George Will Excoriates Bill Kristol & Weekly Standard in Tomorrow's Washington Post
George Will has sent to his client list a most amazing article -- appearing in tomorrow's Washington Post -- that is a full-throttle attack on The Weekly Standard.
Will blasts The Weekly Standard five times in his short, 770-word piece.
He starts with a powerful critique and rebuke of Condi Rice's interview with George Stephanopoulos on This Week that aired yesterday morning. He wraps up with a lashing of William Kristol and his cohorts rivalling the intensity of Israel's latest air raids over Beirut.
TWN published this morning about the strong assaults by Juan Williams and George Will on Kristol and The Weekly Standard, but I did not know at that time that the conservative scribe would be launching such a serious second strike today.
Just so all of those who think that they sent me this article exclusively, four different people sent it to me. I will not run the entire article but will provide some of the zinger parts. As soon as the link is up on the Washington Post's site, I will provide that link.
George Will swats Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice first:
"Grotesque" was Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's characterization of the charge that the U.S. invasion of Iraq was responsible for the current Middle East conflagration. She is correct, up to a point. This point: Hezbollah and Hamas were alive and toxic long before March 2003. Still, it is not perverse to wonder whether the spectacle of America, currently learning a lesson -- one that conservatives should not have to learn on the job -- about the limits of power to subdue an unruly world, has emboldened many enemies.Speaking on ABC's "This Week," Rice called it "short-sighted" to judge the success of the administration's transformational ambitions by a "snapshot" of progress "some couple of years" into the transformation. She seems to consider today's turmoil preferable to the Middle East's "false stability" of the last 60 years, during which U.S. policy "turned a blind eye to the absence of democratic forces."
There is, however, a sense in which that argument creates a blind eye: It makes instability, no matter how pandemic or lethal, necessarily a sign of progress. Violence is vindication: Hamas and Hezbollah have, Rice says, "determined that it is time now to try and arrest the move toward moderate democratic forces in the Middle East."
You will have to see the Washington Post for Will's powerful prose about an ill-thought out democratic plan serving as the vehicle that has delivered and empowered extremism in the current Middle East make-up, but then in the next section of his startling essay, George Will unleashes full fury on the neoconservative agenda and The Weekly Standard:
The administration, justly criticized for its Iraq premises and their execution, is suddenly receiving some criticism so untethered from reality as to defy caricature. The national, ethnic and religious dynamics of the Middle East are opaque to most people, but to The Weekly Standard -- voice of a spectacularly misnamed radicalism, "neoconservativism" -- everything is crystal clear: Iran is the key to everything."No Islamic Republic of Iran, no Hezbollah. No Islamic Republic of Iran, no one to prop up the Assad regime in Syria. No Iranian support for Syria. . ." You get the drift.
So, The Weekly Standard says. . .
"We might consider countering this act of Iranian aggression with a military strike against Iranian nuclear facilities. Why wait? Does anyone think a nuclear Iran can be contained? That the current regime will negotiate in good faith? It would be easier to act sooner rather than later. Yes, there would be repercussions -- and they would be healthy ones, showing a strong America that has rejected further appeasement.""Why wait?" Perhaps because the U.S. military has enough on its plate, in the deteriorating wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, which both border Iran. And perhaps because containment, although of uncertain success, did work against Stalin and his successors, and might be preferable to a war against a nation much larger and more formidable than Iraq. And if Assad's regime does not fall after The Weekly Standard's hoped-for third war, with Iran, does the magazine hope for a fourth?
As for the "healthy" repercussions that The Weekly Standard is so eager to experience from yet another war: One envies that publication's powers of prophecy, but wishes it had exercised them on the nation's behalf before all of the surprises -- all of them unpleasant -- that Iraq has inflicted. And regarding the "appeasement" that The Weekly Standard decries: Does the magazine really wish the administration had heeded its earlier (Dec. 20, 2004) editorial advocating war with yet another nation -- the bombing of Syria?
George Will gets the "Conservatives with a Conscience Award" today from The Washington Note.
His five-whack, scathing assault on Kristol and The Weekly Standard rises from a frustration and raw honesty rarely seen (but increasingly moreso) among those who count themselves friends of conservative presidents like G.W. Bush.
At least this time around -- no matter what happens further in our encounter with Iran and the nations in Israel's neighborhood -- U.S. policy will be debated and fought over.
No more steam-rolling and no more "trust us" duplicity from the White House.
Applause to George Will for this brave and important piece.
Steve Clemons is publisher of the popular political blog, The Washington Note.














Very interesting. Kristol was on Newshour this evening as well regurgitating the same get-ever-tougher flotsom Juan Williams slapped him for on Fox.
July 17, 2006 6:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
Am I the only who would love to wipe that smirk off Bill Kristol's face by dropping off that warmongering jerk in downtown Ramadi with a copy of the Weekly Standard as a shield? All in the name of freedom, of course.
July 17, 2006 6:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
I'm curious to see if we can stay out of the neocon's WWIII long enough for a real force to oppose them and I'm sad to think it may have to come from genuinely conservative Republicans.
July 17, 2006 6:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
William Kristol, as his father Irving, has been spectacularly wrong about everything. Anyone who knew anything about history shouldn't have listened to his garbage pre-March 2003. As Will now gets, but didn't get in the run-up to Iraq, we sure as hell shouldn't listen to this guy now.
Tom
July 17, 2006 7:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
South by Southwest
The current Middle East tragedy we see unfolding before our eyes is, obviously, one that ever more journalists will not be able to cover with cool dispatch, thank goodness. Also, it is unsettling to learn of the neocons' view of how the current out-of-control events in the region could be advantageous to their cause.
War is so easy. And there is plenty of blame to go around: Is the infrastructure of struggling Lebanon so meaningless that it needs to be destroyed? Are the lives of innocent civilians in Israel and Lebanon just "collateral damage?" If Israel has miscalculated by over-reacting, will they be drawn into something from which it will be difficult to extricate themselves? Will Hezbollah so discredited themselves that they will forever leave their experiment with community services and politics? Will the U.S. again be as late and ineffectual at rescue as with Hurricane Katrina? Another chartered cruise ship?!
July 17, 2006 7:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
I watched Kristol on CSpan today. He doesn't seem at all at ease. He seems pink and distressed under a thinning veneer of composure. The callers went after him. Everyone is going after him. He's being revealed for the amateur and minor con artist he's been all along. As for the con artist part, he's his own pathetic victim: only he didn't know that he didn't know.
July 17, 2006 7:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Excellent! I am feeling better already having just endured Kristol's Israel Lobby rant on the NewsHour. Thank God for David Ignatius.
What's happening in Israel is in no small measure a product of desperate people in very desperate straits.
Yes we're talking IraQ, IraN, the TaepOdong nonsense and the 2006 elections. The War Party is desperate. This is their October surprise, this the time for fighting words if ever there was one.
July 17, 2006 7:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
George Will just doesn't like Jews, that's all.
July 17, 2006 7:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
Too "Inside the Beltway" for me to be interested.
I stopped reading the Weekly Standard after it kept putting up progressively more farfetched and more ridiculous "Able Danger" stories on its website.
The "Able Danger" nonsense was proof enough for me that the folks at the Weekly Standard will go along with even the cheesiest and dumbest low-rent propaganda stunts just to get a bad word in about the Clinton administration.
I don't "get" George Will. His columns are a big yawn and he comes across as a pompous jerk with an undeserved elitist attitude on television.
July 17, 2006 7:50 PM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
But what about this Steve? Confirmation?
July 17, 2006 8:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Awesome...but reflecting on Joe Biden's performance yesterday on, back to the dumps...
Then there's John McCain whose never met a war he didn't like (compensating for sitting his out???)...our National Leadership is in the grips of a dying but desperate War Party..
The very worst of all possible worlds
July 17, 2006 8:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
George Will has opposed the Iraqi War from virtually day one. So he is not breaking with Kristol as Fukyama did. However, he is not an anti-Semitic alleged realist like Pat Buchann either. Will is more worried about North Korea and Iran.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 17, 2006 8:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
What part of Will's statement here:
"And perhaps because containment, although of uncertain success, did work against Stalin and his successors, and might be preferable to a war against a nation much larger and more formidable than Iraq."
didn't you grasp?
Not that I'm speaking for Will, since I don't read his stuff. But this statement does not indicate that Will is in any way in favor of the neocon plan for Iran.
Perhaps he believes Iran does have a nuclear weapons program, but he doesn't seem to be supporting the neocon concept.
More importantly, the article's attacks on the neocons seems to come at a time when the neocon and Israeli agenda CLEARLY is to stimulate a war on Syria and Iran. That was precisely the neocon blather Will was quoting.
July 17, 2006 8:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
My guess is that George Herbert Walker Bush shares Will's sentiments, and that no one was as opposed to the war in Iraq as "Bush 41" was.
July 17, 2006 8:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
I have no idea what Will might want to do but before posting I went back to some of Wills columns and read them. He is clearly more concerned about Iran and North Korea than he was ever about Iraq. Will is also more like Fukyama is now skeptical about the ability to transform societies, at least on the cheap. Whereas the neo-Cons clearly believe their rhetoric about societal transformation. It is one of the biggest differences between the neo-Cons and the actual leaders of this country Bush Cheney and Rumsfeld. It would not surprise me if Will is mor a supporter of Cheney and Rumsfeld.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 17, 2006 9:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
There's nothing new here...despite Clemons breathless hysteria. Old and new conservatives (paleo and neo) have been having this argument for almost 10 years.
The Paleo's say Muslims are a bunch of primitive savages. Why waste our resources on them when a few sanctions and a little diplomacy will suffice. We should be focusing on India and China - the GDP of the latter grows more each year than the total GDP of the entire Muslim world.
The Neo's respond that these savages will soon have nuclear weapons - and will use them on us if we don't pre-emptively break their will and their culture.
July 17, 2006 9:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
Then what does that say about Kristol? Now there's a real whack-job "fancy-pants" if one ever walked the face of God's green earth. They oughta require that wag and his pillow-biting buddy Doug Feith to suit up, move 'em out and place them at the tip of the spear of this here "WAR PARTY" if he wishes the US to take out Iran. Those two have been near the top of the Admiral's list for round-up by the Shore Patrol for a trip to the brig aboard the USS Lolliepop for the last four years.
Come on Kristol, how 'bout you and Dougie dearest lead us all to salvation and the promise land. But as usual I have digressed.
Now ... about George Will, he IS a self-proclaimed expert on baseball... So he must know a little about something on everything that works out to be about nothing.
~OGD~
July 17, 2006 9:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
Now this person would make a perfect candidate as an active member of the Shore Patrol aboard the USS Lolliepop:
I hear ya' loud and clear Noble ... Now please don't overlook my personal and professional take related to that point of your's that I posted here...~OGD~
July 17, 2006 10:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
You may well be right about that last. But the point of the post is that Will is down on the neocons.
While Will may be skeptical about the ability to transform societies, and neocons aren't - and that isn't certain, since neocons like to lie about their motivations and real justifications for their actions - clearly Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld seem to still go along with the neocons, even if they personally may not be neocons. I find it hard to distinguish between Cheney, who appears to be just a crook and a power seeker, and the neocons, who appear to be ideologically motivated crooks and power seekers. Since they all seem to be on the same road together, distinguishing the two isn't useful unless there is some sort of leverage to be gained.
Justin Raimondo quotes Dan Rather saying something to the effect that the road is littered with the corpses of people who underestimated Dick Cheney's influence on Bush and points out that if Condi Rice was involved in Bush's "diplomacy" effort on Iran - if there ever truly was one - Cheney and the neocons are back in the saddle now.
This also contradicts Ivo Daalder's recent assertions to me about that as well. Raimondo points out that Israel has cut that stuff off at the knees by unilaterally widening the ME war.
July 18, 2006 3:29 AM | Reply | Permalink
First George Will's column is to large extent a defense of Bush against the charge of appeasement by Kristol. Will is a bit vague but as best as I can determine from reading the column he would not have opposed blowing Saddem out of existence but he opposed all the transformative talk.
The transformative talk is the influence of the neo-Cons. They believe that democracy is the default position of people everywhere. They also believe that like WWII force can be used to bring about democracy. However, Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld are not neo-Cons and were not committed to such a transformation. They believe in the power of force and fear.
As Cobra II makes crystal clear the neo-Cons were never in charge of Bush's Iraq policy, Rumsfeld believed in a tranformation of the American military, not Iraq, and he never listened to the Pentagon about the number of men needed to run Iraq after Saddem fell.
It is a nice fantasy that the neo-Cons made everything happen, it allows you to blame the Jewish advisors, but it is obvious that the neo-Cons had a vision of the world not shared by those at the top of the administration nor for that matter by Kristol and Richard Perle.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 4:16 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'm with you. One thinks that bowtie will eventually cut off the remaining oxygen to his brain as it's evident it has already done significant damage.
And to think George Will is one of the more moderate members of the beltway Kool Kids Klub!
Regardless of what George Will now says we need to keep in mind he's been much more than an "enabler" for these nuts now running our country and dominating our beltway media discourse.
July 18, 2006 5:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
The nut doesn't fall far from the tree.
What does it say about anyone's abilities and pride that they must rely on mommy or daddy for employment (Jonah Goldberg anyone?)
July 18, 2006 5:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
When Juan Williams becomes the voice of reason you know we're in some deep s**t in DC.
July 18, 2006 5:12 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'll pay attention to the neocons as soon as they send their kids into harms way. It is easy to be William Kristol calling for war here, there and everywhere when you are setting behind a keyboard someplace on the east coast of America cashing your checks from CNN,Fox News, the Israel lobby and whatever wacko funded thinktank is paying you these days.
I agree with Will, it is time we all told the neocons to shut up and stand down. I do believe we need to find some grownups to run our foreign policy.
Ron Byers
July 18, 2006 5:17 AM | Reply | Permalink
I am really surprised that none of the posters have noted perhaps the greatest significance of the Will attack. Now, maybe, with this type of "cover" some of our courageous Democrats may be willing to speak out more forcefully. Maybe....nah.
July 18, 2006 5:55 AM | Reply | Permalink
Like Joe Biden did this past Sunday on MTP? Yeah you're right...nah.
July 18, 2006 6:14 AM | Reply | Permalink
It says they are Presidential material.
____________________________________________________________
“I, ..., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic..."
July 18, 2006 6:21 AM | Reply | Permalink
Selfinterest, I disagree with you strongly. The argument between old and new conservatives has been going on under the radar; not so unlike the Democrat and Republican disagreements about Iraq. What changes with a piece like Will's is that the entire national debate moves to a different place; conventional wisdom starts with what a monumental cock-up Iraq and its perpetrators are; that is the significance of a very highly visible, very well known right winger Will turning on the neocons . It is quite different from Fukuyama. With this EVEN our mainstream media may realize that Iraq has to be addressed as a disaster (and we know how determined they are to maintain the Republican pretense and the Republican fairytales). Similarly, if Lamont defeats Lieberman in the primary it may have no meaning in terms of the Republican control of the Senate (even if Lamont defeats Lieberman in the election) but it has incredible significance for how the Democrats nationally act as an opposition party.
July 18, 2006 6:32 AM | Reply | Permalink
I really see this differently in terms of 'greatest significance'. I do not beleive it is a democratic vs. GOP issue in terms of Will speaking out. Rather, this is a inter-party fight over listening to the neo-cons in terms how our foreign policy will be driven.
But as Transhuman noted, it matters not the difference between neo-cons vs. oil backers driving the ME war unless there is something to leverage. This war in the ME, is two pronged, there is the allies of Israel and the bigger 'geopolitical oil control' dominant thinking on USA policy.
Israel is a tactic and support of them is a by product of the much larger goal and strategy to control oil so that we can have some leverage with our bankers, China and Japan.
That's the issue which Clinton told us about during his 2004 DNC speech.
July 18, 2006 6:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
And here I thought it was just global warming steaming up the place.
July 18, 2006 7:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
Yes, but if it is not lack of cover that prevents "our" Democrats from speaking out forcefully on Iraq, what is it? Is it diffidence, modesty, decorum, or do they feel like Lieberman that the war is just and proper and going swimmingly?
July 18, 2006 7:17 AM | Reply | Permalink
Now if only liberal voices debating conservatives got the same press attention as debates among conservatives.
John
http://www.haberarts.com/
July 18, 2006 7:20 AM | Reply | Permalink
I am not certain. But I would tend to think they have nothing to gain politically by doing so. AIPAC is too powerful.
July 18, 2006 7:51 AM | Reply | Permalink
It is interesting that Will's opposition to the Iraq War is the same reason he opposes all the governmental projects of the American Left too. He thinks they don't work and are unlikely to work. He believes that neo-cons like Kristol don't grasp the idea that large scale governmental efforts are doomed to failure.
Kristol, or at least the elder neo-cons, coming out the New York Left maybe skeptical about the government but they actually share with the American Left the belief that government can, in some circumstances, transform societies. This is also Fukyama's departure from Kristol. Will and Fukyama may think the Iraq war as conducted was foolish, but then they think many of the things believed by people on the Left are foolish too.
As Bill Clinton noted when the Iraq War started he was all for health care for Iraqis he just also supported it for Americans. That is closer to the Democratic Party middles position.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 7:56 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
US/Israelite Destruction of Lebanon Continues [Juan Cole's Informed Comment
These attrocities are the work of desperate criminals whose time is running out. Unfortunately, the wounded tiger is the most deadly ..Israel is running out of time both for its 60 year ethnic cleansing campaign and most critically on its blank check from its puppet Bush...
Billy Kristol at the Weekly Standard is now certifiable calling for another two wars - Iran and Syria and for this, receives a righteous shellacking from George Will in the WaPo today.Transformations Toll
What I am watching in Lebanon each day is an outrage By Robert Fisk in Mdeirej, Central Lebanon
July 18, 2006 8:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
For me the significant phrase was the reference to containment. Looks like it will get rehabilitated, but maybe not as a wiser choice but as cover for the failure of transformative intervention in Iraq and inability to try again elsewhere.
July 18, 2006 8:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
Will’s goal, as always, is to defend the Coalition of the George F. Willing. By this, I mean Will is engaged in a pursuit that has become very obvious since practically no sane, remotely honest person can plausibly claim W and his gang of neocompoops hasn’t run the US train off the tracks. Will’s tack is a diversion designed to defend “conservatism” against “fake” (neo) conservatives. Things fall apart, goes this worldview, because we wander from the true path of genuine conservatism. The grandiose failures of Bush, the neo-cons, etc. are not failures of conservatism, they argue. Doom is visited upon our nation as a punishment for straying from the true path.
It’s all obviously a set-up for the November mid-terms: Vote Republican and give the party a chance to implement true conservatism. The party (meaning Will) has learned the error of its ways fiscally and abroad. Neocons and liberals, with their interventionism and pie-in-the-sky visions of largescale transformation, are really the same thing and lead us toward the same problems. Forget the fact that so many liberals opposed the Iraq War. Will has to denounce the neocons in order to create the logic of his final push for the GOP, and “true” conservatism, going into November.
Pay no attention to the man behind that curtain! He’s a desperate fraud, made even more pathetic by his growing irrelevence as a commentator. Oh. did someone mention Will checking into the ER? It was for the war wound he got when Toto bit him on the ass.
Pantheon
July 18, 2006 8:16 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
George Bush's October Surprise arranged in May, delivered in June by Olmert Express.
July 18, 2006 8:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
OGD,
My eyes glazed over just reading the table of contents and the first couple of pages of George Will's s book about baseball. Talk about tedious - "Still, dissect any game, even that one, deeply enough and you will reveal layers of asymmetries."
LOL - "Oh no, Mr. Bill, please don't make me read George Will again".
Blow jobs, baseball and terrorist attacks are all of equal gravity in George Will's world.
It must have been the pompous little prick's up at bat when he bashed Clinton in a January 1999 column.
George Will, Washington Post, 1/21/99
"I regret that what began as a friendship came to include this conduct." -- President Clinton, Aug. 17, 1998
"Such is Bill Clinton's fecundity as a liar, there still are darkly illuminating lies that are just now being scrutinized for the first time, even by people who have been attentive to this scandal. Consider the lie printed above.
Like Poe's purloined letter, Clinton's lie has been in plain view. For five months. And it was neither a slip of the tongue nor a flustered response to an unexpected question. It was a carefully written part of a crafty script, coldly calculated and finely calibrated. It was in the written statement he read to the grand jury when he was asked the first question about his relationship with Monica Lewinsky.
But this relationship that supposedly "began" as a friendship actually became something else very quickly. The "conduct" that included oral sex (and e-mail describing the effect of chewing Altoids before performing oral sex) began the very day in 1995 that Clinton first met Lewinsky. As Rep. James Rogan said to the Senate, within hours after Clinton met and spoke with Lewinsky for the first time, "he invited her back to the Oval Office to perform sex acts on him." Lewinsky has testified that even a month later, a month into both the "friendship" and "this conduct," she was still doubtful that Clinton even knew her name.."
Read what the pompous little prick had the balls to say on 9/12/01.
George Will, Washington Post, 9/12/2001
"Just at the moment when American political debate had reached a nadir of frivolousness, with wrangling about nonexistent "lockboxes" and the like, the nation's decade-long holiday from history came to a shattering end. After about a half-century of war and Cold War, Americans came to feel, understandably, that the world was too much with them, and they turned away from it. What happened Tuesday morning, and can happen again, underscored the abnormality of the decade..."
Hello, you pompous little prick - you were the one who made the American political debate frivoulous for a decade. Speak for yourself, prick - maybe you took a holiday from history in the '90s but I sure didn't.
On 9/12/01, George Will told everyone why he is a world-class asshole and why he should be fired. George Will is one of the reasons why no one wants to pay for a newspaper anymore.
Re Bill Kristol - The other day, I read that Project For the New American Century was being dismantled. I don't know if the PNAC website is staying up but get on over there and download all of PNAC's reports if you want your copies for posterity.
If you haven't read the report, "Iraq : Setting the Record Straight", dated April 2005, I highly recommend it. "Whacked out" does not do the report justice.
LOL - In the report, the PNAC people claim that the Iraq mess is all Bill Clinton's fault because the conservatives believed every word Bill Clinton said about Iraq in the '90s.
Guys, listen to me - you simply cannot have it both ways. Either you firmly believe Bill Clinton really was a moral degenerate and a congenital liar or you were trying to overthrow the government for eight years.
What you cannot do, Mr. Kristol, is say that the conservatives got fooled in Iraq because they relied on a moral degenerate and a congenital liar to establish their own foreign policy.
Liberal alert! "Iraq: Setting the Record Straight" will be a collector's item. Get it now before it disappears from the internet.
July 18, 2006 8:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
The argument between old and new conservatives has been going on under the radar;
Under your radar...but it's been very public at Free Republic for the 5 or so years I've been posting there.
conventional wisdom starts with what a monumental cock-up Iraq and its perpetrators are;
Conventional wisdom is neither conventional nor wisdom. It's simply something which has come to your attention and with which you agree.
Will turning on the neocons
Will has disagreed strongly with the neocons on many issues for a very long time.
July 18, 2006 8:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
By the way, is that really your name, or are you simply paying homage to Casablanca?
July 18, 2006 8:39 AM | Reply | Permalink
I have a question about people like Kristol, Rumsfeld and Cheney and the others who prefer to use force as a solution to world problems - do these people think that because we have an all volunteer army that these soldiers want to fight? I'm really curious as to how they view these kids - do you think they see them as disposable employees, who don't mind getting killed or some throw away lower class trash that it doesn't matter if they die? They seem so anxious to escalate situations into war, that I wonder about their thinking - they always bring up the "appeasers" and the anti-war protesters and the peace activists as though they're the bad guys and always, always bring up the appeasement of Hitler as an example of the wrongheadedness of peace activists (although the fact that people were so exhausted by WW I and of course the war promoters had told the people it was "the war to end all wars") and yet if we had vigorously promoted and supported the peace activists in Germany, the war might have been averted. (and yes, I know this doesn't take into account all the variables at work at the time.) Instead they always choose to escalate the level of violence.
Frankly, I don't think I would be so quick to send boys into combat, because I myself wouldn't want to go and I would hesitate to ask someone to risk losing his life or suffering irreparable damages to do something I'm not willing to do myself.
What am I missing when I read articles like this by Kristol/et.al?
July 18, 2006 8:57 AM | Reply | Permalink
What am I missing...
Not much. They are selling something that's easy to sell. The ex-militarists in this country are a huge special interest group whose appetite for macho action talk is endless.
The word "appeasement" has the same effect pornography has on teenagers to this crowd.
Secondly, the military industrial complex is the last employer that hasn't outsourced their work so who's to argue there.
Finally, the washington insider crowd never sacrifices a thing that isn't expendable to begin with. A soldier's life is as valuable as a used toothpick to Kristol and his audience.
The Rolling Stone writes about plans for a new draft.
July 18, 2006 9:11 AM | Reply | Permalink
the latter. as you know I am a self-hating Jew in a certain lexicon (actually in my own self-evaluation, I feel pretty good, not great, about myself) and Laszlo I think was pretty much the noble gentile although this wasn't spelled out explicitly.
let me ask you also, why do you, given your earlier replies, post here. if you really believed the stuff you told me earlier, you would be posting on a right-wing blog and denouncing not only anti-Zionists but leftists, liberals, moderates, vacillating conservatives, etc?
July 18, 2006 9:19 AM | Reply | Permalink
I should have read this letter first
July 18, 2006 9:20 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Conventional wisdom is neither conventional nor wisdom. It's simply something which has come to your attention and with which you agree."
No. It is something that the right wing has been very successful in creating and maintaining and by now have framed (I hate that word) the debate in the main stream media. It becomes less important in periods of crisis as the one we are in; conventional wisdom will be overturned and basic assumptions will be questionned. It is a great opportunity to really change the direction America is going; but one needs some leaders with a little vision and foresight not the mouthpieces we have in there now.
"Will has disagreed strongly with the neocons on many issues for a very long time."
Sure so has Buckley, Buchanan even the little weasels Novak and Matthews. But this splash is more significant for the DC crowd and thereby the broadcast news and Post and Times which desperately need to reflect "conventional wisdom" and march lockstep.
July 18, 2006 9:29 AM | Reply | Permalink
S-i is here to steal ideas and attention.
You might call it a right-wing Attention Deficit Disorder. The dirty little secret in the world of politics is that right-wing talk no longer drives the agenda. Their mutual masturbation discussion groups have grown flacid and so refugees like self-interest are now looking for host discussion groups to get their intellectual strokes from.
Sadly, when they realize no one treats them like geniuses they were once thought to be get sour and pout.
July 18, 2006 9:36 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
July 18, 2006 10:06 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
The Time for Fighting Words IS NOW
July 18, 2006 10:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Greenbaum may be fooled but don't let him fool you.
One war, one plan, one Lobby
July 18, 2006 10:08 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Daniel Greenbaum and Jhaber may be fooled...don't let them fool you.
One war, one plan, one Israel Lobby
Don't let them play you for fools - ever again
July 18, 2006 10:15 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Greenbaum's fooled himself but he can't fool your lyin eyes:
Don't let Greenbaum and his ilk ever fool you again America for it is his and his Lobby who pursue a
July 18, 2006 10:20 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
One plan, one war, too damned many lies Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 10:21 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Daniel Greenbaum _ Securing the Realm
In point of fact, the NeoCons made everything happen. That's the Cheney/Rumsfeld/Bush Cabal with their Jewish advisors and with minions such as Daniel Greenbaum and Joe Lieberman and Evangelical Nationalist RIght. who are frantically trying to rewrite history right before your lying eyes.
At least the latter don't pretend to be democrats
July 18, 2006 10:26 AM | Reply | Permalink
You couldn't be more wrong. :)
The only way to test one's ideas is to argue with opponents. Before coming to this site I posted to the Agonist for a year or so...and before that I read the liberal as well as conservative journals and argued on talk radio, and in various discussion groups.
My take is what I've said on other threads - partisans of all stripes are mostly mindless followers but liberals are worse because they're to dumb to realize that they must defend themselves.
You're a perfect example.
July 18, 2006 10:27 AM | Reply | Permalink
While Will is excoriating Kristol Kristol has denounced Rumsfeld. Rumsfeld and Cheney believe in a high tech military with high yield weapons that favor the airforce and the navy. Kristol seems to believe in a more convention or traditional military with a great emphasis on the army.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 10:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
S-i is here to steal ideas...
Point to one. As far as I can remember I've treated every idea I've found here and commented on with utter contempt. Do you think I turn around and, in some other venue, argue its virtues?
...and attention
How do you steal attention on an internet chat-site you pathetic little fop? Who does it belong to?
July 18, 2006 10:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
Pleasse dont let me fool anyone. Your participation on this site is a disgrace to this site. Bigots like you run the risk of keeping the country in Republican hands. Fortunately except here I doubt very many people listen to you.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 10:38 AM | Reply | Permalink
You use up a lot of space to say nothing.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 10:40 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Poor me, the Israelite. Aah.
One war, one plan, one Lobby, many, many lies
Your bet with Ivo's looking better now that Olmert's delivered Bush's October surprise TH
July 18, 2006 10:41 AM | Reply | Permalink
Um, too dumb. You can get back to your lecture professor know-it-all.
My, my, you use every trick in the book to get attention though. All these silly inflammatory statements questioning the manhood of Liberals while you snivel away whenever confronted with an "utterly contemptible" idea your head can't handle.
It all spells intellectual WIMP to me.
July 18, 2006 10:46 AM | Reply | Permalink
Your so worried about the Palestinians and the Lebanese why aren't you advocating returning the Israeli soldiers the ending of the use of missiles against Israel and the opening of negotiations? Why is it from your high moral plane all you support is the killing of Jews?
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 10:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
I tried to tell you what it felt like to be a high-school and junior high-school bully, why we did it. You didn't understand.
But those impulses are basic. You'll never elimate them. In some societies they are discouraged, in others encouraged, in adulthood. But they're always there. You'll never elimate them.
Many people out there don't share you vision of a placid, middle-class utopia. They like conflict. They're good at it. They find it exciting, and they like its rewards.
July 18, 2006 11:03 AM | Reply | Permalink
Do you have any idea how boring you are. Maybe the folks over at Agony sympathize with your silly tough guy act but please spare us.
Go back to talk radio where sounding like a crazed homocidal lunatic is a middle-class utopian value. Nobody here is impressed.
You have added zero to these discussions - zero. Oh wait, you hold us in "utter contempt"! Homer Simpson is more compelling than you.
Woo Hoo, s-i thinks that being a juvenile delinquent is a permanent biological condition!
Society has a remedy - prison.
July 18, 2006 11:13 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
The plan now unfolding is in fact the plan whose partisans George Will excoriates in the Washington Post today.
It is one plan of a piece with Kristol's defense of Israeli murder in Gaza and Lebanon; his call for more War on Iran and Syria and the war he and the Israel Lobby so vigorously championed in 2001-2003 - the War in Iraq which we are now told will last until 2016.
Ah what surprises Kristol and the Cabal have in store for us - beyond Olmert's gift wrapped Election Year Surprise!
But were they surprises???
Josh Marshall began to "get it" in May 2003 with his Practice to Deceive in the Washington Monthly.
But long before that, many of us "got it" and none better than Anatol Lieven, whose Ocotober 2002 article in the London Review of Books concludes presciently
Now these fighting words may offend some around here.
Frankly I do not give a damn, and neither should anyone else.
July 18, 2006 11:25 AM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
Oh and those "Jewish advisors" one participant goes to such great lengths of disembling to proect
Here they are:
July 18, 2006 11:27 AM | Reply | Permalink
from
I suggest to you that people who strive for Peace are not striving for a utopia on earth, they are advocating the daily hard-work of respecting the other even when the other may be an arrogant schmuck because in the short time we all have that schmuck is of no consequence to what I want my life to be like.
to
Go back to talk radio where sounding like a crazed homocidal lunatic is a middle-class utopian value...Woo Hoo, s-i thinks that being a juvenile delinquent is a permanent biological condition!...
Society has a remedy - prison.
It took a little longer than I thought but I knew we'd get there.
How are you going to make me go back anywhere? How are you going to force me to agree to your definition of criminality? How are you going to put me in prison if I violate your laws?
Do you really believe that the meek will inherit the earth, that the wimps of the world can unite and put all the tough guys in prison?
July 18, 2006 12:03 PM | Reply | Permalink
Apropos of the latest turn in the conversation
The neighborhood bully just lives to survive,
He's criticized and condemned for being alive.
He's not supposed to fight back, he's supposed to have thick skin,
He's supposed to lay down and die when his door is kicked in. He's the neighborhood bully.
I haven't seen this in a long time. I just saw it posted on another site.
July 18, 2006 1:02 PM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
July 18, 2006 1:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
I would suggest that AIPAC has very little do with it. Unlike the echo chamber here most Americans, including the vast majority of American Jews, support Israel. Just listen to Lou Dobbs' description of the events Israel fighting the terrorists, the same ones that killed 241 Marines in 1983. I don't think AIPAC needs to waste too much effort here.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 18, 2006 2:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
Israel Lobby Watch
July 18, 2006 2:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
What does support mean?
July 18, 2006 2:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Actually the two quotes are compatible and apply to you perfectly. People like you are of no consequence to the civilized world.
I cannot count you as an arrogant schmuck because the smoke you blow up these pipes is too thick to decide whether you are juvenile or full-grown.
In any case, sending you back to your bullytown playground simply means you'll prefer that company better. When you learn to wipe yourself before barging into a discussion you'll feel even fresher.
As for something inheriting the earth, it will be coackroaches and I'm sure you'll be there to bear witness.
But I cannot believe anybody with a brain thinks Liberals believe the bullshit guys like you categorize us by. You are so predictably and safely retro. Do you even read or just come to smear the walls with your fecal preconceived opinion of us?
July 18, 2006 2:54 PM | Reply | Permalink
Isn't it about time you give up the "Greenbaum" bullshit?
You've made your point, a hundred times over.
Now it's just tiresome. And, you're probably at least halfway to getting yourself banned, based on the exchange you and Josh had, as well as some other comments he's made.
Before it comes to that, wouldn't it be better to just give up the personal comments about another user and just stick to the subject at hand?
Have questions about the Cafe? Try here.
July 18, 2006 3:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
"nor for that matter by Kristol and Richard Perle."
Oh my God, talk about BIZARRE!
Perle is Jewish, so he gets exempted from being a neocon!
Not to mention William Kristol is supposedly not a neocon!
I quoted a piece from somebody, I forget who, in another thread, about Perle showing a slide at one point for what he thought was ideal US strategy in the Middle East - all of Palestinie was Israel, Jordan was Palestine, and Iraq was a Hashemite kingdom.
And this, according to you, is not related to the neocons at all.
And all thrown up just so you can accuse me of being "anti-Semitic" again.
Unbelievable.
July 18, 2006 3:33 PM | Reply | Permalink
You'll notice Ivo is nowhere to be seen today. He got his face slapped by Olmert just as Condi Rice did when Olmert launched this operation. Cheney and the neocons are in charge again, despite certain individuals not believing that, and the end game is Iran, as everybody who is not dissembling knows.
Of course, the attack on Iran hasn't happened yet. We'll have to wait and see when Israel 72-hour threat to Syria is up what they do. Because if Israel attacks Syria, there's a reasonable chance (I'd say fairly small, but possible) that Iran may enter the war in some manner.
That, cf course, would be all the excuse Bush needs to start bombing Iran, as Justin Raimondo has pointed out in his last column.
Of course, even if Iran doesn't directly enter the war, the Israelis can force the issue at any time whether Bush likes it or not by merely attacking Iran themselves under cover of the current situation.
It's not clear at the moment whether Bush is going to use the current situation as his "October surprise", or whether he's going to go for the gold with Iran before the elections.
Given that somebody just published an analysis showing that the Democrats may well retake the House in October, I'd say it's still odds on that Bush needs the Iran war.
July 18, 2006 3:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
This from a guy who's going to do the
daily hard-work of respecting the other
and all because I disagreed with and insulted you in an internet chat-room.
I imagine hard work to you is taking a dress from a rack and - if you feel particularly enegetic - simpering at the same time.
July 18, 2006 3:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
From Josh's piece:
"Israel took the West Bank in a war of self-defense, but once there its occupation helped give rise to Hamas. Israel's incursion into southern Lebanon (justified at the time, but transformed into a permanent occupation) led to the rise of Hezbollah."
I guess some people here would probably accuse Josh of "anti-Semitism" based on just those two statements, despite his use of the term "justified."
Josh in his piece clearly shows that the neocons have a broad strategy for the ME that is at odds with the US's interests. He leaves out Israel's part in this plan and the connections between the Israeli government and the neocons - established with certainty by other commentators and witnesses in the Pentagon and elsewhere - but he clearly sees the overall plan.
It would be interesting if he sees no connection between the current situation and the overall plan - as Justin Raimondo clearly sees it in his latest column.
July 18, 2006 3:50 PM | Reply | Permalink
The latter - as Justin Raimondo repeatedly says, they're just the left wing of the War Party.
Really, the Democratic politicians deep down really admire the Republicans and the neocons for being the sort of tough, take-no-prisoners statists THEY would like to be - but can't be because their version of the lies requires them to suck up to the "poor and the downtrodden".
It's the difference between being a "militant" Islamist and being a "peace-loving" Christian. Both will start wars but the rhetoric has to be different.
That puts the Dems at a disadvantage when they talk about issues that don't play to their strengths. It's like the Republicans trying to talk about "Social Security" - it's just laughable.
July 18, 2006 3:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
"neo-cons like Kristol"
Upthread, Kristol wasn't a neocon - now he is.
Make up your mind.
Is Perle a neocon in this thread or what?
July 18, 2006 4:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
Yes. Fellows like you have been dominating the conversation long enough. You have nothing to say that we haven't heard. You're bored and boring because no one listens to you anymore and you've realized that those rightwing chat rooms are filled with 400 pound Rush Limbaugh look-alikes making eyes at each other.
You seem to think being Liberal means being doormats for pigs. Those days are over. You come in here dissing someone, or putting on your phony tough-guy intimidations, you'll get the treatment you deserve.
July 18, 2006 4:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
All this between us began with my claim that no peaceful solution to the Arab-Jew conflict in the Middle-East was possible.
No, you said. We who are willing to do the hard work of respecting the other have another way.
Arabs and Jews have been killing and insulting each other for a hundred years and taking each other's land and treasure...and before that there was a thousand five hundred years of bad blood. You expect me to believe you can solve that conflict without bloodshed...but you cannot even retain a civil tone with me - who you don't know, and who has done nothing but disagree with and insult you in an internet chat room. In fact, you've threatened me with prison, violence, banishment.
I treat you, and others like you, with contempt because you deserve it. You're pathetic fools or worse. How much worse? I couldn't say without reviewing your posting record but based on my general observations I'd say you're one of those who hates the American government more than any foreign enemy, that you probably agree with Ward Churchill on 911, and you're for the destruction of Israel.
July 18, 2006 4:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
Too little, too late.
It has been obvious to anyone with critical thinking skills that neocons are not really conservatives. They are radicals. George Will is finding this out now?
Neocons have their roots in radical left. No wonder Hitchens has become a neocon follower.
July 18, 2006 8:45 PM | Reply | Permalink
I gave you a much deserved spanking primarily because you lie. You told me what a proud thief you were and planned to continue to be. Thieves go to prison when caught. No.
Your banishment was provided by God. Your dim-wits can never be broadened enough to understand the people here. What would you like from me? My sympathies. By all means hang around, make a nuisance of yourself - calling people contemptible and so on like a disease bearing gnat.
Violence is something you claim to relish and listening to your self-flagellation gives me great pleasure.
You can't say because you are incapable of distinguishing your ass from your elbow [never mind identifying anti-semitic brainfarts], unqualified to hold anyone in contempt, and your unimaginative accusation that anyone [myself in this case] is anti-your-mother reads like template Fox News copy. Boring, predictable, dreary, overdone by five years, banal, sorry nothingness.
Give it a break. You know jack nothing about Liberals except what you've been imprinted to believe and you sound more foolish with every post.
I'm not even offended by you. It's like arguing with a baboon who slings mud. You know not what you do.
July 18, 2006 10:07 PM | Reply | Permalink
I told you that, as a kid, I enjoyed dominating other kids, that such instincts were universal and basic, that some societies encouraged them and others didn't, that they could never be eliminated, that many people enjoyed conflict and did not find a peaceful world enticing.
I don't need your permission to hang around and I would never dream of stopping you from endlessly trying to have the last word with someone you consider "Boring, predictable, dreary, overdone by five years, banal, sorry nothingness" and "a baboon who slings mud"...
July 19, 2006 4:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
So you're here trying to dry hump our legs.
great
July 19, 2006 6:13 AM | Reply | Permalink
So you're here trying to dry hump our legs.
I can't see how that follows from the quote...but I do admit that I enjoy provoking you. However, that's not the reason for my posts or tone.
We - you and I - are good proxies for political conflict, two people with hugely different outlooks. We MUST talk to each other if political discourse is to have any meaning, and must do so honestly.
I find it ironic that I, who think that much conflict cannot be resolved peacefully, continue to try while you, who claim the opposite, think me and my views to be of no value and want me leave.
No, ironic is not the right word. Pathetic. Contemtible.
July 19, 2006 7:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
CScs
Thank you.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 19, 2006 7:44 AM | Reply | Permalink
Kristol and Perle are neo-cons but Will and more particularly Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice aren't. There is a real distinction between the traditional conservatives and the neo-cons.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 19, 2006 7:46 AM | Reply | Permalink
Support means first and foremost letting the Israelis decide what risks they are willing to take. It also means understanding that Israel is fight they same types of enemies, Arab extermists, who wish to drive the United States out of the Middle East. It means recongnizing that Hamas and Hezbollah attacked Israel after Israel withdrew behind recognized borders.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 19, 2006 7:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
You removed the sentence. Hard to have a dialogue when the context changes.
July 19, 2006 10:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
The public split within conservative ranks is where Clemons started and what would have been an interesting discussion, way more interesting than what is here.
I see Will speaking in the WaPo as very important in terms of governing philosophy, foreign affairs impact and political dynamics. Thinking back to the Harriet Miers nomination the conservative split killed that nomination, an issue of philosphy and political dynamics.
In the context of the Middle East this split and and an issue- based coalition with other Administration opponents could be a strong counterweight to Bush abroad. That's what I am looking for.
July 19, 2006 11:31 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'm quite aware that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice are not technically neocons and that there is a difference, however small in realistic terms from my point of view, between "Old Right" conservatives like Pat Buchanan and the neocons.
What difference does it make? With the possible exception of Rice - who is just a toady on a par with her predecessor, Powell - the other three you mention hew to the neocon line for their own reasons.
July 19, 2006 4:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
It matters to George Will for starters. It also matters to those who want current American foreign policy to be about a cabal of Jewish advisors who have somehow deluded Bush and the rest of his administration.
Beyond this it matters as a matter of policy goals and the way the two groups view governmental power. As I said above the neo-cons coming out the American left, while skeptical of large scale governmental programs are not adverse to the use of government to effectuate social policies. The neo-cons wanted to transform Iraq, and apparently sincerely believed it could be done. Wolfowitz had a plan to oust Saddem for over a decade that was offered to Clinton and to Netanyahu. The neo-cons' historical model is Munich.
Cheney and Rumsfeld are traditional nationalists with a Hobbesian view of the world. They were far less concerned with the aftermath in Afghanistan and Iraq than with bringing to bear maximum force. They wanted to demonstation the power of Americas smart weapons and lead the world to fear America. Their policy model was overcoming the "Vietnam syndrome."
The crime of Bush is not his lying. His crime is given what the Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld believed how unprepared they were for the results.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
July 19, 2006 5:24 PM | Reply | Permalink
White Rose's "3" rating is the correct one. My comment was rushed and did not give full weight to what George Will said on 9/12/01.
Americans were deliberately distracted away from world events by conservatives in government and media in the '90s to mask their real agenda.
I don't know what the entire conservative agenda is but part of it is to take control of energy resources worldwide.
Most Americans have no idea about the economic havoc and misery in Russia in the '90s deliberately created by the United States government with the help of "expert" advice from Harvard economists.
I am pretty sure that the United States or Israel blew up the Kursk nuclear submarine to provoke the Russians to retaliate, possibly with nuclear weapons.
Don't ask me how I came by them because I'm not sure myself but I have updated versons of maps from the late '60s of the North of Russian Federation marked up to identify nuclear test sites and potential oil fields.
LOL - I posted the maps online on a MSN personal space site weeks ago but I don't remember how to go back there. I think I named the space "Mrs Panstreppon". Now that I am thinking about the maps, I'll see if I can't find them and link to them here.
The maps are fascinating and I bet they will be particularly fascinating if those oil fields were stolen from you.
Those oil fields belong to everyone in Russia, not the gangsters who stole them. By gangsters, I mean the Russian Jewish oligarchs who were fronted by western companies.
The United Stated did not care about freedom for the people of Russia. The United States wanted to get its hands on the Russian oil fields. By the United States, I mean the criminals who have been running this country into the ground for their personal benefit.
George W. Bush is not going to tell his fellow Americans about how they are at risk from retaliation from the Russians but I will tell my fellow Americans.
The morons running the United States government in the last few decades have created such ill will among the rest of the world, the rest of the world is ready to blow us to kingdom come.
If I'm right, blowing up the Kursk was one of the most stupid and most irresponsible acts in modern history.
Anyone who has read about the Battle of Stalingrad knows why blowing up the Kursk put everyone in the United States in grave danger.
I'm not a foreign policy expert and I never attended military college but I know what blowing up the pride of the Russian nuclear submarine fleet meant to the Russians after the Russians had their faces kicked in by the United States for a decade.
I'm going to look for those maps. Maybe someone in the TPM Cafe knows some Russians who will be interested in them.
There, that's why I rated a "3" and not a "4".
July 22, 2006 4:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
I re-posted the maps just in case I could not find them again in the other MSN space but the maps are a little blurry.
The name of the MSN space is "Russian Maps from the '60s with nuclear test sites and oil fields marked".
If anyone wants copies of the maps emailed to them, I'll be happy to do it once I figure out how to email pictures.
July 23, 2006 3:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
What an interesting day this is turning out to be!
I just got a hot tip that some crooked Republicans are laundering money by investing it in a project to develop the South-Pervomayskoye oil deposit in the Saratov region of Russia.
The parties to the contact on paper are the State Geological Prospecting Enterprise (SGPE), "Nizhnevolzhskgeologiya", "IMEG and ??? "RUNO" companies.
IMEG, I know, is a UK engineering firm at www.imeg.co.uk.
I'm not sure how much further I can take this today but tomorrow I'll have plenty to keep me busy.
Hmm...How am I going to figure out which Republicans and which company is sheltering their investment?
A lot of money has been stashed in Russia in the last few years.
I chatted with a former cargo supervisor for one of the big airlines at JFK at a barbecue about three weeks ago. He told me that one of the NYC banks had huge amounts of cash flown to Russia every week.
He told me that, one time, the bank tried to add more cash to the shipment at the last minute and he finally had to put his foot down.
He called one of the officers at the bank and gave him what for. He threatened to send the entire shipment of cash back to the bank via the Brinks truck if the banker persisted with his attempt to ship more cash that day.
The guy I was talking to got laid off after 9/11. I asked what time frame he was talking about and he gave me the impression that huge amounts of cash were being flown to Russia right up until 9/11.
I'm not sure if he told me the name of the bank and I forget which airline he worked for. Delta, maybe? I could just ask him the next time I see him. He's my sister's neighbor and he is the Lloyd Harbor harbor master. How's that for a career change?
I suppose an investigator looking into money laundering operatons could request Brinks to provide a schedule of all deliveries of cash to JFK from a Manhattan bank every week in the months before 9/11.
I'm kind of curious myself as to why a bank would be flying huge amounts of cash to Russia every week.
July 23, 2006 11:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
Yeah, that's a good thread to pull at, sounds like.
I don't buy the Kursk idea. First, the Russians have enough quality-control issues that they don't need anyone's help to sink a ship. Second, the acoustic signature has been studied by non-government experts, I think, and it was consistent with a torpedo cooking off.
Torpedoes are notoriously dangerous and have various means of not arming until well away, but the explanation I heard is that the motor started up, which started a clock and armed at least the warhead detonator. That was sufficient to start a hot fire and cook another, setting off the warhead.
July 23, 2006 1:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
Tom, I read several of them but I don't have the technical expertise to evaluate the various explanations for the Kursk disaster. The one put forward most often is the one about quality controls loosened as a result of Russia's economic woes.
I'm reluctant to accept that theory because some people in the Russian government knew before August 2000 that they had an enemy who was out to take over their country. I am assume the good guys are winning only because I am still here typing my little heart out about corruption every day.
Some time in the '90s, these concerned Russians realized that there was an organized group of people in the United States and elsewhere who planned to take complete control of Russia. They had worked to undermine not just Communism but every facet of Russian civil society. For example, heroin became widely available in Russia in the '90s.
I posted a link in another comment to an MSN My Space site where I posted seven picture maps of Russian oil fields and nuclear test sites. I'm pretty sure someone let me have them and that they are accurate.
Some people in the United States and the Soviet Union have known about the existence of those vast oil fields since the late '60s and they wanted them for themselves and their kind.
These people deliberately collapsed the Russian economy after the breakup of the Soviet Union in the early '90s and created economic chaos and severe hardship for the people of Russia who were rich but didn't know it. That's when the valuable Russian oil and gas assets were stolen by the oligarchs who are all Russian Jews or at least most of them are Jewish.
But I think the oligarchs were fronts in some or all of the cases and I think somebody intended to encourage the Russian people to blame all of their problems on the Jews down the road. On the face of it, the Russian people would have been perfectly justified to blame the Jews for stealing their oil and gas rights.
Me, if I was Russian, I'd want to hang every last oligarch in the public square to tell the world what I think of people who try to ruin my country and my family's well-being. Anyone who knows anything about the Soviet Union knows how the Russian people sacrificed for their country. Those oil and gas fields belong to them, not a handful of Russian Jews.
I'm only guessing what happened in the '90s but I think the plotters found out that not everyone in Russia was for sale and those Russians were in their way.
Blowing up the Kursk was a way to get rid of them. The plotters hoped that by blowing up the pride of the Russian Navy, the Russians would retaliate.
I don't know what happened then but the Russians obviously did not send a nuclear bomb sailing into the middle of Washington DC or New York City.
As far as who are the people behind this nefarious scheme, I think both "Democrats" and Republicans are involved. If I am right about the conspiracy, then I would put James A. Baker, Jon Corzine and Charles A. Gargano on the list as among the principal engineers and architects of the master plan.
But I say Baker, Corzine and Gargano based on my limited view and knowledge of world events. If I have had access to accurate information in the last six years, then I'd say I am more than 95% confident that I am right about them.
Within a month after 9/11, I was sure that James Baker and Charles Gargano were involved in 9/11 and I told that to everyone who would listen to me.
Why Jon Corzine? Corzine was Chairman of Goldman Sachs for ten years in the '90s when the infamous NASDQ stock swindle and the worldwide telecom scandal took place. Trillions of dollars were stolen from the middle class around the world by self-proclaimed elitists who think they know better as to how you should live your life than you do.
I'm somewhat vague here because I don't know all of the details but I knew in the '90s something terrible was happening. Every time I picked up the newspaper or turned on the television, I had lost economic and political ground and I mean me, Mrs Panstreppon who, at the time, was a moderate Democrat and member of the middle class.
I didn't want to work anymore after I engineered my departure from a really good job in July 1992. I was worried and depressed so I took diet pills and drank. The diet pills kept me alert and the alchohol took the edge of my concern and helped me to keep talking to other people.
I stopped drinking, for the most part, in 2000 after I got a DWI and stopped altogether after 9/11 because I knew I needed all my faculites. I didn't stop taking diet pills because they helped me concentrate on detailed information for long periods of time.
I never told anyone explicitly what I was doing. At first, I didn't know myself what I was doing or why I was doing it. For ten years, I never told anyone that I was seeing two different pyschiatrists who dispensed phentermine.
Between March and May 2001, I had a temp job at a bankrupt local telephone company (a CLEC in FCC terms) doing minor accounting work. To this day, I don't know what was really going on there but I thought I had uncovered one of the biggest financial crimes in world history.
Today, I know the worldwide telecom scandal was real but I dont't know who else knew what I did in May 2001. After I was laid off from the CLEC, I laid low in my house for a week until the beau came home from Florida. I had scared myself silly thinking that the crooks running the CLEC were on to me. I still wonder from time to time which of my concerns were real.
Of course, the diet pills enhanced my fear but the diet pills had never before made me paranoid in the ten years I had been taking them. I knew the fear itself was not caused by too many diet pills.
I've been around the block enough times and read enough about crime to know that if I had really come across a worldwide conspiracy to defraud investors and take control of our communications systems, nobody involved would want me walking around shooting off my big mouth.
LOL - Everyone who knows me knows you can't tell me anything and expect it to remain a secret.
A couple of days after I was laid off from the CLEC and "hiding" out, I was in an upstairs bedroom and from the window, I thought I heard someone wire my car in my driveway so I called the cops from my neighbor's house the next day.
I am sure the cop thought I was nuts when I told him I was an accoutant who may have uncovered fraud in the millions of dollars but I noticed he wouldn't start my car for me.
When the beau came home, he started my car and I felt safe again. So I jumped on the internet and started researching the telecommunications industry. At the same time, I wrote a paper letter to Paul Vitello at Newsday about some crooks I had come across in another temp job.
Why Paul Vitello? Because I had just read his column about corruption in Nassau County government and I knew he felt the same way I did about corruption. Angry? No, furious is the best way to describe it.
Paul Vitello was a longtime Newsday columnist who wrote about life on Long Island. He was not an investigative reporter but I trusted him to tell the right people about the information in my letter.
Why did I trust Paul Vitello? Because I had read his column for years so I knew a lot about Paul Vitello. I know we share the same sense of right and wrong.
A week or so later, Paul Vitello sent me his first of only two emails I ever received from him. He asked me where I got my information. I sent him a link to the bankruptcy court and that was it.
I already had told him where I got my information, what my concerns were and how I came to have them in my letter. There was no reason for me to give him any more information in an email. If he needed to know more about what was in my letter, he had to pick up the phone and call me.
Paul Vitello now works at the New York Times.
Let me skip ahead a couple of years. In 2003, I read about a $3 billion Russian gas company named Itera after I found its cheesy website on the internet. The Itera website looked like what I might have come up with if I had ever tried to create my own site.
I had never heard of this $3 billion gas company and I became suspicious when I read that it was a relatively new Russian company "owned" by Alex Makarov who looked to be about thirty years old.
What was really out of whack is that Itera opened offices in Jacksonville Florida in 1993.
Check sunbiz.org for the names of some of the people involved in Itera. You'll know right away what I mean.
Alexander's Gas & Oil website has or had a lot of background information about Itera. As a CPA and former auditor, I can say with authority, Price Waterhouse did not shine in the Itera case.
I'm stopping here but I'll try and post more about Itera and Enron and Goldman Sachs later.
July 24, 2006 12:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
For six years, I've implied or outright said that James Baker and Charlie Gargano were involved in 9/11.
I've complained about Alphonse D'Amato being a crook and not showing up after 9/11 but I don't think I ever specifically included him in the 9/11 plot.
If D'Amato is involved in 9/11, his neighbors in Long Beach will hang him from the lampost.
How could Alphonse D'Amato be involved in 9/11 and then live right in the middle of Long Beach like everyone else?
That's where I got stuck.
But I watched all of the people from the $2 billion Southwest Sewer District Scandal come into the restaurant where I worked and act like they were the most important people in the world.
The f**king thieves were stealing from me and everyone else in Suffolk County.
Today, I would spit on them before I ever put a plate of food in front of them.
If Gargano is involved in 9/11, then D'Amato is too. The big right wingers in New York supported him - Ronald Lauder and David Rockefeller off the top of my head. He is friends with James Baker. He's never done the right thing in his entire life.
What reason do I have to leave Senator Al off the list?
I aleady wrote about D'Amato taking money from Nastasi-White and that someone told me that Nastasi-White had a lot of plywood sheets on hand on 9/11 that were used to board up windows around the WTC.
I found this 1985 Newsday article in Lexis-Nexis archives and it specifically mentions D'Amato being a good friend of James Baker's. It also mentions Baker's special assistant, Lever Standing who I never heard of.
Anyone know anything about Lever Standing and where he is today?
New York Times
March 31, 1985
By FRANK LYNN
POLITICS;D'AMATO ALLY FAILS TO GET POST
SENATOR Alfonse M. D'Amato's plans for a top Federal appointment for a Long Island friend ran into a White House roadblock last week.
The Senator had been so confident that Charles Gargano of Dix Hills, who headed the Reagan campaign in New York, would be appointed undersecretary of housing and urban development that his staff had counted their chickens before they were hatched - publicly acknowledging what was supposed to be an imminent appointment. The Senator had even escorted Mr. Gargano to a White House interview three weeks ago.
Mr. Gargano was turned down, however, and the consequent political embarrassment for Senator D'Amato is reminiscent of another D'Amato false start early in the Reagan Administration: the aborted appointment of Assemblyman John Behan of Montauk to head the Veterans Administration.
Lever Standing, a White House special assistant, is to get the post supposedly earmarked for Mr. Gargano, according to D'Amato aides.
''That was a call from the White House,'' the Senator said in a telephone interview. He said that a job had to be found for Mr. Standing, who was moved out of the White House as part of the recent change in chief of staff from James Baker to Donald Regan.
''Deaver got to the President,'' the Senator said in a reference to Michael Deaver, a longtime friend and adviser of the President and a sponsor of Mr. Standing.
A top New York Republican said he had been told by a White House aide that Mr. Gargano's appointment also was opposed because it would have meant two New Yorkers in the top H.U.D. posts. The H.U.D. Secretary, Samuel Pierce, is a New Yorker.
Another Republican noted a potential problem in Mr. Gargano's former position as an executive with J. D. Posillico Inc., the East Farmingdale construction company known for its political contributions and currently involved in an investigation by the State Attorney General's office of highway-contract bidding on Long Island.
The company is also a defendant in a civil suit initiated by the Suffolk County District Attorney, Patrick Henry, seeking damages on the ground that Posillico overcharged on public contracts. The company has denied any wrongdoing, as has Mr. Gargano, who was executive vice president in charge of operations for Posillico until late 1983.
Senator D'Amato denied that the connection to Posillico had any bearing on Mr. Gargano's not getting the H.U.D. post. ''That's just not the case,'' the Senator said. ''There's never been any finger pointed at him.''
Senator D'Amato had said earlier that he had ''no problems'' with Mr. Gargano's construction-industry background, and noted that he had been approved for an earlier Reagan Administration appointment as deputy administrator of the Urban Mass Transportation Administration.
Still another Republican cited the change in the White House guard from Mr. Baker to Mr. Regan as being behind the Gargano matter. ''Al continues to believe that if he pounds on the table at the White House, he'll get something,'' the Republican said. ''But Don Regan ain't Jim Baker; he's not impressed with table thumping.''
Senator D'Amato acknowledged that he had good relations with Mr. Baker and had publicly differed with the tax proposals Mr. Regan offered as Treasury Secretary before he moved to the White House.
Mr. Gargano, an early fund raiser for the Senator, is a D'Amato favorite. It was Mr. D'Amato who arranged for the appointment of Mr. Gargano as Reagan state chairman last year over the opposition of Republican officials, including George L. Clark Jr., the Republican state chairman. Mr. Clark diluted some of Mr. Gargano's authority by naming two more experienced deputy campaign chairmen.
Senator D'Amato was also promoting Mr. Gargano as a possible state party chairman if Mr. Clark, an early supporter of the President, took a Federal post. Mr. Clark, whose relations with Senator D'Amato have often been strained, has decided to remain as state chairman at least through next year's Governor and Senate elections, when Mr. D'Amato will be seeking a second term.
Mr. Gargano's future is uncertain. Several Republicans said that his first preference for a Federal post was ambassador to Italy, not the H.U.D. post. Mr. Gargano, who was born in Italy, was active in helping victims of the Italian earthquake several years ago. However, the ambassador post is not open and in any event is one of the Administration's most sought-after appointments. Mr. Gargano was reported by his family to be out of town and unavailable for comment.
More likely for Mr. Gargano at the moment, D'Amato aides said, is a part-time job on a Federal commission while waiting for a suitable full- time Federal post to open up.
July 24, 2006 9:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
The USS Scorpion was maneuvering when lost, and it took a long time just to find the wreck. There, as well as with the Kursk, a torpedo problem was suspected, although there were two major theories. It happened that the executive officer of the sub had gone to a new job before the final sailing, so they did have someone available who was intimately familiar with the crew's training and ship's procedures. He was put into a sister ship, and later a simulator, and given alarms consistent with each scenario. The emergency response for one of the theories caused a theoretical ship loss, and essentially in the exact pattern of debris found.
It's sometimes amazing that submarines work at all. A friend of mine spent a number of years as a submarine sonar operator, then went into civilian life. On 9/11, he was in one of the towers, on the thirty-something floor, when the building was hit. While there were "keep calm" announcements on the speakers, what flashed into his mind was a Navy saying: There is no such thing as a minor accident aboard a submarine. With that in his mind, he used all of his official status and personal force to demand everyone go down the stairs now. No one from his group was injured.
--
Howard
*equal opportunity offense to both extremes*
July 24, 2006 9:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
Maybe if George Will gets rid of the bowtie his IQ will go up. Tucker Carlson seems to be somewhat smarter since he got rid of his. However, I'm not sure if there is hope for any present day George W.'s to get smarter.
Tom
July 25, 2006 2:03 PM | Reply | Permalink
HB, One of the items on my to-do list is to read all of your posts because they are so informative.
I am curious about what kind of civilian work a former sonar operator goes into on the thirty-something floor of the WTC.
I'd like you to take a look at seven maps of the North of the Russian Federation that are marked for nuclear test sites, mines and oil and gas fields.
The maps came from a Norwegian NGO site. The group's focus is in helping the indigenous people of Northern Russia.
I'd like to know if the information on the maps is authentic and, if so, is it sensitive.
The maps are also marked with pictures of planes indicating airfields. Some of these "airfields" appear to be in sparsely populated or unpopulated areas so I'm wondering why there are airfields in these areas.
I posted the maps on an MSN Group Space website under "Mrs Panstreppon" but I can't find the link at the moment. If you are interested in the maps, let me know and I can email them to you.
July 30, 2006 8:21 AM | Reply | Permalink