Swedish Meatballs
17 hours ago
The era of President Bush's familiar mantra is long since past, and Congress is pushing hard for a timeline despite new divisions in its leadership over the details. A recent survey from Democratic pollster Greenberg Quinlan Rosner (D) suggests the public is ready for strong measures to take the war in a different direction -- or, at least, on a course other than the president's.Read More......
Bush's Iraq strategy got the cold shoulder from most respondents; 58 percent said they opposed it, compared with 35 percent who said they favored it. And when offered a pair of statements about what Congress should do about Bush's overall plans for Iraq, a slight majority said they wanted their representatives to block the president.
Fifty-one percent chose the anti-Bush response: "I want my member of Congress to vote for measures that will force the president to change policies and reduce troop levels in Iraq." Forty-two percent picked the alternative: "I want my member of Congress to vote against measures that could undermine the president's policies in Iraq."
Barack Obama has chosen not to attend September's Democratic presidential primary debate co-sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus Institute and Fox News, an aide said, effectively dooming the event.Another FOX debate that won't happen. Read More......
Obama is the only member of the Congressional Black Caucus running for President, and his decision allows other candidates to skip the debate without facing criticism that they are turning their backs on a leading black institution.
Barbara Comstock: Comstock is a household name inside the Beltway as a former head of the Justice Department's Office of Public Affairs and research director at the Republican National Committee. Comstock rose to prominence as a master of the art of opposition research; in a 2001 profile of Comstock, Post reporter John Mintz wrote that Comstock had "done more than any other GOP operative to skewer Bill Clinton, Al Gore and their congressional allies."Ms. Comstock's was the boss and mentor to Monica "Fifth Amendment" Goodling, we learned from "The Next Hurrah" (thanks to Atrios):
" 2002 ... 2002 ... What happened in 2002? Well, for starters, that's when Monica Goodling came over to DOJ with Barbara Comstock:What does Mitt Romney's top adviser, Barbara Comstock, know about the U.S. Attorneys firings? And, what did Comstock do to politicize the Department of Justice? Maybe Mitt should explain how he'll run the DOJ. Read More......Goodling quickly won Comstock’s trust for her hard work and talent for digging up information on tort litigation and judicial nominations. And when Griffin left in 2001, Goodling became Comstock’s deputy. They helped prepare Ashcroft and Theodore Olson for their confirmation hearings to be attorney general and solicitor general, respectively.
When Comstock became Ashcroft’s spokeswoman in 2002, she brought Goodling along as her deputy. Goodling stayed for three years. In no time, Goodling became “indispensable” to the office, says Corallo, who became Ashcroft’s spokesman in 2003. “I have never known anybody that works harder or does better work than her.”
U.S.-run detention camps in Iraq have become a breeding ground for extremists where Islamic militants recruit and train supporters, and use violence against perceived foes, say former inmates and Iraqi officials. . . Iraqis swept up in security operations and held indefinitely while the Americans try to determine whether they have any links to the insurgency are susceptible to the extremists' message, former detainees said. . . "It looks like a terrorist academy now," said Saad Sultan, the Iraqi Human Rights Ministry's liaison to U.S. and Iraqi prisons.The policy of mass round-ups works on a very localized level, in that there are fewer fighting-age males to deal with. But from a strategic perspective, it's an absolute disaster. We engender a hatred towards the occupation and our troops while simultaneously offering insurgents access to Iraqis when they are most susceptible to recruitment. According to the article, there are now 18,000 Iraqis in U.S. custody, many of whom wait for up to two years for any kind of judicial process. The most mind-blowing part of the piece, though, is this:
U.S. military officials acknowledge that they are battling militants for the hearts and minds of detaineesUh, no -- if you're incarcerating somebody, either he 1) was an insurgent and already hates the U.S. or 2) didn't do anything wrong and hates the U.S. for wrongfully imprisoning him . . . and is probably now ready and willing to seek revenge. When you throw somebody in jail, I think it's safe to say that you've lost the hearts and minds battle. The idea that we'll get any detainee to like us while in custodyis pretty insane. Naturally, the U.S. reportedly has no strategy for dealing with this problem and leaders are "in denail." Read More......
Of course I'm going to misspeak and I've done it on numerous occasions and I probably will do in the future. I regret that when I divert attention to something that I've said from my message but you know that's just life, and I'm happy frankly with the way I operate, otherwise it would be a lot less fun," McCain says.Think Progress has the video. McCain may be happy with the way he operates, but it's hard to find anyone else who is. Couple more bizarre incidents like this -- and there will be more -- makes me wonder if McCain even make it to the Iowa caucuses next year. McCain's fealty to Bush's Iraq failed war combined with his just plain craziness isn't really working for his campaign. Read More......
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