I’m sure you’ve all heard by now that Patrick Fitzgerald is still interviewing people for the Grand Jury and that he called Rove assistants Susan Ralston and Izzy hernandez just last Friday.
Republican establishment groupies, The Note, which broke this story says this:
We should Note that Ralston and Hernandez are two of the nicest people in Washington and their being called to appear is a necessary reminder of the Caputoean phenomenon from the Clinton Era, which some have forgotten. When there are special prosecutors, a lot of kind, innocent people can get caught up in the investigation, often saddling them with huge legal bills and emotional stress.
That might be true, Perhaps these two are innocents. However, Susan Ralston’s name has the unfortunate propensity to pop up in conjunction with some serious GOP scumbags:
When Rove got to the White House in 2001, he hired as his personal assistant one Susan Ralston, who previously was Jack Abramoff’s personal assistant and was recommended by Abramoff for the job. Since then Ralston has become an insider’s insider. “She’s a remarkably gifted leader, playing a vital role,” Rove told the National Journal in its June 18, 2005 issue.
According to the Washington Monthly (June 1, 2004), Grover Norquist “had a deal with Susan Ralston, who until recently was the assistant to Karl Rove. An unnamed Republican lobbyist recently told Salon.com: “Susan took a message for Rove, and then called Grover to ask if she should put the caller through to Rove. If Grover didn’t approve, your call didn’t go through.”
“How did Norquist attain such influence over Ralston? Flowers every Friday? Redskins tickets?” the magazine wrote. “The answer, actually, is what the White House ethics lawyers call a ‘preexisting relationship.’ Ralston had formerly worked for lobbyist Jack Abramoff, a close friend of Norquist’s and a top fundraiser for House majority whip Tom DeLay (R-Texas).”
I have no idea what Fitzgerald’s looking at but it has something to do with Karl Rove. As Talk Left points out:
The two witnesses could be providing evidence that corroborates Rove’s version. It’s interesting, but not quite up to being a “dot” yet.
I was busy yesterday and didn’t get a chance to follow up, but I wondered about the item in Robert Novak’s column yesterday in which he claimed that the Kerry campaign discarded Wilson after the SSCI report claimed Wilson’s statements had no basis in fact. I had no recollection of that happening, particularly since the bipartisan SSCI report said no such thing — that “no basis in fact” statement came from the “additional views” of partisan tools Orrin Hatch, Pat Roberts and Kit Bond. (It’s quite telling that the committee couldn’t even get all the republicans to sign on to that little smear.)
Robert Parry gets to the bottom of this and lo and behold, it all comes back to our favorite little GOP man-ho, JD Guckert:
The other part of Novak’s attack on Wilson – about his supposed repudiation by Sen. John Kerry’s Democratic campaign – can be traced back to a story by Talon News’ former White House correspondent Jeff Gannon, whose real name is James Guckert.
On July 27, 2004, just over a year ago, a Talon News story under Gannon’s byline reported that Wilson “has apparently been jettisoned from the Kerry campaign.” The article based its assumption on the fact that “all traces” of Wilson “had disappeared from the Kerry Web site.”
The Talon News article reported that “Wilson had appeared on a Web site www.restorehonesty.com where he restated his criticism of the Bush administration. The link now goes directly to the main page of www.johnkerry.com and no reference to Wilson can be found on the entire site.”
A Web Redesign
But Peter Daou, who headed the Kerry campaign’s online rapid response, said the disappearance of Wilson’s link – along with many other Web pages – resulted from a redesign of Kerry’s Web site at the start of the general election campaign, not a repudiation of Wilson.
“I wasn’t aware of any directive from senior Kerry staff to ‘discard’ Joe Wilson or do anything to Joe Wilson for that matter,” said Daou, who now publishes the “Daou Report” at Salon.com. “It just got lost in the redesign of the Web site, as did dozens and dozens of other pages.”
I don’t want to hear any more speculation that Robert Novak has anything but the highest journalistic standards. Nobody has more credibility than the Bulldog.
The Talon article was scrubbed of course. But the freepers kept a copy on their site. Perhaps old Bob hangs out there — many Republican whores do. Here it is in its entirety:
Kerry Dumps Joe Wilson From Campaign Team Talon News ^ | 7/27/2004 | Jeff Gannon
Posted on 07/27/2004 7:22:20 AM PDT by ConservativeMajority
WASHINGTON (Talon News) — Last week, the presidential campaign of Democratic candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) very publicly distanced itself from former National Security Advisor Samuel “Sandy” Berger after it became known that Berger was under investigation for removing highly classified documents from the National Archives.
Talon News reported that Kerry’s anti-terror policy was removed from the candidate’s web site immediately following Berger’s dismissal as a campaign advisor. But in the last few days, another advisor has apparently been jettisoned from the Kerry campaign. All traces of former Ambassador Joe Wilson, the central figure in the controversy of faulty intelligence about Iraq and uranium has disappeared from the Kerry web site. Wilson had appeared on a web site www.restorehonesty.com where he restated his criticism of the Bush administration. The link now goes directly to the main page of www.johnkerry.com and no reference to Wilson can be found on the entire site.
Wilson was discredited by a Senate Intelligence Committee report that contradicted Wilson’s public statements about how he was selected for a sensitive mission to Niger in 2002 and the results of his report about Saddam Hussein’s attempt to purchase uranium in Africa. Wilson represented his investigation as proof that President Bush misled the United States in making the case for the invasion of Iraq. An investigation into British intelligence confirms that Bush’s claim was “well founded.”
It is likely that Kerry’s handlers took advantage of the Berger affair to quietly break official contact with someone who has proved to be something of a loose cannon. The ambassador was known for his vitriolic rhetoric against members of the Bush administration, particularly political advisor Karl Rove. Last year he suggested that Rove be “frog-marched from the White House in handcuffs,” over the alleged leak of his wife’s identity.
The Kerry campaign did not respond to a Talon News inquiry about Wilson’s departure.
This really is worth some follow-up with the mainstream press, I think. All things being equal, Novak should be joining Dan Rather for a geriatric fuck-up cruise. It’s amazing he’s skated thus far.
A state senator frustrated with what he called “stonewalling” by the California National Guard said Tuesday he would launch contempt hearings against the state’s military unit for failing to turn over documents.
-Sen. Joe Dunn, D-Garden Grove, sought the documents as part of his probe into the Guard’s new controversial intelligence unit. After squaring off with a top Guard official and a lawyer for the unit Tuesday, Dunn also threatened to seek subpoenas against dozens of current and former top Guard officials.
The hearing was the first since the Times Sacramento Bureau reported the existence of the Information Synchronization, Knowledge Management and Intelligence Fusion program last month. Internal Guard e-mails show the unit had high-level interest in a small Mother’s Day anti-war rally at the Capitol.
[…]
Before the hearing, the U.S. Army also dealt the committee a blow saying that a computer hard drive and a hand-held Blackberry used by the retiring California Guard colonel who oversaw the fledgling intelligence unit was federal property, and not subject to the subpoena.
The hard drive was erased the same day Dunn requested the Guard preserve all documents related to the unit.
WTF? So it really looks as if the California National Guard with the help of some members of the US Army was spying on anti-war protesters. This is nasty stuff. If it’s happening all over the country, it’s really nasty stuff.
One of the harshest questioners in the hearing was none other than Tom McClintock erstwhile GOP candidate for Governor. He’s very right wing, but sometimes this civil liberties issue creates strange bedfellows. And needless to say, he hates Schwarzenneger with a passion. But then, these days, who doesn’t?
For my second WTF, I find out that even prosecutors in the GITMO Kangaroo courts were appalled by the methods being used to find the “non-combatants” guilty. But, as with all these people who have expressed reservations, revulsion or concern about our handling of prisoners — from the bad apples at Abu Ghraib, to reports of the “Biscuit” teams using psychological torture, to the dog handlers’ testimony, to the FBI agents who were concerned about their legal culpability in inhumane treatment and rendition, to the highly placed members of JAG Corps worrying about complicity in war crimes, to the prosecutors at Guantanamo — they are all mistaken or they are whiners and complainers.
Every day we are learning about people who complained about the legality and morality of our treatment of prisoners and each and every time the defense department whitewashes it. This is becoming unsustainable.
This latest story today about the prosecutors in Guantanamo complaining about the legality of the process discusses a “personality” clash even though the prosecutors who complained were discussing specific instances of unethical and illegal behavior. It sounds to me as if they had some legal Geoffrey Millers down there, whose tactics were as offensive as Miller’s were.
And I suspect that the Colonel Borch mentioned in the article who calls these claims “monstrous lies” may be one of them. I wonder if when the dust settles we will find that Rumsfeld’s Pentagon routinely put the most incompetent and the most gung-ho, quasi-psychotic officers in charge. It would certainly fit the pattern of refusing to listen to anything but their own hype.
My final WTF for the moment is from Josh Marshall, who quotes Michael Barone actually putting finger to keyboard and writing this:
“Richard Nixon, by obstructing investigation of the Watergate burglary, unwittingly colluded in the successful attempt to besmirch his administration. Less than two years after carrying 49 states, he was compelled to resign.”
The intellectual contortions we are seeing on the right these days are quite magnificent. I’m just wondering when their heads will explode.
Paul Hackett is asking the netroots to try out a new GOTV maneuver. It sounds like it might be worth a try, and I don’t see how it could hurt. Experimentation is a good thing. And if the candidate calls, we should probably answer, particularly when it doesn’t really take any effort to speak of.
Check it out. It will be fun to see if it has any impact.
They are also pushing to raise a few last minute bucks. Here’s the link.
Update: I understand that some people are quite upset with the idea of sending out an e-mail to your friends asking them to send an e-mail to their friends in the hopes of spreading the word virally. Some consider this spam, but I’m of the opinion that sending a mass e-mail to people you know is not the same as sending out unsolicited messages to strangers. In fact, i do it all the time. But to each his own.
People should be aware that chain e-mails have become a primary tool of the Republicans and they used them to great effect during 2004. Read this article from Harper’s about how they use them and the dishonesty and calumny they contained. (We are suggesting nothing like this.) Republicans are experts at direct mail and this is the hi-tech version of their vaunted mailing lists. Apparently they believe that it is quite effective and developed lists of people who would willingly start the chain. I don’t think it was used to get out the vote so much as perpetuate whisper campaigns and bad information. It occurred mostly under the radar. I think we can be quite confident that they are refining this technique and will be using it to great effect going forward whether we learn to use it or not.
It just doesn’t seem wrong to me to use the same method to simply ask your friends to pass on a GOTV message. It is slightly annoying but door knocking and phone calling strangers is far more intrusive and yet we do it all the time. It’s one of the more annoying aspects of grassroots politics, but its absolutely essential. You have to try to get people to vote however you can.
But everyone has to do what they think is right. I know what the Republicans think is right. Do what has to be done to win and if that means annoying their friends with an e-mail, they do it.
Update II: I forgot to include this link which explains how chain e-mails can be used effectively and for good, written by Phil Agre, information expert and one of the clearest thinkers about the current political scene around.
You can see why Bob Novak’s lawyers have told him to keep his mouth shut. Today he writes a column “defending” himself that opens up one big ole can of worms again.
Novak’s original column opened with this paragraph:
The CIA’s decision to send retired diplomat Joseph C. Wilson to Africa in February 2002 to investigate possible Iraqi purchases of uranium was made routinely at a low level without Director George Tenet’s knowledge. Remarkably, this produced a political firestorm that has not yet subsided.
Had Novak left it at that there would have been no repercussions. But he went on to reveal that Wilson’s wife was the one who suggested him for the mission. And we know that it was the “wife” part of this story that was being spread all over town, not the fact that the decision to send Wilson to Niger was made in the bowels of the CIA.
This would have been a fairly standard issue character assassination if it hadn’t been for the fact that Plame was undercover. But she was, and the CIA told Novak that. Bill Harlow, former spokesman for the CIA, recently went on the record with the Washington Post and said that he had warned Novak off the story using the only language the CIA can use without revealing classified information. Novak claims in his column today that this simply wasn’t good enough:
So, what was “wrong” with my column as Harlow claimed? There was nothing incorrect. He told the Post reporters he had “warned” me that if I “did write about it, her name should not be revealed.” That is meaningless. Once it was determined that Wilson’s wife suggested the mission, she could be identified as “Valerie Plame” by reading her husband’s entry in “Who’s Who in America.”
Except he could have easily written the story without revealing that Wilson’s wife allegedly sent him on the mission at all. It was a colorful detail that didn’t mean anything unless you were Joe and Valerie Wilson and your careers and reputations were being destroyed. The substance of Novak’s story was that Cheney knew nothing of the mission, not who sent Wilson. It appears to me that this is exactly how Harlow assumed Novak would handle it when he warned him not to use Plame’s name if he wrote the story.
Why did Novak think Plame’s alleged involvement was important in the first place? He certainly didn’t spell it out in his column. He just dropped it out there. In fact, there has still not been, to this day, any satisfactory explanation from him or anyone else involved as to why it was so significant that Plame allegedly suggested her husband for the job. Other than casting aspersions on Wilson’s manhood, creating the impression that he wasn’t qualified or sending a message to critics, I can’t conceive of any legitimate reasons why it would be considered worth reporting — particularly since the CIA had not given him an unequivocal green light. Reporting her involvement can only be seen for what it was: character assasination and political retribution.
Novak knew what Rove and Libby wanted him to do and, alone among his peers, he ran with the petty little detail they were working hard to get into the papers. And now he has the nerve to get indignant when he gets called on it. Douchebag For Liberty doesn’t even begin to describe it.
If you want a message that will resonate with red staters — maybe even some of those macho white working class Nascar males who pride themselves on their independence — this is how you do it:
“I don’t need Washington to tell me how to live my personal life or how to pray to my God,” he said.
The Republicans spent multi-millions over the last 25 years selling the idea that the American people want the government “off their backs.” We should piggy back our candidates right on the back of that marketing slogan and ride it to victory.
What the national Democratic party needs to recognise is that when many people heard the Republicans saying that, they thought that they were talking about literally getting the government “off their backs” not just lowering their taxes. Instead, the Republicans are creating a national government that seeks to intrude in the most personal of ways, interfering with people’s religious and moral choices. That wasn’t what the independent, individualistic western style libertarian signed on for. They are ours for the taking if we have the nerve to say what Paul Hackett said up there.
Combine that with some big ticket ideas like “guaranteed health insurance for all Americans” with a foreign policy narrative that refocuses the threats and policy prescription in the proper direction as Matt Yglesias talks about here, and we have the essence of a Democratic message that will resonate.
Talk Left points to this post about a joint US Canadian raid day before yesterday in Canada to arrest a marijuana seed distributer on charges that his seeds are being used by Americans to break the law. Selling the seeds in not illegal in Canada, but the Americans persuaded the canadians that they should be able to reach across the border and arrest their citizens. The story is complex, but if you are interested in this subject I recommend you check it out.
I was struck by one quote by the US Attorney in Seattle under whose auspices this bust came about:
“The fact is, marijuana is a very dangerous drug,” Sullivan said. “People don’t say that, but right now in America, there are more kids in treatment for addiction to marijuana than every other illegal drug combined.”
Now, I can’t say for sure, but I would bet a million dollars if I had it that this is flat out bullshit. Certainly, the “very dangerous” part is flat out bullshit. And I cannot believe that there are more kids in treatment for marijuana “addiction” than all other drugs combined. This is your government lying in your face. The kids know it and as a result they disregard all the warnings about drugs (like meth — a very, very serious problem.)
I don’t know how many people are following the corruption scandals in Ohio, but they are doozies — just flat out graft in the highest reaches of the Ohio Republican party. It’s one reason why Paul Hackett may just have a chance to win. Combine that with the outrages documented in “What Went Wrong In Ohio” and the GOP is becoming so discredited as an institution that its brand is suffering.
Jean Schmidt has been running from the Ohio bigwigs implicated in the scandal as fast as her bandy little legs will carry her. But it appears that in these last couple of days her lies about knowing some of the major players are unravelling. Swing State project has the story.
In another display of the GOP’s irony and history impaired lameness, the Washington Post reports today why the national GOP decided to throw a bunch of last minute money at Schmidt:
“He called the commander in chief a son-of-a-[expletive],” said NRCC spokesman Carl Forti. “We decided to bury him.”
Arthur has a must read post up dissecting Highpockets’ tribalism and the meaning of plaid pants and cultural paranoia. (If you aren’t checking in with his blog frequently you are missing some of the most consistently amazing cultural and political analysis in the blogosphere.) I’ll leave that fascinating topic to him for now, but he does mention one thing in passing that I’d like to expound on a bit; the wingnuts and the CIA.
I’ve been thinking a lot about how the Plame affair has brought up an interesting political contradiction: the right is now openly contemptuous of the CIA while the left is a vocal supporter. I think it’s probably a good idea to clarify that bit so we don’t get confused. The fact is that both sides have always been simultaneously vocal supporters and openly contemptuous of the CIA, but for entirely different reasons.
I usually don’t speak for “the left” but for the purpose of this discussion I will use my views as a proxy for the lefty argument. I’m not generally a big fan of secretive government departments with no accountability. I always worry that they are up to things not sanctioned by the people and it has often turned out that they are. I have long been skeptical of the CIA because of the CIA’s history of bad acts around the world that were not sanctioned or even known by more than a few people and were often, in hindsight, wrong — like rendition, for instance. I don’t believe that we should have a secret foreign policy operation that doesn’t answer to the people. They tend to do bad shit that leaves the people holding the bag.
But I didn’t just fall out of the back of Arnold’s hummer, so I understand that a nation needs intelligence to protect itself and understand the world. I also understand that the way we obtain that information must be kept secret in order to protect the lives of those who are involved in getting it. I have never objected to the idea that we have spies around the world gathering information about what our enemies are up to. I also think that intelligence should, as much as possible, be objective and apolitical. Otherwise, we cannot accurately assess real threats. If the CIA (and the other intelligence agencies) only make objective analyses, the buck will stop at the president, where it always properly should.
Therefore, I see this Plame affair — and the larger matter of the pre-war WMD threat assessment — as a matter of compromised intelligence and an extension of the 30 year war the right has waged against what it thinks is the CIA’s tepid threat analysis. Never mind that the right’s hysterical analyses have always turned out to have been completely wrong.
But then accuracy was never the point because the right takes the opposite approach to the CIA’s proper role. They have always been entirely in favor of the CIA working on behalf of any president who wanted to topple a left wing dictator or stage a coup without congressional knowledge. This is, in their view, the proper role of the CIA — to covertly advance foreign policy on behalf of an executive (of whom they approve) and basically do illegal and immoral dirty work. But they have never valued the intelligence and analysis the CIA produced since it often challenged their preconcieved beliefs and as a result didn’t validate their knee jerk impulse to invade, bomb, obliterate, topple somebody for reasons of ideology or geopolitical power. The CIA’s intelligence often backed up the success of the containment policy that kept us from a major bloody hot war with the commies — and for that they will never be trusted.(See Team B, and the Committee on the Present Danger parts I and II.)
Therefore, the right sees the Plame affair as another example of an inappropriately “independent” CIA refusing to accede to its boss’s wishes. They believe that the CIA exists to provide the president with the documentation he needs to advance his foreign policy goals — and if that includes lying to precipitate a war he feels is needed, then their job is to acquiesce. When you cut away the verbiage, what the right really believes is that the US is justified in invading and occupying any country it likes — it’s just some sissified, cowardly rule ‘o law that prevents us from doing it. The CIA’s job is to smooth the way for the president to do what he wants by keeping the citizen rubes and the allies in line with phony proof that we are following international and domestic laws. (This would be the Straussian method of governance — too bad the wise ones who are running the world while keeping the rest of us entertained with religion and bread and circuses are so fucking lame.)
Back in the day, they used to just admit that they were engaging in Realpolitik, and as disgusting as that is, at least it was more honest than the current crop of neocons who insist that they are righteous and good by advancing democracy and vanquishing evil using undemocratic, illegal means. It makes me miss Kissinger. At least he didn’t sing kumbaya while he was fucking over the wogs.
I have no idea where people who don’t pay much attention to the political scene would come down on this. It may be that they think the government should have a branch that does illegal dirty work. But I suspect they would also think that the president should not be allowed to run a secret foreign policy or stage wars for inscrutable reasons. Indeed, I think most people would find it repugnant if they knew that there are people in government who think the president of the United States has a right to lie to them in order to commit their blood and treasure to a cause or plan that has nothing to do with the one that is stated.
Of course, that’s exactly what happened with Iraq. The right’s greatest challenge now is to get the public to believe that they were lied to for their own good.