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Abizaid asks for more Iraq troops
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DHS: Kickin' Butt and Takin' Names!
This was only a matter of time.
Bush, Schwartzenegger push new Homeland Security TV show Quote:
Shame of it is, though, that in exchange for getting access from the Feds and CA, Heruth-Waterbury had to agree to a few ground rules: 1. In every cameo appearance by W, he gets to look into the camera and say, "bring 'em on." 2. Cheney is played by the voice of John Forsythe, and "appears" only on speakerphone in the Situation Room. 3. Chalabi gets a positive plug every other episode. 4. The CPA gets advance scripts and times press releases proclaiming Iraq accomplishments accordingly. |
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Clarke wants to sell books, so you're all over his ass for lack of "objectivity." Never mind that Bush wants to be re-elected. God knows he's fallen on his sword and everything and deserves to have bygones be bygones. |
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Not Me accuses me of liking Clarke's book because I'm a Clintonista. Whatever. Only in this weird polarized place do I get accused of that. I've been reading books about intelligence and counterintelligence lately, just for the hell of it, and have two others to recommend in addition to the Clarke book: a collection of short pieces, mostly about the Cold War, by Thomas Powers, and The Age of Sacred Terror, by two former officials of the Clinton NSC. Yes, I know, they're Clinton people too, but note that the Bush II crowd hasn't written any books yet. Oops, except for Clarke, but hereabouts we're pretending that he served in the Clinton Administration but not in Reagan, Bush I or Bush II. Part of the reason people think that nothing happened during the Clinton years is that public sensitivity to these issues was not as great -- certainly that was true before the embassy bombings. Sacred Terror has a lengthy description of Ramzi Yousef's (or, per Mylroie, "Ramzi Yousef"'s) plot to bomb airliners in the Pacific in the early 1990s. The plot was uncovered in the Phillipines, but Yousef got away and a lot of explosives and detonators were unaccounted for, and over the next several weeks unprecedented security measures were put into place. The authors note that the press took little notice of this. |
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Rather, I thought at the time and still think that our public response was not adequate and that lack of overt response emboldened the OBL's of the world. That is my only bone to pick with Clinton. My suspiciousness of Clarke is that, according to him, the Bush Administration failed to understand what the Clinton Administration did, and this just coincidentally corresponds to the time when his role was being reduced. My belief is that the two administrations had a roughly equal understanding of the threat (that is to say that both equally underestimated it). |
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Of course, no one person (probably) could have stopped 9/11, and no one person bears the responsibility. But, don't you think that -- given the nigh indisputable fact that poor information-sharing between our federal agencies contributed greatly to the 9/11 attacks (i.e. known al Qaeda operatives entering the country under their own names, and flying under their own names on and before 9/11) -- the nation and/or the families of the victims deseve some kind of apology?? Lord knows that none are forthcoming from Clinton or Bush. I'm not sure WJC is really capable of believing he's done wrong, and Bush has show no sign of it either. S_A_M |
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S_A_M :doh3: |
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