. But now even Israel is spinning from the realization that they may be faced with yet another Lebanese quagmire (h/t Billmon).

But if you want screw
ups, listen to this out of Iraq.


Is there any way to read this other than that some significant portion of
the Iraqi media which emerged after Saddam's fall was in fact a fully funded
and operational Psychological Operations campaign? If that's the case, then
this would seem to quite a revelation. Which newspapers, radios and TV stations
were actually PSYOP operations, one might want to know. While I'd imagine
that most enterprising journalists are either in Lebanon or on vacation, this
still might be worth somebody following up on.

Information
Operations: What Went Wrong?

The pdf on the Army's
IO
is an incredible read. Phrases like “a commander must
visualize the information environment”
pepper the report. It will
be years before we understand and weigh what we actually asked of our soldiers
in Iraq opposed to the duties they were actually trained to execute. Army leaders
found IO a “nebulous” concept. Well, no kidding. The U.S. Information
Operations in Iraq was nothing less than a total and complete fiasco. But remember
when we shut down Sadr's newspaper, which began the hell? We not only shut him
down, but we started up a huge mechanism that was devoted to PSYOPS, which isn't all that shocking, however none of it worked, or when it did it worked poorly. Read the report, but have a tall cold one handy.

Fast forward… Via Huffington Post,
the picture accompanying this
article
just makes you want to scream. The text doesn't help either.

Israeli Prime Minister Olmert doing take no prisoner bombings in Lebanon while
we were barely hanging on in Iraq are not the actions of an ally. Taking into
account the civilian casualties the brutal barbarity is all the more stunning.
But it's Olmert's actions while Iraq was imploding that really ticks me off.
It's been very difficult for me to get my head around that one; especially with
Bush ignoring it like it doesn't matter. It's unfathomable. But now the Israelis are hitting the Christian areas of Lebanon.

Hezbollah's heinous terrorist acts in the past also doesn't excuse the slaughtering of
Lebanese civilians. It sure doesn't erase the reality that Hezbollah has seats
in the Lebanese government, won in a democratic election.

Memo to Bush and the conservatives: democracy is sometimes messy and unpredictable
(see Connecticut, though there hasn't been fisticuffs just yet).

But to hear our brave and valiant U.S. troops talk about Iraq, with no way
out for them, because our president would rather vacation in Crawford than hunker
down and find solutions for the imploding Middle East, well, dereliction of
duty about covers it. I honestly don't know how President Bush sleeps at night. That he's back in Crawford rubs salt in our soldiers wounds.


… “It's to the point of being irreconcilable; you know, we've found a
lot of bodies, entire villages have been cleared out, we get reports of entire
markets being gunned down – and if that's not a marker of a civil war, I don't
know what is,” said Ramon, 33, of San Antonio, Texas.

Driving back to his base, Johnson watched a long line of trucks and cars
go by, packed with families fleeing their homes with everything they could
carry: mattresses, clothes, furniture, and, in the back of some trucks, bricks
to build another home.

“Every morning that we head back to the patrol base, this is all we
see,” Johnson said. “These are probably people who got threatened
last night.”

In Taji, an area north of Baghdad, where the roads between Sunni and Shiite
villages have become killing fields, many soldiers said they saw little chance
that things would get better.

“I don't think there's any winning here. Victory for us is withdrawing,”
said Sgt. James Ellis, 25, of Chicago. “In this part of the world they
have been fighting for 3,000 years, and we're not going to fix it in three.”

Iraqi
civil war has already begun, U.S. troops say

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George Soros’s on Bush’s ‘Terror on War’

By on 11 June 2006

Reporting from Washington, D.C., on a beautiful evening, weather wonderful, after taking a long walk after a divine supper. Now, on to the post I've wanted to share for a few days, which is now perfectly timed. After all, as our president has his “war council,” the saner souls among us might begin with talking about W.’s ridiculous “war on terror.”

I’ve read an advanced copy of George Soros’s; book The Age of Fallibility – Consequences of the War on Terror, and I can tell you it is not for girlie men. Someone in his circle will have to read it and hand our president the Cliffs Notes. He’ll never get the premise, never mind the exposition and philosophy.


I've also had the pleasure of conversing with Mr. Soros over a conference call about his book. I couldn't resist talking about Mr. Soros's encounter with Grover Norquist in one of his now infamous Wednesday meetings, which is recounted in the book. Boy, I'd love to have been stowed away in the room for that one. When I brought it up in the conference call he simply chuckled. It was a very interesting Sunday conversation with Mr. Soros, to say the least.


If you've never read George Soros, The
Bubble of American Supremacy
is a good place to start.


One of the bloggers on the call asked Soros how he felt about Bill O'Reilly's continual ranting about him, giving him credit for financing the entire vast left wing conspiracy. Though nobody likes to be talked about in the style of Bill O'Reilly, it was obvious that Soros thought of Bill O'Reilly as a mere gnat. Something to be brushed off like the insignificant pisant he is. That would make old Billy boy crazy if he knew.

Something that came over crystal clear in the conference call is that Mr. Soros wants a healthy democracy here in America and has no interest whatsoever in obliterating the Republican Party. That will come as a surprise to some, especially the Big Giant Head (as Keith Olbermann calls Bill O'Reilly).


Though on different sides of the political spectrum, Mr. Soros also said
something similar to what Kevin Phillips, author of American Theocracy,
has said in interviews. The Republican Party has been taken over by extremists,
which is causing a great deal of damage to this country.


Allow me to play stenographer so I can offer you a very brief looking into
Soros' book.

The Bush administration declared the war on terror to further its own
objectives. to this end, it magnified the danger instead of putting it in the
proper perspective. The events of 9/11 were awesome in their own right, but
the Bush administration suggested that terrorists might now gain possession of
weapons of mass destruction. To quote President Bush: “America must not ignore
the threat gathering against us. Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot
wait for the final proof–the smoking gun–that could come in the form of a
mushroom cloud.” Compare that with President Roosevelt's dictum: “The only
thing we have to fear is fear itself.”


Has there ever been a war with an unidentified enemy, undefined objectives,
unknown rules, and an indefinite duration? Yet, by exploiting fear, that is
what the Bush administration has induced the American public to accept as the
natural and obvious response. So much so that when I say that we must renounce
the war on terror as a false metaphor people simply do no understand what I am
talking about. [...]

Since (9/11), public opinion has turned against us and almost every
initiative that is backed by the United States is greeted with suspicion and
opposition by the rest of the world. Even a cursory look at the current state
of affairs reveals that the decline in American power has been much greater
than anybody could have anticipated. As a result, we are less secure and the
world is less stable than it was when al Qaeda attacked the United States.

This only skims the surface of the topics Soros delves into in his new book,
which is a fascinating read. However, again, it's dense and I do wish he'd have
put the cut and dried section about the “war on terror” up front. The density is not for the summer beach reading crowd.


The most important thing Soros says, I believe, is that “America must undergo a change of heart.” We have to understand that our gas guzzling cars come at a price. Preemptive war against Iraq, when the enemy
was bin Laden, cost us. I'd love to know what he thought the death of Zarqawi means to Bush's fantasy “war on terror”; believing it wouldn't mean the end of anything. Our “war on terror” comes at an even greater price, mainly because it isn't working, because it's the
wrong way to look at our challenges today.


Tomorrow, the Take Back America conference begins. I’ll check in during the day.

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Requiem for a Nation

By on 04 May 2006

United 93 begins with a chant. You hear the voice of Islam floating through the air like a whispered warning of death and destruction. We know the ending to this tale.

Bodies are shaved. Knives are in place. All that is left to do is wait.

The American government never knew what hit them. Disbelief gives way to mass confusion. The FAA doesn’t know what’s going on. NORAD is hamstrung. Battle stations are called. But they can’t get authorization from the president. It comes back to you like the rolling wave that hits your stomach when you’re about to throw up. You remember everything and it doesn’t stop until United 93 starts going down. That’s when all sense of proportion leaves your mind and all you want to do is scream, but it’s too late.

FAA: “We’re at war with somebody and until we figure out what to do about it we’re shutting down.”

The past interrupts. It plays in my head.

BIN LADEN DETERMINED TO ATTACK IN U.S.

I can’t erase it, though I try.

…and then it comes into view… the first burning World Trade Center building, as the FAA men and women stand staring in disbelief. Planes drop off radar screens. A white board is brought in to keep track.

NORAD:. “What the fuck are they doing over the ocean?”

The jets have to be turned towards land. But when the reality hits that NORAD has only 4 jets to cover the entire eastern seaboard, your mind crashes. It just doesn’t compute. The men in charge powerless, though more than ready to act. When you remember that NORAD didn’t find out about United 93 until after it hit, you start shaking inside. But it’s the fact that the closest jet to shoot it down was 100 miles away is the one that’s too much to take.

Somewhere amidst the outlying drama, the heroes of United 93 come to grips that this is a suicide mission and that no one will survive. They start talking…

United 93 heroes:. “Two planes just hit the World Trade Center, pass it back. … … There are explosions at the Pentagon. … … Get every weapon you can. …”

The terrorists: “The brothers have hit both targets. We’re in control. …”

The heroes have to do something. They’ve seen other passengers gutted with small knives. The pilots are dead. They’ve called their families. So all that’s left to do is gather weapons, knives, hot water, fire extinguishers, and the will of ten fighters in each one ready to rush the cockpit. But they still don’t give up hope. A man among them is a pilot, so they plot how he will take the controls and bring them to safety. No, we don’t know if this happened, because this is a movie, a brilliant work of hope and courage, but also fiction, based on evidence and guidance and records, plus real cast members who were there that day.

Played on this May day of prayer for a nation being steered by a man who long ago wore out his presidential pew propaganda, I can only think how little we’ve learned since 9/11.

Where is Osama? Roaming free. Other terrorists disappeared. No one held accountable for that day.

Where are we? In Iraq, following a path our president took when he had other choices he could make. He let slip his true mission just days after we were hit. A “crusade” he said. Then corrected himself, but everyone knew he had uttered exactly what he had meant. There was no going back. Our fate sealed.

But when you look at 9/11 through the prism of the Bush presidency today the message is clear. After 9/11 came Katrina, and in the middle of those two horrors is placed the Iraq war, as the good work our military did in Afghanistan disintegrates back to recurring stories of the Taliban and poppies. How can one man and one political party be caught on watch for three such calamitous disasters, all of which were handled worse than the one before. It is not a coincidence. If ignorance is bliss, the Republicans must be living Nirvana. To claim happenstance for such carnage would defy the facts for fiction, which is what President Bush and the Republicans have been doing for years.

9/11… the Iraq war… Katrina… civil war in Iraq… Afghanistan welcomes back the Taliban… God help us for what comes next.

A handful of heroes on United 93 took charge in a hopeless situation and changed the course of one disaster. When are the American people going to wake up and change the path of the politics that year after year brings yet another disaster for this nation? We need more heroes.

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MUNICH

By on 27 December 2005

… Palestinians murder, Israelis murder.
Palestinians show evidence of a conscience, Israelis show evidence of a conscience.
Palestinians suppress their scruples, Israelis suppress their scruples. Palestinians
make little speeches about home and blood and soil, Israelis make little speeches
about home and blood and soil. Palestinians kill innocents, Israelis kill innocents.
All these analogies begin to look ominously like the sin of equivalence… TNR

“Munich” is a minefield movie.

It proves why politicos, pundits and bloggers make really awful
movie reviewers.

It's also the most important movie to see as the 2005 season closes.
I will see it more than once. That's the test of a great film. Something you
have to see again. Not like “Million Dollar Baby,” which was too horrifying
to endure twice. But a movie with so much meaning that it has to be mined on
multiple viewings to separate the political, the polemic, from the merely practical;
the human, from the animal… oops, now I've done it. Can't wait to get the
comments accusing me of equating Jews with an animal… or will that be Arabs
and animals? It all depends from which side of the political fence you view
the carnage, emotional, physical and political, which is the crux of the argument
over “Munich.”

Tony Kushner is taking a beating for “Munich.” All because
he wished “modern Israel hadn't been born.” Oh, and then there's that
other thing: he's a liberal, a progressive, not to mention the author of “Angels
in America.” His new film has been reviewed under “Angels in Munich,”
get it?

Spielberg is taking
heat
too.

Powerline
blog
is awash in wingnuttery
wonkery on the movie
. Thank goodness the viewing public doesn't take their
tips from conservative Republicans on a rampage. But when the likes of Powerline
sights blogs writing articles about “Munich” entitled Why
Does the Left Hate Israel?
, what can you expect? Going further in explanation,
#1 in the article explaining why the Left Hates Israel, you find the following
reason: “It is an easy way to express one’s hatred for America.”
Of course, what would wingnuttery wonkery be without the “hate America”
argument hurled at progressives? Quick, alert Michelle Malkin so she can post
a link.

Then there is the New Republic's “sin of equivalence”
babble, representing the Joe Lieberman vision, I guess, whom they backed in
2004.

I won't even begin to tackle the “Jews
who hate Israel”
logic being dispensed by “The American Thinker,”
which Powerline is using as exhibit A, but which is actually an oxymoron, as
evidenced by the content of their posts.

But when The Sun's Mitch Webber starts interpreting Golda Meir,
all bets are off.

The most misleading line in Stephen Spielberg's
Munich comes near the beginning. Israel's prime minister, Golda Meir, tells
her cabinet, “Every civilization finds it necessary to negotiate compromises
with its own values.” The implication is that Meir was reluctant to hunt
down the terrorists responsible for the Munich massacre, and that doing so
was contrary to Israeli, and civilized, values. PowerLine

I'm sorry, but this interpretation is a putrid steaming pile of,
well, you know what. Webber would have thought Margaret Thatcher a pussycat. There
is absolutely nothing in the characterization of Ms. Meir in “Munich”
that reads “reluctance.” Weary, maybe, but the woman was resolute,
not to mention brutal. And when exactly did Israel become “civilization”
itself? If this is the case, then we're all on the fault line of the
Gaza strip. … Hmmm…

For more rubbish, just check in to Debbie
Schlussel's diatribe
, which strains credulity, unless you walk in knowing
she's pushing ideology and has no interest in any truth or reality.

… Spielberg’s Palestinian terrorists
have cute, young, innocent, piano-playing daughters who will be fatherless.
But he never shows the cute, young daughters of the Israeli athletes who were
made fatherless – and whose fathers, unlike the Palestinian terrorists,
were innocent victims with no choice in the matter.

Spielberg’s Mossad agents say bigoted things
like, “The only blood that matters to me is Jewish blood,” and
go around killing innocent people at whim. The real-life Mossad agents who
hunted the Munich terrorists went to great pains to avoid killing innocents…

Spielberg’s Mossad agents cry and brood a lot,
unsure of themselves and why they are pursuing terrorists. …

After it is confirmed the Israeli athletes
were murdered, Spielberg uses news footage showing pictures and names of the
Israeli dead. Interspersed with that, he shows Golda Meir and Israeli generals
looking though photos and announcing the names of the Palestinian terrorists.
They’re equal in this movie – Get it?

A gunman stands on the balcony of the building where a group called Black September held Israeli athletes hostage at the Olympic Village on Sept. 5, 1972.

(photo: Kurt Strumpf, AP)

In the wingnuttery world of filmmaking and editing, you would
have a Jew and a Palestinian sifting through the dailies on different editing
machines, counting the clips that would make it in the first of the film's rough
cuts, with the final decision left to Spielberg, who is now considered “Abu
Spielberg – Minister of Disinformation.” I mean, really, Debbie.

Mossad agents aren't human? They can't cry and have feelings?
Make mistakes and take in a woman that costs him his life? Any by the way, “Munich”
also goes the full length in saying that the Mossad agents “went to great
pains to avoid killing innocents” too. I guess Ms. Schlussel doesn't remember
the scene where the Mossad agents in “Munich” ran full out to stop
the detonation of a bomb when that same “cute, young, innocent, piano-playing
daughter” was spotted inside the apartment about to be blown. But, hey, it doesn't fit Ms Debbie's prescreened world view, so the reality is cut out and replaced with well worn ideology that fits her picture. Perfect.

Shame on anyone, especially a Jew like Speilberg or Kushner, who
takes a contrary point of view and challenges both sides.

Or is there only one side in this argument?

Or maybe we're all now to be inducted into George
W. Bush's planet preemption project
to save the homeland, which is now only Israel?

Besides, if we're to save Israel, God help them. With the Twin
Towers as an ending tableau, do we not get the message that our “helping”
Israel is actually destroying that land which we all long to see in security
and at peace?

If you don't believe our actions to save Israel have repercussion
that may actually backfire, then you obviously also haven't read about Iran's
cozy coupling with the Shiites
, post 2005 Iraqi elections, which is not what
Americans bought, died and paid for in Mesopotamia. Having now made Iraq a partner
of sorts with Iran
, the question must be asked: What good have we done our Israeli
friends?

To take the discussion one step further, which is Spielberg's
aim in moving the story to New York. What good have we wrought for America?

“Sin of equivalence”? Someone didn't bother watching
the film with an open mind ready to be challenged with a fictional story that
comes at both sides equally. God forbid. Allah be damned.

Both sides of the political aisle missed “Munich,” because
both sides were too busy pushing their own points of view through the extremist lens
of their own lunacy.

Reducing complex issues to petty partisan polarization might make
for nice postings, but it does nothing for the discussion, not to mention actually finding solutions. But also missed is the message that hatred rarely offers a satisfying endgame for anyone, because it feeds itself and only dies out after a long burning over a multitude of time. But sometimes not even then, because hatred can be taught and passed down to new generations. We are not learning the legacy of that lesson.

That purely partisan people rarely
understand or can separate art and cinematic complexities that clash with their
ideology is obvious. But trying to reduce “Munich” to progressive
creativeness, or people who have a self-hatred or a loathing for Israel, all
because the artists in question make the audience uncomfortable with their presupposed
political positioning, is tantamount to kindergarten antics by schoolyard bullies
discontent with his or her own mental ineptitude to tackle the questions at hand. And that goes for your side
too.

As I sat watching the credits roll, listening to the magnificent
scoring, I caught the comments coming from the long line of movie goers walking
by slowly, single file, as they paraded out the exit. An elderly Jewish couple
walked by, the man whispering softly in his wife's ear. The last sound bite
of their conversation said it all for me.

“We keep doing the same thing over and over again, but we're
not getting anywhere,” said the Jew.

As a gentile, for so many reasons, all I could do was nod.

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Condi, Condi, CONDI

By on 16 October 2005

But the fact of the matter is that when we
were attacked on September 11, we had a choice to make. We could decide that
the proximate cause was al-Qaeda and the people who flew those planes into
buildings and, therefore, we would go after al-Qaeda and perhaps after the
Taliban and then our work would be done and we would try to defend ourselves.
Or we could take a bolder approach, which was to say
that we had to go after the root causes of the kind of terrorism that was
produced there, and that meant a different kind of Middle East. And there
is no one who could have imagined a different kind of Middle East with Saddam
Hussein still in power. I know it’s difficult, but we have ahead of us the
prospect, and I think the very good prospect of a foundation for a

democracy (NOTE: A split second verbal gaffe happens right here, where
Condi utters the emphatic “democracy,” which is left out of the
MTP transcript. She quickly recovers to say “democratic”- as you
will see immediately following this “note” – which is a much squishier
description of what Iraq has supposedly become and something that is clearly
still open for debate.)
democratic and prosperous Iraq that can
solve its differences by politics and compromise, that becomes an anchor for
a Middle East that is changing.
Condoleezza
Rice on “Meet the Press”

Oh, goodie, we’ve got another one to add to the ever evolving,
forever growing list of reasons we preemptively invaded Iraq.

Let us review it for the umpteenth time.

We’ve gone from WMDs and a “gathering threat”
to…

“Mushroom cloud” to…

“We know where they are” and “smoking gun”
to…

To “reconstituting its nuclear weapons” and “weapons
programs,” which was bad enough, to…

“Weapons of mass destruction-related program activities,”
which was a personal low, even for George W. Bush and his bunch.

But it seems that the White House Iraq Group has had an epiphany.
Could it be that Patrick Fitzgerald has put the fear of the gods into Bush’s
neocon cult
, so that at least one of them has decided to actually, at long
last, tell us their true motive for the war?

Today on “Meet the Press,” Condi finally let the truth
leak out.

It wasn’t WMDs, the fear factor of a “gathering threat”
or a “mushroom cloud,” because we didn’t really “know where
they were,” not to mention didn’t have evidence of a “smoking gun,”
let alone that Saddam, therefore Iraq, “was reconstituting its nuclear
weapons,” which eventually became “weapons program,” then was
dumbed down by W. to the incomprehensible, unbelievable, inartful term of
“weapons of mass destruction-related program activities.”

The bottom line for the Bushies and the neocons who have hijacked
the Republican Party, was first, last and always, that they were going to take
their “conservative” strategy of being forever against something
(whatever the issue, be it sex, gays, condoms, embryonic stem cell, etc.)
and turn it on Iraq. Their goal wasn’t to protect the United States from WMDs
and nukes, which was offered up by the White House Iraq Group as the easy
way to sell the war. The goal was always to spread our way of life around
the world. That the highest rungs of the GOP have been caught mimicking the
same strategy of the people who wanted to spread global Marxism throughout the globe, seen
through the Bushies’ calamitous campaign to democratize the Middle East via preemption
in Iraq, doesn’t seem to have dawned on anyone but Patrick
J. Buchanan’s magazine the American Conservative
.

Tucked into Ms. Rice’s appearance on MTP, however, was something that
isn’t very sexy right now because everyone is understandably covering the
main story, which is Rovegate all the time. It’s understandable, because there’s
nothing bigger for Bush. But just read the following exchange and you’ll see
that, even after all the disastrous days of W. recently, hubris still
hasn’t arrived at the White House.

MR. RUSSERT: Syria–there are reports of
increased activity on the borders of Syria between U.S. troops and Syrian
troops, covert operations of U.S. operatives in Syria. Would you like to see
a regime change in Syria, and will we help bring that about?

SEC’Y RICE: What we are focused on is getting the Syrian
regime to change its behavior. The Syrian regime is out of step with what
is going on in the region, and, Tim, this is not a problem between the United
States and Syria. This is a problem in which the Syrians have caused destabilization
in Lebanon through their presence there for 30 years, and they finally now
are out. But the question is are they fully living up to their obligations
under Resolution 1559, which we co-sponsored with the French, to not destabilize
Lebanon, to not sanction assassinations in that region.

They are stirring up difficulties in the Palestinian camps in Lebanon,
which is a problem for the Palestinian territories and the work that Mahmoud
Abbas is trying to do in bringing a Palestinian state to bear. And, yes,
they are permitting the use of Syrian territory for terrorists to cross
Syrian territory. And by the way, in many cases they’re coming through Damascus
airport. This isn’t crawling across the border as they do in Pakistan or
Afghanistan. And so, yes, they’re using–that territory is being used to
kill innocent Iraqis, innocent men, women and children, because suicide
bombers are coming through there.

So this is about Syrian behavior. I think you will see over the next couple
of weeks that we will have to address these issues in a multilateral fashion,
because the reports that are coming out on U.N. resolutions about Lebanon
are going to have to be dealt with, and we will see what that means for
Syrian behavior.

The Bush administration is as incompetent on Iraq’s “border issues”
as they are on
our own
.

As for Ms. Rice talking about “Syrian behavior,” well, I mean really.
We’ve got over 150,000 American troops in Iraq, with most of the insurgency
coming from where?

Iran. It’s always been Iran, from the beginning. They were the country that
helped al Qaeda before 9/11, and it was Iran on Khobar, it’s IRAN – IRAN –
IRAN. With Dr.
Rice failing yet again
to get the Russians to help us with Iran’s nuke
desires and destinations.

So, is Ms. Rice actually floating that because Syria and their leadership
are not behaving properly we’ve going to…. what exactly, oh, you know, but
with what and with whom, may I ask?

Evidently, Ms. Rice didn’t get the memo: the American people do not support
the direction in which Mr. Bush and his bunch, including this broad, is taking
the country. Does she actually believe we’ll support another fantasy flight
into regime change? She needs to stop reading Dick
“Condi is the GOP’s next Eisenhower” Morris
and pick
up Susan change
of heart
Estrich’s book
,
if only for a proper perspective.

This all ties very neatly into what is currently happening in Washington under special
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald. The Bush administration, from top to bottom,
needs to be brought in line. Their arrogance, lack of respect for what democracy
means, not to mention their run away incompetence, must be arrested, as in
stopped, before we get caught up in yet another international imbroglio that
we cannot finish. There simply will not be a “White House Syrian-Lebanon
Group.”

Someone needs to get the message to Ms. Rice. W.’s dutiful “social scientist”
(as she refers to herself) has gone delusional, not to mention disassembling,
diabolical, deceitful, disgraceful and dishonest. Because, as long as we’re
all being honest, the only reason she’s even talking about Syria is because
they’re doable. Baby, it’s Iraq all over again.

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BIN LADEN DETERMINED TO ATTACK INSIDE UNITED STATES

By on 08 April 2004

“In the spirit of further declassification, this is what the August 6th memo said to the President: “The F.B.I. indicates patterns of suspicious activities in the United States consistent with preparations for hijacking.” -Bob Kerrey, 9.11 Commission

The Sovietologist showed up to give a speech.

The Commission expected answers.

What emerged wasn’t what the Bush administration had hoped for.

Isn’t it a fact, Dr. Rice, that the August 6th PDB (Presidential Daily
Briefing) warned against possible attacks in this country. And I ask
you if you recall the title of that PDB?” – Richard Ben-Veniste, 9.11 Commission

The title: “BIN LADEN DETERMINED TO ATTACK INSIDE UNITED STATES.”

Yet, the Sovietologist is sticking to her story, that she doesn’t recall being briefed on airplanes being used as missiles.

“A former translator for the FBI with top-secret security clearance says she hasprovided information to the panel investigating the 11 September attacks which proves senior officials knew of al-Qa’ida’s plans to
attack the US with aircraft months before the strikes happened. She said the claim by the National Security Adviser, Condoleezza Rice, that there was no such information was ‘an outrageous lie.” – Independent.co.uk

Meanwhile, on the rogue state front…

“Iraqi insurgents kidnapped eight South Koreans, three Japanese and two Arab Israelis, and captors armed with automatic rifles and swords threatened in a video released Thursday to burn the Japanese alive if Tokyo does not withdraw from the U.S.-led coalition within three days. – USA Today

The poise of the Sovietologist was punctuated by her seminar like
answers, as if she were talking to students.

It was the War and Peace of a tale of terrorism threats, proffered by
one of the people closest to the President.

As the Sovietologist wound her rhetorical web, watching and listening,
the viewer kept waiting for the good professor to at least pose a
minute on a point.

Instead she filibustered.

While in that rogue state a world away…

“United States
forces are confronting a broad-based Shiite uprising that goes well
beyond supporters of one militant Islamic cleric who has been the focus
of American counterinsurgency efforts, United States intelligence
officials said Wednesday. That assertion contradicts repeated
statements by the Bush administration and American officials in Iraq.”
The New York Times

The former senator, Bob Kerrey, called the Sovietologist on her
unending soliloquies…

And on the swatting of flies.

“You’ve used the phrase a number of times. I’m hoping my question will disabuse you of using it in the future. You said the President was tired of swatting flies.  Can you tell me one example when the President swatted a fly when it came to al Qaeda, prior to 9.11? – Bob Kerrey, 9.11 Commission

The Sovietologist’s soliloquy resumed…

Cut off by an impatient interrogator… “No. No. What fly had he
swatted?”

Condi’s comment didn’t quite come…

Back to the senator… “No. He hadn’t swatted – Dr. Rice, we only
swatted a fly once on the 20th of August 1998.  We didn’t swat any
flies afterwards.  How the hell could he be tired?”

“It was a figure of speech,” smiled the Sovietologist.

Killing the fly, finally…

“Well, I think it’s an unfortunate figure of speech, especially after the attack of the Cole on the 12th of October 2000.  It would not have been a swatting of fly. It would not have been – We did not need to wait to get a strategic plan. Dick Clarke had in his memo, on the 25th of January, overt military operations.  He turned that memo around in 24 hours… There were a lot of plans in the Clinton administration, military plans in the Clinton administration..” – Bob Kerrey

Then, on the spot, Bob Kerrey declassified two appendixes from Richard
Clarke’s January 25th memo:> APPENDIX A:  “Strategy for the elimination of the Jihadist Threat of al Qaeda.”; APPENDIX B: “Military Plan for al Qaeda.”

The Sovietologist insisted:  “We were not presented with a plan.”

The senator dissented: “That’s not true… I’ve heard you say that…
If that January 25th memo was declassified…”

And this just in…

“The commission
investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks announced yesterday that it
has identified 69 documents from the Clinton era that the Bush White
House withheld from investigators and which include references to al
Qaeda, Osama bin Laden and other issues relevant to the panel’s work.”
“9/11 Panel: Bush White House Withheld Papers,” by Dan Eggen
WashingtonPost.com

And here are just nine things (out of the innumerable) that we knew
before 9.11:

On January 25, 2001, Richard Clarke offered a memo that included two appendixes entitled: APPENDIX “Strategy for the Elimination of the Jihadist Threat of al Qaeda”; APPENDIX B: “Military Plan for alQaeda.”

In January 2001, Hart-Rudman Commission on national security,
established by President Clinton and former Speaker of the House Newt
Gingrich, delivered a heart sinking warning that the United States was
going to be hit and hit hard domestically.

On July 5, 2001, the “chatter” and threats coming in through U.S.
intelligence was so intense that a high level meeting was held to
discern what damage was coming our way.  There was no follow-up
meeting.

Five days after the July 5 meeting, F.B.I. agent Kenneth Williams
suggested that the F.B.I. should investigate whether al Qaeda
operatives are using U.S. flight schools for training and whether Osama bin Laden agents might be trying to infiltrate U.S. civil aviation systems as pilots; and suggested a national program to track suspicious flight schools. (This is known as the Phoenix memo.)

Colleen Rowley of the F.B.I., who became a renowned whistleblower,
warned of Zacarias Moussaoui, who was attending flight school in order
to learn how to fly a plane once it was in the air, but not how to take off from the ground or land it.

By August 2001, the Bush administration knew about al Qaeda’s
involvement in the first World Trade Center bombing.

By August 2001, the Bush administration knew that the Cole
bombing was carried out by al Qaeda, but they thought that event was
“old.”

By August 2001, the Bush administration knew the U.S., under the
Clinton administration, had thwarted an al Qaeda threat to blow up Los
Angeles International Airport (known as the Millennium Bombing).

By August 2001, our intelligence agencies had thwarted terrorist
cells in Brooklyn, New York, and Boston; and the C.I.A. knew that two
Muslim men with jihadist connections were living in the United States.

During the entire nine months leading up to 9.11, the Sovietologist, Dr. Condoleezza Rice, did not mention al Qaeda or Osama bin Laden once, at any time, ever.

On August 6th, 2001, George W. Bush received the memo entitled, “BIN
LADEN DETERMINED TO ATTACK INSIDE UNITED STATES.”

President Bush continued his vacation in Crawford, Texas, where you can find him vacationing today.

There was never a full principals meeting, at the cabinet level, prior
to September 4, 2001, which included the head of counterterrorism,
Richard Clarke.

On September 11, Dr. Rice was scheduled to give a major foreign policy
speech for the Bush administration outlining their priorities, which
were, among others, missile defense and the issue of dealing with rogue states.

Though asked for this speech, the Bush administration has refused to
present it to the 9.11 Commission.

Meanwhile, right now in the rogue state of the Bush administration’s
choosing…

“U.S. forces have
suffered their bloodiest week in Iraq since just before the fall of
Baghdad a year ago, reporting 40 combat deaths in the seven days from
March 31 to April 6. Unlike earlier spikes in casualty figures, notably ones last autumn that resulted from a few helicopter crashes, the latest jump reflects a broad range of incidents, from fierce firefights to roadside bombs. U.S. military deaths in Iraq since the invasion now total 635, including 444 caused by hostile fire. The number of wounded has reached 2,988.”
WashingtonPost.com

George W. Bush assembled the best Cold War warriors.

People who look towards the stars, towards missile defense and
rogue states.

Then President Bush followed them blindly.

They are 20th century people unsuited for a 21st century purpose.

And now we’re stuck in a rogue state paying a painful price for the
President and his Cold War people.

To date, not one person has resigned, been forced to resign, been
convicted, or taken full responsibility for the attacks of 9.11… other than Richard Clarke.

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