BLOG by Joshua Micah Marshall

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10.13.07 -- 10:27PM // link | recommend

The reaction to a previous Peace Prize winner

Conservative critics of Al Gore winning the Nobel Peace Prize have had no shortage of criticisms, accusing the Nobel committee of everything from cheapening the honor to politicizing it.

James Fallows remembers hearing similar reactions in 1964, when the Nobel Peace Prize went to Martin Luther King.

The reaction was, of course, racial at its root. This was a majority-white, minority-Hispanic small town with very few black residents, which went for Barry Goldwater over Lyndon Johnson in the presidential election that same fall.

But the stated form of the objection concerned not King's race but his obnoxiousness as a man. He was a windbag. He was pompous and self-dramatizing, He was holier than thou. Plus, he had started getting involved where he didn't belong, in raising questions about the Vietnam War.

Those criticisms, of course, sound rather familiar; similar assessments are made of Gore quite frequently.

Time will tell if historical scrutiny will make Gore's critics look like King's -- which is to say, petty and short-sighted -- but given what we know, it seems like a safe bet.

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 8:32PM // link | recommend

Answering questions from Sept. 6

The mystery surrounding the events in Syria on Sept. 6 is slowly becoming less mysterious.

Israel's air attack on Syria last month was directed against a site that Israeli and American intelligence analysts judged was a partly constructed nuclear reactor, apparently modeled on one North Korea has used to create its stockpile of nuclear weapons fuel, according to American and foreign officials with access to the intelligence reports.

The description of the target addresses one of the central mysteries surrounding the Sept. 6 attack, and suggests that Israel carried out the raid to demonstrate its determination to snuff out even a nascent nuclear project in a neighboring state.

Hmm, "neighboring state." How subtle.

The NYT piece fills in a few gaps, including the fact that U.S. was definitely divided on the merit of the airstrikes, and that the Syrian reactor was far from completion.

But here's the nut graf:

A senior Israeli official, while declining to speak about the specific nature of the target, said the strike was intended to "re-establish the credibility of our deterrent power," signaling that Israel meant to send a message to the Syrians that even the potential for a nuclear weapons program would not be permitted. But several American officials said the strike may also have been intended by Israel as a signal to Iran and its nuclear aspirations. Neither Iran nor any Arab government except for Syria has criticized the Israeli raid, suggesting that Israel is not the only country that would be disturbed by a nuclear Syria. North Korea did issue a protest.

Interestingly enough, Syria was outraged two months ago, and looked for some regional allies to share their indignation. They came up empty.

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 6:59PM // link | recommend

Again with the madrassa nonsense?

Way back in January, Insight magazine, a project of Sun Myung Moon's far-right Washington Times, published an item asking, "Are the American people ready for an elected president who was educated in a Madrassa as a young boy and has not been forthcoming about his Muslim heritage?" Even by conservative standards, it was a ridiculous attack with no foundation in reality.

Fox News and several conservative blogs pounced on the story, but even they eventually backpedaled. The story was debunked, repeatedly, by news outlets large and small, and the baseless smear quickly faded away.

Ben Smith and Jonathan Martin report that the story didn't disappear altogether.

[R]ather than vanish, the whispered smear campaign appears to have gone underground, and in its purest form: Obama himself, according to a pair of widely circulated anonymous e-mails, is a Muslim.

"Barack Hussein Obama has joined the United Church of Christ in an attempt to downplay his Muslim background," warns an e-mail titled "Who Is Barack Obama," that was circulating in South Carolina political circles this summer and sent to Politico by a South Carolina Democrat.

"The Muslims have said they plan on destroying the U.S. from the inside out; what better way to start than at the highest level?"

"Please forward to everyone you know," it ended.

The other widely forwarded e-mail is titled "Can a good Muslim become a good American" and answers that question in the negative, before concluding: "And Barack Hussein Obama, a Muslim, wants to be our president!!!"

What is it about South Carolina and ugly whisper campaigns?

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 4:20PM // link | recommend

Dumbest. Ad. Ever.

One of my favorite moments from the six Republican debates thus far came in May, when Mitt Romney tried to explain how he perceives threats to the U.S. from the Middle East: "This is about Shi'a and Sunni. This is about Hezbollah and Hamas and al Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood. This is the worldwide jihadist effort to try and cause the collapse of all moderate Islamic governments and replace them with a caliphate. They also probably want to bring down the United States of America."

The answer drew praise -- ABC News' The Note touted how impressive it was -- but Romney's take didn't make a lot of sense. Romney was articulating a national security strategy that conflates groups, sects, and agendas that have nothing to do with one another -- but he was saying it in such a way as to make it sound like he was informed.

It's exactly this kind of thinking that led to this ad, which may very well be the single dumbest campaign commercial of the year, at least so far.

It's a bit like the remarks from the debate in May -- Romney tries to come across as knowledgeable, but ends up not making any sense at all.

Glenn Greenwald recently explained that some portions of the conservative movement are genuinely convinced that we're this close to a global Islamic theocracy. It's absurd -- as Yglesias noted, "The idea that we should be laying awake at night afraid that a group of at most several thousand people who control almost no territory or valuable military equipment might establish a universal caliphate or 'collapse freedom loving nations like us' is ridiculous." And yet, that's the basis for a campaign ad from a top-tier Republican candidate.

Indeed, notice the ad talks about terrorists "collaps[ing] freedom-loving nations" like the U.S. How is that even possible? Romney doesn't say, but if we vote for him, he'll prevent it. Please.

And what does this have to do with Iran? Nothing, but Iran is in the Middle East, and when trying to sucker the far-right GOP base, that's all that matters.

As Kevin Drum noted, there's nothing serious about this style of campaigning: "There are no actual proposals or serious thoughts here. It's just a puerile contest to see who can stuff the most World War IV bullets into a single 30-second spot."

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 3:50PM // link | recommend

Rice decries power-hungry chief executive with unchecked authority

I genuinely believe Condoleezza Rice has no idea why so many of us would find this ironic.

The Russian government under Vladimir Putin has amassed so much central authority that the power-grab may undermine Moscow's commitment to democracy, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Saturday.

"In any country, if you don't have countervailing institutions, the power of any one president is problematic for democratic development," Rice told reporters after meeting with human-rights activists.

"I think there is too much concentration of power in the Kremlin. I have told the Russians that. Everybody has doubts about the full independence of the judiciary. There are clearly questions about the independence of the electronic media and there are, I think, questions about the strength of the Duma," said Rice, referring to the Russian parliament.

According to the AP report, Rice also told the human-rights activists that democratic institutions are the keys to combating arbitrary power from the state.

On a more serious point, McClatchy's Jonathan Landay has a report on how the Bush administration's policy towards Russia has been ineffective and based on faulty assumptions from the outset.

The piece quotes Michael McFaul of Stanford University's Hoover Institution, hardly a progressive outlet, explaining that Bush and his foreign policy team "grossly misjudged Putin," considering him "a good guy and one of us."

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 2:53PM // link | recommend

S-CHIP debate sends some over the edge

The irony of the last couple of weeks is that the debate over the State's Children's Health Insurance Program (S-CHIP) was supposed to be one of the easy ones. Way back in July, the WaPo's Christopher Lee noted, "If anything looked like a sure thing in the new Congress, it was that lawmakers would renew, and probably expand, the popular, decade-old State Children's Health Insurance Program before it expires this year."

It was a no-brainer. Dems and Republicans reached a compromise version, which drew praise from governors, the medical community, and children's advocates. Of all the bills likely to spark a political war, this was going to be at the bottom of the list.

And yet, here we are. S-CHIP garnered an inexplicable veto, the right is smearing a 12-year-old kid and his family, and Republicans on the Energy and Commerce Committee are issuing breathtaking press releases like this one.

Republican Senate hopeful Montgomery Burns today joined with Mayor Joe Quimby, D-Springfield, to support the Senate's gazillion-dollar SCHIP bill.

"If the poor children can get a piece of the action, why can't I?" explained Burns at a MoveOn.org rally in Capital City. "The little darlings are needy? Me, too. I need somebody to pay. Quimby here says he knows a bunch of low-income nobodies who are ripe for the picking. Excellent."

"You need this?" wondered the mayor. "Well, why not. I've got needs, too. Why, I've got 27 paternity suits pending and to quote the Speaker, 'suffer the little children.' The Quimby Compound is overflowing with those little sufferers. Vote Quimby."

It actually gets worse from there, including multiple references to MoveOn.org and "rental children."

Bill Scher speculates that maybe the Energy and Commerce Committee GOP's site got hacked, which seems reasonable given that committee staffers usually don't go out of their way to appear this foolish on purpose.

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 1:57PM // link | recommend

The Anti-Bush

As conservative apoplexy over Al Gore's earned honors continues, there are two terrific op-eds today that explain the former Vice President's fortunes in a broader context.

First up is Jonathan Chait, who explains that the right loathes Gore, in part because he's the "anti-Bush."

You might wonder why they care so much -- Gore, after all, is obviously not going to run for president, and even some conservatives now concede that global warming is real. The answer is that Gore's triumph is a measure of George W. Bush's disrepute.

Indeed, in the political culture, Gore's role is as a negative indicator of the president's standing. For all the talk of a "new Al Gore," there's nothing new about the man. His public reputation is almost entirely a function of Bush's. [...]

The defensiveness of Gore's critics comes because he is the ultimate rebuke to Bush. Gore, obviously, is the great historic counter-factual, the man who would have been president if Florida had a functioning ballot system. More than that, he is the anti-Bush. He is intellectual and introverted, while Bush is simplistic and backslapping.

I think that's right. When Bush's popularity soared, Gore's reputation was the subject of ridicule. When Bush was exposed as a fraud and a failure, it was Gore's assessments that, upon reflection, proved to be true.

And then there's the NYT's Bob Herbert considers Bush v. Gore, redux.

Mr. Bush came to mind because, for all of the obvious vulnerabilities he exhibited in 2000, it was not him but Mr. Gore who was mocked unmercifully by the national media. And the mockery had nothing to do with the former vice president's positions on important policy issues. He was mocked because of his personality.

In the race for the highest office in the land, we showed the collective maturity of 3-year-olds.

Mr. Gore was taken to task for his taste in clothing and for such grievous offenses as sighing or, allegedly, rolling his eyes. It was a given that at a barbecue everyone would rush to be with his opponent.

We've paid a heavy price. The president who got such high marks as a barbecue companion doesn't seem to know up from down. He's hurled the nation into a ruinous war that has cost countless lives and spawned a whole new generation of terrorists. He continues to sit idly by as a historic American city, New Orleans, remains wounded and on its knees. He's blithely steered the nation into a bottomless pit of debt.

Gore told Herbert, "What politics has become requires a level of tolerance for triviality and artifice and nonsense that I have found in short supply."

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 12:42PM // link | recommend

Qwest's Nacchio: NSA pushed long before 9/11

Earlier this week, the Rocky Mountain News broke word that Joseph P. Nacchio, the former CEO of Qwest, has accused the National Security Agency of retaliating against his company because he refused to cooperate with a domestic-spying scheme.

The WaPo moved the ball forward today, with a solid front-page piece. The key point to take away from the story, however, is the timing.

Nacchio's account, which places the NSA proposal at a meeting on Feb. 27, 2001, suggests that the Bush administration was seeking to enlist telecommunications firms in programs without court oversight before the terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon. The Sept. 11 attacks have been cited by the government as the main impetus for its warrantless surveillance efforts.

It's almost as if the Bush gang, almost immediately after taking office, began a legally-dubious power grab that included warrantless-domestic spying.

I suppose some of the president's allies might be tempted to spin this as encouraging. If the administration was pressuring telecoms as far back as Feb. 2001, the president and his team were taking the terrorist threat seriously long before 9/11.

This might be more persuasive if, six months after the NSA allegedly leaned on Qwest, the president didn't blow off a certain Presidential Daily Briefing, telling his CIA briefer, "All right. You've covered your ass, now."

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 11:40AM // link | recommend

It's still no laughing matter

Hillary Clinton appeared on MSNBC's "Countdown with Keith Olbermann" on Thursday, prompting CBS News to run a report on the interview. It included this jaw-dropper, by way of reader DOK:

During the twelve-minute interview, the former first lady chuckled in response to Olbermann. But she never unleashed the highly-scrutinized, overly-analyzed belly laugh known as "the cackle" that has been the focus of national media over the past few weeks. Which raises the question: Has the tightly-managed Clinton campaign put the kibosh on the cackle?

Yes, we've apparently reached a point in the media's coverage of the campaign in which news outlets find it noteworthy when they don't notice anything unusual about Sen. Clinton's laugh.

As Greg Sargent put it, "We've come full circle: Damned if you do cackle; damned if you don't."

I was particularly fond of the way CBS tried to distance itself from its own report. The senator's laugh, the report said, is "overly analyzed." Apparently, it's so excessive that CBS finds it necessary to note its absence.

In related news, Rudy Giuliani delivered a speech yesterday in which he didn't answer his cell phone; Mitt Romney answered questions without abandoning a position he held five minutes prior; John McCain hosted a town-hall forum in which he did not refer to anyone as a "little jerk"; and Fred Thompson went the whole day without responding to a reporter's question with, "I don't know anything about that."

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 10:38AM // link | recommend

A new target?

Smearing 12-year-old Graeme Frost and his family was so last week. Are there any new targets for the far-right to attack? Catholics United, a left-leaning educational group, seems to be waving a red flag at the conservative bulls. (via DemFromCT)

Catholics United will launch a radio advertising campaign targeting ten members of Congress whose opposition to the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) have compromised their pro-life voting records.

The ads, which feature a mother urging her Congressional Representative to support SCHIP, will primarily air on Christian and talk radio stations from Monday Oct. 15 to Wednesday, Oct. 17 as Congress approaches a critical Oct. 18 vote to override President Bush's veto of bipartisan SCHIP legislation.

The mother in the radio ad will say, "I'm the mother of three children, and I'm pro-life. I believe that protecting the lives our children must be our nation's number one moral priority. That's why I'm concerned that Congressman X says he's pro-life but votes against health care for poor children. That's not pro-life. That's not pro-family. Tell Congressman X to vote for health care for children. Call him today at XXXX, that's XXXXX."

That's a pretty good message, but I'm curious what conservatives might try to discredit this woman before people take her concerns seriously. My friend John Cole believes the far-right smear machine will clearly want to take a closer look at the voice in the ad.

Is she really a woman? What is her address and where can I find her house so I can drive by it? Does she really have three kids? ... Is she really Catholic? Does she go to church? ... Is she really pro-life? ... And most important of all, what do her kitchen counters look like?

Note to the right: Cole is kidding. Please do not go after this woman.

--Steve Benen

10.13.07 -- 9:14AM // link | recommend

The 'revolt of the generals' continues

Following up on Josh's item from last night, it's worth taking a moment to consider how common the criticism of the White House's Iraq policy has become among generals.

Retired Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who commanded U.S. forces in Iraq for a year after the March 2003 invasion, believes Iraq is a "nightmare," with "no end in sight." In today's political climate, the White House and its allies usually dismiss critical assessments like this as "defeatist," and borderline treason. Indeed, when Democratic members of Congress offer criticism nearly identical to Sanchez's, the knee-jerk response from the right is that Dems are emboldening terrorists, undermining the troops, and putting the U.S. at risk.

But smearing generals like Sanchez is obvious more difficult. For one thing, supporters of the president's Iraq policy have made it abundantly clear that questioning the judgment of U.S. generals is practically seditious.

For another, the "revolt of the generals" is surprisingly broad. It's not as if Sanchez's criticism is unusual -- on the contrary, he's the latest in a long line of leaders with stars on their shoulder to break with tradition and blast the Bush administration for its failures.

The generals acted independently, coming in their own ways to the agonizing decision to defy military tradition and publicly criticize the Bush administration over its conduct of the war in Iraq.

What might be called The Revolt of the Generals has rarely happened in the nation's history.

In op-ed pieces, interviews and TV ads, more than 20 retired U.S. generals have broken ranks with the culture of salute and keep it in the family. Instead, they are criticizing the commander in chief and other top civilian leaders who led the nation into what the generals believe is a misbegotten and tragic war.

They can't all be "phony soldiers," can they?

--Steve Benen

10.12.07 -- 10:17PM // link | recommend

Catastrophically Flawed

Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, former commander of US forces in Iraq. From Stars & Stripes ...

The former top commander of U.S. troops in Iraq slammed the handling of the war and gave a bleak assessment of the current situation in Iraq.

“There is no question that America is living a nightmare with no end in sight,” retired Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez told a convention of military journalists on Friday.

...

But Sanchez reserved most of his venom Friday for U.S. officials, saying the U.S. government still has not brought all the resources needed to win in Iraq.

“From a catastrophically flawed, unrealistically optimistic war plan, to the administration’s latest surge strategy, this administration has failed to employ and synchronize the political, economic and military power,” Sanchez said.

Continuing changes to military strategy alone will not achieve victory, rather it will only “stave off defeat,” he said.

“The administration, Congress and the entire inter-agency, especially the State Department, must shoulder the responsibility for this catastrophic failure and the American people must hold them accountable.”

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 9:19PM // link | recommend

Aftermath

Successor to fired US Attorney John McKay sworn in in Washington state.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 9:01PM // link | recommend

Heads Up

Been following the Nacchio/Qwest communications story? More coming this evening.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 4:15PM // link | recommend

Excellent!

Stand-off between pro-torture CIA chief and anti-torture CIA Inspector General to be refereed by notorious Bush crony.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 4:14PM // link | recommend

Rudy: Beside the mob ties, Kerik was a great commish.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 2:29PM // link | recommend

Adventures in Fair and Balanced Reporting

CNN's front page blurb on Gore's Nobel ...

The decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize to Al Gore and environmental scientists has incensed some CNN.com readers while pleasing others. While Robert Ellis of Ohio says the award is "well-deserved", Matthew Whitley of North Carolina says the peace prize is now a "laughingstock."

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 2:15PM // link | recommend

D'oh!

You know, with Al Gore winning the Nobel Prize for his environmental activism, it really makes the Nader voters look prescient, doesn't it?

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 2:06PM // link | recommend

Soooprise, soooprise

Last week I told you about International Peace Operations Association, the DC lobbying outfit and professional organization for military contractors. And then just yesterday we brought you word that Blackwater, a member of the group since 2004, had cancelled its membership in the IPOA.

So what happened to spoil the relationship?

Seems the folks at the IPOA had commenced a review to make sure Blackwater was in compliance with the IPOA Code of Conduct. Apparently it was scrutiny Blackwater didn't think it could bear.

Great company.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 11:26AM // link | recommend

Rudy!

NYDN ...

Bernard Kerik's legal nightmare is about to get worse, with federal prosecutors expected to file charges against the former police commissioner that will likely include allegations of bribery, tax fraud and obstruction of justice, the Daily News has learned.

The indictment, expected next month, could prove to be an embarrassing obstacle for Kerik's former mentor Rudy Giuliani, who is cruising at the top of the polls heading into the presidential primary gauntlet.

...

Another Giuliani commissioner and a top inspector general during Giuliani's years as mayor will be called as witnesses to describe the secret meeting in Tribeca.

The Giuliani officials are Raymond Casey, former head of the Trade Waste Commission, a city agency set up to keep the mob out of the carting industry, and Michael Caruso, former inspector general with the city Department of Investigation.

In July 1999, Casey and Caruso met with Kerik, then the city Correction Department commissioner, at Walker's bar on North Moore St., court papers reveal.

At the time, Casey was investigating Interstate Industrial Corp., a company that employed Kerik's brother Donald and the best man at Kerik's wedding, Larry Ray.

An Interstate affiliate had applied to operate a waste transfer station in Staten Island, and Casey was looking into allegations that the firm had ties to the Gambino crime family.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 11:22AM // link | recommend

Winning Elections at DOJ

Remember Ohio? Find out more about how the Bush DOJ ran interference for the GOP in stifling complaints about African-American Voter Disenfranchisement.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 10:05AM // link | recommend

On Gore

First, before any other yapping and commentary, a big congratulations to Al Gore.

There are several layers of irony and poetic justice wrapped into this honor. The first is that the greatest step for world peace would simply have been for Gore not to have had the presidency stolen from him in November 2000. By every just measure, Gore won the presidency in 2000 only to have George W. Bush steal it from him with the critical assistance of the US Supreme Court. It's worth taking a few moments today to consider where the country and world would be without that original sin of this corrupt presidency.

And yet this is a fitting bookend, with Gore receiving this accolade while the sitting president grows daily an object of greater disapproval, disapprobation and collective shame. And let's not discount another benefit: watching the rump of the American right detail the liberal bias of the Nobel Committee and at this point I guess the entire world. Fox News vs. the world.

And not to forget what this award is about even more than Gore. If half of what we think we know about global warming is true, people will look back fifty years from now on the claims that "War on Terror" was the defining challenge of this century and see it as a very sick, sad joke -- which rather sums up the Bush presidency.

But more than thinking only of what might have been, where can we go from here?

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 10:01AM // link | recommend

'Tis the Endorsement Season

Walter Mondale comes out for Hillary, and so does . . . Charles Krauthammer.

--David Kurtz

10.12.07 -- 9:48AM // link | recommend

Today's Must Read

In what the NYT and LAT are calling an "unusual" if not "unprecedented" move, CIA Director Mike Hayden is investigating his own inspector general, who has been highly critical of the agency.

--David Kurtz

10.12.07 -- 8:41AM // link | recommend

Discuss

Share your thoughts on Gore's Nobel in our special discussion thread at TPMCafe.

--Josh Marshall

10.12.07 -- 7:45AM // link | recommend

Gore Wins

The Nobel Peace Prize goes to Al Gore and the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 11:11PM // link | recommend

Creeping Bushism

It seems that CIA Inspector General John L. Helgerson has probed too aggressively into the CIA's detention and "interrogation" policies. So now CIA Chief Michael Hayden has decided to start investigating Helgerson. Hayden's probe, says the Times, is looking into whether "has not acted as a fair and impartial judge of agency operations, but instead began a crusade against those who have participated in controversial detention programs."

We'll bring you more on this tomorrow.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 8:35PM // link | recommend

TPMtv: '08 Roundup: Episode #1

Starting today we're kicking off our weekly round-up of the 2008 campaign. Mainly we'll focus on the presidential race, as we do in today's kick-off episode, but not exclusively. We'll dig into the House and Senate contests and various down-ticket battles. We do a lot of digging into various aspects of the campaign. And in these episodes I'll try to distill it down to the key development and trends.

We want your feedback. So let us know what you think, both of the show, but also our analysis. We'll include your responses and questions in future episodes ...

(See this episode on Youtube.)

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 8:33PM // link | recommend

The Language of Inevitability

From some recent statements put out by the Clinton campaign:

Oct. 11, regarding torture: "It’s unfortunate that Barack Obama is abandoning the politics of hope as his campaign stagnates and is launching false attacks on other Democrats instead."

Oct. 11, regarding Iran: "It's unfortunate that Sen. Obama is abandoning the politics of hope and embracing the same old attack politics as his support stagnates."

Oct. 8, regarding Iran: "It's unfortunate that Senator Obama is resorting to the same old attack politics as his poll numbers start falling. . . . A flagging campaign is not an excuse to distort anyone’s record.

Sep. 19, regarding a lobbyist luncheon: ‘‘Increasingly negative attacks against other Democrats aren’t going to end the war, deliver universal healthcare, or turn John Edwards’ flagging campaign around.’’

Working to cultivate the sense of Clinton's inevitability? Nah.

Chris Bowers has a slightly different take on some of these recent campaign statements.

--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 8:16PM // link | recommend

The Trend Spreads

According to the AP, the Afghans are now also cracking down on the private security firms working in the country. Hard to believe that's unrelated to the beating the reputation of these companies has taken over the last few weeks.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 7:25PM // link | recommend

Not Outta The Woods Yet

Key staffer to Rep. Lewis (R-CA) subpoenaed in on-going Lewis probe.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 5:23PM // link | recommend

Matt Lauer scores the Larry Craig and wife interview.

--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 4:20PM // link | recommend

Yet another GOP retirement: Rep. Regula (R-OH), from Roll Call (sub. req.)

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 4:02PM // link | recommend

Dana Perino riffs on the President's morning call with Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki . . . and on Turkey and the PKK:


--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 3:23PM // link | recommend

Looks Worth a Read

Haven't read it and don't know anything about it. But Prince of Darkness Richard Perle: The Kingdom, The Power & The End of Empire in America just arrived in the mail.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 3:16PM // link | recommend

Salon's Tim Grieve has a hilarious take-down of today's David Ignatius column on Barack Obama.

--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 2:50PM // link | recommend

Mitt Romney tries to harness the anti-Rudy backlash from religious conservatives.

--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 1:29PM // link | recommend

In Tehran by Summer

Rudy Giuliani has just announced a new raft of foreign policy advisors. And I guess the premise of the campaign is now that the Bush administration wasn't sufficiently riddled by neoconservative whackjobs.

Topping the list: Michael Rubin as Senior Iran and Turkey Advisor and Middle East Advisory Board Member.

I really don't know how to describe Rubin for those who aren't familiar with him. He worked at Doug Feith's Office of Special Plans. But that hardly does the matter justice -- rather like saying Dick Cheney was a supporter of the Iraq War. On the TPM Scale of Pure Neoconism (TM) Rubin gets well over 99%. Like the most interesting and frightening neos, Michael is that perfect mix of extreme factual knowledge and extreme lack of judgment, prone to wild-eyed theories and fantasies of various sorts but all in the end leading inexorably toward catastrophic policy moves for the United States.

You really might as well put Ahmed Chalabi as your top Mideast or Iran advisor.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 1:24PM // link | recommend

Turkey recalls its US Ambassador for 'consultations' after Armenian genocide vote in the House.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 1:13PM // link | recommend

Hmmmm ....

Sun-Times ...

White House hopeful Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) is reorganizing his campaign, deploying key staff from the Chicago headquarters to Feb. 5 primary states while bolstering the ranks of his top leadership.

The move, Obama advisers told the Sun-Times, has been long planned and is not a reaction to the lead chief rival Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) has in national and early state polls.

Anyone heard anything? Drop us a line.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 1:09PM // link | recommend

Heads Up

Charlie Rose is going to have Blackwater CEO Erik Prince on tomorrow Monday night.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 12:56PM // link | recommend

Spencer Ackerman has more on that victims' suit against Blackwater that I mentioned earlier.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 12:54PM // link | recommend

That Really Your Lifestyle?

Matt Yglesias has some shrewd thoughts picking up on Ann Coulter's latest remarks to the effect that eventually and ideally all Jews will be 'perfected' and thus become Christians. But I have a different question. Is Ann Coulter actually trying to pass herself off as a believing member of the Christian right? A born again even? I buy the crypto-fascist hate-monger schtick. And I always assumed that Coulter was happy to be seen as one of that breed of New York 'wingers who pass respectfully past the moral bag of goods they don't live by and just generally kick liberal ass. But hardcore believing Christian on the lifestyle front?

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 11:52AM // link | recommend

Is Hillary Hedging on Torture?

The issue is whether Hillary Clinton was equivocating in her denouncement of torture yesterday, keeping her options open were she to take the White House. Bloggers jumped on it yesterday. The Obama campaign makes it a campaign issue today.

Late Update: The Obama and Edwards anti-torture stances do appear to be less nuanced than Clinton's.

--David Kurtz

10.11.07 -- 11:12AM // link | recommend

One of Many?

One man injured in the Nisoor Square incident and the estates of three who were killed are suing Blackwater in the US courts. The case is being handled by the Center for Constitutional Rights.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 10:19AM // link | recommend

Why State?

Apropos of why the US military and the Iraqis seem to be getting shut out of the Blackwater investigation is this question: what's the State Department's thing with Blackwater? What was it in the contracting personnel or system at State that led to this one outfit getting such an inside track? Does it go back to Bremer?

Late Update: One TPM Reader chimes in ...

I'm sure you'll get lots of leads on this from your network.

Something this reader would like to see is an interview with you and Jay Garner. Since he was the first 'civilian' leadership boots on the ground, I think he might provide an interesting perspective on the mercenaries. Was State and CPA actively planning to have the contractors perform a role, or was it Bremer's brainchild after realizing that Rumsfeld's minimalist plan wasn't going to be able to do it all?

Garner had some choice things to say in Woodward's book.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 10:03AM // link | recommend

No Group That Would Have Me as a Member

Last week we told you about the International Peace Operations Association, the lobby/trade organization in DC for military contractors. Seems Blackwater has just cancelled its membership.

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 8:46AM // link | recommend

"Contractors"

After the Blackwater incident a few weeks ago, just a couple days ago there was another incident in which a different contracting outfit, this one from Australia, shot and killed two innocent Iraqi women. How frequently has this been happening in cases where the story 'hook' just wasn't recognizable enough in the US to get much press?

--Josh Marshall

10.11.07 -- 8:10AM // link | recommend

The Big Money

Romney outpaces Steve Forbes' rate of self-funding.

--Josh Marshall

10.10.07 -- 9:15PM // link | recommend

At today's White House press briefing, the Armenian genocide resolution . . . the new FISA bill . . . and Turkey's military action in northern Iraq.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 7:34PM // link | recommend

Over at The Plank, Jonathan Cohn digs into the muck of S-CHIP, Michelle Malkin, and that kid from Baltimore.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 4:14PM // link | recommend

TPMtv Interviews Paul Krugman

On Monday we sat down (virtually) with the New York Times oped page's Paul Krugman to talk about his new book, The Conscience of a Liberal, what it's like being 'radicalized' by the Bush administration and what he thinks the "big stand up and cheer moment" of the 2008 campaign has been so far.

--Josh Marshall

10.10.07 -- 3:31PM // link | recommend

What did Hillary really say to WaPo about torture?

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 2:36PM // link | recommend

Nearly 90 House Dems say they will not support new funding for Iraq War, Greg Sargent has learned.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 1:58PM // link | recommend

Rep. Conyers whacks critics of Dem FISA bill.

--Josh Marshall

10.10.07 -- 1:10PM // link | recommend

FRC's Tony Perkins: Rudy could lose half of the evangelical vote.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 11:57AM // link | recommend

Who Leaked the Bin Laden Video?

Yesterday, the White House appeared to subtly shift the blame for the leak of the Osama bin Laden video to the Directorate of National Intelligence, Mike McConnell's office. Here's what Dana Perino said initially in her press briefing, followed by her backing off:

Q Dana, you said this morning in the gaggle that the White House did not leak the information about the bin Laden tape. How do you know that?

MS. PERINO: Well, this is -- let me take you back. This is the -- there was a private company that contacted the White House to let us know that they had found the Osama bin Laden tape, asked us if we wanted to have the federal government review it. When -- the standard practice at the White House is to take that phone call -- to take that request and direct it to -- directly to the DNI's office. So we do not ask to have that information just solely reviewed at the White House, we immediately turn it over to the National Center for Counterterrorism.

That's what Fred Fielding and Joel Bagnal did, the two people who were aware of the link. And it went to the DNI -- I'm sorry -- it went to the NCTC. And to the extent that we have Americans coming forward to provide us information, whether it be a private citizen or a private cooperation, or anybody in America that can provide the government information, we take it very seriously that they should, one, feel comfortable that in providing that information, that their sources will be protected; and that we will act on it, if necessary. We appreciate what they did. This was a cause of concern that the information was leaked. And I would have to refer to the DNI's office in regards to any possible investigation into that leak.

. . .

Q When you refer questions about the leak of the bin Laden tape to DNI, is that a way of suggesting the leak might have come from DNI?

MS. PERINO: No, no. The Director of National Intelligence, as the overseer and coordinator of all intelligence agencies, that's the appropriate place for me to refer you.

DNI is pushing back, the Washington Post reports today:

Ross Feinstein, a spokesman for the director of national intelligence, said officials are looking into the leak allegation by the SITE Intelligence Group, which passed the video on to the White House and the director of national intelligence's office before its leak.

"At this point, we don't think there was a leak from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence or the National Counterterrorism Center," Feinstein said.

Considering this White House's track record on leaks, it should be noted that the bin Laden video was leaked on September 7, the Friday before Gen. David Petraeus was slated to begin his much-anticipated testimony on Iraq the following Monday.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 11:33AM // link | recommend

Ezra Klein throws down the gauntlet: "I will debate Michelle Malkin anytime, anywhere, in any forum" on S-CHIP.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 11:03AM // link | recommend

Lieberman: I'm Leaving the Iraq Stuff to Waxman

From Roll Call (sub.req.) ...

“Rep. Waxman has taken a very hound-dog approach to contracting and federal spending issues, whereas Sens. Collins and Lieberman have taken a more conservative approach,” said Scott Amey, general counsel at the nonpartisan Project for Government Oversight.

Lieberman acknowledged in a recent interview that he has not been as focused on government contracting abuses as he has on the homeland security aspects of his panel.

“I’ve tended to want to focus on how we protect the homeland from terrorism, so we’ve done a lot of that,” he said.

Though Lieberman said he gets “angry when I hear about fraud or corruption in the spending of American dollars,” he said he in part chooses what to have hearings on by “watching who else is doing what,” noting that Waxman has held several hearings on Iraq oversight, as have the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees.

“You’ve got to set your own priorities, and it was clear to me that other committees were going to pick this up,” said Lieberman.

Lieberman also noted that the House split government oversight and homeland security between two different committees, making their caseload more manageable.

Still, critics say they don’t understand why Lieberman has not followed Waxman’s example, and they say his support for the war should make him more likely, not less, to hold oversight hearings.

“He supports the war. So why does he not investigate the things that undermine the mission?” asked Charlie Cray, director of the nonpartisan watchdog Center for Corporate Policy.

--Josh Marshall

10.10.07 -- 10:07AM // link | recommend

Today's Must Read

Brent Wilkes: I have an "innocent explanation" for the $700,000 in gifts to Duke Cunningham.

That and more from the Wilkes trial.

--David Kurtz

10.10.07 -- 8:41AM // link | recommend

Dearborn Donnybrook!

Yesterday evening the Republican presidential candidates - yes, including Fred Thompson - debated in Dearborn, Michigan. What does Rudy Giuliani think about a potential 3rd party candidate? What role would attorneys play in a Mitt Romney foreign policy? And which candidate is the most aggressively optimistic about the future of America? Find all the answers - plus Fred Thompson! - in our Dearborn debate highlight reel ...

Late Update: We have more on the debate at over at TPM Election Central.--DK

--Ben Craw

10.09.07 -- 7:34PM // link | recommend

Inside the Cave?

A Hill Republican writes in ...


What on Earth is going on inside the House Democratic Caucus?

What am I not understanding?

Why are House Democrats about to unveil a new FISA bill that is almost indistinguishable from what the White House wants?

I have to admit that I am completely stumped to see how this debate is unfolding, and I don’t get that worked up about the inner workings of the HDC….

And Greg Sargent reports from inside on what he's hearing from within the Democratic Caucus.

--Josh Marshall

10.09.07 -- 6:34PM // link | recommend

In today's White House press briefing, Turkish incursions into Iraq . . . and who leaked that al Qaeda video?

--David Kurtz

10.09.07 -- 5:49PM // link | recommend

Steny Hoyer: Telecom immunity still on the table in FISA negotiations.

--David Kurtz

10.09.07 -- 5:14PM // link | recommend

It's the Strategy, Stupid?

A few people have responded to my post this morning on Barack Obama and argued that the problem is not his toughness or hunger for the nomination but his strategy which focuses on national unity. But I think my post must not have been clear (and no that's not meant facetiously). Because I don't think this is really what I said.

Ezra Klein writes ...

Ben Smith is correct to put aside the question of whether Obama possesses the ruthlessness required to run for president and instead focus on his strategy, "which hinges on a message of 'unity' that is as much in line with polling and message-testing as with his personality," and which has handcuffed him into an above-the-fray vagueness.

I suspect this gets the order wrong, and that the 'strategy' is rooted in the personality. I hope I'm wrong about this. But I'm starting to suspect that I'm not. Ezra goes on to say, "Obama, of course, could have defined the new politics however he wanted, from a focus on transformative policy to a willingness to call out the DC establishment. Instead, he let the Clinton camp define his message in a way advantageous to them." But why'd that happen exactly? Was it really the strategy that got Obama to let Clinton run circles around him? I'm not sure I get that.

I'm getting the sense that it's a little more that Obama thinks what he's selling is so choice that people will come to it rather than bringing it to them. And that can lead to a kind of campaign passivity and fuzziness, notwithstanding confidence and scrappiness.

Genuinely hope I'm wrong on this; really starting to think I'm not.

--Josh Marshall

10.09.07 -- 4:16PM // link | recommend

TPMtv: The Rudy Apocalypse

The Republicans just started debating at 4 PM. Find out why the air looks to be going out of the Rudy balloon as mullah Dobson issues the word and watch Fred Thompson as he finally wheels his hat into the ring -- all in today's episode of TPMtv ...

--Josh Marshall

10.09.07 -- 4:13PM // link | recommend

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher gives a full-throated defense of Blackwater and its CEO Erik Prince (via Think Progress): "Prince is on his way to being an American hero just like Ollie North was.''

--David Kurtz

10.09.07 -- 3:47PM // link | recommend

My Own Private Mid-20th Cent. Totalitarianism

Not long ago, New York Times columnist Roger Cohen unveiled a self-pitying lament about the hard-shake 'neocons' have gotten over the Iraq War and, more pointedly, how the collapse of Iraq has left little room for "liberal interventionists," a group Cohen defines as people who think like he does.

After an initial stir, Cohen has now returned to the subject in his Times blog 'Passages.' And here we have, again, confirmation that at the heart of "liberal hawk" attachment to the Iraq War is moral vanity.

As I first wrote several years ago, from the moment the "global war on terror" was christened, there's been a breed of intellectual who has glommed onto it for a kind of energizing world-historical play-acting. May you live in interesting times, the Chinese curse has it. But for some of us, it seems, our times are not sufficiently interesting. Orwell couldn't have been Orwell if he hadn't had around Fascism and Communism and fellow-traveling intellectuals -- things that were quite a bummer to live through but did generate a lot of good writing. So without those big ticket isms, how will we be able to compare? And thus the constant effort to puff up the times we live in, because if they're great then we can be too.

And from