Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘washington-post’

Mary McCarthy: CIA Whistleblower and Hero

Saturday, April 22nd, 2006

cia rendition cartoon(cartoon: Stuart Carlson/Milwaukee Sentinel)

Mary McCarthy was fired today by the CIA for allegedly being Dana Priest’s source for a Washington Post article revealing the agency’s policy of extraordinary rendition: kidnapping terror suspects and whisking them to foreign prisons for torture and other holiday fun. The NY Times reports:

The C.I.A.’s inquiry focused in part on identifying Ms. McCarthy’s role in supplying information for a Nov. 2, 2005, article in The Post by Dana Priest, a national security reporter. The article reported that the intelligence agency was sending terror suspects to clandestine detention centers in several countries, including sites in Eastern Europe.

Even more scarily the NY Times (TimesSelect membership req’d) reported yesterday that once a suspect is “rendered” to a foreign country they may disappear completely even to the extent of never being heard from again:

cia torture prisons cartoon(cartoon: Nick Anderson/Louisville Courier-Journal)

“Some of these folks have never been heard from again, right?”

“Yup,” said Curt Goering. “That’s right.”

…In past years, stories about torture and “the disappeared” have been associated with sinister regimes in South and Central America. The attitude in the United States was that we were above such dirty business, that it was immoral and uncivilized, and we were better than that.

But times change, and we’ve lowered our moral standards several notches since then. Now people are disappearing at the hands of the U.S. government.

…Some of the individuals swept up by rendition simply vanish.

“This is a kind of netherworld that people disappear into and don’t frequently emerge from,” said Mr. Goering. “It’s a world that’s outside the reach of law. These individuals might as well be on another planet.”

There is no way to know how many people have been seized, tortured or killed.

They vanish and no one knows if they are alive or dead. So what sacred secret precisely is the CIA protecting by firing McCarthy? The fact that our nation’s intelligence agency has become no better than Stalin, Beria, the old KGB and the Soviet Gulag??

Sen. Pat Roberts, of course is prepared to gussy this up in finery saying in the Post that Mary McCarthy endangered the war against Osama bin Laden:

Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), who chairs the Senate intelligence panel, welcomed the CIA’s actions. In a statement, he said leaks had “hindered our efforts in the war against al Qaeda,” although he did not say how.

“I am pleased that the Central Intelligence Agency has identified the source of certain unauthorized disclosures, and I hope that the agency, and the [intelligence] community as a whole, will continue to vigorously investigate other outstanding leak cases,” Roberts said.”

Who’s he kiddin’?? Mary McCarthy did America a great service and if Porter Goss and the other idiots who fired her had a brain in their head they’d realize she was trying to save the agency from its worst impulses. Besides, firing her will only rev up the nation’s investigative reporters to dig even deeper into this story. I’d seriously doubt there isn’t tons more dirt to be dug up about this program and all of it can be expected to make the agency and the Bush Administration look like terror ghouls. Or I should say: make them look even more like terror ghouls than they already do.

Porter Goss has the temerity to claim, like Roberts, that McCarthy somehow endangered the nation through her actions:

In February, Mr. Goss told the Senate Intelligence Committee that “the damage has been very severe to our capabilities to carry out our mission.” He said it was his hope “that we will witness a grand jury investigation with reporters present being asked to reveal who is leaking this information.”

“I believe the safety of this nation and the people of this country deserves nothing less,” he said.

The truth of the matter is that McCarthy endangered the extraordinary rendition program, not the nation’s security. And in doing so, once again, she did her country and her agency a service. She is a hero not a villain.

This CIA official really gets to the nub of the issue by relating McCarthy’s leak to Bush’s approval of Libby’s leak to Judy Miller:

One veteran [intelligence official] said the firing would not be well-received coming so soon after the disclosure of grand jury testimony by Vice President Dick Cheney’s former chief of staff that President Bush in 2003 approved the leak of portions of a secret national intelligence estimate on Iraqi weapons.

“It’s a terrible situation when the president approves the leak of a highly classified N.I.E., and people at the agency see management as so disastrous that they feel compelled to talk to the press,” said one former C.I.A. officer with extensive overseas experience.

Perhaps that’s the reason why the Justice Department appears reluctant to pursue legal charges against her. She’d make an awfully good witness taking the stand and asking: “But if my president can selectively leak classified information to the press, why can’t I?” Also, by not prosecuting her Bush is hoping that the story and her firing will recede more rapidly into the footnotes of history. God, I hope not. This story should be emblazoned across front pages for days if not weeks.

One aspect of this story disappoints me greatly–the Post’s reaction. Perhaps there is a legal reason why they’re keeping mum but I’d think if you just won a Pulitzer for a story like this one and the source was fired for leaking it that you’d feel a bit more loyalty to that poor shlump than this:

Leonard Downie Jr., The Post’s executive editor, said on its Web site that he could not comment on the firing because he did not know the details. “As a general principle,” he said, “obviously I am opposed to criminalizing the dissemination of government information to the press.”

His own newspaper quotes him saying this about the firing:

Post Executive Editor Leonard Downie Jr. said people who provide citizens the information they need to hold their government accountable should not “come to harm for that.”

“The reporting that Dana did was very important accountability reporting about how the CIA and the rest of the U.S. government have been conducting the war on terror,” Downie said. “Whether or not the actions of the CIA or other agencies have interfered with anyone’s civil liberties is important information for Americans to know and is an important part of our jobs.”

Hey, Len…how about a little more class, a little more outrage. How about: “I can’t speak as to who was our source for this story, but whoever it was did this country a service and should be treated as a hero rather than a criminal.” If I ever have a whistleblower story worth writing about I know which paper I’m not going to go to. Speak to the Post and then after the feds get done wiping the floor with you, Len Downie might say–”Gee, that wasn’t a very nice thing they did to you now was it?”

Iraq War/Iran War: It’s Deja Vu All Over Again

Wednesday, April 12th, 2006

The parallels between the Bush Administration’s approach to Iran as the latter steams ahead to create a nuclear weapon and its approach to Saddam Hussein in the runup to the Iraq war are eerie, ominous and frightening. First, Bush appears to give diplomacy a chance by working with the UN and allies to influence the other side’s bad behavior. But all along, Bush is vigorously pursuing a course of military action. He tells the world that military force is a “last resort” and that diplomacy is the first resort, but in the meanwhile refuses to take a vigorous leading role in negotiating a resolution. We now know that regarding Iraq, the president merely paid lip service to the diplomatic option. He was convinced from the beginning it wouldn’t work. In fact, he didn’t want it to work and was prepared to provoke a war by trickery if necessary.
iran nukes graphic
If we look at the news of the last few days we see all these parallels being played out once more. Iran, like Saddam before, bellicosely brags to the world of the nuclear milestones it passes. This in turn, only confirms the war-hawks in their conviction that “the only language Iran will understand is force.” Bush tells the world that diplomacy is the only approach he’s considering. But anonymous government sources reveal their “doubts” that it can work:

U.S. officials continue to pursue the diplomatic course but privately seem increasingly skeptical that it will succeed. The administration is also coming under pressure from Israel, which has warned the Bush team that Iran is closer to developing a nuclear bomb than Washington thinks and that a moment of decision is fast approaching.

Note Israel’s role in all this:

Israel is preparing [for attack], as well. The government recently leaked a contingency plan for attacking on its own if the United States does not, a plan involving air strikes, commando teams, possibly missiles and even explosives-carrying dogs. Israel, which bombed Iraq’s Osirak nuclear plant in 1981 to prevent it from being used to develop weapons, has built a replica of Natanz, according to Israeli media, but U.S. strategists do not believe Israel has the capacity to accomplish the mission without nuclear weapons.

Iran appears to be taking the threat seriously. The government…has launched a program to reinforce key sites, such as Natanz and Isfahan, by building concrete ceilings, tunneling into mountains and camouflaging facilities. Iran lately has tested several missiles in a show of strength.

Israel points to those missiles to press their case in Washington. Israeli officials traveled here recently to convey more urgency about Iran. Although U.S. intelligence agencies estimate Iran is about a decade away from having a nuclear bomb, Israelis believe a critical breakthrough could occur within months. They told U.S. officials that Iran is beginning to test a more elaborate cascade of centrifuges, indicating that it is further along than previously believed.

“What the Israelis are saying is this year — unless they are pressured into abandoning the program — would be the year they will master the engineering problem,” a U.S. official said. “That would be a turning point, but it wouldn’t mean they would have a bomb.”

Many nuclear experts express grave reservations about Israel’s pronouncements about Iran’s progress in the nuclear arms race. They say that Iran is nowhere near as close as Israel states to having a weapon. And further, we should note that Aipac serves as Israel’s attack dog on this issue here in the U.S. It’s recent national policy conference was dedicated to ringing alarm bells about Iran’s military threat. I hope to God President Bush won’t let Aipac set the agenda when it comes to Iran. Lest you scoff at this suggestion, I note that Aipac already sets the tone and substance of much of the policy debate over U.S. Mideast policy. It would not surprise me to know that Aipac’s lobbying staff and lay leadership are speaking every day with Congress and the White House and urging a muscular response, including military force, to Iran’s nuclear buildup. Neither Israel nor Aipac believes that diplomacy can work. They’d have us giving up on that right now and going straight to the bombing runs over Natanz and Isfahan. And my fear is that Bush agrees with them wholeheartedly.

What is new compared to what happened with Iraq according to Seymour Hersh’s New Yorker feature, The Iran Plan, is the Administration’s pursuit of an option that includes the possible use of nuclear weapons against Iran:

One of the military’s initial option plans, as presented to the White House by the Pentagon this winter, calls for the use of a bunker-buster tactical nuclear weapon, such as the B61-11, against underground nuclear sites…

The lack of reliable intelligence leaves military planners, given the goal of totally destroying the sites, little choice but to consider the use of tactical nuclear weapons. “Every other option, in the view of the nuclear weaponeers, would leave a gap,” the former senior intelligence official said. “ ‘Decisive’ is the key word of the Air Force’s planning. It’s a tough decision. But we made it in Japan.”

The Post too confirms this allegation:

Pentagon planners are studying how to penetrate eight-foot-deep targets and are contemplating tactical nuclear devices

“The targeteers honestly keep coming back and saying it will require nuclear penetrator munitions to take out those tunnels,” said Kenneth M. Pollack, a former CIA analyst. “Could we do it with conventional munitions? Possibly. But it’s going to be very difficult to do.”

Thank God according to Hersh, there appear to be a few sane individuals at the Pentagon and Joint Chiefs who see this pathological plan for what it really is:

The attention given to the nuclear option has created serious misgivings inside the offices of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, he added, and some officers have talked about resigning. Late this winter, the Joint Chiefs of Staff sought to remove the nuclear option from the evolving war plans for Iran—without success, the former intelligence official said. “The White House said, ‘Why are you challenging this? The option came from you.’ ”

The Pentagon adviser on the war on terror confirmed that some in the Administration were looking seriously at this option, which he linked to a resurgence of interest in tactical nuclear weapons among Pentagon civilians and in policy circles. He called it “a juggernaut that has to be stopped”…

“There are very strong sentiments within the military against brandishing nuclear weapons against other countries,” the adviser told me. “This goes to high levels.” The matter may soon reach a decisive point, he said, because the Joint Chiefs had agreed to give President Bush a formal recommendation stating that they are strongly opposed to considering the nuclear option for Iran. “The internal debate on this has hardened in recent weeks,” the adviser said. “And, if senior Pentagon officers express their opposition to the use of offensive nuclear weapons, then it will never happen.”

The adviser added, however, that the idea of using tactical nuclear weapons in such situations has gained support from the Defense Science Board, an advisory panel whose members are selected by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. “They’re telling the Pentagon that we can build the B61 with more blast and less radiation,” he said.

And the Administration, of course, denies to the NY Times that it’s considering such a hellfire proposal:

“I’ve never heard the issue of nukes taken off or put on the table,” a senior Pentagon official said

First, this statement is far different and more equivocal than one clearly saying: “we are not contemplating using nukes against Iran.” Second, just because this particular official has “never heard” the “issue of nukes put on the table” doesn’t mean it wasn’t. It only means he hasn’t heard of it. Third, given this government’s past history of lying and deceit regarding Iraq could we trust that if it WERE planning to use nukes that it wouldn’t say precisely the thing this official has said? In other words, they would lie about it just as they lied about WMD and countless other matters related to Iraq. So unfortunately you have to completely discount any statement from the government denying a plan to use nukes and assume that they are considering it. To do otherwise would violate the old saying: “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.”

For the love of God, how can our government consider a nuclear option? Jack Straw, Britain’s foreign secretary, has correctly labeled such a scenario “nuts.” Certainly, during the Cold War we knew that our government would use nuclear weapons if the Soviets used them first. But Iran is different because it doesn’t yet have them and even if it did it couldn’t directly attack us with them. The hardliners will argue that consideration of the use of nuclear weapons is a bluff designed to get the Iranians to understand how serious we are. If so, we’re not showing resolve to Iran. Instead, we’re showing desperation. Only a desperate nation would use WMD or consider using it in pursuit of its policy objectives.

The Washington Post quotes military sources doubting the efficacy of ANY military attack against Iran:

Many military officers and specialists, however, view the saber rattling with alarm. A strike at Iran, they warn, would at best just delay its nuclear program by a few years but could inflame international opinion against the United States, particularly in the Muslim world and especially within Iran, while making U.S. troops in Iraq targets for retaliation.

“My sense is that any talk of a strike is the diplomatic gambit to keep pressure on others that if they don’t help solve the problem, we will have to,” said Kori Schake, who worked on Bush’s National Security Council staff and teaches at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.

Others believe it is more than bluster. “The Bush team is looking at the viability of air strikes simply because many think air strikes are the only real option ahead,” said Kurt Campbell, a former Pentagon policy official.

If we bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities and fail to take them out, this will only continue the ominous decline of the U.S. in successfully executing its military strategies around the world. We’re failing miserably (no fault of our military) in Iraq. Fail in Iran as well and we begin to look like an inept bumbling would-be superpower. Our enemies will only be emboldened.

Hersh also notes that U.S. ambitions go beyond dismantling Iran’s nuclear program:

The Europeans are rattled…by their growing perception that President Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney believe a bombing campaign will be needed, and that their real goal is regime change. “Everyone is on the same page about the Iranian bomb, but the United States wants regime change,” a European diplomatic adviser told me.

So there you have it. We’ve swung full circle and come back to Iraq again. There Bush used a fraudulent WMD charge to gin up a war against Iraq whose real goal was to topple Saddam. Regarding Iran, there seems to be little doubt that it wants a nuclear weapon and is pursuing a plan to get one (unlike Saddam at the time we attacked him). But can there be little doubt in George Bush’s monolithic and unilateral world that there is any policy short of regime change that would satisfy him? The only question is what he will do to bring this goal about and how far he’s willing to go. All very scary thoughts to contemplate.

Foreign Relations Committee Approves ‘Watered Down’ But Still Punitive Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Bill

Saturday, April 8th, 2006


The Jerusalem Post and Washington Post report that the House Foreign Relations Committee passed a modified version of Palestinian Anti-Terrorism bill (HR 697) in a 36-2 vote. While President Bush seems to have won significant easing of the restrictions on U.S. aid to the Palestinians and preserved some presidential flexibility in its disbursement, there are several ridiculously punitive measures that remain in the version passed. Here’s how the Post described both the modifications in the bill and the punitive measures that remain:

The new bill allows the president to use his waver authority in order to approve direct assistance to the PA, and is not as tough as the original version on supplying the Palestinians with humanitarian assistance.

The version approved by the committee enabled the US to provide aid to the Palestinians through non-governmental organizations for causes of health, water improvement and food supplies.

In addition, the US may transfer money to PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas for purposes of elections, or for his personal security.

The bill includes diplomatic limitations as well, including the closure of PLO offices in Washington, and the restriction of PA representatives’ movement to within 40 km of New York.

So let us understand this…the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism bill designed to punish Hamas for its support for terror is punishing the PLO under Mahmoud Abbas who denounces Palestinian terror every chance he gets. I’ve read no account of this bill in any media source which mentioned that the bill was designed to punish any Palestinian entity other than Hamas. Yet somehow the PLO has become a terrorist group in the eyes of Aipac’s grand lobbying wizards and their legislative agents in Congress.

You’ll notice that with the PLO banished from Washington, the halls of Congress and the White House; and with PLO diplomats limited to the UN Mission in New York, there can be no Palestinian presence in our nation’s capital whatsoever. They can’t even travel down from NY to DC because of the travel restriction. That, of course, leaves the field of battle with only Aipac standing. The group will no longer face any opposition from any Palestinian source. How convenient for Aipac! But how bad for maintaining a balanced and fair U.S. Mideast policy.

As Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer noted in more general terms in their controversial essay, Aipac has once again steamrollered its way toward a U.S. policy that allows Israel’s alleged interests to dominate our legislative agenda to the detriment of the Palestinians (and Israel’s long term interests as well).

My five year old son asked me what I was writing here and I explained to him that our government was passing a law that I thought would hurt people unfairly. He asked me how I would write that here. We agreed together that we could say: “I think that this law is bad.”

‘Cowering’ Democrats Pull a ‘Murtha’ on Feingold

Wednesday, March 15th, 2006

Pulling a Murtha. I think I’ve just coined a political neologism. Actually, it wouldn’t be a neologism since I didn’t coin a word, but you get my drift.

Congressional Democrats have long been known for their courageous willingness to take on Republican presidents bent on mischief. So I waited with baited breath to see how the fearless Dems would react to Russ Feingold’s proposed censure resolution against George Bush for NSA spying. Imagine my surprise to read Dana Millbank in the Washington Post saying:

Democratic senators, filing in for their weekly caucus lunch yesterday, looked as if they’d seen a ghost.

“I haven’t read it,” demurred Barack Obama (Ill.).

“I just don’t have enough information,” protested Ben Nelson (Neb.). “I really can’t right now,” John Kerry (Mass.) said as he hurried past a knot of reporters — an excuse that fell apart when Kerry was forced into an awkward wait as Capitol Police stopped an aide at the magnetometer.

Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) brushed past the press pack, shaking her head and waving her hand over her shoulder. When an errant food cart blocked her entrance to the meeting room, she tried to hide from reporters behind the 4-foot-11 Barbara Mikulski (Md.).

“Ask her after lunch,” offered Clinton’s spokesman, Philippe Reines. But Clinton, with most of her colleagues, fled the lunch out a back door as if escaping a fire.

In a sense, they were. The cause of so much evasion was S. Res. 398, the resolution proposed Monday by Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) calling for the censure of President Bush for his warrantless wiretapping program. At a time when Democrats had Bush on the ropes over Iraq, the budget and port security, Feingold single-handedly turned the debate back to an issue where Bush has the advantage — and drove another wedge through his party.

Needless to say, I entirely disagree with Millbank’s last sentence. She sounds more like Chris Matthews and I never take my cues from the likes of him when it comes to analyzing Democratic party politics. Millbank should remember the wonderfully receptive reaction John Murtha received when he proposed bringing our boys (and girls) home from Iraq. Dead silence. No Democrat would come to his defense. Now, who looks at Murtha as a dithering fool or pariah? Murtha was right and so is Feingold.

But Millbank isn’t done pontificating:

they also know Feingold’s maneuver could cost them seats in GOP states.

I really detest journalists who opine as if they were the Delphic oracle and never provide any proof or substantiation for their opinion. How in God’s name will the censure motion cost the Dems seats? It’s a preposterous notion left hanging in the air.

One passage in Millbank’s article I enjoyed was this one:

one Democrat happy to talk was Feingold, who, in a pre-lunch chat with reporters, seemed to enjoy his colleagues’ squirms. “I’m concerned about the approach Democrats are taking, which is too often cowering,” he said.

Couldn’t have said it better myself.

Washington Post: Congress “Craven”on Dubai Ports Deal

Sunday, March 12th, 2006

I couldn’t believe the puffery in today’s NY Times’ Republicans Hail Colleague Who Fought Bush on Ports (the article is nowhere to be found on the Times website nor in Google News so I don’t have a link; by the way, I’ve never seen such a thing happen before at Nytimes.com. UPDATE: there is now a link as of 3/12) making Peter King out to be a maverick new Republican kingmaker because of his “leadership” opposing the Dubai Ports Deal. And King relishes his newfound celebrity in the most disgusting way:

Mr. King–who CNN dubbed “King of the Ports”–often sounded as though he could hardly believe the rapid and unexpected turn of events. “I have to keep pinching myself on all this stuff.”

The man is a demagogue and xenophobe to boot. What does he have to be proud of?

The Washington Post appears to agree with me. Only they take the entire grandstanding Congress to task for its egregious performance over the past two weeks in its editorial, Happy Now?:

THEY SPEND drunkenly…fail at oversight and…can’t stop the administration from abusing detainees or tapping phones. But never call the members of Congress powerless: Yesterday, in the exalted name of anti-terrorism, the Senate rebelled against its Republican leadership and joined the House in a vote to prevent a company based in a moderate, friendly Arab country from making a minor investment in the United States. When it became clear that some such blocking measure would pass, Dubai Ports World threw in the towel, announcing that it would sell all of its U.S. operations…and do business elsewhere.

…This [Dubai Ports World] investment always was a business decision, not the early stages of a covert attack on Baltimore. Quite rightly, the company and its Dubai-based owners…didn’t want their country’s and their company’s names dragged through the mud, so they cut their losses.

The Post lays out the pernicious “message” that Congress is sending to Arab nations and businesses and the damage that may be done to U.S. security and economic interests throughout the region from such stupidity:

…Our brave new Congress has achieved more than the irrational spiking of one business deal. It has also sent a clear message to the Arab world: No matter how far you move along the path of modernization and cooperation, Americans may be unable to distinguish you from al-Qaeda. Dubai welcomes hundreds of ship visits every year from the U.S. Navy and allied ships. It has worked with U.S. agents to stop terrorist financing and nuclear cooperation. But none of that mattered to the craven members of Congress–neither to the Democrats who first sensed a delicious political opportunity nor to the Republicans who then fled in unseemly panic. As to long-term damage to the United States’ security, economy and alliances? Not of concern to the great deliberative body.

No one should underestimate the potential damage. Any government in a Muslim-majority country will have to ask itself: Why take the risk of friendship? If governments find no good answer to that question, the fight against radical Islamic terrorism will suffer. Meanwhile, Arab investors may think twice before putting their money in a country where their companies risk expropriation…Arabs are rapidly becoming a major supplier of foreign capital. This isn’t a good moment for Americans to discourage foreign investment, given the nation’s dependence on foreign capital (see: Congress, drunken spending by). Nor will the message — that foreign ownership was unobjectionable when it was British but intolerable when it was Arab — do much to advance U.S. efforts to promote equitable investment rules for its own companies abroad.

Here the Post dishes out special opprobrium for the Congressional leaders who led the charge and warns those in Congress who try to ‘Monday morning quarterback’ the disaster that they have nowhere else to look but in the mirror for the cause:

Over the next few days, many excuses for this fiasco will be offered, by those who should have known better, by those who know better already and by those who may awake to the embarrassment of their mass hysteria. Some will blame the president, because he politicized the discussion of terrorism or was highhanded in threatening to veto a bill banning the sale. But if Congress can’t do the right thing in the face of such provocations, it is lamer than the excuses themselves.

Some, meanwhile, will blame the public, because opinion polls showed overwhelming objections to this deal. But it was Congress that brought this matter to public attention; here we think, for example, of the cynical actions of two Democratic senators from New York: Hillary Rodham Clinton and Charles E. Schumer, who heads his party’s effort to win back control of the Senate in this year’s elections. Congress falsely portrayed the deal as the “purchase” of U.S. ports. Congress failed to tell the public that port security is run by the U.S. Coast Guard, not the men who pay the salaries of the (overwhelmingly American) longshoremen. Congress created this storm, in other words, and then toppled in its wind.

A hat tip to Villainous Conspiracy and Emirates Economist.

Woodward Apologizes–Should the Post and Its Readers Accept It?

Wednesday, November 16th, 2005

I’ve got to say one thing about Bob Woodward and the Post. They learned a few things about the Times’ and Judy Miller’s abysmal performance during their own encounter with Plamegate. I’m not sure they’ve learned enough. But at least, once the damage is done (and Bob cooked up a pretty bad stew for the Post to deal with) they’re trying to get out in front of it, rather than hunker down and hoping to ride it out. Keller and Sulzberger made a mess out of that particular brand of “strategy.”

So Woodward’s apologized as well he should. But has he or the Post said enough on the subject? Not by a long shot. The apology and Leonard Downie’s comment that Woodward made a “mistake” are just the beginning. If either one thinks they can stop here they’re sorely mistaken.

Here’s a portion of what Woodward wrote in today’s Post:

“I apologized because I should have told him about this much sooner,” Woodward, who testified in the CIA leak investigation Monday, said in an interview. “I explained in detail that I was trying to protect my sources. That’s job number one in a case like this. . . .

I would’ve thought job number one would’ve involved obeying the law and one’s duty to one’s employer to inform them of what I’m doing (in case it might potentially harm said employer).

“I hunkered down. I’m in the habit of keeping secrets. I didn’t want anything out there that was going to get me subpoenaed.”

I said it in the Libby/Rove case and I’ll say it again here. People get themselves into so much trouble thinking of ways to outrun their legal troubles instead of facing them. Instead of coming up with ways to maintain a stealth profile, Woodward should’ve realized that chances are either his source might come forward or someone who got the information from the source would do so; and then where would he be? Woodward cynically thought he could ride it out till Fitzgerald had packed up and gone home. And then a year or so down the road Woodward would come out with one of his snoozy “I Was There at the Beginning of History” books scooping the whole world in telling how he outfoxed Pat Fitzgerald and protected his source (All Hail the Holy Source!).

Downie, who was informed by Woodward late last month, said his most famous employee had “made a mistake.” Despite Woodward’s concerns about his confidential sources, Downie said, “he still should have come forward, which he now admits. We should have had that conversation. . . . I’m concerned that people will get a mis-impression about Bob’s value to the newspaper and our readers because of this one instance in which he should have told us sooner.”

What sort of misimpression might that be? That Bob Woodward has a sweetheart deal with the Post that practically gives him the candy store? He has a nominal editor to whom he doesn’t need to say anything at all about what he’s doing (as long as it’s for his book). He can pretty much write what and when he wants. He’s got a guaranteed major media outlet committed to running his stuff, promoting his byline and giving him continued journalistic prestige. And the Post gets a Pulitzer-winning journalist who every so often provides scoops and tittilating bits of gossip about the Very Powerful Persons in the White House. It’s all so neat, tidy and convenient. Except when it isn’t, which is now. Now, that appears like a recipe for creating a Mr. Run Amok.

The belated revelation that Woodward has been sitting on information about the Plame controversy reignited questions about his unique relationship with The Post while he writes books with unparalleled access to high-level officials, and about why Woodward denigrated the Fitzgerald probe in television and radio interviews while not divulging his own involvement in the matter.

I’ll say it should ignite a few questions. Shouldn’t newspapers have learned by now that these sorts of privileged, rule-breaking relationships with Celebrity Reporters only lead to disaster (see, ‘Judy Miller’)?

I’ve already written here that Woodward’s denigration of the special prosecutor’s investigation was self-serving and hypocritical. But the Post article broaches a subject I’d like to expand upon. Isn’t it quite possible that, like Judy Miller trying to protect her Big Powerful White Guy source (Libby), Woodward too was carrying water for his own Inside Sources. And doesn’t that raise a question about who these reporters are supposed to be serving–their sources or their employer and their readers? I can understand that newspapers are driven by the idea of scooping rivals and that reporters who can feed scoops are worth their weight in gold. But how much are all Woodward’s scoops worth if he brings the paper’s journalistic integrity crashing down to earth (if not lower)?

And what is the Post doing to ensure that Mr. Run Amok stops running amok?

Downie said he has told Woodward that he must be more communicative about sensitive matters in the future.

Now, that seems like a firm hand taking hold of a problematic employee, doesn’t it? This reminds me so much of Keller’s unwillingness to supervise Miller closely even after he knew her WMD articles got it all wrong. I can tell Mr. Downie that if you give Woodward a long leash (as this statement indicates) this type of thing WILL happen again. And it will be far worse the next time because people will say you should’ve learned your lesson the first time.

And why am I not surprised by this “all’s well” statement from the Post’s editor:

Downie said he remains comfortable with the arrangement, under which Woodward spends most of his time researching his books, such as “Bush at War” and “Plan of Attack,” while giving The Post the first excerpts and occasionally writing news stories. He said Woodward “has brought this newspaper many important stories he could not have gotten without these book projects.”

If you read Woodward’s own statement in today’s Post, it is eerily reminiscent of Judy Miller’ first communication in the pages of the Times about her involvement with the case. It’s all a dry repetition of “I testified to this…” and “I testifed to that.” Certainly, prepared by a lawyer. Certainly, tremendously unsatisfying and purposefully opaque.

Woodward Joins Miller in the Plamegate Journalism Scandal

Wednesday, November 16th, 2005

Bob Woodward must’ve been jealous of the absolute jouranalistic mess Judy Miller got herself and the NY Times into regarding Scooter Libby and Plamegate. Because he’s now done the same to himself and the Washington Post (see story) regarding his knowledge of Valerie Wilson’s identity (through an unnamed Administration source) well before Libby spilled the beans to Miller. This new development raises scores of questions–among them:

Bob WoodwardWoodward: new inductee into journalism hall of shame? (credit: Getty Images)

1. why didn’t Woodward report the contact to his editors?

2. when he discovered the subject of Pat Fitzgerald’s inquiry and that the latter was investigating serious national security breaches, why didn’t he report the conversation to Pat Fitzgerald?

3. what is the motivation now of the original Administration source who revealed Wilson’s ID to Woodward in coming forward to Fitzgerald to reveal the conversation just after Libby’s indictment?

4. Did Leonard Downie have the kind of talk with his political reporters that Phil Taubman of the Times had with the paper’s Washington bureau asking if any of them had been offered Wilson information by any Administration sources? If he did, what did Woodward say when asked? If he didn’t, why didn’t he? What good is he as an editor if he can’t monitor his charges properly?

Woodward’s and the Post’s answer to the first question is that Woodward has a “special arrangement” with the Post (do I hear someone say “Big Mr. Run Amok?”) by which he does not have to share information he gleans in preparation for writing his Bush “Path to Power”-type exposes. Also, the journalist would argue that he did not know at the time of the original conversation that Wilson was an undercover operative. However, this does not explain why he didn’t come forward as soon as Fitzgerald was appointed to the case. Personally, I think he aided in concealing a potential crime and had an affirmative responsibility to come forward, which he didn’t. At an absolute minimum, he had a responsiblity to go back to his source and ask for a release from his confidentiality agreement. He could have argued that the federal investigation trumps the agreement. Even if his source disagreed at least he could say he made an attempt. But he didn’t even do this.

Josh Marshall is absolutely correct in noting the brazen conflict of interest in Woodward going around the media circuit impugning Fitzgerald’s investigation when he himself knew he was deliberately concealing material testimony from the prosecutor. This is absolute hypocrisy and the most shoddy judgment. I don’t know whether Woodward is guilty of obstruction of justice. Even if he’s not, he’s tarnished himself and the Post in the same way that Miller tarnished the Times:

Woodward never mentioned this contact — which was at the center of a criminal investigation and a high-stakes First Amendment legal battle between the prosecutor and two news organizations — to his supervisors until last month. Downie said in an interview yesterday that Woodward told him about the contact to alert him to a possible story. He declined to say whether he was upset that Woodward withheld the information from him.

Just like Miller, who dragged her paper into the mire and then (with the connivance of her publisher) handcuffed the Times from covering the story, Woodward handcuffed the Post by concealing an important aspect of the story from his employer. Might it not be time for the Post to consider showing Woodward the door just as the Times recently did for Miller? The problem of course is that Woodward is a household word among journalists and is always good for tons of newsworthy copy (not newsworthy to me but perhaps to his editors and some Post readers–personally, I think Woodward is a semi-fossilized journalistic windbag). But I’d argue that no matter how much juice the connection to Woodward brings the paper it doesn’t make up for the sleaziness of this act.

You’re going to find that Woodward tries the same tack as Miller in seeing himself as the victim and as having done nothing wrong. That’s the way media stars see themselves. They never have anything to apologize for. They always do things out of the best of motives. Well, it won’t wash any better for him than it did for Miller. Let Woodward go off and write his Bush on the Path to History books. He doesn’t need the Post to pontificate. Nor does the Post (or us for that matter) need him.

Let’s examine the motivation of the still confidential source in the Bush Administration who revealed the information to Woodward. The Post notes this source didn’t come forward until a week after Libby was indicted. That too seems like obstruction of justice. And the timing is sneakily suspicious, as if the source was attempting to undermine Fitzgerald’s case against Libby. Do you think the source might be Cheney himself or someone else in his entourage? After all, if Libby is willing to “go down” protecting Cheney–might not Cheney have decided that he would do what he could to protect Libby? The Times reports this telling piece of information:

Mr. Cheney did not join the parade of denials. A spokeswoman said he would have no comment on a continuing investigation. Several other officials could not be reached for comment.

And if Cheney IS the source, then it puts him right in the thick of it. And since Fitzgerald has been trying to ascertain Cheney’s level of knowledge of Wilson’s identity (you can tell how hard he’s tried by Miller’s chracterization of her testimony to the grand jury), this would guarantee the Big Guy gets a second look. Since Woodward made clear that his source did not reveal that Wilson was undercover then perhaps this protects Cheney somewhat (unless Fitzgerald can secure independent confirmation that Cheney knew she was). Getting back to Libby, it appears that this, at first glance, tends to undermine the charges against him when one learns that Libby was NOT the first Administration figure to spill the beans about Wilson. But then again, if it was Cheney perhaps the chances of proving a conspiracy between the two rises.

The Times article also raises this tantalizing possibility of added jeopardy for Cheney:

If there are inconsistencies between Mr. Woodward’s account and any earlier account by his source, Mr. Fitzgerald could be obliged to explore new legal implications.

So since Cheney HAS testified before all of this came out (and again this assumes he IS the source which may or may not be the case) then Pat and his attorneys are busy pouring over Cheney’s original testimony, comparing it to what he said after coming forward to reveal his conversation with Woodward and with Woodward’s own testimony. That’s alot of potential jeopardy for Big Guy.

Returning to Woodward, given his dismissive attitude toward Fitzgerald’s investigation, this new revelation seems to be yet another attempt (by his source or him) to undermine it whether intentionally or unintentionally. It makes Woodward an actor in the story and a bad (I mean that in both senses) one at that. This development also makes it that much harder for Fitzgerald to build a convincing case against Libby. Not that he can’t do it because one should never underestimate Pat Fitzgerald’s prosecutorial abilities.

Let’s hope that Pat has enough ammunition to build as strong a case against the source as he has against Libby. By the way, since ‘Official A’ is taken should we start calling this person Official X? It has a nice mysterious ring to it, doesn’t it?