Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Cheney Rules

The inimitable Charles Pierce, corresponding at Media Matters, reacts the the WaPo's staggering expose of the Cheney presidency. I was struck by John Yoo's apparent backpedal on the entire notion of the unitary executive, and his willingness to blame almost anything he could on David Addington, Cheney's legal eagle. Gonzales comes across as an astounding incompetent, probably not the man that you'd like to see as the highest ranking legal official in the country. But you knew that already, didn't you. And Bush, poor Bush. Every time that you think that he couldn't be portrayed or exposed more embarrassingly, you are surprised once more. Says Pierce:

The public careers of Cheney, Gonzales, David Addington, and anyone else involved in this perversion of democracy must be ended with all the brutality -- and more important, all the finality -- that the rule of law allows. They, and the philosophy they represent, must be crushed, utterly, so that it never rises again. In the future, executives must look at what happened to these people and be afraid of pulling this nonsense again. The WaPo series is a brief for impeachment, as clear a roadmap as we're likely to get, considering everything that must already have gone into the shredder. This is renegade authoritarianism at the very heart of the government and it must be stopped. This is no longer about politics. This is about what kind of country we are. If we allow this kind of unconstitutional brigandry to go on unchecked then we consent by our silence to the end of self-government. Period. If the Congress fails to check it, and if the Judiciary fails to recognize it for what it is, then they have consented to rule by the Executive. Period. Either Dick Cheney goes on trial, or we are found guilty of assisting in the suicide of our country. On this, there is no third way. Not any more.


We'll see.

Atrios thinks that the press ought to hang this story around Bush's neck and taunt him with it. It would be interesting to watch Little Lord Fauntleroy bristle under a constant stream of ridicule for playing second fiddle to Dick. I'd be wary of the unintended consequences, though. He might replace Cheney with someone worse, if that's possible. Maybe Fred Thompson?

Monday, June 25, 2007

Everybody is Al Queda Now

Professor Cole again plainly states the confusion and complication that we face in Iraq. Clearly, there are so many moving parts there, and each facet of the conflict is colored by it's own particular narrative within the larger history of Iraq. He notes:

So the Sunni Arabs in Baquba are done out. They have a Shiite government in their province that they don't want, and they have a Shiite/Kurdish government in Baghdad that sends Shiite troops of the Iraqi Army against them. The Sunni Arab neighborhoods of Baquba have thrown up local militias, and they have made alliances with Baathi and Salafi Jihadi cells.


What is all the more galling is that it has become evident over the last week that the administration has changed their rhetoric once again, and now refers to any and all Sunni insurgents as Al Queda. This is a shameful attempt to shore up support for the surge, and to tie the group responsible for 9/11 to the current chaos in Iraq. It is, of course, also a lie, as the president himself admitted when he said:

A clear strategy begins with a clear understanding of the enemy we face. The enemy in Iraq is a combination of rejectionists, Saddamists and terrorists. The rejectionists are by far the largest group. These are ordinary Iraqis, mostly Sunni Arabs, who miss the privileged status they had under the regime of Saddam Hussein -- and they reject an Iraq in which they are no longer the dominant group. . . .

The second group that makes up the enemy in Iraq is smaller, but more determined. It contains former regime loyalists who held positions of power under Saddam Hussein -- people who still harbor dreams of returning to power. These hard-core Saddamists are trying to foment anti-democratic sentiment amongst the larger Sunni community. . . .

The third group is the smallest, but the most lethal: the terrorists affiliated with or inspired by al Qaeda.


It's as if these guys stopped trying a long time ago.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Numb and Dumber

You really get a good sense of the pathetic yin and yang of the executive branch of our government today. In one corner is the idiot king, who introduces a black musician entertaining the White House barbeque with the following:

I want to thank our Chef, Paul Prudhomme, from New Orleans, Louisiana -- one of the great chefs in America. Thanks for coming, Paul. (Applause.) I thank Tony Snow and his bunch of, well, mediocre musicians -- (laughter) -- no, great musicians. Beats Workin, thanks for coming. (Applause.) Kermit, come up here. Kermit, we're proud to have you.

MR. RUFFINS: Well, thanks for having us.

THE PRESIDENT: Kermit Ruffins and the Barbeque Swingers, right out of New Orleans, Louisiana. (Applause.)

MR. RUFFINS: Thank you. Thanks for having us. We're glad to be here.

THE PRESIDENT: Proud you're here. Thanks for coming. You all enjoy yourself. Make sure you pick up all the trash after it's over. (Laughter.)

God bless you, and may God bless America. Thanks for coming. (Applause.)


In the other corner is the Dark Prince, who simply ignores an executive order that he doesn't feel applies to him:


Vice President Cheney's office has refused to comply with an executive order governing the handling of classified information for the last four years and recently tried to abolish the office that sought to enforce those rules, according to documents released yesterday by a House committee.


Arrogance, hubris, and an almost inconceivable level of incompetence and buffoonery. A fairly toxic mix. Even if they hadn't invaded a country that posed no threat to our own, displaced millions of individuals, caused the slaughter of untold thousands in two countries, isolated America and exposed the inherent limitations of a military that was generally considered invincible, and caused grievous damage to our international reputation that will take a generation to repair, I think we'd be in serious trouble with these two.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Monday, June 18, 2007

Meanwhile, in the North

Juan Cole has two good items regarding the Turkish incursions into Iraqi Kurdistan and the overall Turkish attitude towards the Kurds harboring of PKK terrorists. What comes through, of course, is the inherent complexity of the issue of Iraqi Kurdistan and the potential for disaster should the needle swing too widely in either direction. In the first posting, Cole points out that things have changed for the better for Kurds in Turkey:

things have changed in the past 30 years, though the good Lord knows that much remains to be done in ensuring that Turkish Kurds are first class citizens (not a goal that will be reached by thuggish, murderous PKK tactics). First of all, Turkish Kurds have spread all over Turkey as guest workers. There are millions living in cities such as Istanbul and other industrial centers. Political scientists studying their voting patterns have found that they vote like other Turkish citizens living in the same place. That is, Kurds in Istanbul vote like the Turks in surrounding neighborhoods. There is no pan-Kurdish political identity in Turkey.


However, Turkish anger at the Iraqi Kurds should not be underestimated:

In other words, the Kurdistan Regional Government is playing the Taliban to the PKK's al-Qaeda, from the point of view of the Turkish government. It is harboring 5,000 PKK fighters. Turkey has a strong and impressive military tradition and does not take casualties in its security forces lightly. What is going on is clearly a casus belli.


and at the end of his second post, he concludes:

I continue to be just amazed that no one in authority in Iraq is taking any steps to try to avert such a crisis. I earlier suggested a partion of Kirkuk province before the referendum as a way of defusing the tensions. But it seems like that the referendum will be held in the whole province and that the whole of it will go to Kurdistan. Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has said that this development would be a cause for war in and of itself.

The train wreck continues to unfold.


Now, Cole is a very polemic writer, and is prone to taking extreme positions with regard to his area of expertise. However, he is an expert, and has been on the ground in Turkey as recently as last month. As a weather man, he knows which way the wind is blowing, and I'd not be totally surprised if he is right that the Bush administration is asleep at the wheel once again.

Getting it wrong again.

This post at Whiskey Fire tears apart the spurious argument that "liberal hawks", whatever that means, are intellectually dishonest in their opposition to this administration's increasingly dangerous foreign policy towards Iran. It's important to counter the argument that the initial support for the war in Iraq exists as some immutable piece of one's DNA that therefore categorizes the individual to a mission of supporting this administration's foreign interventions to no end. I naively saw the invasion of Iraq as a parallel to Clinton's policies in Yugoslavia, and supported it at the time as an honest attempt to act on behalf of the oppressed Iraqi people, much in the same way that the UN led forces in Bosnia had. I was stupendously wrong, but smarter people than I were not. In responding to an essay making the case that individuals are either inherently pacifist or militarist, WhiskeyFire points out:

The essay is crazy. The guy thinks the primary debate about foreign policy is between "pacifists" and "militarists" -- as if the primary reason anyone opposed the war in Iraq was from a position of committed pacifism. Well, maybe a small minority did, and good for them. But most of us opposed the war in Iraq because it was obviously a stupid fucking idea. The administration was clearly spouting bullshit about why it was necessary and how much it would cost in money and lives.



But more importantly, looking forward, the point he makes is this:

This is all my balls. Ezra Klein is perfectly right to judge people writing on foreign policy primarily on their stances towards real world issues. A discussion of "underlying beliefs or theories" in this context is absurd, given the horror of the Iraq debacle. If your "underlying beliefs or theories" made you stick your dick in the blender, even "reluctantly," and you haven't thoroughly reassessed these concepts, I frankly don't want to hear your advice about what to do with the weed whacker.


A little colorful, but the point is well taken. And if we step away, we can see that the even larger issue is that if you take such a black and white stance, the consequences are horrible. You have to dig deeper to get out of the hole, and with each and every tragic event, you double down your bets. You read this:

Kabul, 18 June (AKI) - At least seven children have been killed in a US-led coalition air raid in eastern Afghanistan. In a statement released on Monday, the multinational forces said that Sunday night's raid was against a suspected al-Qaeda hideout in Paktika province near Pakistan and that a number of militants died in the attack. The children who were killed in the raid are believed to have been students at a madrassa or Islamic school near a mosque at the targeted compound. The US military said that intelligence information showed that the madrassa was being used as a refuge for al-Qaeda militants.

The statement said that residents in the area, in the district of Zargun Shah of Paktika province, confirmed that al-Qaeda fighters were present in the area all day.

"This is another example of al-Qaeda using the protective status of a mosque, as well as innocent civilians, to shield themselves," said coalition spokesman Major Chris Belcher.
The mosque is said to have been slightly damaged in the air strike.


and you are forced to stiffen your lip and press on, because you are a committed hawk, and you see events through the prism of militarism and pacifism. Ideological cowards like Bill Kristol, who's blood drips from his teeth at Fox News are one thing, but for ostensibly sensible people who supported our invasion of Iraq to stick to their guns with regard to Iran, and ignore the tragic consequences of our actions in Iraq seems to me to be something even worse.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

1979

Cooler than the other side of the pillow, here's Joan Armatrading doing a jam version of Cool Blue Stole My Heart from 1979. A master of her craft. Great band, too.


Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Pace, Iran and Gonzo trifecta

Will Bunch at Attytood has a frightening take on the replacement of Peter Pace as head of the Joint Chiefs on Friday. He wonders whether Pace's refusal to tow the neocon line on the Iranian government's meddling in Iraq may have led to his dismissal. Clearly, it doesn't seem to be any secret that Pace was unwilling to go along with the preemptive action against Tehran:

One intelligence source told me that Joint Chiefs chairman, Gen. Peter Pace, has explored the possibility of resigning if Bush presses forward with air attacks against Iran, a war strategy that might be done in coordination with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.


If this is the case, and if this is part of a coordinated effort to saber rattle on the Sunday talk shows at that same time (as Joe Lieberman was happy to do this weekend), then we really have entered a scary place. The Bush administration seems to be more determined to act radically and unilaterally the lower their approval rating goes. As one after another Bush insider leaps for safety (Dan Bartlett last week), the small group of dead enders that remain loyal to him dig in even deeper. You could see the blood dripping from Bill Kristol's fangs on Fox News yesterday as he reiterated his call for the invasion of Iran.

The Gonzales no confidence debate illustrates this nicely. First, it exposes the ridiculousness of the administration's line on Pace's firing. Namely, their excuse that Pace's continued service would lead to a nasty reconfirmation hearing is flatly contradicted by their willingness to go down to the mat with Gonzo. Secondly, Bush's response to the Gonzo debate is telling. He called the process "meaningless" and announced that

They can have their votes of no confidence, but it's not going to make the determination about who serves in my government,


The vote may have been symbolic, or non binding, or toothless, but one thing that it cannot be is meaningless. I'm not trying to be Bill Safire, but if the vote had anything, it had meaning. If a majority of the United States Senate including eight members of your own party tell you that they believe that the highest ranking law officer in the country is a dog with fleas, there is meaning in that vote. Only a man who could so casually dismiss the process as an infringement on "his government" could consider it thus.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Too depressing for a Friday. Need some tunes.

Digby has a depressing post up surrounding our national attention span and willingness to focus on the trivial rather than the tragic consequences of Bush administration's foreign policy. It is absolutely stunning to me that we as a nation feel that what is occurring in Iraq today does not warrant the attention that we feel we owe Nancy Grace's latest cause.

Atrios, though, I think adds a bit to this, in this post on Mitt Romney. He points out that while it may seem to you and I that Romney's astounding ignorance of the very current events that have led us to the current quagmire in Iraq is enough to ruin your entire weekend, perhaps something even more sinister is at hand. Maybe Romney's ignorance is a calculated attempt to tap into our culture and it's incredible propensity to ignore the larger world stage. Perhaps he is doing no more than repeating palpable falsehoods so that he can appeal to our basest nature. Certainly, that was the overriding theme of the debates this week. Giuliani, Romney and McCain, to say nothing of the lesser lights with which they shared the stage made Bush seem moderate. Their relentless fearmongering and promises to torture, surveil and deport anybody with a brown hue to their skin was a sickening display of the illogical conclusion of the current administration's legacy.

I'm tempted to say that is imperative that the Democrats rise above this sort of appeal, and stick with our better angels, but at the back of my mind, I have Nancy Grace and Glen Beck nagging about JonBenet....

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Ahem

Tbogg gets all Steve Gilliard-like on Bill Kristol today. Good for the soul.

These are the consequences of the actions and chest-thumping policies of people like Scooter Libby, Bill Kristol, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Dick Cheney, Doug Feith, etc. They play a game where only other people lose, but never themselves. Then they just move on to think tanks and visiting professorships and book contracts where nobody ever points out to them that they fucked up. They fucked up really bad.

Monday, June 04, 2007

Steve Gilliard

Steve Gilliard is dead. I don't know these people, I don't pretend to.
But I am moved by his death, because he was such a passionate voice
railing against what is going so terribly wrong with this country right
now. Others will eulogize him much better than I, of course, but to me,
he was the ultimate manifestation of why this medium is so different,
and most remarkably so important. Venture capitalists and visionaries
who spot trends speak of community and viral networks, but at the end
of the day, we've got to keep in mind that the blogosphere , for all
it's faults, is not a business proposition or a social network. At the
beginning and at the end, it is a revolution in discourse. Those that
equate Kos and Atrios with Tom Paine are probably closest to the truth.

Gilliard, to me, represented the most pure manifestation of the revolution. Unapologetically profane, blunt, and willing to call bullshit on friend and foe when the time was right, he understood that blogging is not reporting, not
editorializing, and not "commentary". It is, of course, like nothing
else. Bloggers like Gilliard are expert at what they know, and unashamed
of it. He loved New York, he understood it like no one I've read. His
posts on Giuliani and Bloomberg, on Amadou Diallo and Abner Louima , and
remarkably, on the transit strike of December 2005 placed those events
into the larger responsibilities of our vocation as liberals. He
blogged on the Mets and the Yankees. He knew baseball and that matters, of course.

The other thing that Gilliard knew, as those of us who read him know, was military history. He understood that our pre-emptive invasion of Iraq was ill conceived and fraught with risk. He was a voracious reader who read every available tome on our nations military exploits that he could put his hands on, according to this remembrance by Jane Hamser.

As I posted months ago, he understood that our efforts in Sadr City are a
fool's errand, a death trap for our military, and he clearly understood
that Muqtada al Sadr is waiting us out, allowing us to do his dirty
work. Read James Wolcott. Perhaps his words, more than any other,
illustrate the confluence of old media with new. It beggars belief that
this man thought more deeply than Rumsfeld, Cheney, Wolfowitz or Perle that what we undertook in Mesopotamia was unhistorical and suicidal. I shudder at the thought of Steve Gilliard and Bill Kristol in the same room.

Our last best hope is that everything that Steve Gilliard predicted will not come true. I'll not bet against him.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Jet Pilot

Ahh, the magic of the internets....youtube mashup of an anti bush screed and son volt. Two of my favorite indulgences.