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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: cirrus who wrote (78939)6/29/2010 2:29:17 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Yes, I totally agree...and Obama should have the courage to fire Ken Salazar (who failed to aggressively reform MMS)....the Interior Department has not been run well since Obama took office -- and heads should roll from the top down...Keeping Kenny Boy Salazar in place as Secretary of Interior is NOT change I can believe in...fyi...

"This agency is at the epicenter of the worst environmental disaster in history, and yet it's still going about business as usual."...

rollingstone.com



To: cirrus who wrote (78939)6/29/2010 2:36:42 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Obama Up to His Waist in the Big Muddy: On Appointing Celebrity Generals

by Tom Engelhardt

Published on Monday, June 28, 2010 by TomDispatch.com

Much of the time, our wars may hardly exist for us, but in the age of celebrity, our generals do -- exactly because they become celebrities. When Barack Obama picked Stanley McChrystal as his Afghan war commander, the general was greeted by the media as little short of a savior. He was, we were told, superhumanly fit, utterly austere (eating only one meal a day), and -- strangely for the man who was to oversee a protect-the-people counterinsurgency war -- had spent his professional life in the deepest shadows of counter-terror warfare at the head of groups of hunter-killer special operations forces. His was the darkest of legacies, but he was greeted like Superman.

Reading the Michael Hastings Rolling Stone piece that unseated him, you can sense in the contempt that McChrystal and his aides (many former special ops officers) express for the Obama administration and its civilian representatives in Afghanistan just what a blunt instrument the man was. No leader or group speaking that way, or that crudely, in private could help but exude similar feelings in public. McChrystal was, in fact, always a divided man, caught between his counter-terror past -- he significantly increased special operations units in Afghanistan and sent them out to hunt Taliban mid-level leaders (and in the process kill civilians) -- and his newer fealty to counterinsurgency which led him to institute rules of "courageous restraint" that left American ground troops grumbling.

While the president officially picked McChrystal back in 2009, he was, in reality, the choice of Bush's favorite general, Centcom commander and now new Afghan war commander, General David Petraeus. So the present White House line -- "This is a change in personnel but it is not a change in policy" -- couldn't be more accurate. There have already been several moments in the Obama presidency when a daring president might have changed the course of the war and begun winding it down. In March 2009, when he first "surged" in Afghanistan, again at West Point that December, and now with the Petraeus appointment, Obama has instead chosen the route slated to give him the least trouble domestically, and so doubled down on the war. The first two missed moments have already led, via chaos and failure in Afghanistan, to the third, in which the president dethroned a military demi-god for a man genuinely worshipped in Washington.

David Petraeus is not a blunt instrument. He's the most politically savvy military man of his generation. It says something about our moment in American war-making, however, that the main claim to fame of the four-star general who is treated like the Ulysses S. Grant of the twenty-first century has nothing to do with victory. He simply had a hand in holding off an ignominious American defeat in Iraq or, as the New York Times recently put it, "helping to pull Iraq back from the edge." And not even all that far back.

With Petraeus, Obama again took the easier road in the immediate moment. What will he do, though, in 2011 as the presidential election campaign gears up, if his chosen general, beloved of the right, asks for more troops? The quagmire of this war is in Washington, not Afghanistan, bad as the facts on the ground may be there. With the Petraeus appointment, whether he knows it or not, the president is already up to his waist in the Big Muddy.

*Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book, just published, is The American Way of War: How Bush's Wars Became Obama's (Haymarket Books).



To: cirrus who wrote (78939)6/29/2010 4:45:35 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
Gobbet on June 28, 2010 - 5:45pm
Thank you, but the National Post column is full of misinformation.

(1) The Jones Act could have had no bearing on the delay ordering the Dutch Koseq skimmers, because the Dutch did not offer fitted-out vessels as the column suggests, only the skimming arms. Dutch govt. statement:

dc.the-netherlands.org.

I have followed this story closely and it has always been about arms rather than boats.

(2) "use at no charge"-- false. The "offer" was not a gift to the US but an offer to sell. BP purchased the 3 sets of arms:

articles.latimes.com

(3) Skimmers were rejected "despite BP's desire to bring in the equipment." Whoa, where did that come from? Anyone have a link? I've tried to read all the MSM coverage of this topic and never heard that. Did some blogger make it up? Could be true-- on the other hand, maybe BP in the early stages thought its contractors had the skimming covered and didn't want to spend more millions.

(4) "giving each Dutch ship more cleanup capacity than all the ships that the U.S. was then employing in the Gulf to combat the spill." I made this mistake myself earlier-- confusing claimed capability with actual collection. The claim of 350-400 cubic meters per hour would be 30,000 bbl per 12-hour day for one ship. Well, BP's contractors have dozens of skimmers that claim a capability of 10-15,000 bbl/day. It's just that the amount of net oil they actually collect is relatively trivial. So how are the Koseq skimmers faring after 10-14 days in the Gulf? Nobody's asking but me. IHowever, it's a safe bet that they haven't scarfed up a half-million or a million barrels. My post from just above:

theoildrum.com

Generally, I think the attempt to blame the failure of the skimming effort on red tape is bogus. However, the columnist is right about the EPA rule against dumping oil-polluted water, and he explains well why it is an idiotic rule to apply during a runaway spill. EPA has modified the rule to say that oily water may be dumped in front of the collection device, but they should have suspended or abolished the rule.
theoildrum.com


==
oilfield brat on June 28, 2010 - 11:00pm
Gobbet, nice research, thank you for posting it.

I only wish the media was doing more reporting on the size and effectiveness of the skimmer fleet, and less fantasizing about the Jones Act. Thad Allen has been saying for weeks that it does not apply to skimmers, period.

Here is his latest statement: “Currently 15 foreign-flagged vessels are involved in the largest response to an oil spill in U.S. history. No Jones Act waivers have been granted because none of these vessels have required such a waiver to conduct their operations as part of the response in the Gulf of Mexico."

source here, with more details: marinelink.com



To: cirrus who wrote (78939)6/30/2010 12:03:39 AM
From: ChinuSFO  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Sharon Angles, Harry Reid's opponent is a thorough airhead. Rachel Maddow showed a excerpt (about 5 minutes) of her TV interview. I wonder what did the Republicans see in her to make her their nominee. She makes Palin look very good.