EMPHYRIO has all the goods on Chalabi’s bosom pal and fellow INC flim flammer, Francis Brooke, the man who is now under indictment from the Iraqi police — whatever that means.
What’s truly creepy is that this guy seems to be some kind of avenging fundamentalist firebreather on top of everything else (or so he says):
Francis Brooke says he would support the elimination of Saddam, even if every single Iraqi were killed in the process. He means it. “I’m coming from a place different from you,” he says in the soft southern drawl one hears from preachers and con men. “I believe in good and evil. That man is absolute evil and must be destroyed.”
It has become clear to me that the neocon intellectual infrastructure was actually some kind of affirmative action program for right wing freaks of all stripes who didn’t have any business connections. How else can you explain the absurdity of a fundamentalist Left Behinder becoming the errand boy to a cosmopolitan, muslim con artist like Chalabi?
I’m beginning to think that the smart thing to do rather than build a media message apparatus, would be to simply infiltrate the one the GOP has already funded and start using it for ourselves. How hard can it be to get a sinecure at one of these thinktankmedia operations? Clearly, you don’t have to have any experience or track record — look at Brooke. This could be the answer folks. They won’t even know it’s happened.
Oh, what a big asshole I am for even suggesting that the Republicans would wrap Reagan’s legacy around Junior like a mink coat on a WalMart greeter.
From the shores of Normandy to President Bush’s campaign offices outside Washington, Mr. Bush and his political advisers embraced the legacy of Ronald Reagan on Sunday, suggesting that even in death, Mr. Reagan had one more campaign in him — this one at the side of Mr. Bush.
In France, Mr. Bush heralded the late president as a “gallant leader in the cause of freedom,” and lionized him in an interview with Tom Brokaw. In Washington, Mr. Bush’s aides said that it was Ronald Reagan as much as another president named Bush who was the role model for this president, and they talked of a campaign in which Mr. Reagan would be at least an inspirational presence
Mr. Bush’s advisers said Sunday that the intense focus on Mr. Reagan’s career that began upon the news of his death on Saturday would remind Americans of what Mr. Bush’s supporters have long described as the similarities between the two men as straight-talking, ideologically driven leaders with swagger and a fixed idea of what they wanted to do with their office.
“Americans are going to be focused on President Reagan for the next week,” said Ed Gillespie, the Republican national chairman. “The parallels are there. I don’t know how you miss them.”
Yes they are. Except Reagan, it turns out, had an excuse.
Other Republicans worry that Bush might not hold up so well by comparison:
Some Republicans said the images of a forceful Mr. Reagan giving dramatic speeches on television provided a less-than-welcome contrast with Mr. Bush’s own appearances these days, and that it was not in Mr. Bush’s interest to encourage such comparisons. That concern was illustrated on Sunday, one Republican said, by televised images of Mr. Reagan’s riveting speech in Normandy commemorating D-Day in 1984, followed by Mr. Bush’s address at a similar ceremony on Sunday.
“Reagan showed what high stature that a president can have — and my fear is that Bush will look diminished by comparison,” said one Republican sympathetic to Mr. Bush, who did not want to be quoted by name criticizing the president.
No kidding. As I’ve been watching the mediawhore self-serving treacle marathon, I’ve been struck by just how good Reagan really was on television. He had tremendous confidence before the camera, as a professional actor would, and performed the role of president with humor and flair. Compared to him Junior is playing the second lead in the Midland Junior High version of “Grease.” Let’s face it, even when Bush was deep into his Top Gun phase, he looked more like a member of the Village People than the steely-eyed rocket man. He can’t even ride a fucking horse, fergawdsake.
Reagan looked good in the costume. Bush always looks like he’s swimming in suits a size too big. They’re just not in the same league.
The United States and its allies are winning some battles in the terrorism war but may be losing the broader struggle against Islamic extremism that is terrorism’s source, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Saturday.
The troubling unknown, he said, is whether the extremists — whom he termed ”zealots and despots” bent on destroying the global system of nation-states — are turning out newly trained terrorists faster than the United States can capture or kill them.
”It’s quite clear to me that we do not have a coherent approach to this,” Rumsfeld said at an international security conference.”
Should we put this quote on every campaign web-site, bumper sticker and campaign commercial going forward?
The witchhunt was bullshit then, it is bullshit now and it will be bullshit in the history books. We were lucky to have a president in office who had such resiliance, intelligence and guts or they might very well have succeeded in fundamentally changing our system of government.
It will be a long time coming before anybody attempts a partisan impeachment again. It turns out the people didn’t much like having a bunch of hypocritical Washington politicians and TV stars decide their choice for president wasn’t acceptable, something which the Republicans refused to understand even after they were soundly slapped in 1998. So, they again manipulated the system to deny the citizens their choice as president in 2000, and this time it worked.
I suspect they will get another hard lesson in democracy this November. And once again, the question is whether they will heed it.
Josh Marshall and others continue to be a bit gobsmacked that Chalabi defenders like Gingrich and Perle aren’t getting the message from the neocons inside the administration that their boy did, in fact, do something very, very bad.
Today Josh asks around thinking that the insider neos might not be convinced themselves, but comes up once again with the news that everybody who has any info on this is convinced that Chalabi is guilty as sin. Clearly, they have let that be known to their fellow travellers.
Which leads us to the obvious conclusion that Newt and Perle and the rest of the die-hards don’t give a damn if Chalabi sold the country down the river to the Iranians, nor do they care about this silly concept of “credibility.” Their experience is that there is no such thing. You hold your ground, keep pushing your position no matter what the circumstances or the facts may be, and eventually people will move on, forget the details and you will have lost nothing. Where there is no accountability there is no such thing as credibility.
Newt in particular is a master at this. He has said and done the most outrageous, radical, hypocritical things imaginable over his career, he has failed spectacularly, was forced to leave congress and yet he continues to be welcomed to the DOD, the White House, the GOP think tank apparatus and the media as an elder statesman and intellectual guiding light. Why would a small matter of espionage shake his belief in Chalabi’s usefulness as a Republican tool?
On the other hand, one might also ask whether there is a more personal motive people might have for continuing to defend Chalabi in spite of what appears to be a universal acknowledgement within the administration of his guilt. Just how much classified information does the Defense Policy Board have access to, I wonder?
Update: Kevin quotes Danielle Pletka, one of Chalabi’s most ardent cheerleaders, as now saying that Chalabi may have given secrets to Iran, but it’s not that big of a deal because he isn’t an American citizen and “owes us no fealty.”
It is almost beyond comprehension that the ultra-patriots on the Right have the gall to say these things and even more shocking that they aren’t called on it.
Dick Cheney wanted to put those Lackawanna boys down at Gitmo and throw away the key becaue they’d been to Afghanistan. Instead they were given 8 to 10 years in prison. Chalabi, a high level double agent for a member of the axis of evil, a man who was paid millions of dollars by US taxpayers and spent time in the salons and offices of the biggest Washington movers and shakers for the last ten years, is not prosecutable and presumably should be left to do as he pleases. Jayzuz. That’s some moral clarity for ya.
The hell with that. If we’re dragging poppy farmers out of caves in Afghanistan based on the word of some informant we’ve bribed with $5,000, I think we can “detain” Mr Chalabi and send him down to Gitmo for a little of that patented General Ripper interrogation. Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan — it’s all part of the GWOT, right?
Since I seem to have been linked numerous times to grieving websites as an example of the depravity of the left because of my alleged hateful comments, let me just point out one thing.
I made not one disparaging remark about Ronald Reagan in either one of my posts yesterday. All insults were directed at the followers who would exploit his death, mostly by using it (as they use everything) as a weapon against their political enemies and a media whose love of funeral porn is exceeded only by its love of celebrity scandal.
I have nothing but sympathy for his family. It’s the rest of you who are the target of my disdain. Just so you know.
Hey, I’m just curious, but did David Brooks have some sort of brain tumor or accident that gave him amnesia about the years 1992 to yesterday?
He seems to be having a lot of trouble understanding why the country is so polarized. The only way to explain this would be if he had been unconscious during the years that his party has spent lying, cheating, intimidating, bullying and harrassing the “liberals” as if they were some sort of sub-human species that had no right to participate in the political realm.
There can be no doubt that we live in one of the most tumultuous political climates of the nation’s history, a climate where politicians can be toppled on a whim, election results disputed in the country’s highest courts, and governors unceremoniously recalled. It’s enough to leave even the most cynical voter asking, how did this happen?
Harry Thomason and Nickolas Perry’s incendiary documentary, based on the best-selling book by Gene Lyons and Joe Conason, offers a glimpse at the genesis of these partisan vendettas and explores the myths and truths behind the nearly ten year campaign to systematically destroy the political legacy of the Clintons.
Using previously unreleased materials, interviews, and shocking revelations from both sides of the beltway, this probing work focuses on the smear campaign against Clinton from his gubernatorial days in Arkansas leading up to and including his impeachment trial. Kenneth Starr fans, beware.
Less of an advocacy film and more of an alarming treatise on the political power of the media and personal interests, The Hunting of the President offers us a gallery of defeated politicians, disappointed office seekers, right-wing pamphleteers, wealthy eccentrics, zany private detectives, religious fanatics and die-hard segregationists, all chiming in discord from the tops of their soapboxes.
It would make a nice summer double bill with Fahrenheit 911, don’t you think?
Al Gore, continuing his stinging criticism of the Bush administration, denounced the war in Iraq and deplored the downturn in the U.S. economy.
The former Democratic vice president stopped short of reiterating his demands for the resignations of high-ranking officials in President Bush’s cabinet.
Gore last week blamed Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and others for bungling the war in Iraq.
“We have a responsibility to set this right,” Gore told a crowd of more than 1,500 supporters, “Our standing in this world has been damaged very badly.”
Gore said U.S. voters still had a chance to help the country regain credibility on the global stage by removing the current administration and electing John Kerry, the leading Democratic for November’s presidential election.
“If this nation in November should affirm this administration, then we would be saying that’s us,” Gore said.
I have always had a huge soft spot for Al Gore. There’s something about the guy that always hit me as very human, earnest and real. I know that goes against all the CW, but that’s how he’s always seemed to me, even back in the 80’s.
And, I think my instincts were actually right. What happened to Al Gore after that absurd election campaign he was forced to wage against a forked tongued wind-up doll(and I’m talking about Kit Seelye) and then the recount fiasco, is that he stepped back and decided to — as he himself said — let it rip. That is a very rare thing. Rather than stay in the game (the nomination was his if he’d wanted it) he decided to use his position as the “real” president, and all the press attention that receives, to just say what he really thinks.
And it’s thrilling for those of us who feel like we are screaming into the ether. He’s a blogger with giant megaphone who points out that the emperor has no clothes, just as we all have been doing in our small way for the last three years. I don’t think it is calculated beyond the fact that he probably doesn’t want to hurt Kerry’s chances. But, he’s not running for anything and he has no reason to do this except that he believes it’s the right thing to do. (Even his media venture does not necessarily benefit from it, although it might. It certainly isn’t the safe route.)
And there is something about the truth that Al Gore is speaking that scares the living hell out of the Right. It’s the same with Soros. You can tell by the patented Fox-style coordinated hysterical reactions. Whenever they start foaming at the mouth in unison (and whenever the little presstarts start their ecstatic dance around the pyre) you know that somebody has hit a nerve. Remember, the Right only exists in two modes — smug and rabid. And rabid is their defense mechanism.
So, here’s to Gore and Soros and others who are outside of the political process but are willing to spend their capital and risk their personal prestige to shape the debate, spread some truth and take some hits in the process. It’s the highest form of citizenship.
On the same subject, check out The Daily Howler’s four part bitch slap to the assholes who said Gore was “crazy” “unhinged” “off his meds” and all the rest when he gave his prescient speech last year requesting that the administration lay out its post war plans for Iraq. It was brilliant, passionate and articulate but if you didn’t see it and only saw the press reaction you would have thought it was well…a George W. Bush press conference — ridiculous, embarrassing and dumb. But that’s how things work in Junior’s America. Black is white and up is down. Guys like Gore and Soros are out there pouring cold water down the rabbit hole and they don’t like it.
I’ve been worried about this. When Ronald Reagan dies, the Right and its media handmaidens are going to go into a fit of maudlin masturbation the likes of which the world has never seen. It will be non-stop GOP triumphalism from dawn to dusk. JFK’s funeral will look like a trailer park trash $2,000 special compared to the spectacle we are going to endure for days on end. Lay in a supply of pepto-bismol. It’s not in their DNA to handle this with any grace, restraint or class.
And, unfortunately, it will serve to reinforce the delusion that Republicans, even stupid ones, are the right people to lead us on the world stage. Reagan, after all, personally smote communism with one hand tied behind his back. Everybody knows that. And if they didn’t before the impending canonization, they soon will. Unfortunately, he didn’t have time to take out “evil” before he was forced to retire. Thank Gawd Crusader Codpiece is here to fulfill his legacy.
By the time we’re done, The Reagan Cult headed by swami Grover Norquist, will have probably succeeded in renaming the country the Ronald Reagan States of America.