Wednesday, April 29, 2009

The Courage of Her Convictions; the Cowardice of His

Harvard Law professor Ambassador Mary Ann Glendon announced early this week that she is refusing the Laetare Medal, offered by the University of Notre Dame, rather than share the stage with President Obama at the University's graduation ceremonies on May 17.

The staunchly pro-abortion Obama is also being awarded an honorary degree by the wayward Catholic university.

Ms. Glendon served as US Ambassador to the Vatican under President George W. Bush.

The Laetare Medal honors a Catholic layperson who exemplifies the ideals of the Church.

I'd say by her courageous refusal, Ms. Glendon has proved that the University at least made the right choice in honoring her.

Not so courageous is CIA Director Leon Panetta, who should have resigned his position last week.

Recall, Director Panetta disagreed with President Obama's decision to selectively release CIA memos to the public.

Recall, also, that Mr. Panetta agrees with the Bush administration that the President of the United States does have the executive power to order enhanced interrogation methods against terrorists held at Guantanamo.

At his press conference tonight, a reporter more concerned about doing his or her job and less concerned about receiving a White House holiday card, should ask President Obama if he could legally order enhanced interrogation methods as argued by his CIA Director.

An unequivocal "no" should produce a resignation letter that is a week overdue.

We all know that if asked the question, President Obama would answer, "I will not order enhanced interrogation methods," which is an answer to a different question.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

First ZACKlyRight, then WSJ, then NYT, now Sen. Rick Santorum

Below is a column by former United States Senator Rick Santorum that appeared in the extremely liberal Philadelphia Inquirer on April 23. He does not give me credit for plagiarizing my ideas.

Following Bush's Playbook
Despite what Obama told liberals, he is embracing some once-hated policies.
By Rick Santorum who borrowed extensively from ZACKlyRight

About two years ago, candidate Barack Obama made a series of promises to the radical antiwar crowd so he could outflank Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary. It worked.

Last week, President Obama was justly pummeled for proudly announcing that he was keeping one of those promises by disclosing the details of our interrogation techniques to our enemies. I guess that is one way to make sure an administration won't get accused of failing to connect the dots after a terrorist incident: Setting policies that guarantee it won't have any dots to connect.

As bad as that decision was, I commend Obama for breaking another one of those campaign pledges.

As a candidate, Obama attacked President George W. Bush's invocation of the "state secrets privilege," which allows an administration to refuse to disclose information in court on national-security grounds. Obama's campaign Web site claimed the Bush administration "ignored public disclosure rules and has invoked a legal tool known as the 'state secrets' privilege more than any other previous administration...."

But less than a month into the new administration, Obama's Justice Department relied on the state secrets doctrine to argue for dismissal of an ACLU suit over Boeing's transportation of prisoners to countries where they were allegedly tortured.

Obama's erstwhile supporters threw a fit. Anthony Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, complained that "candidate Obama ran on a platform that would reform the abuse of state secrets, but President Obama's Justice Department has disappointingly reneged on that important civil-liberties issue."

Not to be deterred, the Justice Department has invoked the state secrets doctrine once again in Jewel v. NSA. The Electronic Frontier Foundation said it's suing the National Security Agency and other agencies "on behalf of AT&T customers to stop the illegal, unconstitutional, and ongoing dragnet surveillance of their communications and communications records." A recent foundation press release was headlined, "Obama administration embraces Bush position on warrantless wiretapping and secrecy."

But why did such a liberal president turn against the left on this? Here's the answer from his Justice Department: "An examination ... determined that attempting to address the allegations in this case could require the disclosure of intelligence sources and methods that are used in a lawful manner to protect national security. The administration cannot risk the disclosure of information that could cause such exceptional harm to national security."

Allow me to translate the Beltway-speak: Obama's new intelligence team told him he would have to be out of his mind to turn over the nation's most sensitive secrets to his friends at the ACLU and other radical, left-wing lawyers. If our sources and methods were exposed, our ability to prevent terrorist attacks in America would be greatly diminished.

But Obama has another problem. You see, last year, when he was demagoguing the issue, his supporters in the Senate were copying his act. Sens. Patrick Leahy, Ted Kennedy, and Russ Feingold introduced the "State Secrets Protection Act" to restrict the Justice Department's use of the state secrets privilege.

The bill, of course, was purely partisan. It had only one Republican cosponsor, Arlen Specter. But guess who else cosponsored it: Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden. So Obama is supporting policy that his vice president and secretary of state are on record as opposing.

In spite of Obama's apology tour in Europe and his inability or unwillingness to defend America against socialist despots at last weekend's Summit of the Americas, most of his administration's national-security decisions have been downright Bushian.

He has almost unilaterally escalated our military presence in Afghanistan. He has launched Predator attacks on al-Qaeda in Pakistan. (Preemption, anyone?) He has found that, just as the Bush administration claimed, Guantanamo meets Geneva Conventions standards. And he has said he would hold the worst enemy combatants captured overseas without trial. And - the greatest broken promise of all - he continues to maintain Bush-like troop levels in Iraq.

This pattern of high-profile announcements pandering to the antiwar left and weak-kneed passivity toward Third World anti-American tyrants, coupled with quietly forceful national-security policies, looks like a riff on the words of another young, turn-of-the-century president: Apologize profusely and wield a big stick. (End of column by Sen. Rick Santorum that borrowed extensively from ZACKlyRight.)

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Where Has Everybody Been?!

The link is to the December 9, 2007 article by Washington Post writers Joby Warrick and Dan Eggen that detailed CIA briefings to Congressional Democrats on enhanced interrogation techniques way back in 2002. That the web is alive today with reports that House Speaker Pelosi was made aware of these techniques in 2002 is rather unbelievable. Where has everyone been for a year and a half?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/08/AR2007120801664.html

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

My Existence, While Grotesque and Incomprehensible to You, Saves Lives.

"High-value information came from interrogations in which those (harsh interrogation) methods were used and provided a deeper understanding of the al Qaeda organization that was attacking this country." - Excerpt from an April 16 memo from Adm. Dennis Blair, the Director of National Intelligence, to colleagues.

Admiral Blair was selected for his current job by President Obama.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Educating the Terrorists

Maybe some day soon I'll do a post on President Obama's hostility toward Catholicism or his administration's hostility toward Veterans, but today I really need to address President Obama's loyalty to the pro-terrorist lobby.

Below is Gen. Michael Hayden and Attorney General Michael Mukasey's column from today's Wall Street Journal:

The President Ties His Own Hands on Terror
The point of interrogation is intelligence, not confession.
By Michael Hayden and Michael Mukasey

The Obama administration has declassified and released opinions of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) given in 2005 and earlier that analyze the legality of interrogation techniques authorized for use by the CIA. Those techniques were applied only when expressly permitted by the director, and are described in these opinions in detail, along with their limits and the safeguards applied to them.

The release of these opinions was unnecessary as a legal matter, and is unsound as a matter of policy. Its effect will be to invite the kind of institutional timidity and fear of recrimination that weakened intelligence gathering in the past, and that we came sorely to regret on Sept. 11, 2001.

Proponents of the release have argued that the techniques have been abandoned and thus there is no point in keeping them secret any longer; that they were in any event ineffective; that their disclosure was somehow legally compelled; and that they cost us more in the coin of world opinion than they were worth. None of these claims survives scrutiny.

Soon after he was sworn in, President Barack Obama signed an executive order that suspended use of these techniques and confined not only the military but all U.S. agencies -- including the CIA -- to the interrogation limits set in the Army Field Manual. This suspension was accompanied by a commitment to further study the interrogation program, and government personnel were cautioned that they could no longer rely on earlier opinions of the OLC.

Although evidence shows that the Army Field Manual, which is available online, is already used by al Qaeda for training purposes, it was certainly the president's right to suspend use of any technique. However, public disclosure of the OLC opinions, and thus of the techniques themselves, assures that terrorists are now aware of the absolute limit of what the U.S. government could do to extract information from them, and can supplement their training accordingly and thus diminish the effectiveness of these techniques as they have the ones in the Army Field Manual.

Moreover, disclosure of the details of the program pre-empts the study of the president's task force and assures that the suspension imposed by the president's executive order is effectively permanent. There would be little point in the president authorizing measures whose nature and precise limits have already been disclosed in detail to those whose resolve we hope to overcome. This conflicts with the sworn promise of the current director of the CIA, Leon Panetta, who testified in aid of securing Senate confirmation that if he thought he needed additional authority to conduct interrogation to get necessary information, he would seek it from the president. By allowing this disclosure, President Obama has tied not only his own hands but also the hands of any future administration faced with the prospect of attack.

Disclosure of the techniques is likely to be met by faux outrage, and is perfectly packaged for media consumption. It will also incur the utter contempt of our enemies. Somehow, it seems unlikely that the people who beheaded Nicholas Berg and Daniel Pearl, and have tortured and slain other American captives, are likely to be shamed into giving up violence by the news that the U.S. will no longer interrupt the sleep cycle of captured terrorists even to help elicit intelligence that could save the lives of its citizens.

Which brings us to the next of the justifications for disclosing and thus abandoning these measures: that they don't work anyway, and that those who are subjected to them will simply make up information in order to end their ordeal. This ignorant view of how interrogations are conducted is belied by both experience and common sense. If coercive interrogation had been administered to obtain confessions, one might understand the argument. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), who organized the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, among others, and who has boasted of having beheaded Daniel Pearl, could eventually have felt pressed to provide a false confession. But confessions aren't the point. Intelligence is. Interrogation is conducted by using such obvious approaches as asking questions whose correct answers are already known and only when truthful information is provided proceeding to what may not be known. Moreover, intelligence can be verified, correlated and used to get information from other detainees, and has been; none of this information is used in isolation.

The terrorist Abu Zubaydah (sometimes derided as a low-level operative of questionable reliability, but who was in fact close to KSM and other senior al Qaeda leaders) disclosed some information voluntarily. But he was coerced into disclosing information that led to the capture of Ramzi bin al Shibh, another of the planners of Sept. 11, who in turn disclosed information which -- when combined with what was learned from Abu Zubaydah -- helped lead to the capture of KSM and other senior terrorists, and the disruption of follow-on plots aimed at both Europe and the U.S. Details of these successes, and the methods used to obtain them, were disclosed repeatedly in more than 30 congressional briefings and hearings beginning in 2002, and open to all members of the Intelligence Committees of both Houses of Congress beginning in September 2006. Any protestation of ignorance of those details, particularly by members of those committees, is pretense.

The techniques themselves were used selectively against only a small number of hard-core prisoners who successfully resisted other forms of interrogation, and then only with the explicit authorization of the director of the CIA. Of the thousands of unlawful combatants captured by the U.S., fewer than 100 were detained and questioned in the CIA program. Of those, fewer than one-third were subjected to any of the techniques discussed in these opinions. As already disclosed by Director Hayden, as late as 2006, even with the growing success of other intelligence tools, fully half of the government's knowledge about the structure and activities of al Qaeda came from those interrogations.

Nor was there any legal reason compelling such disclosure. To be sure, the American Civil Liberties Union has sued under the Freedom of Information Act to obtain copies of these and other memoranda, but the government until now has successfully resisted such lawsuits. Even when the government disclosed that three members of al Qaeda had been subjected to waterboarding but that the technique was no longer part of the CIA interrogation program, the court sustained the government's argument that the precise details of how it was done, including limits and safeguards, could remain classified against the possibility that some future president may authorize its use. Therefore, notwithstanding the suggestion that disclosure was somehow legally compelled, there was no legal impediment to the Justice Department making the same argument even with respect to any techniques that remained in the CIA program until last January.

There is something of the self-fulfilling prophecy in the claim that our interrogation of some unlawful combatants beyond the limits set in the Army Field Manual has disgraced us before the world. Such a claim often conflates interrogation with the sadism engaged in by some soldiers at Abu Ghraib, an incident that had nothing whatever to do with intelligence gathering. The limits of the Army Field Manual are entirely appropriate for young soldiers, for the conditions in which they operate, for the detainees they routinely question, and for the kinds of tactically relevant information they pursue. Those limits are not appropriate, however, for more experienced people in controlled circumstances with high-value detainees. Indeed, the Army Field Manual was created with awareness that there was an alternative protocol for high-value detainees.

In addition, there were those who believed that the U.S. deserved what it got on Sept. 11, 2001. Such people, and many who purport to speak for world opinion, were resourceful both before and after the Sept. 11 attacks in crafting reasons to resent America's role as a superpower. Recall also that the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993, the attacks on our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the punctiliously correct trials of defendants in connection with those incidents, and the bombing of the USS Cole took place long before the advent of CIA interrogations, the invasion of Saddam Hussein's Iraq, or the many other purported grievances asserted over the past eight years.

The effect of this disclosure on the morale and effectiveness of many in the intelligence community is not hard to predict. Those charged with the responsibility of gathering potentially lifesaving information from unwilling captives are now told essentially that any legal opinion they get as to the lawfulness of their activity is only as durable as political fashion permits. Even with a seemingly binding opinion in hand, which future CIA operations personnel would take the risk? There would be no wink, no nod, no handshake that would convince them that legal guidance is durable. Any president who wants to apply such techniques without such a binding and durable legal opinion had better be prepared to apply them himself.

Beyond that, anyone in government who seeks an opinion from the OLC as to the propriety of any action, or who authors an opinion for the OLC, is on notice henceforth that such a request for advice, and the advice itself, is now more likely than before to be subject after the fact to public and partisan criticism. It is hard to see how that will promote candor either from those who should be encouraged to ask for advice before they act, or from those who must give it.

In his book "The Terror Presidency," Jack Goldsmith describes the phenomenon we are now experiencing, and its inevitable effect, referring to what he calls "cycles of timidity and aggression" that have weakened intelligence gathering in the past. Politicians pressure the intelligence community to push to the legal limit, and then cast accusations when aggressiveness goes out of style, thereby encouraging risk aversion, and then, as occurred in the wake of 9/11, criticizing the intelligence community for feckless timidity. He calls these cycles "a terrible problem for our national security." Indeed they are, and the precipitous release of these OLC opinions simply makes the problem worse.

Gen. Hayden was director of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2006 to 2009. Mr. Mukasey was attorney general of the United States from 2007 to 2009. (End of Hayden-Mukasey column from 4/17/09 Wall Street Journal.)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Don’t Deprive Sleep, Beat Instead!

The Reuters News story from Sunday, April 12 reporting on the U.S. Navy’s rescue of Captain Richard Phillips, “U.S. Navy rescues captain, kills Somali pirates”, was written by Abdi Sheikh and Abdi Guled.

Reuters also wanted us to know that additional reporting was provided by David Morgan and Randall Mikkelsen in Washington, Abdi Sheikh and Ibrahim Mohamed in Mogadishu, Jack Kimball, Celestine Achieng and Njuwa Maina in Mombasa, Andrew Cawthorne and Abdiaziz Hassan in Nairobi.

Other contributors to the dispatch were noted as “Writing by Paul Eckert; Editing by Chris Wilson”

Not knowing which of these geniuses was responsible for the following paragraph in the story, I’m going to hold them all responsible:

So far, pirates have generally treated hostages well, sometimes roasting goat meat for them and even passing phones round so they can call loved ones. The worst violence reported has been the occasional beating and no hostages are known to have been killed by pirates. (End of excerpt noting the kindness of the pirates.)

Maybe Reuters would have been less critical of President Bush over the years if in 2003 at Guantanamo we beat three terrorists with critical information on planned terrorists attacks against America instead of pouring a little water in their face and depriving them of a little sleep.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Bush's Third Term VIII

The updated letter:

Editor,

It must render those who voted for President Obama apoplectic.

After asking four US Senators and one US Representative who voted for the Iraq war to serve in his administration,
after retaining Bush's Secretary of Defense,
after retaining Generals David Petraeus and Ray Odierno,
after retaining Bush's Undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence,
after announcing he will keep combat troops in Iraq until December 31, 2011,
after announcing he will continue operations at Guantanamo for up to a year under the Bush rules,
after announcing he will continue President Bush's faith-based initiatives program under Bush's rules,
after announcing he will leave No Child Left Behind intact,
after reasserting Bush on state-secrets,
after reasserting Bush’s detention policy at Bagram AB,
after reaffirming Bush’s 6-Nation strategy with North Korea,
after promoting Bush’s chief North Korean negotiator to Ambassador for Iraq,
after reasserting Bush’s drone-use policy in Pakistan,
after affirming Bush’s decision to walk out on Durban I by announcing a boycott of Durban II for the very same reasons,
after stating that there are no policy changes toward Hamas or Venezuela,
after reasserting Bush on removing the gray wolf from the Federal endangered species list,
after condoning the continuation of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in search of illegal immigrants,
after announcing an open-ended war in Afghanistan to be fought by American "mercenaries",
after reaffirming Bush by repeating that the United States is not at war with Islam,
President Obama requested supplemental funding of $84 billion dollars for his wars in Iraq and Afghanistan after campaigning on the promise he would not use supplementals to fund the wars as Bush did.

The Emperor is indeed wearing Bush's clothes. (End of updated letter.)

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Can it be the Content? Nah!

Today my (news)paper led with a story that its owner, The New York Times Co., is going to close the Boston Globe unless unions agree to $20 million in concessions. (Times Co. threatens to shut Globe, seeks $20m in cuts from unions, April 4, A1).

The sub-title was, “Paper reported to face $85m loss this year, as recession, Internet growth batter news industry.”

The article goes on ad nauseam blaming declining ad revenue.

A few facts:

The article is 1,437 words but it never mentions the Boston Globe’s declining circulation.

For the last year reported, 2008, new numbers will be out later this month with the first look at 2009, the Boston Globe had an 8.0% decline in its weekday circulation and a 6.4% decline in its Sunday circulation.

Its parent, The New York Times, experienced a 3.8% decline in daily circulation and a 9.2% decline in Sunday circulation.

The number one and number two newspapers, USA Today and the Wall Street Journal, respectively, were both up for the same period by 0.3%. Apparently the recession and the internet are not battering all participants in the news industry equally.

The letter:

Editor,

It’s the content, stupid. (End of letter.)