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To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/26/2003 9:12:25 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Here's something worth watching...

***Comedian Bill Maher on Larry King Live right now***

btw, thnx for posting the article on 'virtual protests'.

-s2



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/26/2003 9:58:12 PM
From: Sig  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
<<<<Tom Andrews, a former Democratic representative from Maine who is running the organization, said more than 500,000 people had signed up on the Internet to take part and a half a million more were also expected to
participate without registering on the group's web site (Moveon.org).>>>

It is these arrogant thoughtless asses----who do not consider or care what it costs each individual or organization to clean up the mess and clear the Web so that the $billions in on-line trading , the E-bays, the Dells, the Amzn,
can do their routine efficient trading.
Forcing Representatives to put a filter on their e-mail which means ordinary people with legitimate complaints
cannot get through to be heard
No wonder he is a "former" representative and hopefully a "never again" representative.
Sig



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/26/2003 10:30:39 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
The down side to internet protests is that anybody can vote early, and vote often, and it's not illegal.

So, they aren't "scientific."

As a former sociologist, I'd imagine that you'd prefer "scientific" opinion polls.

No?

Sometimes, when I feel like it, I vote many, many times in an online poll. All you have to do is delete cookies, and the website has no way to tell you already voted.

Lest that seem "cheesey," the Democratic Underground does exactly the same thing.

CB@allsfair.rowr



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/26/2003 10:45:00 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Business Implications of the U.S.- Europe Rift

Knowledge@Wharton Newsletter
knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu
February 26-March 11, 2003

The diplomatic rift over war with Iraq has reverberated throughout the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany and the rest of what only recently has come to be known as Old and New Europe. Policy makers and citizens are wondering what will happen in the coming months and years as familiar alliances founder, new alliances emerge, and structures like NATO and the European Union face new pressures.



But more is at stake than politics and diplomacy. At issue, too, are business and trade relations between the United States and Europe, according to faculty members at Wharton and INSEAD, the French business school. Just how far the disagreement over Iraq may affect business remains to be seen. No one is predicting anything like an out-and-out trade war or a rash of Americans pouring bottles of Bordeaux into Boston Harbor. But faculty members say the impact of the Iraq issue on commerce may nonetheless be serious as ordinary consumers and corporate strategic planners alike begin to make decisions based on the friction that has affected the political climate in Berlin, Brussels, London, Paris and Washington.



“Nobody knows how this is going to play out,” says Howard Pack, professor of business and public policy at Wharton. “I think the likelihood of a consumer backlash is not huge. But Germany has a very high unemployment rate. It also exports about $30 billion more a year to the U.S. than it imports. So, even if sales of German consumer products went down by $20 billion, this would have a very serious impact on the German economy. In that sense, the Europeans may run into some unanticipated problems. Given the weakness of the European economies, this dispute might have some effect.”



Bruce Kogut, professor of strategy at INSEAD, attended the recent annual conference of corporate leaders, government officials and other well-connected people at Davos, Switzerland, where he found the atmosphere “devastatingly against the U.S.” At Davos, he noted, “Europeans and many expatriate Americans were angry over the United States acting as a bully” toward those countries that oppose military action against Baghdad. Those same people also expressed disappointment over previous U.S.-European conflicts regarding trade and environmental policies.



After the Davos sessions, Kogut and his family went skiing in France where he heard people express fears about a possible decline in U.S. imports from Europe, which is a net exporter to America. “Europe is very dependent on the American market and has invested heavily in the U.S. in the last 10 to 15 years,” says Kogut.



Reports of a Backlash
News articles concerning the effects of the diplomatic rift on business have surfaced in the last few weeks. According to the International Herald Tribune, the president of a German wholesalers group reported that an executive of a consumer-goods company lost a contract with a longtime U.S. customer who was unhappy over German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s opposition to a war with Iraq. The newspaper also quoted the president of the French-American Chamber of Commerce in Paris as saying that, while French-U.S. crises usually “blow over” in a few weeks, “I don’t expect U.S. airlines to be buying Airbus over the next few months.”



The Associated Press, meanwhile, ran a story that an official in Palm Beach County, Fla., would try to block a subsidiary of the French company Vivendi Environmental from getting a $25 million government contract to build a sludge-treatment plant.



But faculty members say the potential ramifications of the European-U.S. dispute go beyond anecdotal evidence of consumer dissatisfaction and the French-bashing comments of tabloid columnists and late-night comedians. They say that animosity and distrust on both sides of the Atlantic could affect where U.S. firms decide to invest in Europe and how effectively trade disputes between the EU and the United States are handled. In addition, EU antitrust officials may look at proposed U.S. corporate mergers with a more critical eye. What is more, they say, the chasm between Old European countries like Belgium, France and Germany and the New Europe of Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and other central and east European nations will affect how enlargement of the EU proceeds. The 15-member EU is expected to expand to 25 countries by 2004.



“The less obvious, but perhaps more damaging, effects won’t be from consumer boycotts and companies walking way from deals,” says Wharton management professor Witold Henisz. Instead, bigger risks will arise when a company, say, enters into talks with blinders on or a chip on its shoulder.



“When companies deal in an international context, they need to appreciate the situation on the ground in other countries,” says Henisz. “If you’re not listening, you may miss the importance of what someone else is saying. There’s a danger that if you are entering into a negotiation, you won’t hear the piece of information you need for a deal to work.”



He adds: “Are people going to walk away from deals out of spite? I don’t think so. I think it’s more important to understand … what makes a deal successful. A continued process of discussion, of developing a better understanding of what politics, culture and societies are like in other countries, helps businesses succeed abroad. If a firm writes off the other side as antagonistic, that will impede further progress.”



Henisz also fears that the disagreement over Iraq will spill over into other areas, such as the longstanding controversy over the importation of genetically modified organisms into EU countries.



The value of the dollar has fallen against the euro since the rift opened. But Richard J. Herring, professor of international banking and director of the Joseph H. Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies, says it is difficult to discern how much of the dollar’s decline is attributable to the diplomatic flap over Iraq.



“A lot of things have happened at once,” Herring explains. “There are structural reasons to believe the dollar would be devalued anyhow because the U.S. has a huge current account deficit and the euro has, by some measures, been undervalued for some time. But we haven’t seen what we often see when there are huge international uncertainties, such as a flight to the safety of the dollar. It’s possible the current threat to international stability won’t have that result. After 9/11, the U.S. no longer seems invulnerable to attack. Also, terrorists seem to be hostile only toward the U.S.”



Herring notes that the costs of the 1991 Gulf War were borne jointly by the United States and its allies, so there was little impact on America’s balance of payments position. “But it’s clear if we go ahead with a war on Iraq, it will be ours alone to pay for. This could cause an adjustment in the dollar,” he adds.



According to Wharton management professor Gerald A. McDermott, U.S.-European tensions may affect the evolution of EU enlargement and the drafting of a European constitution, which is currently underway. Many of the countries that have announced support for the U.S. position on Iraq are candidates for entry into the EU and into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It was these countries that in mid-February were on the receiving end of criticism from Jacques Chirac. The French president said that the countries should have kept their opinions about Iraq to themselves and indicated that their outspokenness could affect their entry into the common market.



Trade Issues
What this all means for business is that fundamental decisions are being made about the future of political and economic institutions in Europe at a time of strained relations, McDermott suggests. “The French say President Bush is screwing around with the EU [by welcoming support for a war with Iraq from Central and Eastern European countries]. Historically, the EU has been a French-German affair. The French view Bush’s actions as a willingness to play around with what they view as domestic politics. There are huge divisions within the EU over things like subsidies [to new EU entrants] and to agriculture. Now the French and Germans are really angry at the countries that support Bush, which exacerbates the difficulty in dealing with critical policies and institutions.”



McDermott says the disagreement over Iraq also may affect the current Doha round of World Trade Organization negotiations on contentious issues that include EU subsidies to farmers. (The deliberations are known as the Doha round because the talks began in 2001 in the capital of Qatar.) He also predicts “foot dragging” on U.S. antitrust cases that come before EU officials. In addition, tensions related to Iraq will affect whether Britain decides to give up the pound and adopt the euro as its currency, an issue that bitterly divides British officials.



British Prime Minister Tony Blair is “at no threat of losing his job at this point,” McDermott says, “but what is at issue is the political capital and power he would need to get voters to adopt the euro. I think you have to evaluate the impact of the Iraq war and the postwar situation on Blair’s ability to carry out other parts of his agenda. All of these issues affect the integration of Europe and the international political economy.” With regard to trade between the United States and the EU, Herring says it is hard to predict what may happen as a result of the current diplomatic tensions since trade friction already exists. “There have been longstanding tensions over the EU’s agricultural policy, its mergers policy and U.S. steel tariffs,” according to Herring. “But at the end of the day I don’t see the Iraq issue rupturing the WTO. I think the last round of tit-for-tat retaliation for tariff moves shows that neither side may be eager to resort to them at this point.”



When the U.S. placed temporary tariffs on imported steel last year, the Europeans were clever to retaliate not in an across-the-board way but by targeting steel products in congressional districts where they thought President Bush was weak. “The Republicans ended up winning the mid-term elections, but the impression was left that the Europeans would be almost surgical in retaliation, which makes tariffs less appealing,” says Herring.



The Lure of Eastern Europe

INSEAD’s Kogut believes that French and German opposition to a war with Iraq may lead more U.S. firms to seek to set up operations in Central and Eastern Europe, where labor is cheaper, the business climate is entrepreneurial and there is access to the EU market. But Kogut notes that American companies were looking to this region as a place for investment long before the Iraq issue caused U.S-European tensions.



The extent of the attraction that New Europe holds for investors in the United States – as well as Old European countries – was spelled out in a recent article written by William Drozdiak, a former Washington Post reporter and now executive director of the German Marshall Fund’s Transatlantic Center.



“Over the next decade, Europe’s fastest growth rate and highest income surge are projected to occur in the eastern swath, stretching from the Baltic states to Bulgaria,” Drozdiak wrote in the Post. He added: “Western insurance companies, supermarkets, banks and automobile and machinery firms are flocking east to establish themselves in what is seen as the new mother lode of consumer markets.” For instance, Citigroup and General Motors are among the firms that have heavily invested in Poland, a staunch U.S. ally that was particularly unhappy with the way Chirac chastised European supporters of the United States in the Iraq controversy.



Wharton’s Pack points out that if any U.S. firms are reluctant about investing in Germany or France, it may simply be because they see good opportunities elsewhere and have little to do with the squabble over Iraq. “American businesses are concerned with investments in China and, increasingly, with India in the area of software,” says Pack. “There is rapid per-capita growth in both countries. This highlights a long-term trend. Economies in India, China and even Russia may do much better than Europe in the next 10 or 15 years.” France, Germany and other European countries “have to figure out how to keep their economies growing when their birth rates are so low.”



Herring points out that many U.S. companies “are already not investing in Germany and France. Even the Germans are no longer investing in Germany, which is part of their problem. The same is true of France, but to a lesser degree.”



An Optimistic View
Looking ahead, Kogut is largely optimistic about the ability of the United States and Europe to settle their differences. “I’m not predicting the U.S. will withdraw economically from Europe,” Kogut stresses. “The U.S. is a unified market and it is still the country that has been the engine of world growth in the past few years and it will continue to remain attractive to Europeans.”



By the same token, Western Europe will continue to remain attractive to many U.S. firms, and vice versa. “In deciding where to invest, American companies look to see whether there is support for their presence and activities in foreign countries,” according to Kogut. “Every investment depends on favorable political climate. My sense is U.S. firms are going to find support in France and Germany. These economies still have high unemployment rates and are thankful for investment. And, in the end, Europe and the U.S. have great common interests.



“Things do look a bit worse than they really are,” Kogut continues. “It’s difficult to know what French policy is – and that’s a major factor in how all of this will play out. But, in the end, I’m fairly optimistic. Both Europe and the U.S. are so deeply involved with each other they’re going to work to maintain favorable business environments. Their destinies are common destinies.”



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/26/2003 11:16:20 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Bush's policies risky, say Feinstein, Tauscher

Unilateralism, treaty rejections, nuclear threats could isolate U.S.

By Edward Epstein
San Francisco Chronicle Washington Bureau
Thursday, February 27, 2003

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Washington -- President Bush's go-it-alone foreign policy, his administration's willingness to threaten nuclear attacks against countries without nuclear weapons and his rejection of several treaties are making the world more dangerous, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California charged Wednesday.

Feinstein's sweeping criticism, which came in a speech to a Washington think tank, was echoed in part by Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Walnut Creek, in a separate speech to an energy group. Tauscher said Bush's decisions to walk away from arms control accords and consider building a new generation of nuclear weapons threaten to undo decades of successful policies.

The harsh words from two moderate Democrats who both voted in October for the resolution authorizing Bush to use military force against Iraq show that bipartisanship over U.S. foreign policy is shredding. Despite their votes on the war resolution, the two have called on Bush to give U.N. inspectors more time in Iraq before taking military action.

Tauscher also introduced a resolution with two other House Democrats on Wednesday that would require Bush to file a report with Congress addressing the human and financial costs of a war with Iraq and its aftermath before launching an assault. But the resolution, like other similar proposals aimed at reopening the congressional debate over Iraq, is unlikely to go anywhere in a Republican-controlled Congress that voted by wide margins for last fall's war resolution.

"By moving the United States sharply away from the concept of cooperative security and a world governed by international law and established norms of behavior, and potentially substituting unilateralism and pre-emption in its place, I believe that the administration's policy runs the real risk that the United States will become increasingly isolated and alone, and dependent on its military might to protect its interests and its citizens," Feinstein said at the Center for National Policy.

She said the White House's 2002 nuclear posture review and its new national security strategy, which raised the possibility of pre-emptive strikes against American enemies and of developing new low-yield nuclear weapons, represent "an approach that is neither in our national interest, nor is it consistent with our nation's standards and values."

Feinstein said that in some cases a pre-emptive strike might be warranted, but the president has made a mistake by creating a specific pre-emption doctrine.

"By adapting the concept of 'imminent threat' to threats not 'fully formed' or to cases where, one day, a foreign government may be a threat to the United States, we set a precedent for others -- which may well come back to haunt us."

Feinstein listed Bush's decisions to walk away from agreements on global warming, the creation of an international criminal court and a comprehensive test-ban treaty as examples of the unilateralist trend.

Tauscher, in her speech to a group of energy facility contractors, said the president is taking the "low road" on nuclear-weapons issues.

"Rather than improve on past accomplishments, the United States is currently in a pattern of rejecting treaties, has put forth a nuclear posture review that seems divorced from reality, and is making only paltry investments in nuclear nonproliferation," she said.

Referring to Bush's abrogation of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, she added, "The current approach of treating past arms control agreements as somehow suspect ignores that treaties have been the currency of peace and trust between parties for hundreds of years."

In her proposal for a new presidential report on Iraq, Tauscher said Bush could use it to convince the public of his case for military action.

"People stop me on the street and tell me they believe that the administration has already decided to use force against Iraq. . . . Publicly answering these fundamental questions gives President Bush a chance to turn that around," she said.

Feinstein has endorsed the proposal of Democratic Sens. Robert Byrd of West Virginia and Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts for a new congressional debate on a war resolution. But Senate Republican leaders have made it clear the proposal isn't going anywhere.

The administration has a sharply different view on the issues raised by Feinstein and Tauscher. Officials say the changes to military posture have been forced on the United States by the war on terrorism, which has created new conditions.

"To win the global war on terror, our armed forces need to be flexible, light and agile so that they can respond quickly to sudden changes," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing this month. "The same is true of the men and women who support them in the department; we also need to be flexible, light and agile so we can move money and shift people, and design and buy new weapons more quickly, and respond to the frequent sudden changes in our security environment."

Specifically, the administration has said it reserves the right to use nuclear weapons against any country that launches a chemical or biological attack on the United States.

sfgate.com



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/27/2003 1:35:20 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
America Is 'Old Europe'

Unlike The U.S., Europe Learned From The Past

tompaine.com

<<...In the United States, administration members like Wolfowitz, Rice and Perle, and pundits like Friedman and Kristol, have sold the President on the notion of turning Iraq into a Middle Eastern democracy experiment. But nothing about these people's educational backgrounds, political interests or personal experience promotes confidence that they know anything more about the Islamic world than Bonaparte and his men did in 1799. The fact that the vaunted, expensive United States intelligence system was not able to protect 3,000-plus Americans from being murdered en masse by a gang of Arabic-speaking criminals should give at least pause to the idea of American preparedness to invade and then administer -- democratically -- an entire Muslim country...>>



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/27/2003 2:02:45 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
President Bush's Nation-Building

Lead Editorial
The New York Times
February 27, 2003

President Bush sketched an expansive vision last night of what he expects to accomplish by a war in Iraq. Instead of focusing on eliminating weapons of mass destruction, or reducing the threat of terror to the United States, Mr. Bush talked about establishing a "free and peaceful Iraq" that would serve as a "dramatic and inspiring example" to the entire Arab and Muslim world, provide a stabilizing influence in the Middle East and even help end the Arab-Israeli conflict.

The idea of turning Iraq into a model democracy in the Arab world is one some members of the administration have been discussing for a long time. But it is not one that Mr. Bush has devoted much effort to selling to the American people. Most Americans would certainly rally around the idea of a strong, stable and open government in Iraq. But they haven't been prepared for the cost of such an undertaking. For most people, the vision of a new gulf war is one of relatively quick victory, not years of American occupation.

• In a speech to the American Enterprise Institute, the president described an undertaking that resembled American efforts in post-World-War-II Japan and Germany. This week Gen. Eric Shinseki, the Army chief of staff, said he believed that hundreds of thousands of soldiers would have to remain on Iraqi soil to create a stable environment for democratic change. Mr. Bush, a man who ran for office scoffing at the idea of "nation-building," is now betting his presidency on that idea.

In his eagerness to get both American and international support for an invasion of Iraq, Mr. Bush seemed to be piling everything onto this single cart. While many Europeans and Arabs have urged that the president make solving the Arab-Israeli conflict his first priority for the region, Mr. Bush said last night that getting rid of Saddam Hussein was the key to peace between Israel and its neighbors.

The United States is supposed to be working with the United Nations, the European Union and Russia on a "road map" toward a comprehensive settlement that would lead to creation of a separate Palestinian state by 2005. Britain's embattled prime minister, Tony Blair, has been urging Mr. Bush to talk more about that map, and last night the president said that he remained committed to it. But it seemed little more than lip service. Instead the president put Iraq in the center of the picture, arguing that success there would deprive Palestinian terrorists of critical support and provide the Palestinian people with an inspiration for establishing their own democratic institutions.

It is true that Saddam Hussein has encouraged terrorism in Israel by paying rewards to the families of suicide bombers. But neither Mr. Hussein's political nor financial support has been the critical factor in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It would have been more useful last night if the president had fleshed out his vision of a new Middle East by describing that "road map" in detail and committing the administration to work on it now. Even under the best of circumstances, the situation in Iraq is likely to be chaotic for years to come. Neither the Israelis nor the Palestinians should have to wait for peace until it is settled.

nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)2/27/2003 8:42:50 AM
From: gamesmistress  Respond to of 281500
 
Why would jamming phone lines, fax lines and email boxes do anything other than irritate the hell out of your Congressperson? Equating telemarketing and hacker techniques as "the voice of the people" is silly and pretentious.



To: JohnM who wrote (77989)8/17/2005 2:17:18 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
The Strategic Class
________________________________________

By Ari Berman
TomPaine.org
Monday 15 August 2005

In July 2002, at the first Senate hearing on Iraq, then-Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair Joe Biden pledged his allegiance to Bush's war. Ever since, the blunt-spoken Biden has seized every opportunity to dismiss antiwar critics within his own party, vocally denouncing Bush's handling of the war while doggedly supporting the war effort itself. Biden carried this message into the Kerry campaign as the candidate's closest foreign policy confidant, and a few days after announcing his own intention to run for the presidency in 2008, he gave a major speech at the Brookings Institution in which he criticized rising calls for withdrawal as a "gigantic mistake."

The Democrats' speculative front-runner for '08, Hillary Clinton, has offered similarly hawkish rhetoric. "If we were to artificially set a deadline of some sort, that would be like a green light to the terrorists, and we can't afford to do that," Clinton told CBS in February. Instead, she recently proposed enlarging the Army by 80,000 troops "to respond to threats wherever danger lies." Clinton, a member of the Armed Services Committee, appears more comfortable accommodating the president's Iraq policy than opposing it, and her early and sustained support for the war (and frequent photo-ops with the troops) supposedly reinforces her national security credentials.

The prominence of party leaders like Biden and Clinton, and of a slew of other potential pro-war candidates who support the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq, presents the Democrats with an odd dilemma: At a time when the American people are turning against the Iraq War and favor a withdrawal of U.S. troops, and British and American leaders are publicly discussing a partial pullback, the leading Democratic presidential candidates for '08 are unapologetic war hawks. Nearly 60 percent of Americans now oppose the war, according to recent polling. Sixty-three percent want U.S. troops brought home within the next year. Yet a recent National Journal "insiders poll" found that a similar margin of Democratic members of Congress reject setting any timetable. The possibility that America's military presence in Iraq may be doing more harm than good is considered beyond the pale of "sophisticated" debate.

The continued high standing of the hawks has been made possible by their enablers in the strategic class-the foreign policy advisers, think-tank specialists and pundits. Their presumed expertise gives the strategic class a unique license to speak for the party on national security issues. This group has always been quietly influential, but since 9/11 it has risen in prominence, egging on and underpinning elected officials, crowding out dissenters within its own ranks and becoming increasingly ideologically monolithic. So far its members remain unchallenged. It's more than a little ironic that the people who got Iraq so wrong continue to tell the Democrats how to get it right.

It's helpful to think of the Democratic strategic class as a pyramid. At the top are politicians like Biden and Clinton, forming the most important and visible public face. Just below are high-ranking former government officials, like U.N. ambassador Richard Holbrooke, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Assistant Secretary of State Jamie Rubin. These are the people who devise and execute foreign policy and frame the substance of the message. Virtually all the top advisers supported the Iraq War; Holbrooke, who's been dubbed the "closest thing the party has to a Kissinger" by one foreign policy analyst, even tacked to Bush's right, arguing in February 2003 that anything less than an invasion of Iraq would undermine international law. Many of the officials held high-ranking positions in the Kerry campaign. Holbrooke, frequently mentioned as a potential secretary of state, urged Kerry to keep his vision on Iraq "deliberately vague," the New York Observer reported. Rubin appeared on television 60 times in May 2004 alone. Nine days before the election, Holbrooke addressed the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and reiterated Kerry's support for the war and occupation, belittled European negotiations with Iran on its nuclear program and endorsed the Israeli separation wall. "Hardly a Dove Among Dems' Brain Trusters," read a headline from the Forward newspaper.

Underneath the top policy officials are the anointed regional experts, who play an instrumental role in legitimizing the politicians' arguments and drumming up support inside the Beltway for impending conflicts in faraway lands. Brookings fellow and former CIA official Kenneth Pollack's book The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq played precisely that function for wavering Democratic elites in the run-up to war, turning "more doves into hawks than Richard Perle, Laurie Mylroie and George W. Bush combined," wrote Slate's Chris Suellentrop in March 2003. "In Washington, it's not uncommon to hear fence-straddlers qualify their ambivalence about an Iraq war with the sentiment, 'Of course, I haven't read the Pollack book yet.'"

The likes of Pollack are greatly bolstered by a second front of national security specialists at prestigious think tanks like Brookings, the Council on Foreign Relations, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Center for Strategic and International Studies and the Center for American Progress. Though they often toil in obscurity, the think-tank officials form a necessary echo chamber for the political class, appearing on television and writing issue briefs while providing, through their organizations, a platform on which candidates can appear "robust" in the national security realm. As one example, Stephen Walt, a leading foreign policy expert and academic dean of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, says that "Brookings was basically supportive of the war in Iraq. If Brookings is signing on to a major foreign policy initiative of a Republican administration, that doesn't give the Democratic mainstream much room to mount a really forceful critique of the incumbent foreign policy." Much of Kerry's campaign platform-with its calls to add 40,000 troops to the military, preserve the doctrine of pre-emptive war and stay the course in Iraq-read as if it had been lifted verbatim from a Brookings strategy memo.

At the bottom of the pyramid are the liberal hawks in the punditocracy, figures like New Republic editor Peter Beinart, Time writer Joe Klein and New York Times columnist Tom Friedman. These pundits, along with purely partisan outfits like the Democratic Leadership Council's Progressive Policy Institute (PPI), help to both set the agenda and frame the debate. The journalistic hawks churn out the agitprop that the more respectable think tanks turn into "serious" scholarship, some of which eventually becomes policy, or at least talking points, when adopted by the politicians.

Central to the liberal hawks' mission is a challenge to other Democrats that they too must become "national security Democrats," to borrow a phrase coined by Holbrooke. To talk about national security a Democrat must be a national security Democrat, and to be a national security Democrat, a Democrat must enthusiastically support a militarized "war on terror," protracted occupation in Iraq, "muscular" democratization and ever-larger defense budgets. The liberal hawks caricature other Democrats just as Republicans long stereotyped them. The pundits magnify the perception that Democrats are soft on national security, and they influence how consultants view public opinion and develop the message for candidates. In that sense, the bottom of the pyramid is always interacting with the top. It matters little that people like Beinart have no national security experience-as long as the hawks identify themselves as national security Democrats, they're free to play the game.

Today, despite the growing evidence that the Bush administration's actions in Iraq have been a colossal-some would say criminal-failure, what's striking is how much of the pyramid remains essentially in place. As the Iraqi insurgency turned increasingly violent, and the much-hyped WMDs never turned up, the hawks attempted a bit of self-evaluation. Slate and The New Republic both hosted windy pseudo-mea culpa forums. Of the eight liberal hawks invited by Slate, journalist Fred Kaplan remarked, "I seem to be the only one in the club who's changed his mind." TNR's confession was even more limited, with Beinart admitting that he overcame his distrust of Bush so that he could "feel superior to the Democrats." Pollack took part in both forums, and then earned five figures for an Atlantic Monthly essay on "what went wrong." Even at their darkest hour, the strategic class found a way to profit from its errors, coalescing around a view that its members had been misled by the Bush administration and that too little planning, too few troops and too much ideology were largely to blame for the chaos in Iraq. The hawks decided it was acceptable to criticize the execution of the war, but not the war itself-a view Kerry found particularly attractive. A "yes, but" or "no, but" mentality defined this thinking. Having subsequently pinned the blame for Kerry's defeat largely on the political consultants or the candidate himself, the strategic class has moved forward largely unscarred.

Biden and Clinton still have more influence than antiwar politicians like Ted Kennedy or Russ Feingold. No one has replaced Holbrooke or Albright. Pollack continues to thrive at Brookings and, despite never visiting the country, has a new book out about Iran. Shortly after the election, Beinart penned a 5,683-word essay calling on hawkish Democrats to repudiate "softs" like MoveOn.org and Michael Moore; the essay won Beinart--already a fellow at Brookings-a $650,000 book deal and high-profile visibility on the Washington ideas circuit. Subsequently a statement of leading policy apparatchiks on the PPI publication Blueprint challenged fellow Democrats to make fighting Islamic totalitarianism the central organizing principle of the party. Replace the words "Al Qaeda" with "Soviet Union" and the essay seemed straight out of 1947-48; the militarized post-9/11 climate of fear had reincarnated the cold war Democrat. A number of leading specialists signed a letter by the neoconservative Project for the New American Century asking Congress to boost the defense budget and increase the size of the military by 25,000 troops each year over the next several years. The "Third Way" group of conservative Senate Democrats recently introduced a similar proposal.

"There's an approach which says, 'Let's raise the stakes and call,'" says former Sen. Gary Hart, a rare voice of principled opposition in the party today. "That if Republicans want a ten-division Army, let's be for a 12-division Army. I think that's just nonsense, frankly. It's stupid policy. Trying to get on the other side of the Republicans is folly, both politically and substantively."

If Hart is correct, then why does so much of the Democratic strategic class march in lockstep? There's no simple answer. The insularity of Washington, pressures of careerism, fear of appearing soft and the absence of institutional alternatives all contribute to a limiting of the debate. Bill Clinton's misguided political dictum that the public "would rather have somebody who's strong and wrong than somebody who's weak and right" applies equally to the strategic class.

"Everybody's on the make," says Steve Clemons of the New America Foundation, who led the fight against John Bolton from his blog, The Washington Note. "They're all worried about their next government job. People pull their punches or try to craft years in advance what sort of positions they're gonna be up for. The culture of Washington is very risk-averse." Adds Walt, "It's pretty hard to go wrong right now taking a hard-line position. There's enough places or institutions that will take care of you. Outside of academia, if you take positions on the other side, there's just nowhere near the level of institutional support."

Those insiders who doubt the wisdom of a hawkish course often get the cold shoulder if they stray too far from the strategic line. After criticizing the rush to war, Ivo Daalder of Brookings became the foreign policy point man for Howard Dean's insurgent campaign. Many of Daalder's colleagues at Brookings and elsewhere sharply criticized Dean, and afterward unnamed Democratic insiders bragged to The New Republic that Dean's advisers would never work again. That, of course, didn't happen, but Daalder and others have since tempered their opposition rhetoric. Today Daalder blames the antiwar movement for Dean's defeat and calls for more troops in Iraq.

For daring to tackle the liberal hawk consensus in his recent book America Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American Nationalism, Anatol Lieven, who is British and until recently a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment, got lumped into the "anti-American" category by Jonathan Tepperman of the Council on Foreign Relations in the New York Times Book Review . "It is hardly an anti-American position to suggest that Americans today can learn much from the work of great Americans of the past like Reinhold Niebuhr and J.W. Fulbright," Lieven wrote in reply. He has since left Carnegie and joined Clemons at the New America Foundation, a centrist think tank that has acquired a maverick reputation. New America, along with places like the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy-an anti-imperial umbrella of thinkers on the left, right and center-now form a sort of dissident establishment.

Owing to their distinction, the Democratic strategic class, consisting of the party's leading foreign policy thinkers, could have provided a powerful check on a reckless Administration intent on rushing to war. Instead, it bears partial responsibility for the war's costs: more than 1,800 American fatalities, thousands of maimed and wounded US soldiers, many more dead Iraqi civilians, spiraling worldwide anti-Americanism, surging world oil prices, a new breeding ground for Al Qaeda, multiplying terror attacks abroad and mounting economic insecurity at home.

At the same time, talking tough on Iraq has been a disastrous moral, tactical and political miscalculation for Democrats. A recent Democracy Corps poll found that Iraq tops the list of factors motivating voter discontent toward President Bush. "This is a country almost settled on the need for change," political consultants Stan Greenberg and James Carville write. Yet Democrats will only prosper if they pose "sharp choices," something the strategic class has been unwilling or unable to do. A few small progressive think tanks, helped by the dissident establishment, have tried to pry open badly needed institutional space for a bolder national security policy. A few courageous elected officials are attempting to drum up Congressional support for withdrawal. Thus far, the hawks have drowned them out. Unless and until the strategic class transforms or declines in stature, the Democrats beholden to them will be doomed to repeat their Iraq mistakes.

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Ari Berman writes The Nation's "Daily Outrage" weblog. He is a Ralph Shikes Fellow at the Public Concern Foundation.

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