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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/25/2006 2:24:22 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    [O]ne of the inherent vices of leaks of classified 
information is the selectivity of those leaks. When anti-
Bush intelligence officials want to damage the President
with a leak to the Washington Post, they relate certain
features of, in this case, the National Intelligence
Estimate, that they think will have the intended effect.
But we don't get to see the whole report; just the
reporter's spin on the spin she was given by the embedded
Democrats in the agencies. We have no way of knowing,
based on this kind of news story, what the report actually
says, or how sound its reasoning is.

"Spy Agencies Say Iraq War Hurting U.S. Terror Fight"

Power Line

That's the headline story on the front page of the Washington Post this morning. I have no idea whether the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) upon which the story relies actually says this, but Karen DeYoung's report gives one little confidence (a) that she is reporting fully and accurately on the NIE and (b) that our "spy agencies" have any sound basis for such a conclusion.

De Young's story conflates a number of different alleged phenomena:


(1) terrorism is becoming more decentralized,
(2) successful recruting of terrorists is on the rise,
(3) terrorists are using the Iraq war as the centerpiece of their recruiting campaigns and
(4) the sitation in Iraq has worsened the U.S. position with respect to fighting terrorism.

De Young's confusion (or the confusion she induces in the reader) reaches its climax when she proclaims that the "conclusions and tone" of the NIE "have been reflected in a number of public statements by senior intelligence officials this year." De Young cites a statement by John Negroponte that;

<<< "[m]y colleagues and I sill view the global jihadist terrorist movement, which emerged from the Afghan-Soviet conflict in the 1980s but is today inspired and led by al Qaeda, as the preeiminent threat to our citizens, homeland interests and friends." >>>

This statement may have some very slight connection to phenomena (1) and (2) cited above, but they do not "reflect" phenomena (3) and (4) at all.

De Young also cites a statement by CIA Director Michael Hayden that "threats to the U.S. at home and abroad will become more diverse and that could lead to increasing attacks worldwide." Again, on its face this statement has no relation to the question of the impact of the war in Iraq on our overall efforts to combat terrorism.

It may be the case that the terrorists are recruiting more members than before, and it's likely that terrorists rely heavily on the war in Iraq when they engage in recruiting. But it does not follow that the war is hurting the overall terror fight or even that it's materially helping terrorists recruit. If we had not overthrown Saddam Hussein, the terrorists would hardly be without a sales pitch.
They could cite the "crusade" in Afghanistan (which some liberals assure us would be intense if only we weren't bogged down in Iraq), our support of Israel including our support of its bombing campaign in Lebanon, our support of the Saudis, and the fact that we backed down in Iraq. These sorts of recruiting pitches fueled the rise of al Qaeda in the 1990s. If the NIE argues that this decade's Islamofascists need the war in Iraq on top of its traditional arguments in order effectively to recruit, I'd like to see its evidence.

One should also ask whether any alleged recruiting gains are offset by the fact that a state that supported terrorism and had significance experience and know-how with a variety of WMD is out of business. I wonder whether the NIE gets into this subject, which undoubtedly is a sore one for our spy agencies.

Finally, one should ask what the impact on terrorist recruiting of a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq would be. Past terrorist recruiting efforts are said to have fueled by the U.S. withdrawal from Lebanon in the 1980s and Somalia in the 1990s, and of course by the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan.
It seems obvious that a U.S. pull-out in Iraq under present conditions would represent the mother of all recruiting opportunites. But maybe our spy agencies believe that a pull-out would cause would-be recruits suddenly to conclude that we're not evil infidels after all.

De Young glides around this whole issue by noting that the NIE does not offer policy recommendations. But don't our spy agencies consider the likely effects of changing our policies? If not, they have little to offer us when it comes to thinking about what our policies should be.

JOHN adds: This is the latest cheap shot in the CIA's war against the Bush administration. As I've said before, one of the inherent vices of leaks of classified information is the selectivity of those leaks. When anti-Bush intelligence officials want to damage the President with a leak to the Washington Post, they relate certain features of, in this case, the National Intelligence Estimate, that they think will have the intended effect. But we don't get to see the whole report; just the reporter's spin on the spin she was given by the embedded Democrats in the agencies. We have no way of knowing, based on this kind of news story, what the report actually says, or how sound its reasoning is.

By the way, note that the report was completed in April. So the Democrats held their leak until it could be of service in the election campaign.

UPDATE: Sure enough, the White House says that the stories in the Post and the New York Times are "not representative of the complete document." That's very likely true, but we can't know without reading the whole report. And in all likelihood, the reporters who passed on the leakers' spin don't know either.

powerlineblog.com

washingtonpost.com

today.reuters.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 11:54:20 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Tony Snow is giving a live press conference. He just said that the released NIE fully reflects what is in the full document - it was NOT "cherry picked" to support the Admin's case. He quoted a frequent critic of the Admin who stated that the released document is an accurate snapshot of the full document.



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 12:59:36 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Here's what this NIE incident has revealed plainly & clearly - The MSM & DNC are a bunch of opportunistic, lowlife, scumbag, lying bastards who won't think twice about committing acts of treachery as long as they get 2 or 3 "newz" cycles to lie their asses off in order to harm the Bush Admin.

    Democrats have badly misrepresented this report and offer 
the one solution guaranteed to result in making the
problem worse -- as the NIE also concludes.

The Real NIE Revelations

By Captain Ed on National Politics
Captain's Quarters

The Bush administration's decision to declassify the conclusions of the National Intelligence Estimate yesterday revealed two truths about politics and the intelligence community, neither of which appear very complimentary. First, the Democrats allowed themselves to get outfoxed on national security yet again by allowing themselves to get hysterical and seriously misrepresent the conclusions of the NIE. As the Washington Post reports, Democrats made a lot of extraordinary claims about the NIE, which the report itself doesn't support:


<<< President Bush took the extraordinary step of releasing portions of the classified report, which was completed in April, to counter assertions made after information from the document was leaked to media outlets over the weekend. Reports based on those leaks said the report blames the war in Iraq for worsening the global terrorist threat -- an interpretation that the administration calls a distortion of its contents.

Speaking at a White House news conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Bush angrily called the leak a political act intended to affect the upcoming midterm elections. "Somebody has taken it upon themselves to leak classified information for political purposes," he said. ...

For the third straight day, Democrats sought to draw attention to the issue with news conferences and political maneuvers.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) moved to put the House into secret session to discuss the intelligence estimate, but the motion was defeated along party lines.

"With such a devastating and authoritative analysis of the Bush administration's failures in Iraq, the president and the Republican-controlled Congress now have a choice to make," said Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (Nev.). "Will they stubbornly follow a failed stay-the-course strategy that America's intelligence community has concluded makes America less safe, or will they finally admit their mistakes and change course?" >>>


In fact, the NIE doesn't offer any conclusions about successes or failures at present or in the past regarding Iraq. The actual conclusions of the intelligence community about Iraq take up one paragraph and one bullet point in the four-page document, and both do not assess the success or failure of the Coalition. It does, however, point out the consequences of both in the future:


<<< We assess that the Iraq jihad is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives; perceived jihadist success there would inspire more fighters to continue the struggle elsewhere.

• The Iraq conflict has become the "cause celebre" for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of US involvement in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement. Should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves, and be perceived, to have failed, we judge fewer fighters will be inspired to carry on the fight. >>>


It also lists the Iraq "jihad" as one of four main factors that fuel the spread of jihadism across the region, but note the other three:


<<< Four underlying factors are fueling the spread of the jihadist movement:

(1) Entrenched grievances, such as corruption, injustice, and fear of Western domination, leading to anger, humiliation, and a sense of powerlessness;

(2) the Iraq "jihad";

(3) the slow pace of real and sustained economic, social, and political reforms in many Muslim majority nations; and

(4) pervasive anti-US sentiment among most Muslims - all of which jihadists exploit. >>>

Factors one and three are directly impacted by the American forward policy of engagement that led to factor two. The "neocon" impulse to use democratization as a method to reform the area addresses both of these factors. Self-government allows Arabs to determine their own foreign-policy goals and gives Arabs the tools to eliminate corruption and injustice, or at least to greatly reduce it from Ba'athist levels of the past. Democratization also brings political reforms and a free market that resolves many of the oppressive triggers for radicalization by giving individual Arabs the freedom to create and own their own property and to protect it.

This is why we have to endure the Iraqi "jihad" until we succeed. The insurgency will collapse when Iraqis grow strong enough to defend themselves and rebuild their infrastructure in peace. In fact, no other strategy could possibly address factors one and three. Even if we packed up and walked out of Iraq, those factors would still exist -- as they have for decades -- and the fourth factor would remain from our economic engagement with the oppressive regimes that control the region. We have an opportunity to address all four factors by prevailing in Iraq.

What do the Democrats offer? Withdrawal from the one theater in which we face our terrorist enemy and the one place that has to replace a missing tyrant. If we continue our resolve, we can firm up a democracy as Saddam's replacement and begin to address the factors that drive jihadism. As the NIE concludes, a victory in Iraq would seriously damage the radical Islamist movement, perhaps even mortally. We have no chance to strike a blow against them by retreating. Democrats have badly misrepresented this report and offer the one solution guaranteed to result in making the problem worse -- as the NIE also concludes.

captainsquartersblog.com

media.washingtonpost.com

washingtonpost.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 1:25:02 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Note: This Power Line report was posted prior to the release of the NIE report by the Bush Admin. Still, it is quite revealing.

What Else Was In the NIE Report?

Power Line

In my addendum to this post by Paul (linked below), I repeated a point I've made several times before: one of the sinister aspects of leaks of classified information is that they are by nature selective. The leaker has access to lots of material, but he doesn't leak it all: he only leaks what he thinks will best serve his political agenda. The recent leaks of alleged conclusions from the National Intelligence Estimate that was completed last spring is a perfect case in point. Paul and I talked about an article in the Washington Post by a reporter who obviously had not read the report. All she could do was pass on the Democrat leaker's spin. Which, in all likelihood, she was happy to do.

But what does the report really say?
In From the Cold, a web site operated by a former intelligence officer with 20 years' experience, has obtained access to portions, at least, of the intelligence agencies' report. If you are interested in this story, you should read it all (link below). Here are a few excerpts:


<<< Thankfully, the actual NIE is not the harbinger of disaster that the Times and WaPo would have us believe. According to members of the intel community who have seen the document, the NIE is actually fair and balanced (to coin a phrase), noting both successes and failures in the War on Terror--and identifying potential points of failure for the jihadists. The quotes printed below--taken directly from the document and provided to this blogger--provide "the other side" of the estimate, and its more balanced assessment of where we stand in the War on Terror.

In one of its early paragraphs, the estimate notes progress in the struggle against terrorism, stating the U.S.-led efforts have "seriously damaged Al Qaida leadership and disrupted its operations." Didn't see that in the NYT article.

Or how about this statement, which--in part--reflects the impact of increased pressure on the terrorists:
    "A large body of reporting indicates that people 
identifying themselves as jihadists is increasing...
however, they are largely decentralized, lack a coherent
strategy and are becoming more diffuse."
Hmm...doesn't sound much like Al Qaida's pre-9-11 game plan.

The report also notes the importance of the War in Iraq as a make or break point for the terrorists:
    "Should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves to have
failed, we judge that fewer will carry on the fight."
It's called a ripple effect.

More support for the defeating the enemy on his home turf:
    "Threats to the U.S. are intrinsically linked to U.S. 
success or failure in Iraq."
President Bush and senior administration officials have made this argument many times--and it's been consistently dismissed by the "experts" at the WaPo and Times.

And, some indication that the "growing" jihad may be pursuing the wrong course:

    "There is evidence that violent tactics are backfiring...
their greatest vulnerability is that their ultimate
political solution (shar'a law) is unpopular with the vast
majority of Muslims."
Seems to contradict MSM accounts of a jihadist tsunami with ever-increasing support in the global Islamic community.

The estimate also affirms the wisdom of sowing democracy in the Middle East:
    "Progress toward pluralism and more responsive political 
systems in the Muslim world will eliminate many of the
grievances jihadists exploit."
As I recall, this the core of our strategy in Afghanistan and Iraq. >>>


On balance, it appears that the NIE supports the Bush administration's approach to the war on terror. Why, then, did the Washington Post and the New York Times report so selectively and misleadingly? In From the Cold wants to know, and we do too:


<<< Quite a contrast to the "doom and gloom" scenario painted by the Times and the Post. Not that we'd expect anything different. But the obvious slant of their coverage does raise an interesting question, one that should be posed to their ombudsman or public editor. If sources used by the papers had access to the document, why weren't they asked about the positive elements of the report? Or, if sources provided some of the more favorable comments regarding our war on terror, why weren't those featured in articles published by the Times and the Post?

The ball's in your court, Mr. Keller and Mr. Downie. We'd like an answer to these questions, since they cut to the heart of whether your publications can actually cover a story in a fair and objective manner. We won't hold our breath waiting for a response. >>>

Sadly, I don't think the answers to these questions are much in doubt. The bureaucrat leakers are Democrats who wanted to advance their party's interests, and the reporters at the New York Times and Washington Post were also Democrats, and were happy to oblige. The bottom line is that you just can't get adequate information from these news sources. Their grotesque biases outweigh the resources that, in theory, they are able to devote to covering the news. They can't even provide a balanced account of a single bureaucratic report, let alone of a war.

powerlineblog.com

powerlineblog.com

formerspook.blogspot.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 1:50:26 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
I saw this press conference. It was great. I doubt any of the important issues discussed made it on to the front page of any "newz"papers since it all bodes well for the Bush Admin & bad for scumbag lying libs.

Bush and Karzai Strike Back

Power Line

This morning President Bush and President Karzai of Afghanistan had a brief press conference at the White House. After some introductory remarks, they opened the floor for questions. You can read the full transcript (linked below).

The first question came from our old friend old friend Jennifer Loven:

<<< Q Thank you, sir. Even after hearing that one of the major conclusions of the National Intelligence Estimate in April was that the Iraq war has fueled terror growth around the world, why have you continued to say that the Iraq war has made this country safer? >>>

This is when Bush announced that he had ordered the report declassified, to the extent possible. But there's lots more to his answer:

<<< I, of course, read the key judgments on the NIE. I agree with their conclusion that because of our successes against the leadership of al Qaeda, the enemy is becoming more diffuse and independent. I'm not surprised the enemy is exploiting the situation in Iraq and using it as a propaganda tool to try to recruit more people to their -- to their murderous ways.

Some people have guessed what's in the report and have concluded that going into Iraq was a mistake. I strongly disagree. I think it's naive. I think it's a mistake for people to believe that going on the offense against people that want to do harm to the American people makes us less safe.
The terrorists fight us in Iraq for a reason: They want to try to stop a young democracy from developing, just like they're trying to fight another young democracy in Afghanistan. And they use it as a recruitment tool, because they understand the stakes. They understand what will happen to them when we defeat them in Iraq.

You know, to suggest that if we weren't in Iraq, we would see a rosier scenario with fewer extremists joining the radical movement requires us to ignore 20 years of experience. We weren't in Iraq when we got attacked on September the 11th. We weren't in Iraq, and thousands of fighters were trained in terror camps inside your country [Afghanistan], Mr. President. We weren't in Iraq when they first attacked the World Trade Center in 1993. We weren't in Iraq when they bombed the Cole. We weren't in Iraq when they blew up our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. My judgment is, if we weren't in Iraq, they'd find some other excuse, because they have ambitions. They kill in order to achieve their objectives.

You know, in the past, Osama bin Laden used Somalia as an excuse for people to join his jihadist movement. In the past, they used the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It was a convenient way to try to recruit people to their jihadist movement. They've used all kinds of excuses.

This government is going to do whatever it takes to protect this homeland. We're not going to let their excuses stop us from staying on the offense. The best way to protect America is defeat these killers overseas so we do not have to face them here at home. We're not going to let lies and propaganda by the enemy dictate how we win this war.

Now, you know what's interesting about the NIE -- it was a intelligence report done last April. As I understand, the conclusions -- the evidence on the conclusions reached was stopped being gathered on February -- at the end of February. And here we are, coming down the stretch in an election campaign, and it's on the front page of your newspapers. Isn't that interesting? Somebody has taken it upon themselves to leak classified information for political purposes.

I talked to John Negroponte today, the DNI. You know, I think it's a bad habit for our government to declassify every time there's a leak, because it means that it's going to be hard to get good product out of our analysts. Those of you who have been around here long enough know what I'm talking about. But once again, there's a leak out of our government, coming right down the stretch in this campaign, -- to create confusion in the minds of the American people, in my judgment, is why they leaked it.

And so we're going to -- I told the DNI to declassify this document. You can read it for yourself. We'll stop all the speculation, all the politics about somebody saying something about Iraq, somebody trying to confuse the American people about the nature of this enemy. And so John Negroponte, the DNI, is going to declassify the document as quickly as possible. He'll declassify the key judgments for you to read yourself. And he'll do so in such a way that we'll be able to protect sources and methods that our intelligence community uses. And then everybody can draw their own conclusions about what the report says. >>>


President Karzai, before he went on to respond to Loven's second question, added his own observations on what must have seemed to him to be an expression of sheer lunacy:

<<< PRESIDENT KARZAI: Ma'am, before I go to remarks by my brother, President Musharraf, terrorism was hurting us way before Iraq or September 11th. The President mentioned some examples of it. These extremist forces were killing people in Afghanistan and around for years, closing schools, burning mosques, killing children, uprooting vineyards, with vine trees, grapes hanging on them, forcing populations to poverty and misery.

They came to America on September 11th, but they were attacking you before September 11th in other parts of the world. We are a witness in Afghanistan to what they are and how they can hurt. You are a witness in New York. Do you forget people jumping off the 80th floor or 70th floor when the planes hit them? Can you imagine what it will be for a man or a woman to jump off that high? Who did that? And where are they now? And how do we fight them, how do we get rid of them, other than going after them? Should we wait for them to come and kill us again? That's why we need more action around the world, in Afghanistan and elsewhere, to get them defeated -- extremism, their allies, terrorists and the like. >>>

Bush also refused to be drawn into the low-class blame game that Bill Clinton played on Fox News. Asked about Clinton's accusations, he responded, in part:

<<< You know, look, Caren, I've watched all this finger-pointing and naming of names, and all that stuff. Our objective is to secure the country. And we've had investigations, we had the 9/11 Commission, we had the look back this, we've had the look back that. The American people need to know that we spend all our time doing everything that we can to protect them. So I'm not going to comment on other comments. >>>

And later:

<<< But there's a difference of opinion. It will come clear during this campaign, where people will say, get out, leave before the job is done. And those are good, decent, patriotic people who believe that way -- I just happen to believe they're absolutely wrong. So I'm going to continue to work to protect this country. And we'll let history judge -- all the different finger-pointing and all that business. I don't have enough time to finger-point. I've got to stay -- I've got to do my job, which comes home every day in the Oval Office, and that is to protect the American people from further attack. >>>

As usual, the President stands head and shoulders above his critics.

powerlineblog.com

whitehouse.gov

powerlineblog.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 2:04:13 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
The AP Goes Over the Top for the Democrats

Power Line

The administration declassified and released the three-page "key judgments" of the National Intelligence Estimate; we linked to it earlier today. The document, taken as a whole, shows that the leaks given to the New York Times and Washington Post were so incomplete and unrepresentative as to be wildly misleading, as were the stories those papers wrote based on the leaks.

At this morning's press conference, the AP's Jennifer Loven, one of the most partisan reporters in that highly partisan stable, asked a tendentious question about the NIE, in response to which President Bush announced that he had ordered the report's conclusions declassified so that the American people can read it for themselves and draw their own conclusions. We quoted that exchange below.

Ms. Loven lost no time, once the report was made available, in continuing her attack on the administration in the guise of news reporting. Here is how she and a colleague characterized the report:


<<< The war in Iraq has become a "cause celebre" for Islamic extremists, breeding deep resentment of the U.S. that probably will get worse before it gets better, federal intelligence analysts conclude in a report at odds with President Bush's portrayal of a world growing safer.
In the bleak report, declassified and released Tuesday on Bush's orders, the nation's most veteran analysts conclude that despite serious damage to the leadership of al-Qaida, the threat from Islamic extremists has spread both in numbers and in geographic reach.

Bush and his top advisers have said the formerly classified assessment of global terrorism supported their arguments that the world is safer because of the war. But more than three pages of stark judgments warning about the spread of terrorism contrasted with the administration's glass-half-full declarations.

*** Virtually all assessments of the current situation were bad news. The report's few positive notes were couched in conditional terms, depending on successful completion of difficult tasks ahead for the U.S. and its allies. >>>


The Associated Press is apparently relying on the assumption that hardly anyone will read the report's conclusions. Here are a few significant items that, with just one exception, Loven and her colleague didn't see fit to mention:


<<< United States-led counterterrorism efforts have seriously damaged the leadership of al-Qa'ida and disrupted its operations; however, we judge that al-Qa'ida will continue to pose the greatest threat to the Homeland and US interests abroad by a single terrorist organization.

Greater pluralism and more responsive political systems in Muslim majority nations would alleviate some of the grievances jihadists exploit. Over time, such progress, together with sustained, multifaceted programs targeting the vulnerabilities of the jihadist movement and continued pressure on al-Qa'ida, could erode support for the jihadists.

We assess that the global jihadist movement is decentralized, lacks a coherent global strategy, and is becoming more diffuse.

We assess that the Iraq jihad is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives; perceived jihadist success there would inspire more fighters to continue the struggle elsewhere. [Ed.: So whatever you do, don't cut and run.]

Should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves, and be perceived, to have failed, we judge fewer fighters will be inspired to carry on the fight. [Which is why it is so critical to win in Iraq.]

Four underlying factors are fueling the spread of the jihadist movement:

(1) Entrenched grievances, such as corruption, injustice, and fear of Western domination, leading to anger, humiliation, and a sense of powerlessness;

(2) the Iraq "jihad;"

(3) the slow pace of real and sustained economic, social and political reform in many Muslim majority nations; and

(4) pervasive anti-US sentiment among most Muslims--all of which jihadists exploit. [Ed.: Note that the administration's strategy of bringing reform to the Muslim world is intended to address factors 1, 3 and 4.]

Concomitant vulnerabilities in the jihadist movement have emerged that, if fully exposed and exploited, could begin to slow the spread of the movement. They include dependence on the continuation of Muslim-related conflicts, the limited appeal of the jihadists' radical ideology, the emergence of respected voices of moderation, and criticism of the violent tactics employed against mostly Muslim citizens.

The jihadists' greatest vulnerability is that their ultimate political solution--an ultra-conservative interpretation of shari'a-based governance spanning the Muslim world--is unpopular with the vast majority of Muslims. Exposing the religious and political straitjacket that is implied by the jihadists' propaganda would help to divide them from the audience they seek to persuade.

Recent condemnations of violence and extremist religious interpretations by a few notable Muslim clerics signal a trend that could facilitate the growth of a constructive alternative to jihadist ideology: peaceful political activism. [Note that this is one of the chief goals of the administration's Iraq policy.] This also could lead to the consistent and dynamic participation of broader Muslim communities in rejecting violence, reducing the ability of radicals to capitalize on passive community support. In this way, the Muslim mainstream emerges as the most powerful weapon in the war on terror.

If democratic reform efforts in Muslim majority nations progress over the next five years, political participation probably would drive a wedge between intransigent extremists and groups willing to use the political process to achieve their local objectives.

The increased role of Iraqis in managing the operations of al-Qa'ida in Iraq might lead veteran foreign jihadists to focus their efforts on external operations. [Note that this means that veteran, non-Iraqi jihadists are now focusing their attentions on that country, rather than on places like Europe and the United States.] >>>

The NIE is very much a mixed bag, with a lot of on-the-one-hand and on-the-other-hand. But, given the assessments noted above, which are not only positive but also reinforce the importance of the goals the Bush administration is pursuing--victory in Iraq and reform, eventually, in the Arab world--the AP's characterization of the report as "bleak" is ridiculous, and its claim that "[v]irtually all assessments of the current situation were bad news" is simply false.

Beyond the misreporting of the NIE, what strikes me most about it is what a useless document it is. It is couched in such generalities that I don't see what use the President, or anyone else, could make of it for policy-making purposes. I would hope that if we saw the whole report, there would be substance that is not reflected in the "key judgments." If not, if I were President, I would send it back to the agencies it came from with a request to tell me something I didn't already know.

powerlineblog.com

news.yahoo.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 2:16:20 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
AT WAR

What Clinton Didn't Do . . .

. . . .and when he didn't do it.

BY RICHARD MINITER
The Wall Street Journal Editorial Page
Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Bill Clinton's outburst on Fox News was something of a public service, launching a debate about the antiterror policies of his administration. This is important because every George W. Bush policy that arouses the ire of Democrats--the Patriot Act, extraordinary rendition, detention without trial, pre-emptive war--is a departure from his predecessor. Where policies overlap--air attacks on infrastructure, secret presidential orders to kill terrorists, intelligence sharing with allies, freezing bank accounts, using police to arrest terror suspects--there is little friction. The question, then, is whether America should return to Mr. Clinton's policies or soldier on with Mr. Bush's.

It is vital that this debate be honest, but so far this has not been the case. Both Mr. Clinton's outrage at Chris Wallace's questioning and the ABC docudrama "The Path to 9/11" are attempts to polarize the nation's memory. While this divisiveness may be good for Mr. Clinton's reputation, it is ultimately unhealthy for the country. What we need, instead, is a cold-eyed look at what works against terrorists and what does not. The policies of the Clinton and Bush administrations ought to be put to the same iron test.

With that in mind, let us examine Mr. Clinton's war on terror.
Some 38 days after he was sworn in, al Qaeda attacked the World Trade Center. He did not visit the twin towers that year, even though four days after the attack he was just across the Hudson River in New Jersey, talking about job training. He made no attempt to rally the public against terrorism. His only public speech on the bombing was a few paragraphs inserted into a radio address mostly devoted an economic stimulus package. Those stray paragraphs were limited to reassuring the public and thanking the rescuers, the kinds of things governors say after hurricanes. He did not even vow to bring the bombers to justice. Instead, he turned the first terrorist attack on American soil over to the FBI.

In his Fox interview, Mr. Clinton said "no one knew that al Qaeda existed" in October 1993, during the tragic events in Somalia. But his national security adviser, Tony Lake, told me that he first learned of bin Laden "sometime in 1993," when he was thought of as a terror financier. U.S. Army Capt. James Francis Yacone, a black hawk squadron commander in Somalia, later testified that radio intercepts of enemy mortar crews firing at Americans were in Arabic, not Somali, suggesting the work of bin Laden's agents (who spoke Arabic), not warlord Farah Aideed's men (who did not). CIA and DIA reports also placed al Qaeda operatives in Somalia at the time.

By the end of Mr. Clinton's first year, al Qaeda had apparently attacked twice. The attacks would continue for every one of the Clinton years.

• In 1994, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (who would later plan the 9/11 attacks) launched "Operation Bojinka" to down 11 U.S. planes simultaneously over the Pacific. A sharp-eyed Filipina police officer foiled the plot. The sole American response: increased law-enforcement cooperation with the Philippines.

• In 1995, al Qaeda detonated a 220-pound car bomb outside the Office of Program Manager in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, killing five Americans and wounding 60 more. The FBI was sent in.

• In 1996, al Qaeda bombed the barracks of American pilots patrolling the "no-fly zones" over Iraq, killing 19. Again, the FBI responded.

• In 1997, al Qaeda consolidated its position in Afghanistan and bin Laden repeatedly declared war on the U.S. In February, bin Laden told an Arab TV network: "If someone can kill an American soldier, it is better than wasting time on other matters." No response from the Clinton administration.

• In 1998, al Qaeda simultaneously bombed U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, killing 224, including 12 U.S. diplomats. Mr. Clinton ordered cruise-missile strikes on Afghanistan and Sudan in response. Here Mr. Clinton's critics are wrong: The president was right to retaliate when America was attacked, irrespective of the Monica Lewinsky case.

Still, "Operation Infinite Reach" was weakened by Clintonian compromise. The State Department feared that Pakistan might spot the American missiles in its air space and misinterpret it as an Indian attack. So Mr. Clinton told Gen. Joe Ralston, vice chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, to notify Pakistan's army minutes before the Tomahawks passed over Pakistan. Given Pakistan's links to jihadis at the time, it is not surprising that bin Laden was tipped off, fleeing some 45 minutes before the missiles arrived.

• In 1999, the Clinton administration disrupted al Qaeda's Millennium plots, a series of bombings stretching from Amman to Los Angeles. This shining success was mostly the work of Richard Clarke, a NSC senior director who forced agencies to work together. But the Millennium approach was shortlived. Over Mr. Clarke's objections, policy reverted to the status quo.

• In January 2000, al Qaeda tried and failed to attack the U.S.S. The Sullivans off Yemen. (Their boat sank before they could reach their target.) But in October 2000, an al Qaeda bomb ripped a hole in the hull of the U.S.S. Cole, killing 17 sailors and wounding another 39.

When Mr. Clarke presented a plan to launch a massive cruise missile strike on al Qaeda and Taliban facilities in Afghanistan, the Clinton cabinet voted against it. After the meeting, a State Department counterterrorism official, Michael Sheehan, sought out Mr. Clarke. Both told me that they were stunned. Mr. Sheehan asked Mr. Clarke: "What's it going to take to get them to hit al Qaeda in Afghanistan? Does al Qaeda have to attack the Pentagon?"

There is much more to Mr. Clinton's record--how Predator drones, which spotted bin Laden three times in 1999 and 2000, were grounded by bureaucratic infighting; how a petty dispute with an Arizona senator stopped the CIA from hiring more Arabic translators. While it is easy to look back in hindsight and blame Bill Clinton, the full scale and nature of the terrorist threat was not widely appreciated until 9/11. Still: Bill Clinton did not fully grasp that he was at war. Nor did he intuit that war requires overcoming bureaucratic objections and a democracy's natural reluctance to use force. That is a hard lesson. But it is better to learn it from studying the Clinton years than reliving them.

Mr. Miniter, a fellow at the Hudson Institute, is author of "Disinformation: 22 Media Myths that Undermine the War on Terror" (Regnery, 2005).

opinionjournal.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 2:34:34 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Slick Willie’s Day of Rage

Hot Air TV
featuring "Vent"

hotair.com



To: Sully- who wrote (23161)9/27/2006 4:16:15 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    I do not support partisan games becoming games of life-and
-death. Too many on the left are betting it all on a
variation of Russian Roulette. Spin is one thing. But
lying to America about what is happening and the meaning
of our choices, and the deaths these choices will result
in, is not spin. All future paths will result in some
deaths - ours or the terrorists it seems. The only
question is will these be deaths that lead to a bright or
dark future. Now that we have the NIE we, America, chose
our path this fall.

An Accurate Reading Of The NIE

A. J. Strata
The Strata-Sphere

[Warning: this is a long post analyzing the entire NIE release properly, without removing context or cherry-picking]

The media is terrible at reading comprehension, as has been proven time and time again.
From the erroneous reporting on the NSA’s Terrorist Surveillance Program (were they wrongly claimed the NSA was bypassing the NSA when in fact NSA leads were for the first time being used to identify and monitor possible terrorists in the USA via FISA warrants) to the GITMO abuse claims, our ‘reporters’ cannot read and understand what they have read. Whether it is lack of skill or partisan blinders is irrelevant. It is beyond them. I see this all the time when the media tries to report on NASA or military programs. It is embarrassing most of the time. Unless the news media enlist the help of career subject matter experts, they get lost rapidly.

The recently unclassified sections of the NIE are a perfect example. Where the media cherry picks what they want to support their pre-conceived delusions, a fair reading of the document is very different.
Especially to someone like me who has worked in the bowels of the federal government for years and understands the process and product of a consensus report (where all dissent, even the slightest in emphasis, has been removed). Everyone is now free to read and digest the document itself. But many will attempt to synthesize and interpret. So let’s see what the NIE says about the views of the country’s Intelligence Community (IC):

<<< United States-led counterterrorism efforts have seriously damaged the leadership of al-Qa’ida and disrupted its operations; however, we judge that al-Qa’ida will continue to pose the greatest threat to the Homeland and US interests abroad by a single terrorist organization. We also assess that the global jihadist movement—which includes al-Qa’ida, affiliated and independent terrorist groups, and emerging networks and cells—is spreading and adapting to counterterrorism efforts.

>>>• Although we cannot measure the extent of the spread with precision, a large body of all-source reporting indicates that activists identifying themselves as jihadists, although a small percentage of Muslims, are increasing in both number and geographic dispersion.

If this trend continues, threats to US interests at home and abroad will become more diverse, leading to increasing attacks worldwide.

• Greater pluralism and more responsive political systems in Muslim majority nations would alleviate some of the grievances jihadists exploit. Over time, such progress, together with sustained, multifaceted programs targeting the vulnerabilities of the jihadist movement and continued pressure on al-Qa’ida, could erode support for the jihadists.
<<< >>>


Needless to say the nesting of the paragraphs and bullets is very important. The press will cherry pick one or two things from this grouping, but the IC has combined all these elements under one heading with sub-bullets to describe one aspect of the IC concensus.
The IC would not separate these statements and take them out of context - that is why they were structured this way. Beware any reporting that violates the intent of the IC.

This first section is a overview of where we are. Cleary the IC sees terrorism as having been dealt serious blows to its organization, leadership and operations. Translation: we have been very successful. But the consensus is, while we have severely hit the movement, it is not giving up yet. Instead it is adapting - which should put our news media on notice since they have helped the terrorists adapt by leaking classified material regularly on all aspects of our efforts, including on going investigations. It is telling that that gem of information has never shown up in the compliant news media.

The terrorists’ adaptation is to spread out support away from our targetted enemies. In essence it is a strategy to retreat and regroup. And though this is happening, the other great news in this is the Jihadist movement remains a small fraction of the Muslim population. Which means the Arab street backlash everyone predicted, and still claim is happening, is not happening. The second bullet says if we take our eyes off these adaptations we will find ourselves back to a higher threat level (because we have undercut much of the threat in taking out our primary targets). This section concludes the growing threat is best neutralized through democratization and other political solutions in Muslim countries to defuse the call to Jihad. Somehow the press only caught on to the adaptation the terrorists are attempting in light of the pummeling they have taken - ignoring the fact of the pummeling. Classic news media reporting: faulty and inaccruate. So, what else does the NIE say?

<<< We assess that the global jihadist movement is decentralized, lacks a coherent global strategy, and is becoming more diffuse. New jihadist networks and cells, with anti-American agendas, are increasingly likely to emerge. The confluence of shared purpose and dispersed actors will make it harder to find and undermine jihadist groups.

>>>• We assess that the operational threat from self-radicalized cells will grow in importance to US counterterrorism efforts, particularly abroad but also in the Homeland.

• The jihadists regard Europe as an important venue for attacking Western interests. Extremist networks inside the extensive Muslim diasporas in Europe facilitate recruitment and staging for urban attacks, as illustrated by the 2004 Madrid and 2005 London bombings.<<< >>>

Following from the first conclusion, we see the Jihadists have become spread to the wind. Unlike much of the reporting on this section, it is clear we have the terrorists in a dynamic and handicapped position. They are retreating and re-grouping. Their adaptation was to spread out support to new locations, but in doing so they are now also fractured and without proven lines of support or safe havens. They are in uncharted waters and dealing with new people. In essence they are vulnerable. Being spread out to new, untested cells without the hardened experience and discipline has obvious ramifications for error and mistep. I read this as saying “don’t hold back, don’t let up, press onward”. The terrorsts have been hit and dispersed and are attempting to regroup. The misreportings in the media are because these conclusions are being taken out of context and attempts to make them stand on their own without context. Thus their mistaken conclusions.

The sub bullets emphasize the challenges we face now, that we have hit them hard and dispersed our enemies. The IC rightfully states that new cells with fresh faces mean we cannot focus on the known terrorists, but must be on the look out for the previously unkown ones. In other words, we cannot dismantle our monitoring of the enemy as the left demands. It goes on to say the populations most likely to harbor these new cell are in Europe, where Muslim immigrants have not been integrated into European societies. It does say we need to watch Muslims in this country too. This is so non-PC I am not surprised the media chopped this section apart and misreported on it. Next:


<<< We assess that the Iraq jihad is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives; perceived jihadist success there would inspire more fighters to continue the struggle elsewhere.

>>>• The Iraq conflict has become the “cause celebre” for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of US involvement in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement. Should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves, and be perceived, to have failed, we judge fewer fighters will be inspired to carry on the fight.<<< >>>


Translation: Iraq is seen as the central battle in the Jihadist War on The West. Lose Iraq and the enemy’s ranks will swell with enthusiasm and confidence. Win in Iraq and it will likely cripple the movement for good. This is from the IC folks and completely contradicts the cut-and-run plans of the Democrats. These sentences are never produced in tandem like they are in the report and have been here. This is one conclusion being presented here. Iraq is everything for our future. Next the NIE discusses the factors which are keeping the Jihadist movement afloat


<<< We assess that the underlying factors fueling the spread of the movement outweigh its vulnerabilities and are likely to do so for the duration of the timeframe of this Estimate.

>>>• Four underlying factors are fueling the spread of the jihadist movement:

(1) Entrenched grievances, such as corruption, injustice, and fear of Western domination, leading to anger, humiliation, and a sense of powerlessness;

(2) the Iraq “jihad”;

(3) the slow pace of real and sustained economic, social, and political reforms in many Muslim majority nations; and

(4) pervasive anti-US sentiment among most Muslims - all of which jihadists exploit.<<< >>>

So here are the factors fueling the continued, but small, support of Jihad in the Muslim population. Iraq is one and, interestingly, the easiest to deal with. Old grievances, the Muslim failures at ecomonic success, etc are decades long efforts which will require a balance of support which cannot be used to fuel anger and attacks back at us. This one conclusion delineates the effort ahead of us. Winning Iraq will squash the Jihadist movement - but only temporarily. The root causes must be addressed in order to make sure the fustration levels do not rise again. This is why democracies in Iraq and Afghanistan, with the US as their ally, is so important. It provides for success for Muslims and respect from the West. But of course there are other ways to address these inherent problems, and the NIE identifies high potential solutions

<<< Concomitant vulnerabilities in the jihadist movement have emerged that, if fully exposed and exploited, could begin to slow the spread of the movement. They include dependence on the continuation of Muslim-related conflicts, the limited appeal of the jihadists’ radical ideology, the emergence of respected voices of moderation, and criticism of the violent tactics employed against mostly Muslim citizens.

>>>• The jihadists’ greatest vulnerability is that their ultimate political solution - an ultra-conservative interpretation of shari’a-based governance spanning the Muslim world-is unpopular with the vast majority of Muslims. Exposing the religious and political straitjacket that is implied by the jihadists’ propaganda would help to divide them from the audiences they seek to persuade.

• Recent condemnations of violence and extremist religious interpretations by a few notable Muslim clerics signal a trend that could facilitate the growth of a constructive alternative to jihadist ideology: peaceful political activism. This also could lead to the consistent and dynamic participation of broader Muslim communities in rejecting violence, reducing the ability of radicals to capitalize on passive community support. In this way, the Muslim mainstream emerges as the most powerful weapon in the war on terror.

• Countering the spread of the jihadist movement will require coordinated multilateral efforts that go well beyond operations to capture or kill terrorist leaders.<<< >>>


Again, the perscription to Jihadism is open political debate, peaceful opposition, a stake in the future - all elements of a strong democracy. This is why the IC sees Iraq as the pivot point. If we succeed there we can reduce our activities to capture and kill and focus more on building representative governments which offer the opportunity to success, and the alternative to Jihad. Again, this the consensus of the IC community folks. As much as the Democrats and antique media hate to face facts, this is where the consensus lies. Finish the job in Iraq. This is emphasized in the very next paragraph:


<<< If democratic reform efforts in Muslim majority nations progress over the next five years, political participation probably would drive a wedge between intransigent extremists and groups willing to use the political process to achieve their local objectives. Nonetheless, attendant reforms and potentially destabilizing transitions will create new opportunities for jihadists to exploit. >>>


This is an obvious warning that political transitions mean change, and change can be disruptive or uncomfortable. These aspects of change can be exploited by our enemy. But it does not say give up. It does not say run away from Iraq. It says to stay focused and determined and be prepared to adapt to challenges. Again, not what the left wants to face up to. What follows is an example of the kind of exploitatin we face:


<<< Al-Qa’ida, now merged with Abu Mus’ab al-Zarqawi’s network, is exploiting the situation in Iraq to attract new recruits and donors and to maintain its leadership role.

>>>• The loss of key leaders, particularly Usama Bin Ladin, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and al-Zarqawi, in rapid succession, probably would cause the group to fracture into smaller groups. Although like-minded individuals would endeavor to carry on the mission, the loss of these key leaders would exacerbate strains and disagreements. We assess that the resulting splinter groups would, at least for a time, pose a less serious threat to US interests than does al-Qa’ida.

• Should al-Zarqawi continue to evade capture and scale back attacks against Muslims, we assess he could broaden his popular appeal and present a global threat.

• The increased role of Iraqis in managing the operations of al-Qa’ida in Iraq might lead veteran foreign jihadists to focus their efforts on external operations.<<< >>>


Interestingly, this part of the NIE references conditions since changed in Iraq - namely the killing of Zarqawi. It is clear killing the leaders further degrades the jihadists, which naturally collapse into smaller, less organized groups (which are in ways easier to isolate and deal with). Note the concern Al Qaeda will stop attacking Muslims and Iraqis and thus gain support. We have not seen Al Qaeda learn this lesson yet, but now that some liberal partisan in the IC has forced the exposure of this NIE they will obviously take note and adjust. One more example of the left crippling our efforts in their vain quest for votes.

But back to the NIE (now that we are in the home stretch). The IC notes the biggest concern in Iraq are the foreign supported terrorist organizations. These have to be dealt with (which is tough to do when our resources are redeployed to Okinawa as some liberal democrats have naively proposed). The concern here is once these Sunni associated terrorist groups (and Al Qaeda is a Sunni based terrorist movement) lose interest in Iraq they will look elsewhere for targets:


<<< Other affiliated Sunni extremist organizations, such as Jemaah Islamiya, Ansar al-Sunnah, and several North African groups, unless countered, are likely to expand their reach and become more capable of multiple and/or mass-casualty attacks outside their traditional areas of operation.

>>> • We assess that such groups pose less of a danger to the Homeland than does al-Qa’ida but will pose varying degrees of threat to our allies and to US interests abroad. The focus of their attacks is likely to ebb and flow between local regime targets and regional or global ones.<<< >>>


Translation: After Iraq and after Bin Laden we still have a ways to go. And that is after succeeding in Iraq. All surrendering will do is embolden these fledgling new centers of Jihad. As the other sections noted, we hit them hard and what was left dispersed and is trying to start afresh. So we need to continue fighting on. If this translates in leftward political circles here in the US to ‘Stay The Course’ then so be it. Because if we release the pressure, if we stop pressing in the ME, the result will be a flood of activity spreading out to Europe and here to America. And it will be a wave of carnage very difficult to defend without something nearing martial law:


<<< We judge that most jihadist groups-both well-known and newly formed-will use improvised explosive devices and suicide attacks focused primarily on soft targets to implement their asymmetric warfare strategy, and that they will attempt to conduct sustained terrorist attacks in urban environments. Fighters with experience in Iraq are a potential source of leadership for jihadists pursuing these tactics.

>>>• CBRN capabilities will continue to be sought by jihadist groups.<<< >>>


Thankfully the terrorists are still without WMD tools at their disposal. But they are still trying to acquire them (I am guessing CBRN stands for “Chemical, Biological, Radioactive and Nuclear”). But the prediction is clear. If we release the pressure the terrorists will flood into our neighborhoods to kill as many unarmed innocents as possible. That is chilling. Finally, there is a remnant at the end of this de-classified NIE segment which has some final tidbits clearly collected from other sections of the NIE:


<<< While Iran, and to a lesser extent Syria, remain the most active statesponsors of terrorism, many other states will be unable to prevent territory or resources from being exploited by terrorists.

Anti-US and anti-globalization sentiment is on the rise and fueling other radical ideologies. This could prompt some leftist, nationalist, or separatist groups to adopt terrorist methods to attack US interests. The radicalization process is occurring more quickly, more widely, and more anonymously in the Internet age, raising the likelihood of surprise attacks by unknown groups whose members and supporters may be difficult to pinpoint.

>>>• We judge that groups of all stripes will increasingly use the Internet to communicate, propagandize, recruit, train, and obtain logistical and financial support.<<< >>>


This is ominous because it doesn’t address Jihadists - it is referring to ‘leftists’ and ‘nationalists’. This brings to mind North Korea or Venezuela or some other hot spot in the world. Basically this says that we need to be watchful to other threats if they think we are too distracted with the Jihadists. This seems to be one of those points of confusion with antique media. What is happening is not the growth of terrorism, but the idea that terrorist tactics are being looked at and adopted by other threats. This is not a good result, and it would also be escalated if we do run from Iraq. Running from Iraq will send a signal to everyone that terrorism works on the US.

The media has clearly misread or misrepresented these findings. You cannot separate the dispersion of Jihadists from the fact the dispersion was caused by our highly successful attacks on them. The dispersion is not as much adding strength as a tactic of retreat and regrouping. These conclusions cannot have their elements taken out of the context intended by the IC itself. Of course dispersion could imply a growing threat if one doesn’t have the information in the leading paragraph that set the stage for the dispersion.

What is also clear is that Iraq is critical to our efforts short and long term. If we follow the democrat proposals the jihadists will swell in ranks and come emboldened to our shores in waves. Right now the jihadists are a small fraction of the Muslim world. We cannot allow them to grow in popularity by retreating and giving up on the systemic solution of democracy in the ME. And we need to understand Iraq and Al Qaeda are not the end of the efforts we face in this conflict. America deserves to know the stakes in this battle and, sadly, the media and liberal talking heads are clearly misrepresenting the stakes for some kind of political advantage.

I do not support partisan games becoming games of life-and-death. Too many on the left are betting it all on a variation of Russian Roulette. Spin is one thing. But lying to America about what is happening and the meaning of our choices, and the deaths these choices will result in, is not spin. All future paths will result in some deaths - ours or the terrorists it seems. The only question is will these be deaths that lead to a bright or dark future. Now that we have the NIE we, America, chose our path this fall.

strata-sphere.com