Support Bill O’Reilly

Maybe, just maybe we have gotten Bill O’Reilly wrong all this time.

Underneath that crusty. loofah-swabbed exterior lies a delicate, sensitive soul.
I type this because Mr. O’Reilly, the author, the commentator, the defender and savior of all-that-is-right-far right-in-America, has humbly taken time from his very busy schedule to warn the gullible, the dupable, the naive, the easily-influenced away from the cooing, brainwashing entreaties of communists, socialists, baby-killers, Christmas damners and other sirens who only wish to damage America.

This after he spent untold time and effort in saving American youth from despoilment with “The O’Reilly Factor for Kids: A Survival Guide for America’s Families.”

Bill is looking out for us!

For evidence, here is his latest outreach:

“The following media operations have regularly helped distribute defamation and false information supplied by far left websites:

  • New York Daily News
  • The St. Petersburg Times
  • MSNBC

These are the worst offenders. In the months to come, we expect to add more names to this list. We recommend that you do not patronize these operations and that advertisers do the same. They are dishonest and not worth your time and money.”

I say let’s take up a collection right here and now so that Mr. O’Reilly can continue his most-necessary work. All of you reading this who have spare loofahs and phone cards, please send them directly to Mr. O’Reilly at the FOX headquarters in New York City. This will enable our nation’s protector to continue his ‘missionary’ work with single young women, rescuing them from a life of loneliness and sexual unfulfillment.

Please spare no generosity. American femalehood is in jeopardy.

Bill, how can I say this to you gently. Realize that I am only emulating you, okay? Imitation is the sincerest from of flattery, right? “SHUT UP! CUT HIS MIKE! GET HIM OUT OF HERE! DIDN’T I SAY SHUT UP? YOU PUNK, I’LL KICK YOUR ASS…OH YEAH…GOOD NIGHT AND GOD BLESS EACH AND EVERYONE OF YOU.”

Oldman has died after a short illness

Loan Nguyen, known to bloggers by his pen name Oldman, has died after a short illness this past week at the age of 32.  A frequent poster on Blogging of the President 2004, as well as his own blog–which so far–is still up, he was known to bloggers for his exceptional and clear insights, his ability to penetrate economic data, his feel for strategy, and his sense of moral obligation and purpose.  More at BOP, and here.  

We mourn.  

What is the point of online conversation?

It has long been my belief that you could not convince anyone online of anything. That’s extreme, the sort of rule that admits a lot of little trivial exceptions, but in general it holds. The rise of the popular use of online communication and of the political blogosphere pretends to threaten my theory, and frankly, I don’t know its real status — but from what I see things are unchanged and I suspect they will remain so for it is not a feature just of the net.

A great philosopher once made the point that he could not, in fact, really enlighten his readers, for the readers would not understand anything he said except that which they had already more or less formed in themselves. If he spoke an idea that made a reader think, “aha! yes!”, that was a matter of him having expressed something such that the reader recognized his own belief.

But this is not to say that people don’t change as a result of their reading and conversation, not at all, it’s to put the emphasis on how and why they change and who does the changing, people change themselves.

“People never change” is a popular cliche, and yet, people do nothing but change, the actual truism is “people never stay the same”, and what is really meant by “people never change” is, “I couldn’t change her” and similar.

If we are open to changing ourselves then the information we get from others, their facts and opinions, their arguments and refusals all inform that process of change. You may owe someone thanks, but not for changing you, rather for helping you change yourself. If it seems a subtle difference, think again, there is a world of difference between doing something for someone and helping them do it for themselves.

I believe if we all knew it was really the latter that we were doing online, it would change our approach because building a house and expecting someone to move into it is different from helping them build their own house.

(also posted at MLW)

Woodward Gossip OPEN THREAD

Judy Belushi wants revenge. “Bob Woodward is getting it from all sides … After the ‘SNL’ player OD’d, Judy Belushi Pisano encouraged all of his pals to talk to Woodward, who, like John, had grown up in Wheaton, Ill. [Woodward then wrote ‘Wired,’ a negative bio of John Belushi.] She now tells us: ‘Woodward was the wrong guy [to write that book. I was foolish.’ …”

“It was my first experience of getting tricked by a journalist,” says Belushi’s “Continental Divide” co-star Blair Brown. “I really felt betrayed, and it made me question all of his other work.”


Have any of you ever been tricked or misquoted by a journalist? Should the WaPo fire Woodward’s ass? And, can any of the rest of you remember an excellent TV series that Blair Brown starred in? OPEN THREAD:

The GOP’s Phony Tough-Guy Creds

The Republicans are not very popular right now. On almost every issue the pollsters care to ask about, the Democrats are polling better. But there is one thing the GOP always does well on. They are seen as more hawkish and pro-military. There are two things about this: to be an advantage, the American public must see a need for hawkishness. And this image of a wimpish Democratic Party was not always so. In fact, far from it.

At the Alley Theater in Houston on Oct. 15, 1976, Republican vice presidential candidate Bob Dole faced off against Democrat Walter Mondale. Walter Mears of the Associated Press asked Dole whether his 1974 criticism of President Gerald Ford, while running for a second Senate term from Kansas, for pardoning Richard Nixon might be appropriate in 1976 when Ford was running for president.

Obviously exasperated, Dole retorted that it was not “a very good issue any more than the war in Vietnam would be or World War II or World War I or the war in Korea, all Democratic wars, all in this century. I figured out if we added up the killed and wounded in the Democrat wars in this century, it would be about 1.6 million Americans, enough to fill the city of Detroit.”

Democrats were appalled, but not nearly as upset as Ford strategists.

One might counter that Dole, who was horribly injured in Italy during World War Two, was just having a bad day. But he made an important point. Until Reagan invaded Grenada, no Republican president had started a full-out war in the 20th-Century. And let’s face it, Grenada doesn’t count. So, how did the Republicans get their fearsome reputation?

It certainly didn’t arise out of their opposition to Nazism. In 1940, the Republican incumbent Wendell Winkie initially bucked the isolationism of his party and blamed Roosevelt for the country’s military unpreparedness. But, when FDR responded by issuing tons of military contracts, Wilkie turned around and accused Roosevelt of warmongering and claimed only he could keep America out of the war.

The origins of the Republican’s fierce reputation arose in the post-war era with their rabid anti-communism. But even here, Eisenhower, once elected, swiftly brought the Korean War to an end and never started another major conflict. Nixon inherited the Vietnam War, and Reagan gave us eight years of relative peace.

The Republicans didn’t initiate anything like a real war until the Persian Gulf in 1991. The fact of the matter is that the Republicans never earned a reputation for military toughness. Instead, the Democrats gained a reputation for military meekness by becoming the party that housed the fiercest critics of the Vietnam War. When McGovern captured the 1972 nomination, he captured it as an anti-war candidate. He lost 49 states.

The modern day image of the parties was molded during the remainder of the 1970’s, as the Republicans made heroic efforts to hype the threat posed by the Soviet Union in order to justify the continuation of huge military budgets even as Vietnam wore down and came to an end. This effort was spearheaded by a toxic brew of neo-conservatives, John Birchers, and DCI George H.W. BushCo. (and cronies).

George H.W. Bush and Robert Dole were real soldiers who sacrificed for their country. But the move to maintain an enormous military budget was always more about getting a cut of the action than participating in any war where those weapons might be used. It’s no surprise that the current government is filled with chickenhawks. It’s not about war, it’s about weapons systems and access to markets and energy resources. All in the name of God and country, of course.

Read about how it all went down on the flip:

Election years have much in common. They produce a profusion of punditry, media attention, and politically expedient action, quickly forgotten, and with little lasting impact. But not always; sometimes events are set into motion that have long lifetimes. This was the case in 1976 when, as in 1992, an incumbent Republican president faced a strong challenge from the right wing of his own party. Then (as last year) sops were offered to placate the far right and, while it is too early to know which of the 1992 capers will endure, we now know a great deal about one of the most political events of 1976, and its remarkably long-lasting effects on U.S. policy.

Late last year, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) released the 1976 “Team B” reports. Team B was an experiment in competitive threat assessments approved by then-Director of Central Intelligence George Bush. Teams of “outside experts” were to take independent looks at the highly classified data used by the intelligence community to assess Soviet strategic forces in the yearly National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs). NIEs are authoritative and are widely circulated within the government. U.S. national security policy on various issues as well as the defense budget are based on their general conclusions. Although NIEs represent the collective judgment of the entire intelligence community, the lead agency is the CIA.

There were three “B” teams. One studied Soviet low-altitude air defense capabilities, one examined Soviet intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) accuracy, and one investigated Soviet strategic policy and objectives. But it is the third team, chaired by Harvard professor Richard Pipes, that ultimately received considerable publicity and is commonly referred to as Team B.

The Team B experiment was concocted by conservative cold warriors determined to bury détente and the SALT process. Panel members were all hard-liners. The experiment was leaked to the press in an unsuccessful attempt at an “October surprise.” But most important, the Team B reports became the intellectual foundation of “the window of vulnerability” and of the massive arms buildup that began toward the end of the Carter administration and accelerated under President Reagan.

How did the Team B notion come about? In 1974, Albert Wohlstetter, a professor at the University of Chicago, accused the CIA of systematically underestimating Soviet missile deployment, and conservatives began a concerted attack on the CIA’s annual assessment of the Soviet threat. This assessment–the NIE–was an obvious target.

In the mid-1970s, the CIA was vulnerable on three counts. First, it was still reeling from the 1975 congressional hearings about covert assassination attempts on foreign leaders and other activities. Second, it was considered “payback time” by hard-liners, who were still smarting from the CIA’s realistic assessments during the Vietnam war years–assessments that failed to see light at the end of the tunnel. And finally, between 1973 and 1976, there were four different directors of central intelligence, in contrast to the more stately progression of four directors in the preceding 20 years.

The vehicle chosen from within the administration to challenge the CIA was the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB). Formed as the Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Affairs by President Eisenhower in 1956, PFIAB was reconstituted by President Kennedy in 1961 after the Bay of Pigs fiasco. Members are appointed by the president but hold no other government positions (except possibly on other advisory committees or panels). By 1975, PFIAB was a home for such conservatives as William Casey, John Connally, John Foster, Clare Booth Luce, and Edward Teller.

The PFIAB first raised the issue of competitive threat assessments in 1975, but Director of Central Intelligence William Colby was able to ward them off, partly on procedural grounds (an NIE was in progress). But Colby, a career CIA officer, also said, “It is hard for me to envisage how an ad hoc ‘independent’ group of government and non-government analysts could prepare a more thorough, comprehensive assessment of Soviet strategic capabilities–even in two specific areas–than the intelligence community can prepare.” [1]

At a September 1975 meeting of CIA, National Security Council, and PFIAB staff, the deputy for National Intelligence Officers, George A. Carver, noted that since John Foster and Edward Teller, the principal PFIAB members pushing for the alternative assessment, disagreed with some of the judgments made by the intelligence community, “the PFIAB proposal could be construed as recommending the establishment of another organization which might reach conclusions more compatible with their thinking.”

In 1976, when George Bush became the new director of central intelligence, the PFIAB lost no time in renewing its request for competitive threat assessments. Although his top analysts argued against such an undertaking, Bush checked with the White House, obtained an O.K., and by May 26 signed off on the experiment with the notation, “Let her fly!! O.K. G.B.” [2] Why in the world did the Ford administration, gearing up for an election campaign, put prominent outside critics of the CIA on the agency’s payroll, give them free access to the classified material, data, and files they requested, and not foresee how damaging the resulting study could be?

By spring 1976, President Ford was in deep political trouble. A January poll showed that his performance had a 46 percent disapproval rating. The president attributed much of the dissatisfaction to the increasing criticism of détente by a conservative coalition in both parties. Moreover, at the time the Soviet Union and Cuba were actively supporting the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola, while the U.S. Senate had barred further covert American support to the other contenders.

Nevertheless, early in January 1976 President Ford defended the policy of détente he had inherited from Richard Nixon and said in an NBC News interview: “I think it would be very unwise for a President–me or anyone else–to abandon détente. I think détente is in the best interest of this country. It is in the best interest of world stability, world peace.” [3]

But then came the February 24 New Hampshire primary, and President Ford nosed out challenger Ronald Reagan by only one percent-age point. Reagan began to step up his attacks on the “Ford-Kissinger” foreign policy, claiming that the United States had been permitted to slide into second place and that the Soviet Union was taking advantage of détente at the expense of American prestige and security.

In March, three important events took place. During an interview, President Ford abruptly banished the word “détente” from his political vocabulary, much to the surprise of the White House staff. “We are going to forget the use of the word détente,” the president said. “What happens in the negotiations . . . are the things that are of consequence.” [4] Then, at a lunch at Washington D.C.’s Metropolitan Club, Richard Allen, Max Kampelman, Paul Nitze, Eugene Rostow, and Elmo Zumwalt, all well-known hawks opposed to détente, agreed to form the “Committee on the Present Danger” (CPD) to alert the public to the “growing Soviet threat.” The first draft of the committee’s initial statement was circulated to its members within a month. Finally, on March 23, Ronald Reagan won the North Carolina primary–only the third time in U.S. history that a challenger had defeated an incumbent president in a primary. He went on to win the Nebraska and Texas primaries as well.

By now, conservative critics in full swing kept up a steady cry of alarm. Paul Nitze, a CPD and Team B member, testified before the Joint Committee on Defense Production that the Soviet Union was conducting a massive civil defense program that would give it a bargaining edge in the then-deadlocked arms talks. Retired Defense Intelligence Agency Director Lt. Gen. Daniel Graham, also a Team B member, wrote in the September 1976 Reader’s Digest: “The Soviets have not built up their forces, as we have, merely to deter a nuclear war. They build their forces to fight a nuclear war and [they] see an enormous persuasive power accruing to a nation which can face the prospect of nuclear war with confidence in its survival.”

A January 21, 1976, Library of Congress report, “The U.S./Soviet Military Balance, a Frame of Reference for Congress,” identified a strong shift in the quantitative military balance toward the Soviet Union over the past 10 years. And the CIA itself revised its estimate of Soviet military spending to 10-15 percent of Soviet gross national product (GNP), as compared to 6-8 percent in previous NIEs. The revision was immediate news.

(This jump did not indicate any great increase in Soviet military spending nor did it change the Pentagon’s estimates of actual Soviet troops, tanks, and missiles. Indeed, it reflected the judgment that the Soviet military sector was less efficient than previously believed and therefore the military’s economic burden on the Soviet Union was greater than earlier estimates indicated. None of this meant a greater threat to the United States. However, such distinctions, usually made in the next to last paragraph of a long article, were lost on the public, and the message seemed to be that the Russians were spending more on defense and therefore we should too.)

In the summer of 1976, President Ford was rearranging priorities in much the same erratic way as George Bush did 16 years later in an effort to stave off conservative critics. Even the signing of the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty was delayed from May 12 to May 28 because of panic at Ford’s loss to Ronald Reagan in the Nebraska primary.

In July 1976, Director of Central Intelligence George Bush let a PFIAB subcommittee suggest members of the three B teams; in August he wrote to the president that “morale at the CIA is improving.” [5]

Each B team met in September and October and exchanged drafts with their CIA counterparts during October. The first press leak occurred two days after the first meeting of the CIA and Team B members who were examining Soviet strategic policy and objectives. William Beecher’s story in the October 20 Boston Globe contained leaks by at least one Team B member who conveyed to the journalist only his recommendations, not those of his fellow panelists. According to Leo Cherne, then chairman of PFIAB, Director of Central Intelligence Bush was aghast at the leak and stormed into the Old Executive Building accusing members of PFIAB of being the leakers. Cherne assured Bush that this was not the case, and that “members of PFIAB were sufficiently smart to recognize that any publicity would invalidate what had been a serious effort.” [6] The story was not picked up and seemed to fade from view.

However, after the Democrats won the election and President-elect Jimmy Carter had ignored Bush’s hint that up to now, CIA directors had not changed with an incoming administration, George Bush, the foe of leaks, agreed to meet with David Binder of the New York Times. The same director who wrote to President Ford in August 1976, “I want to get the CIA off the front pages and at some point out of the papers altogether,” now made sure that Team B would become front-page news. [7]

On Sunday, December 26, the lead New York Times story was about Team B. Bush appeared on Meet the Press, and three separate congressional committees vowed to hold hearings on the whole exercise. Although officials within the new Carter administration paid scant attention to the Team B reports, the spadework had been done. In particular, the Pipes panel’s major conclusions had been publicly and repeatedly aired.

Meanwhile, back in November, nine days after the presidential election, the Committee on the Present Danger issued its founding statement, “Common Sense and the Common Danger.” “The principal threat to our nation, to world peace and to the cause of human freedom is the Soviet drive for dominance based upon an unparalleled military buildup. . . . The Soviet Union has not altered its long held goal of a world dominated from a single center–Moscow.” If this sounded similar to the conclusions of Richard Pipes’s Team B panel, it was hardly surprising; panel members Paul Nitze, Richard Pipes, and William Van Cleave had leading roles in the committee.

Even before the Team B report was officially presented to PFIAB, Pipes was eager to publicize its findings. He opened a December 7 meeting by discussing the possibility of declassifying the report. After the CIA rejected declassification, Pipes said that “he would urge PFIAB to make the Team B report available to as large an audience as possible. If his appeal to PFIAB were rejected . . . he mentioned . . . the publication of articles on the general subject of the report without reference to classified information. . . . Pipes also raised the possibility of using the Freedom of Information Act to get the report into the public domain.” [8]

It took 16 years before Pipes’s hopes were fully realized and the documents published. In February 1989, I filed a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain Team B documents. After repeated letters, phone calls, and an interview by the chairman of the Intelligence Council produced only two items, I filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court in July 1992. By the first meeting before the judge in September 1992, counsel for the CIA promised that I would receive all the documents before the end of October. The CIA deposited the Team B report at the National Archive, and delivered to me most of the documents I had requested before the end of October 1992.

Today, the Team B reports recall the stridency and militancy of the conservatives in the 1970s. Team B accused the CIA of consistently underestimating the “intensity, scope, and implicit threat” posed by the Soviet Union by relying on technical or “hard” data rather than “contemplat[ing] Soviet strategic objectives in terms of the Soviet conception of ‘strategy’ as well as in light of Soviet history, the structure of Soviet society, and the pronouncements of Soviet leaders.”

And when Team B looked at “hard” data, everywhere it saw the worst case. It reported, for instance, that the Backfire bomber “probably will be produced in substantial numbers, with perhaps 500 aircraft off the line by early 1984.” (In fact, the Soviets had 235 in 1984.) Team B also regarded Soviet defenses with alarm. “Mobile ABM [anti-ballistic missiles] system components combined with the deployed SAM [surface-to-air missile] system could produce a significant ABM capability.” But that never occurred.

Team B found the Soviet Union immune from Murphy’s law. They examined ABM and directed energy research, and said, “Understanding that there are differing evaluations of the potentialities of laser and CPB [charged particle beam] for ABM, it is still clear that the Soviets have mounted ABM efforts in both areas of a magnitude that it is difficult to overestimate.” (Emphasis in original.)

But overestimate they did. A facility at the Soviet Union’s nuclear test range in Semipalatinsk was touted by Gen. George Keegan, Chief of Air Force Intelligence (and a Team B briefer), as a site for tests of Soviet nuclear-powered beam weapons. In fact, it was used to test nuclear-powered rocket engines. According to a Los Alamos physicist who recently toured Russian directed-energy facilities, “We had overestimated both their capability and their [technical] understanding.”

Team B’s failure to find a Soviet non-acoustic anti-submarine system was evidence that there could well be one. “The implication could be that the Soviets have, in fact, deployed some operational non-acoustic systems and will deploy more in the next few years.” It wasn’t a question of if the Russians were coming. They were here. (And probably working at the CIA!)

When Team B looked at the “soft” data concerning Soviet strategic concepts, they slanted the evidence to support their conclusions. In asserting that “Russian, and especially Soviet political and military theories are distinctly offensive in character,” Team B claimed “their ideal is the ‘science of conquest’ (nauka pobezhdat) formulated by the eighteenth-century Russian commander, Field Marshal A.V. Suvorov in a treatise of the same name, which has been a standard text of Imperial as well as Soviet military science.” Raymond Garthoff, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, has pointed out that the correct translation of nauka pobezhdat is “the science of winning” or the “science of victory.” All military strategists strive for a winning strategy. Our own military writings are devoted to winning victories, but this is not commonly viewed as a policy of conquest.

Team B hurled another brickbat: the CIA consistently underestimated Soviet military expenditures. With the advantage of hindsight, we now know that Soviet military spending increases began to slow down precisely as Team B was writing about “an intense military buildup in nuclear as well as conventional forces of all sorts, not moderated either by the West’s self-imposed restraints or by SALT.” In 1983, then-deputy director of the CIA, Robert Gates, testified: “The rate of growth of overall defense costs is lower because procurement of military hardware–the largest category of defense spending–was almost flat in 1976-1981 . . . [and that trend] appears to have continued also in 1982 and 1983.”

While Team B waxed eloquent about “conceptual failures,” it was unable to grasp how the future might differ from the past. In 1976 mortality rates were rising for the entire Soviet population, and life expectancies, numbers of new labor entrants, and agricultural output were all declining. Yet Team B wrote confidently, “Within what is, after all, a large and expanding GNP . . . Soviet strategic forces have yet to reflect any constraining effect of civil economy competition, and are unlikely to do so in the foreseeable future.” (Emphasis in original.) And When Ronald Reagan got elected, Team B became, in essence, the “A Team.”

For more than a third of a century, perceptions about U.S. national security were colored by the view that the Soviet Union was on the road to military superiority over the United States. Neither Team B nor the multibillion dollar intelligence agencies could see that the Soviet Union was dissolving from within.

For more than a third of a century, assertions of Soviet superiority created calls for the United States to “rearm.” In the 1980s, the call was heeded so thoroughly that the United States embarked on a trillion-dollar defense buildup. As a result, the country neglected its schools, cities, roads and bridges, and health care system. From the world’s greatest creditor nation, the United States became the world’s greatest debtor–in order to pay for arms to counter the threat of a nation that was collapsing. link

Sound familiar? It should.

Froggy Bottom Cafe – Show us your Snacks: CLOSED

Since this is a foody kinda day

It is time for True Confessions…

Hello my name is Parker and I am a potato chip-aholic. I am powerless when it come to these thin slices of evil.

This morning’s diary was about “Comfort” breakfast foods this one is about “Shame” foods… yunno the ones that you berate yourself for eating. We have all been there…

We live in a society that expects perfection yet we are still just mere mortals. I decided that I can not give up chips … I don’t know if it is the salt or the mega carb loading … so instead of “punishing” myself I just buy the smallest bag I can find. I have already given up cigs so I feel I deserve some “sin” in my life… how many Hail Mary’s is this worth?

Ah! It’s an IRAQI Rebellion! Ah!

by Col. Patrick Lang (Ret.) (bio below)

I listened to President Bush’s speech at Annapolis.


The thing with the Midshipmen and the Academy Band and a predictably warm reception is amusing. If he really wanted to hear them cheer, he should have given them “amnesty” for any disciplinary penalties they may be “enjoying.” There is nothing like a general release from confinement to barracks to “pump” cadets, midshipmen, or OCS candidates.


What was said that was of interest?


We “learned” today that Zarqawi is not the commander of the revolt in Iraq. This is great since the administration and its “claque” has been insisting that the war is between foreign terrorists under Zarqawi and the forces of the coalition on the other side. Everyone seriously involved in other than propaganda and manipulation of public opinion has long known that to be untrue, but the Bushies seem to have felt compelled to “stick” with that in order to maintain the fiction of the supposed Iraq-Jihadi alliance.


Now, someone has gotten the prez. to say that there are three, THREE, parts to the insurgents population:


  1. The “Rejectionists.” Read “ordinary Iraqis” for that “Mostly Sunni Arabs,” (his words) He says that these are people who want to restore their previously dominant role in Iraqi society. Absolutely.


  2. Baathist hold-outs for a Restoration. (This would be nothing like Charles the 2nd’s return from France, trust me.) Presumably, these guys have the money.


  3. Jihadi religious fanatics, some local, some foreign. Not more than 10% of total but responsible for most suicidal activity. No problem there, either.

He did not mention the awkward implication of (1) above that there are a hell of a lot of supporters maintaining this force in existence, but based on the speed with which the administration acknowledges the truth, we should see an admission of that in a year or so.


Is this important? You bet it is! Up until this morning, the “Zarqawi Madness” insisted on by the government was a straitjacket within which the intelligence people and the command in the field had to operate.


This changes a lot in both the operating environment and the political parameters within which a solution must be found.


Pat Lang


Col. Patrick W. Lang (Ret.), a highly decorated retired senior officer of U.S. Military Intelligence and U.S. Army Special Forces, served as “Defense Intelligence Officer for the Middle East, South Asia and Terrorism” for the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and was later the first Director of the Defense Humint Service. Col. Lang was the first Professor of the Arabic Language at the United States Military Academy at West Point. For his service in the DIA, he was awarded the “Presidential Rank of Distinguished Executive.” He is a frequent commentator on television and radio, including MSNBC’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann (interview), CNN and Wolf Blitzer’s Situation Room (interview), PBS’s Newshour, NPR’s “All Things Considered,” (interview), and more .


Personal Blog: Sic Semper Tyrannis 2005 || Bio || CV
Recommended Books || More BooTrib Posts

Novel: The Butcher’s Cleaver (download free by chapter, PDF format)


Drinking the Kool-Aid,” Middle East Policy Council Journal, Vol. XI, Summer 2004, No. 2

ah-nold trounced even worse than suspected

 
the laweekly tells us that, since absentee ballots are still being counted in caleefornia, it’s turning out that gov. ah-nold got his butt kicked even worse than anybody thought.  excerpts from the article, and our thoughts, after the jump:

so the numbers keep coming in, and factoring in the late returns, the results are quietly astounding. the biggest story is turnout. in each of the other two special elections (that is, elections featuring ballot measures but no candidates) in california over the past two decades, turnout was roughly 37 percent. schwarzenegger’s consultants assumed that this time around, inasmuch as turnout has been steadily declining in state and out over the past four decades, they could count on 36 percent of voters actually bothering to participate. the consultants for the unions who ran the campaigns against schwarzenegger’s measures figured that they had to boost turnout at least to 41 percent. in the days before the election, the office of secretary of state bruce mcpherson figured that perhaps 42 percent of voters would cast ballots, and that was the figure most commonly cited on election day itself.

and they were all wrong. as the count proceeded this past weekend, the percentage of california voters who cast ballots was up to 47.3 percent. when the count’s all done — the county registrars have to wrap it up by december 8 — that figure may be close to 48 percent, 11 points higher than each of the two preceding specials…

it’s also a testament to the scope and efficacy of the campaign the unions ran to pull their voters — and not just union members, but black, latino and progressive voters more generally — to the polls. in l.a. county, not only was the turnout surprisingly high, but the margins against arnold’s measures were huge. as of this weekend, proposition 74, extending the probationary period for teachers, was losing by 22.8 percent among l.a. county voters; proposition 75, curtailing unions’ ability to wage election campaigns, was trailing by 23.2 percent; proposition 76, limiting funding on schools and giving the governor unilateral power to cut spending, was down by 35.6 percent; and proposition 77, establishing a mid-decade reapportionment, was behind by 32 percent.

 the article goes on to mention the latimes’ new hard tack to the right (under new management), and thereby how out of touch with its core readership the paper is now appearing. the op-ed page not only endorsed 3 of ah-nold’s 4 propositions, the editors, after the loss, chided, derided and broad-sided the citizenry of the state for failing to pass them.

Pls Support Students at Hampton University! (ACTION ITEM)

Perhaps many of you know about students at Hampton University currently facing expulsion for participating in the November 2 protests sponsored by The World Can’t Wait.

If not, here is information about it and a call to support the students

Ah the advantages of being able to dress up like a good girl and slap a few words on university letterhead!

I have called the university and written the following letter which is going in the mail today. I encourage anyone and everyone to do the same (especially if you have university “credentials”). Feel free to beg, borrow or steal from this letter as you wish, and/or to pass it on.

Letters are to be send to Dean Long, Dean of Women at Hampton University and to Woodson Hopewell, Jr., Dean of Men

Hampton University
Hampton Virginia 23668

I didn’t see anything on their site about this scandal in which they are currently embroiled. Maybe someone should write them to inquire!

My letter below the fold.
 

I recently learned from a colleague about disciplinary measures involving the possible expulsion of students (Aaron Ray, Sheridan Owens, and Verness Hunt) at your university in response to their participation in political activities on November 2, 2005. I consider these disciplinary measures counter productive. In my classes at the university, I teach students that participation in the democratic process is an essential civic responsibility. It is in fact one of the most sacred duties of the citizenry in a participatory democracy. These values were once taught in high school civics classes that have since been replaced by courses in “American government” in which curriculum focuses almost exclusively on the structural and functional outlines of government bodies with little or no discussion of the roles and responsibilities of the populace in the democratic process.

This change in curricular focus is apparent in voter participation statistics: during the last 25 years, voter turnout has decreased from 63% to 54%, and the greatest decrease can be seen in young people (18-24), whose participation in elections has decreased by 18% in the past 25 years, so that now, a mere 32% of youth turn out at the polls. Obviously, the high schools are not doing what needs to be done to prepare young people for embarking on a civically responsible life.

The highly contested nature of the most recent election  helped to increase voter turnout to around 60%. However, when an election is decided by 50% of 60% of eligible voters, this means that the “winner” of said election is supported by about 30% of the population. In other words, democracy has failed and the minority rules, not the majority. This is clearly reflected in recent polls which place approval rates for the current administration at 37% (CNN). Especially when the electoral process fails to serve the principle of “majority rules,” it is not only the “right” of the populace to protest, it is their responsibility.

Regardless of one’s political stance, participation in the political process is a responsibility we should be teaching our young people, not something for which they should fear reprimand. They should be rewarded for their commitment to democratic principles and encouraged to contribute in any way they can to shaping the future of the country because it is, after all, their future–it is my sincere hope that you will encourage your students to continue in their efforts to insure that the democratic process not be subverted by lack of interest and/or participation and that you will support them in their efforts.  I will be following the development of this case very closely.

Kind Regards,

Iraqi Press Paid To Publish US Propaganda

Previously, the Bush administration has distributed video and news stories in the US that have run without identification of their source.  Furthermore, journalists have been paid to promote Bush policies.  The GAO deemed these practices to be covert propaganda.

Now it has been disclosed that the US military has been paying Iraqi newspapers to publish stories written by American servicepeople.
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/world/ny-la-woiraq1130,0,5645587.story?coll=ny-top-headlines

WASHINGTON — As part of an information offensive in Iraq, the U.S. military is secretly paying Iraqi newspapers to publish stories written by American troops in an effort to burnish the image of the U.S. mission in Iraq.

The articles, written by U.S. military “information operations” troops, are translated into Arabic and placed in Baghdad newspapers with the help of a defense contractor, according to U.S. military officials and documents obtained by the Los Angeles Times.

The intent is to have the stories perceived as unbiased while actually only presenting some of the relevant facts. (principles of good journalism be damned.)

Many of the articles are presented in the Iraqi press as unbiased news accounts written and reported by independent journalists. The stories trumpet the work of U.S. and Iraqi troops, denounce insurgents and tout U.S.-led efforts to rebuild the country.  Though the articles are basically factual, they present only one side of events and omit information that might reflect poorly on the U.S. or Iraqi governments, officials said. Records and interviews indicate that the U.S. has paid Iraqi newspapers to run dozens of such articles, with headlines such as “Iraqis Insist on Living Despite Terrorism,” since the effort began this year.

So how exactly does this dovetail with the democratic government that the US is supposedly facilitating?  Wouldn’t a free press play a critical role?  Well, maybe not.

One of the military officials said that, as part of a psychological operations campaign that has intensified over the last year, the task force also had purchased an Iraqi newspaper and taken control of a radio station, and was using them to channel pro-American messages to the Iraqi public. Neither is identified as a military mouthpiece.

Perhaps they can get Fox to help with management. </snark&gt And if this is illegal, some basis for justifying it is always available.

U.S. law forbids the military from carrying out psychological operations or planting propaganda through American media outlets. Yet several officials said that given the globalization of media driven by the Internet and the 24-hour news cycle, the Pentagon’s efforts were carried out with the knowledge that coverage in the foreign press inevitably “bleeds” into the Western media and influences coverage in U.S. news outlets.

Huh?  So planted stories from abroad will get into western media and then influence western readers too.  A bonus in that US media will subsequently cover the stories and thereby circumvent the relevant law.

Several outside companies have been paid for services related to carrying out these “strategic communications”.  One of these is the Lincoln Group (formerly “Iraqex”).  Lincoln Group, in addition to its contract to do work in Iraq, has been given another major agreement.

Besides its contract with the military in Iraq, Lincoln Group this year won a major contract with U.S. Special Operations Command, based in Tampa, to develop a strategic communications campaign in concert with special operations troops stationed around the globe.  The contract is worth up to $100 million over five years, although U.S. military officials said they doubted the Pentagon would
spend the full amount of the contract.

Who knew that biased news stories could be worth so much?

And here’s a nice comforting statement from the Lincoln Group site:

http://www.lincolngroup.com/

Across a wide variety of issues, from governance to economic development, our professionals work every day of the year in some of the most inhospitable environments in order to get your message communicated effectively.

But the money quote here is by Abdul Zahra Zaki of the newspaper Al Mada.

Zaki said that if his cash-strapped paper had known that these stories were from the U.S. government, he would have “charged much, much more” to publish them.

Well spoken, no?