People I’m Sick Of (Part IV): David Sirota

Aren’t you sick of “antiwar” activists who are nothing but shills for the Democratic party? Because I sure as hell am. I’ve written about the Democratic “antiwar” legislation that recently passed the House, slated for a quick veto by the White House, and I note the complete capitulation of the “liberals,” i.e., the Out of Iraq Caucus, made up almost entirely of Democrats, with Rep. Maxine Waters, Lynn Woolsey, and Barbara Lee being three of the leading lights. After pressure was exerted by the Pelosi-crats — including threats of cutting off the federal gravy train to their districts — the California trio gave in to the Speaker and pledged not to lobby against H.R. 1591. Previously, these three had rightly opposed — and urged others to oppose — a bill that gives more money for the military than requested by Bush — and which, as Military Families Speak Out avers, makes it very easy for the White House to circumvent those much-vaunted “benchmarks.”

None of this matters to David Sirota, the resident “radical” over at the HuffPuffPost. He hails the “principled and shrewd” move by the “progressives” to capitulate to the Pelosi-crats. In a veritable cascade of Orwellian doublespeak, Sirota claims:

It is a courageous move because it is never, ever easy to swallow a compromise, even if it is clearly the right thing to do to achieve long-term goals. These Members of Congress played hardball from the beginning, and that hardball made sure this bill included strong, binding legislation to end the war.

If this is “strong and binding,” then one can only wonder what would be weak: read it and you ‘ll find that the actual wording of the legislation leaves it up to the White House to “certify” whether “progress” is being made in Iraq – in which case none of the requirements, including a withdrawal of our forces from Iraq, have to be met. It’s true that such a certification would only delay “redeployment” of our troops, but then all the President has to do is assert that forces remaining in Iraq after March 1, 2008 are specifically in pursuit of Al Qaeda, or other terrorist groups with “global reach” — which is the argument he’s been making since Day One — and they can stay — indefinitely.

This is “strong” and “binding”?

Sirota babbles on:

These progressive lawmakers are true heroes because they are displaying a seriousness about ending the war, rather than merely a seriousness about protesting the war. Protest and pressure are critical in the lead up to legislative action – but when it comes time for that action, we hire lawmakers to do just that: make laws.

What sophistry: there is nothing in this bill that would seriously end the war, and Sirota knows it. Anyone can see that there are enough loopholes in this “serious” legislation to drive a few tanks through. It is typical, however, of these “pragmatic” types that their “pragmatism” is eminently impractical, and almost never leads to the intended result. The reality is that this “emergency supplemental” funds the continuation of the war: without it, the war could not be fought. By voting for it, and supporting it, “antiwar” Democrats and the party bosses are giving the Iraq war their imprimatur.

In another typical “pragmatist” trope, Sirota avers that antiwar opponents of the Pelosi measure are “just blowing off contrarian steam,” and that it is them who are really “selling out,” because, you see, “the contrairians [sic] are selling out – selling out a viable way to end the war in order to grandstand for the cameras.”

Look who’s talking! Pelosi and the Dems are the ones grandstanding for the cameras, by loudly declaring that they have passed a “timetable” to end the war — with an easy escape hatch for the President to wriggle out of this “strong” and “binding” legislation. This partisan legislation — larded with pork, in order to make the sellout more lucrative — attracted only a few Republicans, and this was quite intentional: the Democrats would much rather have the war as an issue during the election than actually do anyting meaningful to end it. The result is that Bush’s veto will be sustained, and this “serious” legislation will wind up in the congressional dustbin — where it belongs.

The real story of the Pelosi “antiwar” bill is that it pitted the “progressive” leaders against their own supporters — and one can only wonder how long the latter will put up with it.

Michael Scheuer

Terror Wars: Al Qaeda and the Permanent Crisis

Former CIA analyst Michael Scheuer discusses Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, al Qaeda, their true motives, how best to fight against them, torture, the escape at Tora Bora, the FBI and CIA in the months before September 11th, the 9/11 Commission sham, the Israeli art students, the Israel and Saudi lobbies, reports that a Pakistani general financed Mohammed Atta, Bojinka, Bill Clinton’s 10 blown chances to get bin Laden and the total lack of evidence of a Saddam-al Qaeda connection.

MP3 here. (41:40)

Michael Scheuer is a 22-year veteran of the CIA and the author of Imperial Hubris: Why the West Is Losing the War on Terror.

“Damned Proud” of Dead Arab Women and Children

Former US United Nations Ambassador John Bolton told the BBC today that he was “damned proud” of how the U.S. intentionally blocked efforts to achieve a ceasefire last summer when Israel was bombing Beirut and many other locales in Lebanon.

The BBC summarized Bolton’s comments: “A former top American diplomat says the US deliberately resisted calls for a immediate ceasefire during the conflict in Lebanon in the summer of 2006. Former ambassador to the UN John Bolton told the BBC that before any ceasefire Washington wanted Israel to eliminate Hezbollah’s military capability.”

Bolton said it was “perfectly legitimate and good politics” for Israel to seek to crush Hezbollah.   The fact that the Israelis used U.S. bombs to wreak death and destruction throughout Lebanon is apparently irrelevant.   More than a thousand Lebanese civilians were killed by the Israeli government, with the Bush team cheering on each detonation.

AIPAC, the most powerful lobby in DC, bragged of its role in blocking any ceasefire.  (A good critique of AIPAC’s role in the Lebanon carnage is here).  

Bolton captures the arrogance and total hypocrisy of the Bush war on terrorism.  In a meeting last August, Bolton  “implied that because Lebanon harbored Hezbollah, Lebanese lives were forfeit,” according to a UN official who heard Bolton commenting in meetings at the time.

Neither AIPAC nor the Bush team suffered any backlash from  Christian fundamentalists as a result of Israeli bombing of Christian villages.  Lebanese Christians despise and oppose Hezbollah – but they were Lebanese so they apparently deserved to die.

As I wrote in blogs last summer, both Hezbollah and the Israeli government were guilty of mass murder.  But the Bush administration’s absolute support (and re-arming) of a government that was intentionally slaughtering civilians is a crime that must not be forgot.  

Comments & contrary views welcome at my blog here.

The Ambassador, the Iraqi, and the Penguin

An ambassador – his name happens to be Timothy Carney – an Iraqi, and a penguin walk into a bar. The bartender asks how the Iraqi will ever possibly pay for his drink. The ambassador replies:

“The point to make there is that Iraq is basically a rich country; that in fact there’s been a successful effort to mightily reduce the debt that Iraq had incurred during the Saddam Hussein era. I would argue that as Iraq returns to its former levels of 3 million-plus barrels a day of oil exported, that you’re going to find as much money as the country needs for the major portion of this effort at maintenance and sustainment as you’ve defined it.”

Oh wait, I think I’ve already heard this joke before; but back in March 2003, it went like this:

A Deputy Secretary of Defense – his name was Paul Wolfowitz – an Iraqi exile, and a penguin walk into the House Committee on Appropriations. A Congressman asks how the invasion and occupation the Bush administration has just launched will be paid for. The Deputy Secretary of Defense replies that our “Second Iraq War” won’t be “overly expensive for American taxpayers”: “There’s a lot of money to pay for this that doesn’t have to be U.S. taxpayer money, and it starts with the assets of the Iraqi people… and on a rough recollection, the oil revenues of that country could bring between $50 and $100 billion over the course of the next two or three years… We’re dealing with a country that can really finance its own reconstruction, and relatively soon.”

Oh, and ambassador Carney, who is officially in Baghdad as the “coordinator for Economic Transition in Iraq,” offered his gem on how the Iraqis could take over paying for the “reconstruction” of their country in a March 9th, 2007 Department of Defense briefing in the Iraqi capital.

When you hear jokes like this repeated almost four years later, head for the exits… fast.