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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: steve harris who wrote (68375)6/9/2006 2:35:43 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
and that would be just what the moron bush would have done...
case in point...
his CHILDISH and absolutely DEVASTATING INVITATION TO HAVE INSURGENTS ATTACK OUR TROOPS with his stupid and moronic BRING IT ON...and DEAD OR ALIVE...you still just don't get it...
even the SHRUB knows he's an imbecile for saying it...
and yet...you do



To: steve harris who wrote (68375)6/9/2006 3:35:52 PM
From: Mao II  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Questions to Ask About the Zarqawi Killing
Ankush Khardori
The death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is, everyone seems to agree, unquestionably good news. No one needs reminding of all that he has done, but suffice it to say that he had on his hands the blood of US troops as well as innocent civilians in Jordan and Iraq, and that he was the leading figure in one significant component of the insurgency and violence that rages throughout Iraq today.

It is in times like these, however, when the country is in nearly unanimous agreement about the desirability of an action taken by the US government, that reporters may fail to ask some nagging and important questions. Getting caught up in the celebratory mood of the country is, to some degree, unavoidable -- particularly for the reporters stationed in Iraq, who have had to work in the violent conditions Zarqawi helped to create -- but there can be adverse consequences to this emotional involvement as well, in the form of dropped questions, missed opportunities, vulnerability to spin, and timidity in pursuing lines of inquiry that might place the American government and military in less than stellar light.

The problem is compounded by the fact that Zarqawi's death creates a sense of closure, as if one significant chapter in the history of the Iraq war has been definitively closed and we should direct our attention to the other challenges that lay ahead in Iraq. Journalists may be tempted to do uncritical tick-tocks of what occurred prior to Zarqawi's killing, recap his life and deadly influence, and move on. That temptation should be avoided, since there are sets of questions pertaining to Zarqawi that should be aggressively pursued by the people who cover the administration (whether White House or military correspondents).

What follows is a discussion of a few of those questions. Because this story has just been broken, this is not yet intended as criticism per se, but I think we all have an investment in seeing these issues probed in the weeks ahead.

Why was Zarqawi killed rather than captured?
According to the Times, reports from Iraqi villagers suggest that American forces on the ground may have exchanged fire with people in the house where Zarqawi was holed up prior to the bombings that ultimately killed him. Thus, the answer to the question of why Zarqawi wasn't captured may turn out to be very straightforward -- there was simply too high of a risk that large numbers of US troops would be killed, or that Zarqawi would yet again elude American forces -- but it is important nonetheless, for reasons that should be obvious.

I wrote above that Zarqawi's death was "unquestionably good news"; it was not, however, unquestionably the best news. As the head of a large segment of the insurgency, the potential intelligence value of Zarqawi could probably not be understated. The fact that people around Zarqawi appear to have turned on him by offering up information about his whereabouts suggests the military may be making notable intelligence inroads in at least certain parts of the insurgent elements in Iraq, but the operational details of the (formerly) Zarqawi-run operation are still shrouded in mystery. Indeed, as Professor Mohammed Hafez noted on the NewsHour, Zarqawi appears to have set up a highly decentralized network of cells that should be able to continue unimpeded in his absence. Zarqawi may not have offered intelligence on these networks or plans for impending acts of terrorism easily, but his death means there is no chance of that happening whatsoever.

It should be noted, incidentally, that while supporters of the Bush administration might deride the notion that Zarqawi might have been better off alive (and in our hands), the question of why Zarqawi wasn't captured is hardly an inherently partisan one. In fact, everyone should agree that this proposition is obviously true. I don't want to get sidetracked on debates about the administration's torture and detention policies, but readers are free to choose their preferred ending to the alternative storyline of a Zarqawi capture: Perhaps he would be interrogated in accordance with the Geneva conventions and put on trial (maybe with the result of a death sentence), or perhaps he would be locked up in a secret prison and tortured for intelligence.

Either way, whether Zarqawi's capture simply wasn't tactically viable or just wasn't pursued, reporters should try to get to the bottom of this issue.

Does the President regret not having killed Zarqawi when he was given the chance before the invasion of Iraq?
On three separate occasions before the start of the Iraq war -- in June 2002, October 2002, and January 2003 -- the White House was presented with plans for taking Zarqawi out, but all three times it declined to authorize them. NBC News reported in March 2004 that, according to military officials, "their case for attacking Zarqawi's operation was airtight, but the administration feared destroying the terrorist camp in Iraq could undercut its case for war against Saddam" (emphasis added, angrily). Though Condoleezza Rice, who was Bush's National Security Adviser at the time, denied the veracity of the report, the NBC story was later confirmed by The Wall Street Journal and Michael Scheuer, the former head of the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit. The results of the White House's seemingly inexcusable failure to kill Zarqawi, before he would go on to kill and maim US soldiers and Iraqis, were quite obviously disastrous.

To my knowledge, no one has asked Bush directly about this report and why, if it's true (as it appears to be), the White House did not kill Zarqawi when it had numerous chances to do so. The American people deserve an answer to this question from the President himself. In all likelihood, he will deflect the question, but that of course would be a story in itself. And if he answers it substantively, the result will be headline-worthy regardless of what he says ("Bush Regrets Failure to Kill Zarqawi Prior to Iraq Invasion," or "Bush Does Not Regret Killing Zarqawi Prior to Iraq War").

What's next?
The White House can be forgiven its willingness to take the day to make a victory lap, but while the press has so far been healthily (and rightly) skeptical of the idea that Zarqawi's death will slow the violence in Iraq, we have yet to get any sense from the White House of what America's next moves in Iraq are. This may seem like an obvious inquiry to pursue, but the increasing pressure to constantly produce breaking news has meant political reporting that focuses on broader questions and policy issues is all too often in short supply. Nowhere has this problem been more prevalent than in coverage of Iraq, where so much is constantly taking place that pauses for serious examination of our policy have been rare.

Indeed, for most of the last three years, the administration's strategy for victory in Iraq has seemed either to be nonexistent or seriously misguided, a problem that has no doubt fueled the increasing disapproval of war among the public. And despite the success in killing Zarqawi, everyone, including the President himself, grants that the violence in Iraq is unlikely to abate in the near term. (For the most thorough exposition of why this is the case, see Anthony Cordesman's report.)

White House Press Secretary Tony Snow was in an understandably good mood at his briefing yesterday, and the press was predictably (and again, understandably) trying to pin down details about Zarqawi's death, but some of the focus in the coming days needs to be on whether the administration has a larger plan for dealing with the insurgents and terrorists in Iraq. The questions should not stop with inquiries about potential troop reductions. Is there a strategy in place to deal with the potential infighting among Zarqawi's lieutenants to take his position? Does the US have any idea of how it will quell sectarian, militia-based violence (which, by pretty much all accounts, is the predominant cause of the turmoil in Iraq today)? Might there be overtures to any moderate groups previously aligned with Zarqawi that could be brought into the political process? I have my own suspicious about what the answers to those questions might turn out to be, but I'd still like to hear what the government and military have to say about them.

* * *

So far, the outpouring of reporting on the strike on Zarqawi has been impressive. In the weeks to come, however, it will be interesting to see whether the media steps out of the present and turns to the administration with the right questions about the past, as well as what lies ahead for the future.

huffingtonpost.com



To: steve harris who wrote (68375)6/9/2006 3:53:42 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 173976
 
War, War and More War is What Bush Really Wants

By BILL CHRISTISON
Former CIA analyst

George W. Bush. "Dubya." In the media, the practice of using the W to distinguish the current president from his father is common. George Senior has two middle initials -- H and W -- but few media flacks seem to use them. Nevertheless, two beats one, and adding to the fetid miasma constantly enveloping Washington these days is the old but oft-repeated rumor about a dominating motivation of Bush Junior -- that he would do almost anything to assure that his own reputation surpasses that of his father in historians' future rankings of presidents. It seems to me that we might in common courtesy push him a little more quickly than might otherwise occur, at least in the name game, toward equality with (though not superiority over) his father -- by giving him the honor and dignity of two middle initials. We should decree that henceforth the son shall be known as George P. W. ("Perpetual War") Bush. Instead of just "Dubya," how about calling him "Pee Dubya?"

Is it unfair to label the current president "Pee Dubya?" No, it is not. Let's look at a little background. Back on March 16, 2006, the White House published a new document, The National Security Strategy of the United States of America. This replaces or, more properly, supplements an earlier document with the same title that the White House put out in 2002.

Most people in the U.S. and elsewhere did not pay much attention to the new version of this document, because it is loaded with clichés and much of it reads like the propaganda put out by far too many current Bush administration spokesmen these days. It is not an inspired piece of writing. The first two pages contain a cover letter from George W. Bush to "My fellow Americans" that seems particularly propagandistic. In these two pages, the words "democracy" or "democratic" appear seven times; the words "freedom" or "free," eleven times.

But the document is nonetheless important. Perhaps the major difference between the 2006 and the 2002 version is the greater bluntness with which the new version proclaims that the U.S. is in a struggle that will last for many years and defines who our alleged principal enemy is. Several recent speeches of Bush had already presaged this bluntness, but the new White House document puts the same thoughts into the most prestigious and official foreign policy pronouncement that the present administration makes public.

In the very beginning of the paper, immediately following Bush's covering letter, the "ultimate goal" of the U.S. is described as "ending tyranny in our world." A cliché? Of course, but noteworthy for its arrogance. The paper then continues, "Achieving this goal is the work of generations. The United States is in the early years of a long struggle. . . . The 20th century witnessed the triumph of freedom over the threats of fascism and communism. Yet a new totalitarian ideology now threatens, an ideology grounded not in secular philosophy but in the perversion of a proud religion." Later in the document, this statement appears: "The struggle against militant Islamic radicalism is the great ideological conflict of the early years of the 21st century." This comparison of 20th century threats with 21st century threats makes it quite clear that the Bush administration foresees new world wars in the 21st century that may be every bit as bad as the world wars of the 20th. And there are no statements that the U.S. will make any great efforts to avoid such wars. "Pee Dubya" just doesn't seem to care.

Nowhere in the 2002 version of The National Security Strategy were such comparisons of 20th century fascism and communism with 21st century "militant Islamic radicalism" made, although a formulation almost as blunt did appear in a very high-level U.S. publication (for the first time that this writer can recall) -- in the 9/11 Commission Report released in July 2004.

The 9/11 Commission, consisting of both Republicans and Democrats appointed by the leaders of both parties, issued a report that contained absolutely no dissents or even hints of disagreements. The commissioners unanimously concluded, in what was a key passage of the report, that "the enemy is not just 'terrorism,' some generic evil. . . . It is the threat posed by Islamist terrorism. . . . Bin Ladin and Islamist terrorists mean exactly what they say: to them America is the font of all evil, the 'head of the snake,' and it must be converted or destroyed. . . . [This] is not a position with which Americans can bargain or negotiate. With it there is no common ground -- not even respect for life -- on which to begin a dialogue. It can only be destroyed or utterly isolated. . . . This process is likely to be measured in decades, not years." The only things missing from this diatribe were the comparisons with fascism and communism.

So, from 2002 to 2004 and then to 2006, there was a progression -- a gradually increasing willingness at top levels of the government to talk explicitly about Islamic extremism as the cause of all our troubles and to talk more openly and bluntly about a conflict lasting for "decades" or "generations." At lower levels around Washington, among mid-level neocon officials and media representatives of the neocons such as Charles Krauthammer, such bluntness has been in evidence for a considerably longer period. But by 2006 the bluntness was also an open part of the presidentially-approved dogma in the highest level U.S. documents.

All this seems intended to provide Bush a stronger reason to support the "clash of civilization" notion originally conceived by the neocons and long backed by many Christian fundamentalist leaders in the U.S., as well as by Israeli right-wingers. And since this conflict will last for "generations," won't it also promise great profits for those arms-makers who are among Bush's strongest supporters and largest contributors? And isn't it also intended to make it easier for the Bush administration to continue giving its close ally Israel a free hand to do whatever it wants to those "Muslim extremists" who recently won a democratic election in the West Bank?

Let's look more closely at this picture of a conflict lasting for decades that the Bush administration wants to drag us into. Some among us, including me, would argue the contrary case, that if the U.S. actually changed its foreign policies, ceased its drive for political and economic domination over areas of the world that Arabs and Muslims consider to be theirs, and seriously addressed their legitimate grievances on the Palestine-Israel issue, we could reduce the threat of terrorism against us and our allies in far less time. Taking a moral stand for a change, if only by backing away from imperialism, would have the dual benefit of being moral -- a nice change of pace -- and pragmatically of vastly enhancing the U.S. image around the world and undermining the terrorists' anti-American case.

Let's look more closely also at the claim that Islamist terrorism is the great danger of the present. Danger to whom? If you were a Muslim, might you not figure instead that the greatest danger to you was U.S. and Israeli aggression and Christian fundamentalist extremism, given some of the statements certain fundamentalist leaders in the U.S. have made about Islam? Put another way, might you not see the greatest danger to you arising from the alliance of Christian and Jewish fundamentalism arrayed against your world?

Let's take one more example. One of the action recommendations in the 9/11 Commission's report is this: "The problems in the U.S.-Saudi relationship must be confronted, openly. . . . [An effort should be made to work toward] a shared interest in greater tolerance and cultural respect, translating into a commitment to fight the violent extremists who foment hatred." If we say that about the U.S.-Saudi relationship, should we not ask that problems in the U.S.-Israeli-Muslim relationship be confronted just as openly? If you were a Muslim, would you not regard it as equally important to global peace that the U.S. work for tolerance and cultural respect in both America and Israel as well, and work toward translating that into a commitment to fight extremists who foment hatred of Islam in both nations?

The new 2006 version of the National Security Strategy paper also deals with U.S. policy toward Iraq, Iran, and Syria. It will not be news to readers that there is nothing in the document about the timing of even a partial withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq. Every reference to Iraq is written in a manner intended to persuade readers that U.S. forces will remain in the country indefinitely. Nor will it be news that the administration plans to continue employing preemptive military action in the region whenever and wherever it decides to do so. The paper contains no serious restrictions on any future U.S. preemptive military actions.

Syria and Iran are lumped together as "allies of terror" in the 2006 version, and they are told that "the world must hold these regimes to account." The document contains nothing on specific U.S. plans for Syria, but Iran receives considerably more detailed treatment. The U.S. alleges that Iran "has violated its Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) safeguards obligations" and says that "we may face no greater challenge from a single country than from Iran." The paper threatens "confrontation" if diplomatic efforts do not succeed and goes on to say that the U.S. also has "broader concerns. . . . The Iranian regime sponsors terrorism; threatens Israel; seeks to thwart Middle East peace; disrupts democracy in Iraq; and denies the aspirations of its people for freedom." How much of this is bluff and how much is not is impossible to know for sure, but at the least, the document intentionally leaves the impression that some form of U.S., or U.S.-Israeli, military action against Iran, possibly involving nuclear weapons, is likely in coming months.

A digression is necessary here. This writer's belief is that the only long-term hope the world has of avoiding a quite widespread further proliferation of nuclear weapons to additional nations in the coming decade is for the U.S. to undertake honest and serious multilateral negotiations aimed at eliminating nuclear weapons everywhere. In the specific case of Iran, if we in the U.S., without launching a war, seriously want that country to forgo nuclear weapons, we should understand that Iran, despite its present denials, almost certainly wants a capability to acquire such weapons in the future, just as the Bush administration believes. Iran wants them, or will want them, first, because Israel has them; second, because the U.S. has them; and third, because numerous other nations have them. As a proud country, Iran believes it is equally entitled to them, and that belief will not change. Furthermore, in the eyes of most Muslims around the world and many other people too, Iran, with a population of close to 70 million, clearly has as much right as Israel, with a population less than one-tenth as large, to have nuclear weapons.

To reemphasize the essential point, in a world where the dominant system of governance continues to be based on sovereign nation-states, the only hope, without a war, of persuading Iran to stop its nuclear weapons program is for the U.S. to end its own monumental hypocrisy on nuclear weapons. The U.S. government itself would have to undertake a major change of policy. It would have to accept the proposition, very publicly, that until the U.S. is willing to eliminate its own nuclear weapons, other nation-states around the world, including Iran, have just as much right to them as the U.S., Israel, Russia, China, England, France, India, Pakistan -- and yes, North Korea. Then, as already mentioned, the U.S. would have to begin negotiations to eliminate nuclear weapons everywhere, and it would have to stop immediately all planning to expand the varieties of weapons in its own nuclear arsenal. It would also have to stop Israel from doing the same.

From here on, what would happen next becomes even more speculative. Assuming it was possible to convince most of the major powers including the U.S. to begin multilateral talks on nuclear disarmament, the negotiations would undoubtedly require several years. In the end, the United Nations or some new international organization would most likely need a strong international military force, not dominated by the U.S., to enforce and verify any agreement, with respect to both nation-states and non-state entities. Under any circumstances, such negotiations would be exceedingly difficult.

As a simultaneous and indispensable step in this scenario, parallel negotiations on a nuclear-free zone in the entire Middle East, including Israel, would also have to be undertaken simultaneously with the global nuclear disarmament talks. Most Arab nations in the past have already supported a nuclear-free zone, while Israel has been the stumbling block. But the U.S. would have to refuse to be a partner of Israel in these negotiations, because to do so would cause the negotiations to fail miserably. Instead, we would deliberately and openly have to change our policy toward Israel and put whatever pressure on that country might be necessary to bring about a nuclear-free zone. Specifically, the U.S. would probably have to announce that future U.S. aid to Israel would be tied to the successful establishment of such a zone. Stringent enforcement and verification measures would be needed.

Now let's come down to earth. Unfortunately, it is simply impossible to envisage a situation in which any conceivable U.S. administration would at present accept even step one of this scenario -- that is, even beginning a process of negotiating away its own nuclear weapons.

Therefore, any Iranian government will in the end consider that it has as much right as the rest of us to have its own nuclear weapons, regardless of the fact that it has signed the Nonproliferation Treaty. It could quite truthfully charge that the U.S. itself had already violated the NPT, and that therefore Iran was entitled to do the same. Even if Teheran, under pressure, were to sign new agreements, now or in the future, to forgo such weapons, the new agreements would be meaningless as long as the U.S., Israel, and other nuclear nations insisted that they could keep and expand their own nuclear arsenals.

Many people are aware that the critical bargain reached in the 1970 NPT -- the bargain that made the treaty possible -- was a trade-off: the acceptance of continued non-nuclear-weapons status by states without those weapons, in return for the simultaneous agreement by states possessing nuclear weapons to pursue good-faith negotiations on nuclear, as well as general and complete, disarmament, "under strict and effective international control." These provisions had no teeth, and certainly many "realists" in the U.S. foreign policy establishment thought the provisions were so unrealistic that they would not and could not be enforced. And in truth they never have been. Nevertheless, the existence of these provisions was necessary to the NPT's ratification by numerous countries, and they give any state dissatisfied with progress toward nuclear disarmament -- including Iran -- an excuse to abrogate or ignore the treaty.

While the niceties of international law on this issue may not be a major concern to most people, another question truly is vital. Which is more important -- stopping the further proliferation of nuclear weapons to Iran, or stopping the U.S. government and/or the government of Israel from instigating a war against Iran? If it is impossible to do both without military action, this question must be addressed. To this writer, the answer is crystal clear: The single most urgent objective right now is preventing a war, possibly nuclear, from being started by the U.S. and/or Israel against Iran. Such a war would be disastrous, and we should be doing whatever we can, with the highest possible priority, to prevent it from ever happening.

From 1945 until the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, the U.S. never once took military action to prevent other nations from simply acquiring nuclear weapons. And numerous other nations did in fact acquire them. Washington relied instead on deterrence and containment to prevent other nations from using such weapons after they had been developed. Deterrence and containment may not be perfect policies, but they have a successful track record and can probably be applied more successfully than other policies to subnational groups as well as nation-states. It is also quite likely that Iran itself, whenever it decides that it must have its own nuclear weapons more quickly than it now seems to want them, will conclude that it too needs them for deterrent rather than preemptive and aggressive purposes against the U.S. and Israel. The point is that for Iran as well as the U.S., deterrence and containment turn out still to be better policies than the recklessness of preemption. We should therefore strongly reject any U.S.- or Israeli-initiated military actions or coup attempts against Iran. The consequence of such actions would almost certainly be a new world war.

Bill Christison was a senior official of the CIA. He served as a National Intelligence Officer and as Director of the CIA's Office of Regional and Political Analysis. He is a contributor to Imperial Crusades, CounterPunch's history of the wars on Iraq and Afghanistan. He can be reached at Kathy.bill@christison-santafe.com.