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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JBTFD who wrote (692355)7/16/2005 5:47:56 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
London and Guantanamo
The 7/7 attacks show the importance of keeping terrorists out of circulation.

Saturday, July 16, 2005 12:01 a.m.

Some of our readers took offense that we mentioned the debate over Guantanamo in reaction to last week's London bombings. So we thought we'd elaborate on why the political campaign against both Gitmo and the Patriot Act illustrate how far some of our elites have traveled since 9/11.
Start with Guantanamo, and the growing chorus to shut it down. In Congress, this includes most Democrats. A few Republicans have piled on too, such as Mel Martinez, a Florida Senator and former Bush Cabinet officer, who said last month that the detention center had "become an icon for bad stories" and was hurting the war effort.

The argument seems to be that closing Gitmo will make the Arab world think better of us, thereby causing Islamic terrorists to stop killing Americans. This overlooks the small detail that they were willing to kill us, even on American soil, long before Guantanamo was up and running. What critics also don't mention is the dozen detainees released from Gitmo who have already rejoined the fight against the U.S. The Pentagon says that several Gitmo veterans have been killed in combat with U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan. Imagine the uproar if it had been the other way around.

Nor has anyone come up with a better idea about what to do with enemy combatants who, under international law, can be held until the cessation of hostilities. At best, there's a certain cognitive dissonance at work here. On the one hand, civil libertarians have sued to get detainees returned to their countries of origin. On the other hand, they've sued to prevent them from being sent home if that home is located in a place like Turkey or Pakistan, where they might be treated less gently than at Guantanamo. A spokesman tells us there are 15 detainees whom Defense has deemed no longer threats but can't be released until their cases are reviewed in federal court. Call it the ACLU detention policy.

Then there are those who want detainees charged and tried in U.S. criminal courts as if they were run-of-the mill felons instead of fighters. They presumably haven't studied the al Qaeda training manual captured in Manchester, England, which explains how operatives are trained to manipulate the West's system of criminal justice. Lesson 18 is titled: "If an indictment is issued and the trial begins, the brother has to pay attention to the following." Item one is: Tell the judge you're being tortured. Item two is: Complain of mistreatment in jail. Sound familiar?

The debate over the Patriot Act hasn't been any more clarifying. Last month the House voted to exclude libraries and bookstores from a provision of the law (Section 215) that lets law enforcement officers obtain warrants from a special federal intelligence court to search business records. The Justice Department says that, as of the end of March, Section 215 had been used 35 times--though not once to search library records. Two of the terrorists used public libraries to check their flight reservations for 9/11, a little-known fact that militates against carving out what would become a safe haven for libraries.
The Patriot Act was rushed through Congress in the emotional days after 9/11, and making some of its provisions automatically expire at the end of 2005 was a prudent idea. Four years later, however, despite the doom-and-glooming of the ACLU and friends, there is no evidence that the Patriot Act has been abused in any way or that it jeopardizes basic civil rights. Not one concrete example.

None of this is to say that the U.S. hasn't made mistakes in fighting terrorism. The broadly based post-9/11 roundup of illegal immigrants went too far, as an Inspector General report noted and the Administration has admitted. The refusal to endorse racial profiling in airport security checks is another--reducing the government's credibility among ordinary Americans who understand that it defies common sense. But the federal courts have mostly upheld the government's anti-terror policies and where they haven't--as in the question of regular reviews of detainees' status--Washington has been quick to adjust.

In the wake of the London attacks, a common line was surprise that something similar hasn't yet happened in the U.S. No one knows why we've been spared, but one reasonable guess is that the forceful anti-terror response of the U.S. government has made it more difficult.

The specifics of Guantanamo and the Patriot Act aside, the campaigns against them show that we've been creeping back toward the law-enforcement mindset about terrorism that prevailed before September 11 and which contributed so much to letting that day's attacks succeed. London is a reminder of how clear and present the danger still is.



To: JBTFD who wrote (692355)7/16/2005 5:49:45 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
BY JAMES TARANTO
Friday, July 15, 2005 10:10 a.m. EDT

Best of the Tube This Weekend
The good news first: We're appearing on this weekend's episode of PBS's "The Journal Editorial Report," with colleagues Paul Gigot, Dorothy Rabinowitz and Kim Strassel, to discuss Karl Rove and the Valerie Plame kerfuffle. In New York the program airs at 9 p.m. on WNET channel 13; elsewhere, click here to check local listings. If the show doesn't air where you are, video and transcripts will be available at the link atop this item.

Now the bad news: We're going on vacation, not to return until Aug. 1. (Actually, come to think of it, this is bad news for you but good news for us.) We have left behind a few surprises, so make sure you keep checking the site or your e-mail.

An Innocent Man
Let's conduct a little thought experiment, shall we? Suppose that people in Washington generally had the sense that Karl Rove was soon to be indicted in the Valerie Plame kerfuffle. How would they react?

It seems to us the White House would be working to distance itself from Rove, possibly planning for him to make a quiet exit, much as John Kerry's campaign "disappeared" Joe Wilson last summer when Wilson's credibility fell apart. The Democrats, on the other hand, would act high-minded and talk of "letting the process work," at least as long as Rove remained on the job. An actual indictment, after all, would do maximal political damage to the Bush administration.

Instead, the White House (which knows a lot more about the investigation than any of us) is confidently standing behind Rove, while the Democrats are waging a hysterical attack that would be premature if it were based on anything real. Partisan Democrats don't want to talk about the facts of the case (facts are irrelevant, as a former Enron adviser insists) or about the law. They just want to pound the table and insist that Rove is metaphysically guilty.

Here at Best of the Web Today, facts do matter, so let's look at the latest to emerge on the Plame kerfuffle:

The New York Times, the Washington Post and the Associated Press all report that, as the AP puts it, Rove "originally learned about the operative [Plame] from the news media and not government sources, according to a person briefed on the testimony," apparently a lawyer friendly to the White House. According to the Times account, Rove was the second source for Bob Novak's column identifying Plame's role in arranging Wilson's trip to Niger:

Mr. Rove has told investigators that he learned from the columnist the name of the C.I.A. officer, who was referred to by her maiden name, Valerie Plame, and the circumstances in which her husband, former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, traveled to Africa to investigate possible uranium sales to Iraq, the person said.

After hearing Mr. Novak's account, the person who has been briefed on the matter said, Mr. Rove told the columnist: "I heard that, too." . . .

On Oct. 1, 2003, Mr. Novak wrote another column in which he described calling two officials who were his sources for the earlier column. The first source, whose identity has not been revealed, provided the outlines of the story and was described by Mr. Novak as "no partisan gunslinger." Mr. Novak wrote that when he called a second official for confirmation, the source said, "Oh, you know about it."

That second source was Mr. Rove, the person briefed on the matter said.

If this account is accurate, then Rove simply confirmed a fact that was already in circulation. He no more "outed" Plame than Wilson did when he peddled his "outing" allegation to various left-wing journalists after Novak's column ran.

Meanwhile, the Washington Times quotes an erstwhile colleague of Plame's who casts further doubt on the Democratic narrative:

A former CIA covert agent who supervised Mrs. Plame early in her career yesterday took issue with her identification as an "undercover agent," saying that she worked for more than five years at the agency's headquarters in Langley and that most of her neighbors and friends knew that she was a CIA employee.

"She made no bones about the fact that she was an agency employee and her husband was a diplomat," Fred Rustmann, a covert agent from 1966 to 1990, told The Washington Times.

"Her neighbors knew this, her friends knew this, his friends knew this. A lot of blame could be put on to central cover staff and the agency because they weren't minding the store here. . . . The agency never changed her cover status."

Mr. Rustmann, who spent 20 of his 24 years in the agency under "nonofficial cover"--also known as a NOC, the same status as the wife of Mr. Wilson--also said that she worked under extremely light cover.

In addition, Mrs. Plame hadn't been out as an NOC since 1997, when she returned from her last assignment, married Mr. Wilson and had twins, USA Today reported yesterday.

In an interview with CNN yesterday, Wilson acknowledged, "My wife was not a clandestine officer the day that Bob Novak blew her identity," though he refused to say anything about her career before that day. As we noted yesterday, though, the source for that USA Today report was none other than Wilson himself, in his book, which apparently no one bothered to read until now.