I saw this story earlier this week and thought it was a hoax. This is ridiculous.
But hey, Iran will be different.
Read More......
Roasted Squash and Einkorn Wheat Salad
22 hours ago
The White House is fast at work recalibrating how best to use the power of the presidency to save immigration legislation from languishing for the rest of the year, eager for a victory in what has been a difficult political season for President Bush.Looks like it will be languishing. So far, the only tactic Bush has is to attack Harry Reid. Not a winning strategy. (see post below)
When White House aides alerted Mr. Bush that last-minute parliamentary procedures had scuttled Senate approval of compromise legislation late Thursday, he met them with disbelief.He wondered aloud? After all these years, Bush still doesn't understand how the legislative process works. It's too hard.
Impatient with explanations of the technicalities, he wondered aloud how an agreement announced just that morning was suddenly dead, according to a meeting participant who was granted anonymity to speak freely about the encounter.
"President Bush has as much credibility on immigration as he does on Iraq and national security. If he were actually committed to comprehensive immigration reform he would have stopped his own party from filibustering it twice last week.Bush has no cred. And, he has no backbone when it comes to the right wingers. That pretty much sums it up.
"If the president is serious about moving forward, then he should join me in calling on Senator Frist to bring immigration reform back to the Senate Floor when we return. Hopefully by then, President Bush and his Majority Leader will have found the backbone to stop the extreme elements of the Republican Party from blocking improvements to America's security."
"What we're really scared of is what we don't know about the Iranians."As BC wrote in the comments to this post,"I know so little about that hornets' nest... I must kick it!"
In a telling reflection of Bush's erosion in public support, 54% said they did not trust him to "make the right decision about whether we should go to war with Iran," while 42% of respondents said they trusted him to do so.Public isn't per se against military action
Asked whether they would support military action if Iran continued to produce material that could be used to develop nuclear weapons, 48% of the poll's respondents, or almost half, said yes; 40% said no.Air strikes might get public support, but not use of ground troops
In this month's Times/Bloomberg poll, when respondents were asked what kind of military action against Iran they would support if President Bush chose to act, 44% said they would support airstrikes but oppose the use of ground troops; 19% said they would support both airstrikes and ground troops; and 6% said they would support the use of ground troops alone.I wonder what the poll numbers would do if you explained to the public exactly what kind of international terror network Iran has and what the consequences might be for every shopping mall, restaurant and bus in America. Then see how willing they are to have the US attack Iran. Read More......
a. This is a bigger Bush intelligence failure than Iraq.(And for the record, I didn't come up with the "16 words is the new 16 days." Though I'm not sure who did, it was one of those things you hear people saying.) Read More......
Just last year the entire Bush intelligence infrastructure determined that Iran was at a minimum of ten years away from building nukes. Now they realize they were wrong and Iran is only 16 days away? If that is true, then we have a catastrophic crisis of intelligence in this administration, a crisis that Bush failed to fix even after September 11 AND the Iraq WMD debacle. Why wasn’t it fixed? What is Bush waiting for? A mushroom cloud?
b. What has Bush been doing these past 5 years?
If Iran is 16 days away from building a nuclear weapon, and we’re only finding out now, five years into Bush’s term, then Bush has a lot of explaining to do as to why he waited five years to address this enormous crisis.
c. Where is the Republican Congress?
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me three times… How many times does Bush have to get the facts wrong on a major threat to our national security before the Republican Congress provides sufficient oversight of this administration.
Iran is likely years away from producing weapons-grade plutonium or highly enriched uranium. Vice Adm. Jacoby, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told the Senate Armed Services Committee in March 2005 that Iran is expected to be able to produce a weapon early next decade. According to one report, the new National Intelligence Estimate on Iran assesses that it will be ten years before Iran has a bomb.What the report didn't bother mentioning is that the five year "sometime early next decade" estimate has now been overruled by this ten year estimate. Yes, the "according to one report" reference would be THE definitive federal government report on this issue, not just "one" report.
Until recently, Iran was judged, according to February testimony by Vice Adm. Lowell E. Jacoby, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, to be within five years of the capability to make a nuclear weapon. Since 1995, U.S. officials have continually estimated Iran to be "within five years" from reaching that same capability. So far, it has not.Got a give a lying, corrupt and incompetent administration points for trying. And one more thing, that ten year estimate, that's the QUICKEST Iran could get nukes, not the estimate of when we EXPECT them to get nukes ("The timeline is portrayed as a minimum designed to reflect a program moving full speed ahead without major technical obstacles.")
The new estimate extends the timeline, judging that Iran will be unlikely to produce a sufficient quantity of highly enriched uranium, the key ingredient for an atomic weapon, before "early to mid-next decade," according to four sources familiar with that finding. The sources said the shift, based on a better understanding of Iran's technical limitations, puts the timeline closer to 2015 and in line with recently revised British and Israeli figures.
Iran is ten years away from developing nuclear weapons. There is no discussion of America rushing into another premature war until either Bush leaves office, or Congress is able to provide effective oversight of, and can serve as a counter-balance to, the Bush administration's incompetence.Your suggestions? Read More......
"We made some serious mistakes in the immediate aftermath of the fall of Baghdad," Powell told a crowd of thousands at the McCormick Place conference. "We didn't have enough troops on the ground. We didn't impose our will. And as a result, an insurgency got started, and . . . it got out of control."There are only three people who had a say in these matters. Bush, Rumsfeld and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. If things are a disaster now, it's their fault. Read More......
Some in Washington cite a U.S. intelligence estimate that an Iranian bomb is 10 years away. In fact the low end of that same estimate is five years, and some independent experts say three.Uh, not according to your own newspaper, Fred.
Until recently, Iran was judged, according to February testimony by Vice Adm. Lowell E. Jacoby, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, to be within five years of the capability to make a nuclear weapon. Since 1995, U.S. officials have continually estimated Iran to be "within five years" from reaching that same capability. So far, it has not.As for Hiatt's contention that "some experts" say it could be only 3 years, or even ONE YEAR before Iran gets nukes, I'd like to know why we should trust "some" experts when even the hawkish we-really-want-to-blow-up-Iran Bush administration can only muster a best estimate that says Iran won't be able to produce nukes for at least ten years?
The new estimate extends the timeline, judging that Iran will be unlikely to produce a sufficient quantity of highly enriched uranium, the key ingredient for an atomic weapon, before "early to mid-next decade," according to four sources familiar with that finding. The sources said the shift, based on a better understanding of Iran's technical limitations, puts the timeline closer to 2015 and in line with recently revised British and Israeli figures.... The timeline is portrayed as a minimum designed to reflect a program moving full speed ahead without major technical obstacles.
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia on Wednesday called his 2004 decision not to recuse himself from a case involving Vice President Cheney, who is a friend of his, the "proudest thing" he has done on the court.Scalia's not exactly the model of judicial temperament these days. Read More......
The conservative justice's remarks came as he took questions from law students during a lecture at the University of Connecticut.
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