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Tuesday, February 06, 2007
Open thread
(click photo to see larger image)
I'm back from CNN. Ever the blogger, I snagged a photo of Paula Zahn while she was on the air (and got to say hi to Anderson Cooper in the make-up room - and you know what, it was fun, so to the "you've sold out" whiners out there, get over it, the man is hot). I really like Paula. I've been on her show a number of times on both FOX and CNN, and she has always been quite professional and good on the issues. Sure, she's not always perfect, nobody is, but I really think she's one of the good guys in the journalism field - and who else is doing repeated coverage of hate in America?
And here's Times Square from the car on the way back to my hotel.
Read the rest of this post...
Bush sent 363 tons of cold hard cash to Iraq
This is why oversight matters. This is why having Henry Waxman as the Chair of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform matters. We know that the Bush administration has been out of control in Iraq. We just haven't known all the details because the Hill Republicans never bothered to find out. We just know the Bush team never had a plan. And, the things we're learning now are shocking -- like the one about how we sent 363 tons of cash to Iraq without any real idea what it was for:
Wow. Read the rest of this post...
"Who in their right mind would send 363 tons of cash into a war zone? But that's exactly what our government did," the California Democrat said during a hearing reviewing possible waste, fraud and abuse of funds in Iraq.Bremer really had no idea how the money was allocated. The Iraqis just needed it. How much of that money ended up in the hands of insurgents or other people killing American soldiers? Bremer didn't think that happened, but managed to say that he "would certainly be concerned" if any money was diverted to the insurgents. Thanks, Paul, for the concern.
On December 12, 2003, $1.5 billion was shipped to Iraq, initially "the largest pay out of U.S. currency in Fed history," according to an e-mail cited by committee members.
It was followed by more than $2.4 billion on June 22, 2004, and $1.6 billion three days later. The CPA turned over sovereignty on June 28.
Paul Bremer, who as the administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority ran Iraq after initial combat operations ended, said the enormous shipments were done at the request of the Iraqi minister of finance.
Wow. Read the rest of this post...
The Klan is back, thanks to gay-bashers and immigrant-bashers
And by that, I of course mean, Republicans.
You reap what you sow. Conservatives, aligned with religious right Republicans, have spent the past six years (plus) demonizing gays, immigrants, Muslims, and everyone else they could get their hands on, and now that hate has come home to roost. And if they try to claim that they're not responsible, their words don't have any power, then why did they say them at all? Read the rest of this post...
You reap what you sow. Conservatives, aligned with religious right Republicans, have spent the past six years (plus) demonizing gays, immigrants, Muslims, and everyone else they could get their hands on, and now that hate has come home to roost. And if they try to claim that they're not responsible, their words don't have any power, then why did they say them at all? Read the rest of this post...
Another Open Thread
Let's do another open thread while John is on Paula Zahn's show. Interesting how all three panelists basically agreed on the Snicker's website with the ads and the NFL reaction.
Ted Haggard claims he was "cured" in three weeks -- and no one on this panel believes him, either. I don't want to know how Ted Haggard is "wired." And, Lauren Lake is right...Haggard's claim is "down right despicable."
The KKK. This is what has happened in George Bush's America. Hate groups are flourishing. The KKK.... Read the rest of this post...
Ted Haggard claims he was "cured" in three weeks -- and no one on this panel believes him, either. I don't want to know how Ted Haggard is "wired." And, Lauren Lake is right...Haggard's claim is "down right despicable."
The KKK. This is what has happened in George Bush's America. Hate groups are flourishing. The KKK.... Read the rest of this post...
House and Senate Democrats taking offensive on Iraq policy
For five years, the Republicans on Capitol Hill have resisted any oversight of Bush's disastrous Iraq policy. Yesterday, the Senate Republicans sabotaged the chance to start a debate. But, they can't stop it. House and Senate Democrats are on the move with tactics and strategies to thwart Bush. The President has never had to answer for his failed war. Those days are over:
Democratic critics of the Iraq war seized the offensive at both ends of the Capitol on Tuesday, disclosing plans for a symbolic rejection by the House of President Bush's decision to deploy additional troops and filing legislation in the Senate to require withdrawal of U.S. military personnel.The entire policy has been irresponsible -- and note to Gates and the GOP: we've already lost the chance to be successful in Iraq. It's a failure. That's why the Democrats have to take control of the mess. That's why the Democrats won in November. Read the rest of this post...
"We're going to stand by our soldiers, but we're not going to stand by a failed policy that exposes more of our soldiers to death and suffering," said Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, rebutting charges that the war's critics may be undermining the morale or even the safety of U.S. forces.
Democrats pressured Bush to change course as Defense Secretary Robert Gates told lawmakers that U.S. forces might be able to start leaving Iraq before the end of the year - if daunting conditions including subdued violence and political reconciliation are met.
He also said that the buildup in troops is "not the last chance" to succeed in Iraq and added, "I would be irresponsible if I weren't thinking about what the alternatives might be."
Open thread
I'll be on CNN's Paula Zahn Now from 8pm to 9pm Eastern tonight. Sounds like an hour, but it's not. It's actually 3 segments, each only about 4 minutes or so, with 2 other guests. We'll be discussing the Snickers ad, Ted Haggard being "cured" of his homosexuality in just 3 short weeks, and the renewed rise of the KKK across the country in unexpected places like Maryland and New Jersey.
Read the rest of this post...
Republicans give tax breaks to the rich and the poor get the war bill
Predictable. Who better to fund the war other than a sick granny and the poorest slice of the American population? Please tell me again how morally superior the Republicans are because this is just sick. Hasn't "guns & butter" failed before?
Kent Conrad, the Democratic chairman of the Senate budget committee, said: "The president's budget is filled with debt and deception, disconnected from reality, and continues to move America in the wrong direction. This administration has the worst fiscal record in history and this budget does nothing to change that."Hasn't the US public already said "enough?" Read the rest of this post...
The Vietnam war cost about $614bn at today's prices. According to the Congressional Research Service, the Iraq war has so far cost $500bn. About 90% of the spending on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars goes to Iraq. In addition to the spending on Iraq and Afghanistan this year and next, Mr Bush is seeking $50bn for 2009.
Praise Jesus, he's cured!
Ted Haggard, the fallen leader of the gay-hating, far-right, evangelical movement in America - you remember him, the guy who bought meth from a male prostitute with whom he repeatedly slept for three years, while running the evangelical movement - well, after only 3 weeks of therapy, HE'S CURED!
These people are so sad. And so gullible. More from Towle Road. Read the rest of this post...
These people are so sad. And so gullible. More from Towle Road. Read the rest of this post...
The amazing disappearing NIE
The Iraq NIE released on Friday has gotten less attention than I expected. That is partially due to this administration's time-honored tradition of releasing bad news on a Friday (nobody pays attention to Saturday news), and this was the Friday before the Super Bowl, a veritable perfect storm if you want bad news to be overlooked. Still, the document is worth unpacking.
To start, a draft of any NIE is written and slowly makes its way up through the intel chain of command. I would guess that this one originated within CIA, but there’s no hard and fast rule for where an NIE begins. Once there’s a draft to work with, the other agencies weigh in, with CIA, DIA, and (State’s) INR being the major players, along with DNI and NIC (National Intelligence Council) personnel coordinating all the input. I’ve participated in NIC meetings on major analytic issues like this, and sometimes they go smoothly and sometimes they can be an absolute foodfight. I would imagine this was relatively straightforward, though, only because virtually everybody in the intelligence community knows Iraq is a disaster (and have for some time now).
The document's explanation of language is helpful, and intel-speak does need some translation. It’s a very specific style, designed to indicate judgment through degrees of likelihood. In writing intel papers, you always have to differentiate facts (of which there are few, because intel reports are almost never 100% sure) from assessment (which is most of the work), hence the frequent “we judge”, “we estimate”, etc. The assessments are based on a combination of estimated source/information veracity, volume of information, and contextual knowledge.
The 3.5 pages of unclassified key judgments are likely (see, old habits die hard) just a fraction of the full document, and I would guess the unclassified judgments are both more muted and less predictive than the complete report. The findings are, frankly, stark. There’s little that the reality-based community will find surprising, but much of the NIE directly contradicts what the Bush administration has been saying for years.
The initial, overall assessment basically says that Iraq is likely to deteriorate at a rate consistent with the "latter part" of 2006 in the absence of a major shift in the political/military situation. That is, Iraq is likely to continue to deteriorate rapidly over the next 12-18 months. It also acknowledges the reasons for sectarian divisions (essentially profound mutual distrust from decades of the old power structure), the decentralized authority within the major groups (which makes a political situation difficult), and the "self-sustaining" accelerators of violence.
In stating "the term 'civil war' does not adequately capture the complexity of the conflict in Iraq," the NIE essentially admits that the situation is worse than a classical civil war. We can’t just wait (or hope) for one side to win; there are multiple levels of conflict (with the caveat that our presence is probably accelerating more than inhibiting two or three of those) and each plays a part in the cycle of violence. "Civil war" does describe, as the NIE says, key elements of the violence, however, which gives the lie to Bush administration claims otherwise.
After a wish list of (unlikely) potential factors that could benefit the situation and a gratuitous slap at the Maliki government, the NIE very clearly states that the neocons (and Cheney's people) remain absolutely full of it: "Iraq’s neighbors influence, and are influenced by, events within Iraq, but the involvement of these outside actors is not likely to be a major driver of violence or the prospects for stability . . ." This is a clear repudiation of the idea that the conflict is driven by Iran, al-Qaeda elements, Syria, or other regional actors, and those who insist on hyperventilating about Iran in particular should take note.
The paper closes with potential outcomes (again, National Intelligence Estimates usually project out 12-18 months, so these are possibilities for that timeframe). First is "chaos leading to partition," which I think is very unlikely in the near term. A weak central government will likely continue to cede power to localities, but there is little reason to believe that power will be a tripartite consolidation as the paper posits. Much more likely than "three mutually antagonistic parts" is warlordism, or localism, for lack of a better word, which the paper describes as "anarchic fragmentation of power", its third possibility. I see no reason to believe government will be any more effective at the super-province level than the national level (with the notable exception of Kurdistan, which already has a functioning -- if brutal and somewhat authoritarian -- regime), and such fragmentation is not only likely, but largely extant. The third option listed is a "Shia strong-man", which I think is entirely possible, especially after U.S. withdrawal. The Shia will want to consolidate, and if they can get their fighters to unite in a marriage of convenience at minimum -- a big if, admittedly -- either a single Shia leader or small Shia oligarchy could emerge. None of these possibilities, however, would replace the violence, but rather exist in the midst of some level of it.
The NIE lays out what many of us have been saying for years. It is a direct rebuke of administration statements and policies, and like virtually everything that disagrees with the administration, it is already, just days after being released, settling into the dustbin of history. Read the rest of this post...
To start, a draft of any NIE is written and slowly makes its way up through the intel chain of command. I would guess that this one originated within CIA, but there’s no hard and fast rule for where an NIE begins. Once there’s a draft to work with, the other agencies weigh in, with CIA, DIA, and (State’s) INR being the major players, along with DNI and NIC (National Intelligence Council) personnel coordinating all the input. I’ve participated in NIC meetings on major analytic issues like this, and sometimes they go smoothly and sometimes they can be an absolute foodfight. I would imagine this was relatively straightforward, though, only because virtually everybody in the intelligence community knows Iraq is a disaster (and have for some time now).
The document's explanation of language is helpful, and intel-speak does need some translation. It’s a very specific style, designed to indicate judgment through degrees of likelihood. In writing intel papers, you always have to differentiate facts (of which there are few, because intel reports are almost never 100% sure) from assessment (which is most of the work), hence the frequent “we judge”, “we estimate”, etc. The assessments are based on a combination of estimated source/information veracity, volume of information, and contextual knowledge.
The 3.5 pages of unclassified key judgments are likely (see, old habits die hard) just a fraction of the full document, and I would guess the unclassified judgments are both more muted and less predictive than the complete report. The findings are, frankly, stark. There’s little that the reality-based community will find surprising, but much of the NIE directly contradicts what the Bush administration has been saying for years.
The initial, overall assessment basically says that Iraq is likely to deteriorate at a rate consistent with the "latter part" of 2006 in the absence of a major shift in the political/military situation. That is, Iraq is likely to continue to deteriorate rapidly over the next 12-18 months. It also acknowledges the reasons for sectarian divisions (essentially profound mutual distrust from decades of the old power structure), the decentralized authority within the major groups (which makes a political situation difficult), and the "self-sustaining" accelerators of violence.
In stating "the term 'civil war' does not adequately capture the complexity of the conflict in Iraq," the NIE essentially admits that the situation is worse than a classical civil war. We can’t just wait (or hope) for one side to win; there are multiple levels of conflict (with the caveat that our presence is probably accelerating more than inhibiting two or three of those) and each plays a part in the cycle of violence. "Civil war" does describe, as the NIE says, key elements of the violence, however, which gives the lie to Bush administration claims otherwise.
After a wish list of (unlikely) potential factors that could benefit the situation and a gratuitous slap at the Maliki government, the NIE very clearly states that the neocons (and Cheney's people) remain absolutely full of it: "Iraq’s neighbors influence, and are influenced by, events within Iraq, but the involvement of these outside actors is not likely to be a major driver of violence or the prospects for stability . . ." This is a clear repudiation of the idea that the conflict is driven by Iran, al-Qaeda elements, Syria, or other regional actors, and those who insist on hyperventilating about Iran in particular should take note.
The paper closes with potential outcomes (again, National Intelligence Estimates usually project out 12-18 months, so these are possibilities for that timeframe). First is "chaos leading to partition," which I think is very unlikely in the near term. A weak central government will likely continue to cede power to localities, but there is little reason to believe that power will be a tripartite consolidation as the paper posits. Much more likely than "three mutually antagonistic parts" is warlordism, or localism, for lack of a better word, which the paper describes as "anarchic fragmentation of power", its third possibility. I see no reason to believe government will be any more effective at the super-province level than the national level (with the notable exception of Kurdistan, which already has a functioning -- if brutal and somewhat authoritarian -- regime), and such fragmentation is not only likely, but largely extant. The third option listed is a "Shia strong-man", which I think is entirely possible, especially after U.S. withdrawal. The Shia will want to consolidate, and if they can get their fighters to unite in a marriage of convenience at minimum -- a big if, admittedly -- either a single Shia leader or small Shia oligarchy could emerge. None of these possibilities, however, would replace the violence, but rather exist in the midst of some level of it.
The NIE lays out what many of us have been saying for years. It is a direct rebuke of administration statements and policies, and like virtually everything that disagrees with the administration, it is already, just days after being released, settling into the dustbin of history. Read the rest of this post...
David Broder says Dems don't like the military
It's time for David Broder to apologize or retire, because his right-wing rants are getting ridiculous at this point. Democrats don't like the military? That's his latest unsubstantiated right-wing talking point he published today.
From Oliver Willis, quoting Broder today:
I was at the DNC meeting this past weekend, and unlike David Broder, it wasn't clear to me at all that the overwhelming majority of the audience had "no sympathy" for the military. In fact, General Clark was MOBBED the entire time he was there. I was due to interview him, and it took a good 20 minutes for him to walk 20 feet to our camera because the crowd wouldn't leave him alone. And not because they didn't feel any "empathy" for him. They loved him.
This is a classic Republican talking point based on absolutely nothing. Unless David Broder thinks that opposition to the Iraq disaster makes you anti-military, in which case over 70% of the American people hate the military, using David Broder's calculus.
It's time for David Broder to apologize, or admit that he's lost his edge, and unfortunately his mind. This kind of angry, right-wing crap is beneath him. Or at least it should be. Read the rest of this post...
From Oliver Willis, quoting Broder today:
One of the losers in the weekend oratorical marathon was retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who repeatedly invoked the West Point motto of "Duty, Honor, Country," forgetting that few in this particular audience have much experience with, or sympathy for, the military.From where did he pull that bullshit argument? He says he was at the DNC meeting this weekend, and I guess he could just tell by all the "kill the military" buttons we were all wearing (we had them pinned to our "I work for Satan" t-shirts).
I was at the DNC meeting this past weekend, and unlike David Broder, it wasn't clear to me at all that the overwhelming majority of the audience had "no sympathy" for the military. In fact, General Clark was MOBBED the entire time he was there. I was due to interview him, and it took a good 20 minutes for him to walk 20 feet to our camera because the crowd wouldn't leave him alone. And not because they didn't feel any "empathy" for him. They loved him.
This is a classic Republican talking point based on absolutely nothing. Unless David Broder thinks that opposition to the Iraq disaster makes you anti-military, in which case over 70% of the American people hate the military, using David Broder's calculus.
It's time for David Broder to apologize, or admit that he's lost his edge, and unfortunately his mind. This kind of angry, right-wing crap is beneath him. Or at least it should be. Read the rest of this post...
White House gleeful over Senate Iraq Vote. Reid warns: "We are going to debate Iraq." Help make that happen.
The NY Times reports that the White House is quite pleased that the Iraq war debate was stymied in the Senate:
But, it's not over. Harry Reid sounds resolute:
John Warner (R-VA): 202-224-2023,
John Sununu (R-NH): 202-224-2841
Gordon Smith (R-OR): 202 224-3753
They all ran with Bush on his war platform in 2002. The GOP has enabled Bush to run a disastrous war for the past five years. Now, they're trying to stop the debate about the war. We can't let that happen. Call your Senators. It matters. Read the rest of this post...
The White House welcomed the Senate vote. “All sides have a right to be heard in this debate, and we support Senator McConnell’s and the Republicans’ right to be able to offer the amendments they want to offer,” said a spokeswoman, Dana Perino.The Bush White House wants no voice to be heard. For five years, the Bush team has avoided any real debate on Iraq. Despite the 2006 loss of the Senate, Mitch McConnell, Trent Lott and the rest of the Republican Senators are willing to do Bush's dirty work.
But, it's not over. Harry Reid sounds resolute:
“You can run but you can’t hide,” Mr. Reid told his Republican colleagues on the floor. “We are going to debate Iraq.”Don't let the Republicans Senators run and hide. If you have a Republican Senator, call them. Today. The full contact list is here. But several of the "run and hide" Republicans deserve special attention:
John Warner (R-VA): 202-224-2023,
John Sununu (R-NH): 202-224-2841
Gordon Smith (R-OR): 202 224-3753
They all ran with Bush on his war platform in 2002. The GOP has enabled Bush to run a disastrous war for the past five years. Now, they're trying to stop the debate about the war. We can't let that happen. Call your Senators. It matters. Read the rest of this post...
Dear Senator Clinton, we all lived through 9/11, thank you very much. PS Iraq has nothing to do with 9/11.
A lot of folks didn't notice that Hillary gave an interview last week about Iraq that read like George Bush at his worst. Not only did she lecture Democratic voters about how Iraq is tied to September 11 - which it most certainly is not - but she then one upped herself by chastising the other Democratic candidates, and we presume their supporters, over the fact that SHE was alive on September 11, and apparently we weren't:
We don't have a problem with Hillary, here at AMERICAblog. Other than John Kerry, who has now left the presidential race, we don't have firm views about any of the candidates (though Biden gives us the willies). Sure, we have concerns about all of candidates, to varying degrees, and we have things we like about each of them - but we have written off no one, and we most certainly are not Hillary-haters.
But.
Invoking September 11 when asked about Iraq is unconscionable. It is pure Dick Cheney, and an outright lie. It is not what a Democrat says, and hell, it isn't even what a sane moderate Republican says. I have no idea what Senator Clinton was trying to telegraph in her speech - who exactly doesn't think that we're engaged in a war against heartless enemies? - but speaking as a blog that has a pretty damn good record of treating her fairly, she really crossed the line on this one.
Don't question our patriotism, and don't talk like George Bush, or this is going to be a very problematic race. Read the rest of this post...
Attention focused on Iraq and her vote to authorize the use of force ahead of the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003. Presidential rivals such as former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards now say the vote in support was a mistake.With all due respect, that's a load of crap. As a resident of Washington, DC I too lived through September 11 and have been dealing with the aftereffects. I watched the Pentagon burn outside my window the entire day, so spare me the "you lived through September 11 and I didn't" crap. Secondly, I suspect every American alive on that day was scared to death and worried about their lives and their loved ones and their country. It is beyond hubris to suggest that somehow Mrs. Clinton suffered more than the rest of us, and even worse, she implies that we didn't suffer at all.
"There are no do-overs in life," Clinton said. She says Congress received bad information going into the vote and that she would have voted differently given what she knows now.
"As a senator from New York, I lived through 9/11 and I am still dealing with the aftereffects," Clinton said. "I may have a slightly different take on this from some of the other people who will be coming through here."
Clinton said her view is that the nation is engaged in a deadly fight against terrorism, a battle that she contends Bush has botched.
"I do think we are engaged in a war against heartless, ruthless enemies," she said. "If they could come after us again tomorrow they would do so."
We don't have a problem with Hillary, here at AMERICAblog. Other than John Kerry, who has now left the presidential race, we don't have firm views about any of the candidates (though Biden gives us the willies). Sure, we have concerns about all of candidates, to varying degrees, and we have things we like about each of them - but we have written off no one, and we most certainly are not Hillary-haters.
But.
Invoking September 11 when asked about Iraq is unconscionable. It is pure Dick Cheney, and an outright lie. It is not what a Democrat says, and hell, it isn't even what a sane moderate Republican says. I have no idea what Senator Clinton was trying to telegraph in her speech - who exactly doesn't think that we're engaged in a war against heartless enemies? - but speaking as a blog that has a pretty damn good record of treating her fairly, she really crossed the line on this one.
Don't question our patriotism, and don't talk like George Bush, or this is going to be a very problematic race. Read the rest of this post...
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Snickers' statement on their homophobic Superbowl ads
While I'm glad they pulled the homophobic ads they had posted on the Web, and the homophobic response videos from NFL players, this statement, quoted in the New York Times hardly reeks of "I get it":
It still amazes me how even when there's no downside (I mean, who is Snickers worried about offending by simply saying, I'm sorry), these companies still refuse to just come clean and say 'we screwed up.'
On a brighter note, the story made the NYT, and I'll be flying to New York today to appear on Paula Zahn's show, for the entire hour, to talk about the Snickers ad and other issues of the day. Read the rest of this post...
“As with all of our Snickers advertising, our goal was to capture the attention of our core Snickers consumer, primarily 18-to-24-year-old adult males,” said a spokeswoman for Masterfoods, Alice Nathanson. “Feedback from our target consumers has been positive, and many media and Web site commentators on this year’s Super Bowl lineup ranked the commercial among this year’s best.”Yeah, well, any idiot could have told them that homophobia ranks pretty high up there with some members of the 18 to 24 year old adult male crowd. So does racism, Jew-hating, and the sexual harassment of women. Is this what we can expect next from Snickers?
“We know that humor is highly subjective and we understand that some consumers have found the commercial offensive,” Ms. Nathanson said, adding: “Clearly that was not our intent. We do not plan to continue the ad on television or on our Web site.”
It still amazes me how even when there's no downside (I mean, who is Snickers worried about offending by simply saying, I'm sorry), these companies still refuse to just come clean and say 'we screwed up.'
On a brighter note, the story made the NYT, and I'll be flying to New York today to appear on Paula Zahn's show, for the entire hour, to talk about the Snickers ad and other issues of the day. Read the rest of this post...
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Texas GOP to fight against life saving vaccine
Who would have guessed that the decision by Texas (Republican) governor Perry would cause such a commotion? Any normal person would find the vaccination and its availability to Texas girls to be beneficial since it is a vaccine against cervical cancer, but as with just about everything, the Republicans want to make this about sex because they are obsessed with sex. The vaccine is about life and stopping a deadly virus:
Perry defended his decision, saying his fellow conservatives were wrong to worry that mandating the vaccine will trample parents' rights and promote premarital sex.Read the rest of this post...
"Providing the HPV vaccine doesn't promote sexual promiscuity any more than providing the Hepatitis B vaccine promotes drug use," Perry said in a statement. "If the medical community developed a vaccine for lung cancer, would the same critics oppose it claiming it would encourage smoking?"
Tuesday Morning Open Thread
Well, the Republican Senators got their wish yesterday. They stopped the Iraq debate. The very Senators who've enabled Bush's war won't even discuss it on the floor of the Senate -- they won't even allow a debate on a non-binding resolution.
They have to pay a price in 2008. (And, note to Norm Coleman and Susan Collins: you might have voted the right way for a change. But your GOP leaders shut down the debate. You're not off the hook.)
Start threading, please. Read the rest of this post...
They have to pay a price in 2008. (And, note to Norm Coleman and Susan Collins: you might have voted the right way for a change. But your GOP leaders shut down the debate. You're not off the hook.)
Start threading, please. Read the rest of this post...
Deadly friendly fire cockpit tape transcript published
After being stonewalled by both the US government and the UK government since 2003 when British soldier Matty Hull was killed by US air friendly fire, the transcript of the cockpit tapes have been published in the UK press. For years the UK MoD and US DoD have dodged the question and misled the family about the situation but it is now quite clear what transpired. Friendly fire deaths have been unusually high in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. Rumsfeld made a mess of the US military and should be held properly accountable.
A cockpit recording of a US pilot opening fire on UK forces in Iraq was leaked today, exposing the catalogue of errors which led to the death of a British soldier.Read the rest of this post...
In the recording, the pilot of one of two US A-10 Thunderbolt jets involved in the attack says, after they realise their mistake: "We're in jail dude".
The other pilot, who opened fire, weeps, saying: "God dammit."
The Sun newspaper today published the transcript after obtaining a tape of the recording of the moment that one of the jets launched two devastating attacks on a British armoured convoy, killing Lance Corporal of Horse Matty Hull.
The Ministry of Defence initially told L/Cpl Hull's family the recording did not exist, but it found its way into the hands of Oxford coroner Andrew Walker, who is hearing the inquest into the soldier's death.
CNN's Lou Dobbs repeats, all week long, false Moonie paper story about Pelosi
But in all fairness to Dobbs, he probably thought Pelosi was Mexican.
More from TPM. Read the rest of this post...
More from TPM. Read the rest of this post...
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