Commentary and analysis on American politics, culture, and national identity, U.S. foreign policy and international relations, and the state of education
- from a neoconservative perspective! - Keeping an eye on the communist-left so you don't have to!
Stanley Kurtz argues that Barack Obama's resignation from Trinity United Church of Christ does nothing fundamental to change his affinity to the views of Michael Pfleger and Jeremiah Wright:
Having now left Trinity United Church of Christ, can Barack Obama escape responsibility for his decades-long ties to Michael Pfleger and Jeremiah Wright? No, he cannot. Obama’s connections to the radical-left politics espoused by Pfleger and Wright are broad and deep. The real reason Obama bound himself to Wright and Pfleger in the first place is that he largely approved of their political-theological outlooks.
Note this passage especially:
Obama’s long-held and decidedly audacious hope has been to spread Wright’s radical spirit by linking it to a viable, left-leaning political program, with Obama himself at the center. The revolutionizing power of a politically awakened black church is not some side issue, or merely a personal matter, but has been the signature theme of Obama’s grand political strategy.
It's amazing that while members of radicalnetroots continue to bash the administration on Iraq, claiming sectarian reconciliation will never take place, Members of Congress are increasingly bowing to the liklihood of success in the conflict.
The latest example is Congressman Paul Kanjorski, who claims Democratic war opponents are reponsible for the surge, via Jeff Emanuel:
In February 2007, Kanjorski went to the floor of the House to say:
Ms. Speaker, I rise today to join the overwhelming majority of the American people, the Congress, and many top U.S. military commanders to voice my opposition to President Bush's ill-conceived plan to send more American troops into the middle of an ongoing Civil War in Iraq
Then, in an interview from just days ago, Kanjorski said:
We've taken public positions which have now forced the president to go into the surge mentality, which is somewhat working
Recently, it was his unfortunate honesty that hurt him; this time, it will be that honesty combined with a penchant for duplicitousness that will come back to haunt him.
In his first statement, Kanjorski was correct in his toeing of the Democrat line on the President's proposals for Iraq: oppose, oppose, oppose. Oppose staying the course, while simultaneously opposing changing course. Deny that any impact was being made; call the 'surge' a failure, even before the troops assigned to execute the strategy being implemented by the new commander of coalition forces there were in place to do so.
Talk down the war's progress at all costs, and say things like this: "The war is lost. The surge has failed" (Sen. Harry Reid); The surge "is a failure" (Rep. Nancy Pelosi); "The U.S. troop buildup in Iraq has failed" (Sen. Carl Levin); The president is "desperate...to shore up support for his failed "surge" strategy" (Gov. Bill Richardson); "We should stop the surge and start bringing our troops home" (Sen. Joe Biden); "As many had forseen, the escalation has failed to produce the intended results" (Reid and Pelosi); "It’s clear that the current strategy – the President’s escalation – has failed" (Sen. John Kerry); and "According to...Republicans, and unfortunately even some Democrats, the President's surge in Iraq has been a resounding success. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth" (Rep. Robert Wexler).
If all else fails, attempt to implement a "slow bleed" strategy (and call it that, for maximum effect!), which will consist of a multimillion dollar anti-military, anti-war campaign combined with legislative action that will slowly but surely deprive the warfighters on the ground in Iraq of the materiél they need to prosecute the war, in hopes that, once they run so low on funding, gear, and supplies that they can no longer effectively fight, President Bush will be forced to bring them home.
At worst case, Democrats were to treat any positive results that came from Iraq as a result of President Bush and General Petraeus's new strategy there with the snide indifference that Florida Congressman Tim Mahoney did when he responded last year to the question "What if the 'surge' is successful?" with a question of his own: "So what?"
Crediting any possible progress in that country to Iran, who is busy providing insurgents with the weapon responsible for killing the most American troops of any being used in the country, was fine, as Rep. Pelosi demonstrated last week; actually crediting the 'surge' itself, though, was to be verboten.
Whoops.
Members of Congress face electoral pressures, and when Iraq's turning out to be less salient in the minds of voters, incumbents naturally want to get on the right side of the issue, especially when the "do-nothing" label can be powerfully deployed against entrenched Defeatocrats.
Gallup reports that a large majority of Americans supports presidential-level diplomatic talks with our international enemies, including Iran (and this finding's noteworthy as Iran tops the list of perceived foes of the United States).
The report is careful to note that public support for talking to our enemies could decline if the dangers of such an approach became demonstrably evident in the course of the long presidential campaign:
The issue of using presidential diplomacy with U.S. enemies distinguishes Barack Obama from the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, John McCain, and even from his opponent for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton.
Obama is the only one of the three who has said he would personally meet with the leaders of countries like Iran, Syria, Cuba, and Venezuela as president, and he recently defended his position by saying "strong countries and strong presidents talk to their adversaries." Clinton has criticized Obama's approach as "naïve," and McCain has been unrelenting in his attacks on the issue, accusing Obama of being dangerously inexperienced and having "reckless judgment."
Bottom Line
McCain may eventually persuade more Americans that there is nothing for the president of the United States to discuss with hostile foreign leaders like Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and that to do so only undermines U.S. efforts to destabilize such regimes.
However, for now, whether it's the leader of an "enemy" country, generally, or the president of Iran, specifically, Americans think it's a good idea for the president of the United States to meet directly with the nation's adversaries.
We can thus see that while public opinion appears favorable to Barack Obama's position, a spirited campaign debate on the merits of meeting our enemies (especially unconditionally) could very well provide the context for a more skeptical public stance vis-à-vis our foes.
One point I've been trying to make in my book talks is that there's precious little evidence that public opinion is demanding a neo-imperial foreign policy for the United States. Nobody felt during the 2000 presidential campaign that the public was clamoring for a new Orwellian doctrine of "anticipatory self-defense" (to repeat the phrase used in Doug Feith's book) in which the United States was going to launch aggressive wars against countries that hadn't attacked us or our allies and had no plans of doing so. September 11, clearly, had a large impact on public opinion but even then there was little public interest in doing this, which is why the Bush administration overstated both the scale and the immediacy of the alleged Iraqi threat while drastically downplaying the costs.
And you see again that while it took a certain amount of courage for Barack Obama to stand up to the crusted-over notion that the United States should set itself up as too damn important to conduct high-level talks with regional adversaries, there's not some genuine avalanche of public opinion on the other side of this issue. What you have instead is a political and media system that's very vulnerable to hype, fearmongering, hysteria, etc. But calm political leadership that doesn't panic at the first sign of conservative self-confidence about the politics of warmongering has a real chance to win these fights.
I've read the book, and to study Yglesias is to understand how the folks on the left can ideologically twist and turn endlessly to devise a position on international conflict where the resort to arms would never be considered a viable policy position of the Unitied States.
Notice how Yglesias offers no clear, verifiable reference for his claim that:
September 11, clearly, had a large impact on public opinion but even then there was little public interest in doing this, which is why the Bush administration overstated both the scale and the immediacy of the alleged Iraqi threat while drastically downplaying the costs.
Considering Yglesias has made a career out of hammering "liberal war hawks," and as one who's demonized John McCain as "the militarist," we might think that we'd at least get some empirical confirmation for these substantive claims and spurious smears.
Straightforward polling data from the "even then" period after 9/11 puts Yglesias in a bind:
FOX News/Opinion Dynamics Poll. March 12-13, 2002. N=900 registered voters nationwide. MoE ± 3.
.
"Do you support or oppose the U.S. military action being taken in response to the terrorist attacks?"
Support
Oppose
Not Sure
%
%
%
3/12-13/02
91
6
3
2/26-27/02
82
11
7
1/30-31/02
89
7
4
1/9-10/02
90
5
5
12/12-13/01
91
6
3
11/28-29/01
91
5
4
11/14-15/01
91
6
3
10/31 - 11/1/01
87
8
5
Not only that, in 1998, when the Clinton/Gore administration ratcheted-up American foreign policy efforts to prevent Iraq from developing weapons of mass destruction, large majorities favored military efforts over non-military means to resolve the crisis:
Previous polls have shown that controlling weapons of mass destruction and containing Iraq are among the public's top priorities in foreign affairs, and underpin support for a tough approach toward Iraq. Also, Americans seem to have become less patient about using non-military measures against Iraq since the last inspection crisis. Gallup (1/16-18) found 75 percent believed military force "will eventually be necessary to keep Iraq from developing weapons of mass destruction" -- up from 56 percent last November (11/21-23), after inspections were resumed.
So, while this is two years before the 2000 presidential election campaign, the polling data show support for military action over diplomacy ("non-military measures"); and while these polls do not survey support for regime change per se, the data here, gathered during a Democratic administration, nevetheless cast asperision on blanket left-wing denunciations that there was "little public interest" in "anticipatory self-defense."
The standard question used by many public opinion organizations, including the Pew Research Center, asks whether the respondent favors or opposes taking military action to remove Saddam Hussein from power. These questions yield higher measures of support than the standard question asked by Gallup/CNN/USA Today, which asks about invading Iraq with ground troops....
Here are recent polls on the general question of using force in Iraq:
Organization
Dates
N
Question
Favor/Yes
Oppose/No
DK
Pew Research Center
1/8-12/03
611
Would you favor or oppose taking military action in Iraq to end Saddam Hussein's rule?
68
25
7
Fox News/ Opinion Dynamics
1/14-15/03
900 RV
Do you support or oppose U.S. military action to disarm Iraq and remove Iraqi President Saddam Hussein?
67
25
8
CBS/NYT
1/19-22/03
997
Do you approve or disapprove of the United States taking military action against Iraq to try to remove Saddam Hussein from power?
64
30
6
Newsweek
1/23-24/03
1001
In the fight against terrorism, the Bush Administration has talked about using military force against Saddam Hussein and his military in Iraq. Would you support using military force against Iraq, or not?
60
35
5
Time/CNN
1/15-16/03
1010
Do you think the U.S. should or should not use military action involving ground troops to attempt to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq?
60
33
7
ABC/Washington Post
1/16-20/03
1133
Would you favor or oppose having U.S. forces take military action against Iraq to force Saddam Hussein from power?
57
41
3
NBC News/Wall Street Journal
1/19-21/03
1025
Do you think that the United States should or should not take military action to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq?
56
36
8
Gallup/CNN/ USA Today
1/23-25/03
1000
Would you favor or oppose invading Iraq with U.S. ground troops in an attempt to remove Saddam Hussein from power?
52
43
5
This analysis, then, raises serious doubt on Yglesias' larger assertions that Barack Obama's views are in line with public opinion on international diplomacy. To quote this passage once more:
And you see again that while it took a certain amount of courage for Barack Obama to stand up to the crusted-over notion that the United States should set itself up as too damn important to conduct high-level talks with regional adversaries, there's not some genuine avalanche of public opinion on the other side of this issue.
The Gallup data discussed at the start of this post are much more variegated than Yglesias' view suggests, and a review of public opinion trends in precisely those periods Yglesias claims support his push for diplomacy-at-all costs indicates how drastically unserious (even dangerous ) are the representative foreign policy points of the far-left.
But as Andrew Kohut notes, the public's views on the conflict have lost urgency as a campaign issue, a trend that coincides nicely with the gains in security on the ground:
It turns out that Iraq is not the pivotal campaign issue that it seemed to be less than a year ago. Indeed, the war is no longer the top concern among voters.
A lot has changed with respect to Iraq in a relatively short period of time period. Voters have come to feel better about the way the war is going, and with American casualties declining, there is more optimism about our efforts there. While most Americans still believe the war was a mistake, the percentages of people who think the war is going badly or believe that the United States is losing ground against the insurgents has decreased compared with a year ago. In short, while no less important, Iraq is a somewhat less pressing issue....
At the same time concerns about the economy — and prices specifically — have soared. In almost all rankings of issues in national opinion polls, the economy is No. 1 and Iraq is No. 2.
How the war will figure as an issue in the coming election is complicated by ambivalent and contradictory public opinions. One of the more interesting findings in Republican exit polls was that John McCain, despite his strong support for the war, was more likely to win the backing of voters who disapproved of the war, while G.O.P. supporters of the war voted for other candidates (most often Mitt Romney.) And surprisingly, a late April Pew survey found voters thinking that Mr. McCain could do a better job than Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton in handling the war by a 50 percent to 38 percent margin in Mr. Obama’s case and a 49 percent to 43 percent margin in Mrs. Clinton’s case. A late May poll found a much closer division of opinion between Mr. McCain and Mr. Obama, 46 percent to 43 percent, but not one that favored the Illinois senator.
Note something here: While a majority of Americans think the war's been a mistake, we continue to see the public resisting a preciptious retreat from the conflict:
Follow-up questions to those who favor withdrawal reveal that, relatively few think that American troops should be taken out immediately (16 percent); most favor gradual withdrawal (39 percent) over the next year or two. And follow-up questions to those who back keeping troops in Iraq until the country stabilizes also found a good number saying they favor a time table (14 percent). This leaves a relatively small segment of the public (26 percent) supporting an open-ended commitment to keeping American forces in Iraq.
I've written quite a bit on public opinion and Iraq.
One of the most egregious failures of the media in the last year is not only the increasing unwillingness of war opponents in the press to acknowledge the success of the Petraeus counterinsurgency program, but also the continuing meme that public opinion on the war is uniformly hostile to continuing the deployment.
Simply because the war's unpopular doesn't necessarily mean that we should throw our hands up and surrender.
"The harmony that existed between MyDD and Kos since the birth of the Netroots no longer exists today."
Writes TNR's Dana Goldstein. I guess I don't read the lefty blogs enough. I had no idea. Anyway, it seems that back in February, Jerome Armstrong (My DD) came out for Hillary Clinton, and the commenters on both sites have been fighting ever since. And then there was that "writers strike" by the pro-Clinton diarists at Kos.
After announcing her departure from the site, [strike leader] Alegre was the subject of insults by dozens of commenters.
Dozens! Ooh. Ouch.
[Kos's Markos] Moulitsas fumed on the site's front page, "People expect me to give a damn that a bunch of whiny posters 'go on strike' and leave in a huff. When I don't give a damn, people get angry that their expectations aren't being met." Of course, characterizing Clinton supporters, especially female Clinton supporters, as "whiny," didn't sit well with many. A Maryland mother of two in her mid-40s, Alegre said she won't publicize her real name because she fears harassment from anti-Clinton bloggers and commenters....
The Netroots has always had a hostile streak, and it's natural that as the Democratic Party and the Netroots themselves began to wield more power, some of that hostility would be directed inwards. Its denizens are also a relatively homogeneous bunch--largely male, middle-aged, college-educated, and upper middle class.
Really? Upper middle class? I can believe there are more men than women, but enough to make it "relatively homogenous"?
I guess Alegre wants back in at Kos, since the writer's strike didn't have much impact, to which Althouse notes:
The writers strike was a dumb idea that left its leader without a high platform to blog from. Now, she has her regrets. Sorry, that's not the big theme she wants it to be. If Alegre deserved the elevation she once had on that platform that Kos built, she ought to be able to blog independently now instead of whining — yeah, whining — about not having a place in his heart.
Jack Tapper reports that Michael Pfleger's controversial sermon denouncing Hillary Clinton's also included attacks on this country as a "sin Against God":
In another excerpt from Rev. Michael Pfleger's sermon last Sunday, May 25, from the pulpit of Sen. Barack Obama's now former church, Trinity United Church of Christ on the South side of Chicago, the longtime Obama associate condemns America for racism in fairly harsh terms.
"Racism is still America's greatest addiction," Pfleger says. "I also believe that America is the greatest sin against God."
There seems to be a mixed reaction to that from the pews. But Pfleger explains:
"If the greatest command is to love, than the sin against love must be the greatest sin against God who IS love and who calls us to love one another. So that this greatest sin against God, racism, it's as natural as the air we breath."
Obama, of course, resigned from Trinity on Friday, saying he didn't want to be held accountable for every word spoken from the pulpit at the church, and he didn't want the church to continue to have the media disrupting its worship. The last straw may have been Pfleger's mocking of Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY, from the pulpit in this same sermon.
But Obama's relationship with Pfleger -- who is the priest at a different, Catholic, church -- spans decades.
Jennifer Rubin also comments on Obama's statement that he has "deep regard" for the hate-filled preachers of his former church:
True to form, Barack Obama’s explanation yesterday of his reasons for leaving Trinity Church are a model of double-talk....
The Trinity cast of characters and Obama’s reaction to them have been more revealing than more a dozen-plus debates, all the speeches, and just about anything that has happened in over a year of campaigning. It might be even more revealing if the media would take their role seriously and press Obama on some of these obvious points. But Obama, however inadvertently, has done a fairly good job of letting us know how he makes both political and moral judgments. And that is perhaps the most important thing to know about a potential President.
CNN reports the Senator Edward Kennedy will undergo brain surgery today to remove a malignant growth in Kennedy's left parietal lobe:
Sen. Edward Kennedy announced Monday he will undergo surgery to treat a malignant brain tumor.
"Over the past several days, Vicki and I, along with my outstanding team of doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital, have consulted with experts from around the country and have decided that the best course of action for my brain tumor is targeted surgery followed by chemotherapy and radiation," the senator said in a statement.
"This morning, I will be undergoing surgery with Dr. Allan Friedman at Duke University Medical Center and expect to remain there to recuperate for approximately one week.
"Shortly thereafter, I will start radiation treatments at Massachusetts General Hospital and begin chemotherapy. After completing treatment, I look forward to returning to the United States Senate and to doing everything I can to help elect Barack Obama as our next president."
Duke University Medical Center is in Durham, North Carolina.
Friedman is an internationally recognized tumor and vascular neurosurgeon, according to the Duke medical center Web site. He is responsible for over 90 percent of all tumor removals and biopsies conducted at Duke, the Web site says.
Aides said Kennedy would be going into surgery around 9 a.m. ET and the surgery would last four to six hours.
Treatment will include surgery and highly focused radiation and chemotherapy, they said.
The 76-year-old Democrat, who has represented Massachusetts in the U.S. Senate since his election in 1962, suffered a seizure on May 17 while walking two of his dogs at his home in Hyannisport, Massachusetts.
Kennedy's doctors said a few days later that preliminary results from a brain biopsy showed that a tumor in the left parietal lobe was responsible for the seizure.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent, who is also a neurosurgeon, said a tumor in that area of the brain could affect the senator's ability to speak and understand speech, as well as the strength on the right side of his body.
Gupta said such tumors don't usually metastasize or spread to other parts of the body.
"What they do do -- and I think that's a concern to people -- is that they grow, and sometimes they invade other normal parts of the brain. That is the big concern here," he said.
My thoughts and prayers got out to the Kennedy family
Robert Scheer has an essay up today, at the Los Angeles Times, criticizing trends in military spending throughout the post-9/11 period. As many readers may recognize, Scheer is a former new-left '60s radical who has been a vocal critic of American foreign policy throughout the Bush era.
Scheer rails away at increases in gross defense spending, and throws in figures from other federal bureaucratic agencies to inflate his urgency ("... other federal budget expenditures for homeland security, nuclear weapons and so-called black budget -- or covert -- operations).
"Black budget"? It's always some conspiracy for those on the hard left - and this is certainly par for Scheer, who remains a central member of the contemporary radical establishment in academe and journalism.
But check out FrontPageMag's analysis of Scheer's background, from an earlier episode of attacks on the war, when war opponents were more likely smear the Bush administration for alleged "fascist imperialism":
Scheer began his career with a 1961 book defending Fidel Castro and was the Cuban dictator’s chosen publisher of Ché Guevara’s diaries. Scheer’s history of support for Communist revolutionaries (not nationalists or pragmatists) stretches back 40 years and began with his Cuban romance. Cuba, of course, is the exemplar of Communism’s imperial ambitions – the very ambitions that Scheer pretends don’t exist. In 1963, Castro sent 22 tanks and more than 100 Cuban troops to the Algerian National Liberation Front led by Ahmed ben Bella, ultimately giving two billion francs to the Arab Marxists. Ché Guevara famously called for radicals to “create two, three…many Vietnams” – the title also of a book by Ché wannabe Tom Hayden – and died trying to launch one in Bolivia. This martyrdom inspired Ho Chi Minh's followers to host Raul Castro shortly after the Fall of Saigon.
Castro reached his imperial apex when he sent 50,000 troops to aid the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola in its efforts to foist Leninism in the former colonial nation. Cuban troops fought in the Congo well into the Reagan administration and Fidel sent aid to the brutal “Red Rule” of Ethiopia’s Communists, architects of one of the worst politically devised famines in world history. Castro’s efforts to build an airport for Soviet bombers in Grenada provoked Ronald Reagan to take defensive military action. The Sandinista dictators were his personal protégés, trained in Havana to spread Marxist police states throughout Central America. The trainers of Nicaragua’s secret police were Cubans loaned by Castro for that very purpose.
So Scheer is well aware that Communism was a messianic creed and an imperialist enterprise and one that the North Vietnamese Communists shared. But acknowledging this would prevent him from writing yet another column (he has written them before) on how it would be good thing for America to lose its wars with totalitarian enemies. But this is the very column that Scheer has been writing for the last three years about America’s war against the Islamic totalitarians in Iraq – another nation in which French self-interest left the United States to take care of a murderous autocrat they kept in power. Plus ça change....
As Captain Ed has argued regarding the left's relentless denialism on the war:
The defeatists have been exposed. They cannot run, but they can keep spinning. Even their colleagues in the media have begun to notice the good news, however, and the facade of defeat has begun its inevitable collapse.
Because war opponents no longer have any credible attack on the Iraq deployment in either the military or political dimensions, they've shifted to the economic and human costs of the mission (including making U.S. troops out as victims of the Bush administration's "war machine").
Surprise, surprise. Having failed to puncture General Petraeus’s story about great improvements on the ground in Iraq, liberals are now saying the cost of the Iraq war has somehow undermined the economy — even caused the current slowdown. What complete nonsense....
What is the cost of freedom? While the Left refuses to acknowledge it, the U.S. homeland has not been attacked since September 11. Right there is a big economic plus. Since President Bush went on the offensive and took the battle to Iraq, al Qaeda and other extremist terrorist groups have been utterly routed by U.S. forces. But in tying the jihadists down on their home turf, and keeping them from mounting another coordinated attack on the U.S., our economy has benefited incalculably.
Then again, the anti-war forces might want to recall John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address, in which he called on Americans to “Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to ensure the survival and the success of liberty.”
Do these folks actually think 1 percent of GDP is too large a price, too heavy a burden? I sure hope not.
Well, yes, 1 percent of GDP is too much for war opponents, but the argument's not compelling - indeed, it's mostly a rehash of old Marxist talking points from earlier eras in the history of anti-American radicalism.
Combat fatalities for U.S. service personnel in Iraq are down for the month of May, the New York Times reports:
American casualties dropped in May to their lowest monthly level — 19 — since the invasion in 2003, the United States military said Sunday, though officials said they were reluctant to highlight the number as a milestone.
There have been troughs in American casualty rates before, only to be followed by rising numbers of fatalities. Just on Sunday, one American soldier was killed by a roadside bomb in Baghdad. The military has instead focused on falling rates of enemy attacks, among other indicators, as a measure of improving security.
Even amid the news of declining deaths, efforts to negotiate a long-term security pact that would set out how long American forces stay in Iraq suffered a setback on Sunday when the Iraqi government criticized proposals from American negotiators and vowed to reject any deal that violates Iraqi sovereignty.
Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has been under political pressure to resist some American demands. Street protesters loyal to the radical Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr, for example, burned American flags on Friday to oppose the deal, and Mr. Sadr promised that his followers would stage regular protests through the summer.
The pact, called the Status of Forces Agreement, would address the future of American bases in Iraq, immunity for American soldiers and security contractors, the power of American troops to detain Iraqis and conduct military operations, and control of Iraqi airspace. A United Nations resolution that authorizes the presence of American troops in Iraq expires in December, and the world body is not expected to take the issue up again — leaving it to the United States and Iraq to work out between them.
Along with Mr. Sadr, the main Shiite political parties in Mr. Maliki’s government have come out against key elements of the proposed agreement sought by the Americans. Kurds support a strong American military presence, and some Sunni Arab politicians support the pact because they see the United States military as a bulwark against the rising power of the Shiite majority in Iraq.
“The Iraqi side has a vision and a draft different from the American vision and American draft,” the Iraqi government spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, said in a statement. “The Iraqi government is focusing on preserving the complete sovereignty of Iraqi land, Iraqi sky and Iraqi water.”
Iraq’s foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, meeting with his French counterpart, Bernard Kouchner, in Iraq on Sunday, said the government would study agreements in Germany, Japan and Turkey allowing American bases in these countries. “Negotiations will continue,” said Mr. Zebari, a Kurd.
Mr. Kouchner, who said earlier that France would look to the future in cooperating with the Iraqi government though it had opposed the American -led invasion, used the visit to praise security gains in Iraq, saying he had noticed “huge improvements.”
Earlier this month, the American military released statistics showing that overall attacks had dropped to their lowest level over a one-week period since March 2004, before the Sunni uprising flared in western Iraq.
The 19 American deaths in May were a steep drop from the 52 fatalities the previous month, when the American military was supporting an Iraqi Army operation to quell an uprising in the Sadr City district of Baghdad.
Of the 19 soldiers who died in May, 14 were listed as killed in action, four were non-combat deaths and one died in the United States after being wounded in combat in Iraq.
The United States lost the highest number of soldiers in a single month in November 2004, when 137 American service members were killed, coinciding with the Marine assault of the western city of Falluja, according to icasualties.org, a group that tracks American deaths in the war.
Notice how the Times hedges the positive news with the dire tone on Iraqi political progess.
Women often can be heard adopting the passive-aggressive victim posture, and bitching about how easy and good men have it in life. Fortunately, there are plenty of wise women out there who appreciate how tough it is for a boy child to become a man: so tough that many never do it.
Let's bring some politics into this, just for fun. McCain is the Retrosexual: he knows guns, wouldn't back away from a fight and can use his fists, bait a hook, and can mess with an old Chevy carburetor. Obama: pure Metrosexual, with clean nails, probably never used a chain saw or shot a handgun in his life, and probably hires illegal Mexicans to do his gardening. "I'll have a chardonnay spritzer, please, when you have a chance." A classic "pretty boy," like John Kerry would have been had he been handsome.
Photo: Atticus Finch, a portrait of a real man [...]
I like my nails clean, but I'm no stranger to handguns, shotguns, or cleaning out the pigsty down on the farm.
As for the retro-metro divide, I like McCain: He's a national greatness conservative, and we could use a little more of that in this day an age.
Don't forget to check the Daily Mail article, here. I'll have more later!
Voters today in Puerto Rico will allocate another 55 delagates toward the Democratic presidential nomination. For all the appearance of a likely Barack Obama candidacy this fall, there's little certainty as to the party's next steps.
The big drama now facing the Democratic Party in the presidential contest is how, when and even whether Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton will depart the race.
The contest is coming to a close as Puerto Rico votes on Sunday and Montana and South Dakota on Tuesday, finishing a process that began five months ago in Iowa. Even if those results do not put Senator Barack Obama over the top, aides to both Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton said they expected enough superdelegates to rally behind Mr. Obama in the 48 hours after the final primaries to allow him to proclaim himself the nominee.
In many ways, Mr. Obama is wheezing across the finish line after making a strong start: He has won only 6 of the 13 Democratic contests held since March 4, drawing 6.1 million votes, compared with 6.6 million for Mrs. Clinton.
Mrs. Clinton has kept her counsel about what she might do to draw her campaign to a close. But when the rules committee of the Democratic Party divided up delegates from Michigan and Florida on Saturday night, Harold Ickes, a committee member and Clinton adviser, said she was reserving the right to contest the decision into the summer.
Still, despite the fireworks, Mrs. Clinton’s associates said she seemed to have come to terms over the last week with the near certainty that she would not win the nomination, even as she continued to assert, with what one associate described as subdued resignation, that the Democrats are making a mistake in sending Mr. Obama up against Senator John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee.
Her associates said the most likely outcome was that she would end her bid with a speech, probably back home in New York, in which she would endorse Mr. Obama. Mrs. Clinton herself suggested on Friday that the contest would end sometime next week.
But that is not a certainty; Mr. Obama’s announcement on Saturday that he would leave his church was just another reminder of how events continue to unfold in the race. She has signaled her ambivalence about the outcome, continuing to urge superdelegates to keep an open mind and consider, for example, the number of popular votes she has won. Gov. Phil Bredesen of Tennessee, a superdelegate who has been at the forefront of calling for uncommitted Democrats to make a choice soon after the last vote, said in an interview that Mrs. Clinton called him last week and urged him to “keep an open mind until the convention.”
Assuming Mr. Obama reaches the number of delegates and superdelegates he needs to secure the nomination in the coming week, Mrs. Clinton will be faced with three options, associates said: to suspend her campaign and endorse Mr. Obama; to suspend her campaign without making an endorsement; or to press the fight through the convention. Several of Mrs. Clinton’s associates said it was unlikely she would fight through the convention, given the potential damage it would do to her standing in the party, which is increasingly eager to unify and turn to the battle against Mr. McCain.
Mrs. Clinton would almost surely face the defection of some of her highest-profile supporters, as well as some members of her staff. She would no doubt also face anger from Democratic leaders.
The drama was high at yesterday's DNC bylaws committee meeting:
These "greatest hits" compilations are completely arbitrary, but they can still be fun. The #1 guitar song is Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode," so let's let it roll:
"If you want to play rock & roll," Joe Perry told Rolling Stone in 2004, "you have to start here." Recorded 50 years ago, on January 6th, 1958, at the Chess Records studio in Chicago, Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" was the first great record about the joys and rewards of playing rock & roll guitar. It also has the single greatest rock & roll intro: a thrilling blast of high twang driven by Berry's spearing notes, followed by a rhythm part that translates a boogie-woogie piano riff for the guitar. "He could play the guitar just like a-ringing a bell," Berry sings in the first verse — a perfect description of his sound and the reverberations still running through every style of rock guitar, from the Beatles and the Stones on down. "It was beautiful, effortless, and his timing was perfection," Keith Richards has said of Berry's playing. "He is rhythm man supreme." Berry wrote often about rock & roll and why it's good for you — "Roll Over Beethoven" in 1956, "Rock and Roll Music" in '57 — but never better than in "Johnny B. Goode," a true story about how playing music on a guitar can change your life forever.
I've actually been mulling the question of history's greatest rock-and-roll hits, especially guitar anthems, since I've been writing my "lightening up" series.
It turn's out that #7 on the list is "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," one of the initial songs I wrote about here.
Not included among the "100 greatest songs" are any of Mick Ronson's power hits when he was David Bowie's sideman in the early 1970s. I've been planning a couple of posts on Bowie soon, but I'm not the only one who took exception to Ronson's exclusion:
OK, let me get this straight. No Mick Ronson, like "Moonage Daydream." A guy who did so many unbelivable things with the guitar...
The comment thread's got a few more folks getting much more animated.
The issues's also got interviews with guitar heroes like Jimmy Page and Eddie Van Halen. Here's Van Halen on some of the classic bands, like the Kinks:
I just like songs. I don't mean to sound like a prick or nothin', but I've never really been that much of a fan of bands outside of Cream. And I don't really listen to anything nowadays. The last record I might've bought was Peter Gabriel's So. With Cream, I was more a fan of their interaction live. You know, they were an example of "What's the difference between jazz and rock & roll? We just play louder." That's all. We get 12 notes. Do what the f**k you want with 'em, you know.
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