Saturday, January 30, 2010

Rule of law


The torture issue is not going away. But the Obama administration still wants it to.

It is the responsibility of the federal government to enforce the laws of the country, even when it's serving officials who commit the crimes. And the torture crimes committed by the Cheney-Bush administration.

Progressive in the US have noticed with chagrin that Britain is holding what is a barely-disguised cover-up inquiry over the beginning of the Iraq War. But even their method of sweeping under the rug the crime of launching an illegal war looks like aggressive investigation compared to how we now handle such crimes in the United States: Blair at the Iraq inquiry: No regrets Guardian editorial 01/30/10.

Hans Blix, who was extremely unfairly maligned by the neocons and assorted warmongers for reporting honestly about his findings on Iraq's non-nuclear "weapons of mass destruction" programs (which were non-existent, as was the alleged nuclear program), in Blair's blind faith in intelligence Guardian 01/28/10 how cynically Blair and his leaders in Washington used the weapons inspections to justify the 2003 invasion.

The story of the Iraq War and the torture issue are very connected, though the torture program had already begun with the Afghanistan War. The mobilization of fear after the 9/11 attacks - and the still unsolved anthrax attacks soon after - and the military mobilizations (physical and psychological) around the Afghanistan War, the Iraq War and the "global war on terror" were the justifications that the Cheney-Bush administration successfully used to initiate the torture program and massive domestic surveillance.

Serious crimes were committed by government officials. It was the responsibility of the Ashcroft, Gonzales and Mukasey Justice Departments to prosecute those crimes but they obviously did not. It is still the responsibility of Obama's Justice Department under Eric Holder to prosecute those crimes. But instead they have shielded the perpetrators.

Very discouraging news reports are now indicating a new cover-up by Holder's Justice Department, this one applying to the torture lawyers who provided the Mob-style legal justifications for the torture program: bmaz, OPR Report Altered To Cover Bush DOJ Malfeasance Emptywheel 01/29/10; Michael Isikoff and Daniel Klaidman, Justice Official Clears Bush Lawyers in Torture Memo Probe Newsweek 01/29/10.

The consequences of the torture policy are too far-reaching and too basic a violation of the rule of law for the issue to sink into the mists of government cover-up as the Obama administration clearly want them to. The administration shirked its duty in not pursuing prosecutions of torture perpetrators immediately. And it continues to do so.

And it's a dramatic symptom of the Fighting Gap between the Democrats and Republicans that the Democrats, instead of seizing the clear political advantage of discrediting the Republicans for their open embrace of official criminality, they ran the other way and happily perpetuate the official cover-up.

The Republicans, on the other hand, are willing to impeach a Democratic President over a sad love affair.

This may actually be most telling symptom of how dysfunctional the Democratic Party has become in responding to the needs of its constituents. If the Party is unwilling to take a stand on a basic question of the rule of law when there are obvious political advantages for doing so, what is really going on with the Democrats?

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Bobo and Honest Abe

Bobo Brooks, The Populist Addiction New York Times 01/25/10:

In fact, this country was built by anti-populists. It was built by people like Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln who rejected the idea that the national economy is fundamentally divided along class lines.
Abraham Lincoln, Annual Message to Congress 12/03/1861:

Labor is prior to and independent of capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration.
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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Obama: Jackson or Cleveland?

Jack Balkin hopes that Obama will become a Jacksonian Democratic President rather than a Clevelandian one. (As in Andrew Jackson and Grover Cleveland.) In Is Barack Obama a Preemptive President? Balkinization 01/27/10. Balkin makes a distinction between "reconstructive" Presidents like Jackson, Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan who in some important way redefined the framework of politics, and "preemptive" ones. A preemptive President, he explains, is one "who works within a political regime that is largely hostile to his aims, accepting its basic premises and making comparatively minor adjustments."

At the current moment, Balkin thinks Obama is looking awfully "preemptive":

There is still time, of course. Andrew Jackson did not become a truly reconstructive president until his second term in office. But one does not begin a reconstructive presidency by apologizing to one's political opponents and giving in. At the end of his first year, Obama seems to have responded to adversity by capitulation, and to opposition by throwing in the towel. [my emphasis]
Here's what he means by Obama's seeming "preemptive" approach at this point:

Obama has largely continued the construction of the national surveillance state and followed many of the anti-terrorism policies of the Bush Administration while eschewing only their worst features.

Domestically, Obama has effectively conceded that the Republican party's vision of the world is correct and that the greatest danger to American prosperity comes from increased government spending during a time of recession. Hence his proposed spending freeze on non-discretionary spending. This freeze is transparently a gimmick. But it is important because it suggests that Obama has chosen to accept Republican themes and play politics on Republican terms, even though his party controls the Presidency and both houses of Congress. Although he himself knows better, Obama has decided to adopt a public stance that is actually pre-Rooseveltian in framing how to deal with a severe recession.

Obama also seems, for now, to have accepted that his signature domestic initiative, health care reform, is going nowhere and will have to be put on the back burner.

This is not what reconstructive presidencies are made of. [my emphasis]
That a supposedly reformist Democratic President is adopting "public stance that is actually pre-Rooseveltian in framing how to deal with a severe recession" is a sign of the extent to which the Democratic Party has been captured by the neoliberal ideology of "free market" deregulation/tax cuts for the wealthy/cutting government's social functions. Otherwise known as Reaganism and Hooverism.

Don't get me wrong. I'm very confident that a McCain Presidency would have been worse in about every way imaginable. McCain would have probably been at this point with unemployment of 15% and climbing. But he would have successfully jammed through more massive tax cuts for the wealthy, put even fewer restrictions on the Wall Street giants bailed out with public funds, let General Motors be liquidated to destroy the auto workers union, and maybe started a war with Iran.

But I'm assuming that most voters, and certainly most Democratic voters, were hoping to have more at this point from an Obama Presidency than "at least he's better than John McCain".

A Grover Cleveland type Presidency, by the way, would be the sort that follows that conservative Democratic President's philosophy of government: Cleveland's philosophy of government was, "Though the people support the government; the government should not support the people." Or, in another of his versions of it, "while the people should patriotically and cheerfully ...support their Government its functions do not include the support of the people."

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Republican judicial activism in Citizens United

Law professor Dan Farber of UC-Berkeley notes of the Republican Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United that it represents a striking incidence of judicial activism (Of the corporations, by the corporations, and for the corporations?):

The Court’s decision in Citizens United was something of a foregone conclusion. Still, it was a bit breathtaking. The Court was obviously poised to strike down the latest Congressional restrictions on corporate political expenditures. But the Court went further and struck down even restrictions that had been upheld thirty years ago. Seldom has a majority been so eager to reach out, address a question that wasn’t presented by the parties and overrule a bevy of prior decisions. The term “judicial activism” is overused but seems entirely appropriate here.
I had to smile a bit at the professorial phrase "a bit breathtaking". That's little like "a little bit pregnant". Or the phrase that native German-speakers often use in English, "I'm freezing a little".

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Democrats freezing over?

Joan Walsh takes a look at Obama's proposed spending freeze on non-military programs in Dead wrong, or deeply cynical Salon 01/26/10. There's another possibility that suggests itself - floundering - but we'll have to wait a bit to see what they are really proposing. Joan links to various other reactions, including Paul Krugman's ("Right now, this looks like pure disaster."). And that of "R.A." at the British Economist blog:

I understand the arguments from supporters of the president that this is a poltical [sic] gambit, that it won't actually amount to much but a sound talking point and a tool with which to co-opt the president's moderate antagonists. What's the difference? Seriously. How does the president move from this to any important policy goal? What room does this leave him to deal with either the jobless recovery or the long-run budget deficit? [my emphasis]
Along with the Democrats' Fighting Gap is an ideology gap. Republicans' policy goals are generally helped by what even American economists call the "neoliberal" ideology of deregulation of business, freeing the wealthiest from the burden of paying taxes to support their country, free trade policy that guts American manufacturing and minimizing the social functions of government. But the Republicans mostly seem to be cynical enough to know what they are doing with that dogma. A lot of Democrats seem actually to believe it.

Which means that they try to couch even proposals like health care reform in terms that don't challenge the neoliberal "free market" dogma. Like by stressing cost control instead of access and quality in selling the program. Their commitment to deficit and debt reduction is the most self-destructive. Dick Cheney expressed the actual Republican attitude on that when he famously said "deficits don't matter", possibly the closest thing to true words that ever passed through his lips.

For Democrats to spotlight the deficit and debt right now the way the Obama administration is doing does nothing but undermine the Democrats' case for necessary spending and give support to the Republicans' long-term campaign to destroy Social Security and Medicare, which is mainly what the Republicans' hoopla over the deficit is about. Senate Minority Leader Growling Mitch McConnell was on Meet the Press this past weekend talking about the deficit and the idea of a deficit-reduction commission. He made it painfully clear that this supposedly critical deficit problem is certainly not something that should be solved by asking the wealthy to pay more taxes:

SEN. McCONNELL: Well, the first thing you do is you stop this job killing healthcare bill, and you don't pass the energy tax that passed the House earlier this year. Their prescription for new jobs is obviously higher taxes. Don't do that. You've got tax relief that was passed a number of years ago expiring next year. Don't raise taxes in the middle of a recession. Look, if I'm running a small business, David, and I'm trying to figure out what to do next year, I'd like to expand employment, but I'm looking at the potential for healthcare taxes, I'm looking at the potential of income taxes going up, dividend taxes going up, capital gains taxes going up. The cost of adding employees is bothering me. And then I see the administration rattling the markets on top of it. You know, if you sum up the first year, what this administration has done best is rattle the markets, advocate tax increases and run up deficits. That's not a very comforting message to business people looking at trying to expand employment.

MR. GREGORY: The president's also looking at the long-term fiscal health of the United States. He wants to put together a bipartisan commission that will look at the possibility of either tax increases or budget cuts or both, but long-term budget health. Will you support that?

SEN. McCONNELL: I think a spending commission is a good idea. I've been advocating it all year. We're going to have votes on several different forms of that in the, in this very next week in the Senate. Spending is the problem. I do worry that if we construct this commission in the wrong way, it will be kind of an indirect way to raise taxes. I've already indicated what I've said earlier today, that raising taxes in the middle of a recession's not a good idea. We don't want this to end up doing that. What we need is a spending reduction commission. Get spending down. [my emphasis]
On the same problem, White House Domestic Policy Adviser Valerie Jarrett played right in to alarmism over the deficit:

... the deficit is looming out of control ...

Let's, let's just remember where we were a year ago, David. We were losing 700,000 jobs a month. We were in the middle of the worst economic meltdown in our nation's history. Our financial system was on the brink of collapse. We had the largest federal deficit in our nation's history. [my emphasis]
And Gregory played a tape of Blue Dog Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh saying:

If you look at the independent voters who have bailed out on the Democratic Party in Virginia and New Jersey and now Massachusetts, they care about the economy, they think the healthcare bill was--went too far in some ways, and they care about spending and deficits. That's one thing we can correct, starting with the president's budget and starting with the State of the Union address this week. [my emphasis]
I would say there's little evidence that voters anywhere actually care about deficits as such. But in the absence of the Democrats providing an alternative narrative, voters and pundits will tend to fall back on the received wisdom that deficits are always and everywhere a problem. But exit polls rarely if ever indicate that concern over the federal budget deficit was actually a decisive issue in an election.

But the Democrats can't seem to let go of the idea that it will somehow show them to be virtuous to talk up the idea that the deficit is a big problem. So we're getting headlines like, "Obama endorses deficit task force". Not a good sign.

It's a good time for Jamie Galbraith's advice:

James Galbraith on How Government Deficits Saved Us and Are Still Needed FDL Seminal 12/01/09

Another Crash, Another Galbraith Bill Moyers Journal 10/30/09

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Monday, January 25, 2010

Refuting Jonah Goldberg's crackpot theory about fascism

Dave Neiwert, who has written extensively about Jonah Goldberg's crackpot book Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning (2007), a propaganda tract that argues the fascism and the National Socialist (Nazi) variety of it were leftwing political movements, organized an online symposium of academic experts on the topic at the History News Network that appears today.

Dave provides the Introduction, noting at the beginning that Goldberg himself declined to participate. As he explains, academic reviewers largely ignored it because in terms of its substance, it was a total crank work. But, as Dave explains:

And yet, here we are two years later, and it turns out that many people indeed have taken Goldberg’s book seriously. Not only was Liberal Fascism a national bestseller that to date reportedly has sold some sixty million copies worldwide, but its core thesis – that, "properly understood, fascism is not a phenomenon of the right at all. Instead, it is, and always has been, a phenomenon of the left” – has become widely accepted conventional wisdom among American conservatives, and has played a significant role in the national discourse. Along the way, it morphed into the claim that the agenda of Democratic liberals, and particularly President Obama, was an innately fascist attempt to impose a totalitarian state, something Goldberg himself only intimated in the book, though he later confirmed it in a National Review article. ...

Goldberg’s thesis has become the running theme for Glenn Beck’s wildly popular Fox News program, in which Beck regularly insists that Obama is secretly a radical fascist (or Marxist, or socialist, or Communist, depending on that day’s flavor), and that the progressive movement – dating back to Woodrow Wilson – not only is at the root of all the nation’s miseries, but represents a concerted effort to remake America as a totalitarian state. Beck has regularly equated fascism with progressivism, a claim central to Goldberg’s book. And indeed, Goldberg himself has appeared on Beck’s show numerous times to promote these claims.

Beck is hardly alone in this regard. At various times, such right-wing pundits as Rush Limbaugh (for whom the claim was actually old hat), Sean Hannity, and Michael Savage have promoted the “liberal fascism” thesis as well.
I generally try to avoid the term "fascism" in reference to present-day regimes and movements, just because it became a vague epithet long before Goldberg's book was published. And also because it's a difficult historical concept. Mussolini's party in Italy called itself the Fascist Party, so it's safe to say they were fascists. The Austrian "Standesstaat" regime of 1933-38, usually called "clerical-fascist" in English, was closely modeled on Mussolini's movement and governing. Franco's movement in Spain was often called fascist, though one of the leading experts in the field, Robert Paxton, didn't include it as one of the fascist regimes he describes in his main book on the subject, The Anatomy of Fascism. And Hitler's Nazi Party and government are also commonly called fascist. But among historians and political scientists, there is a dispute over whether that dictatorship was similar enough to that in Italy that it should be called fascist, or whether National Socialism/Nazism should be seen as a distinct form of dictatorship. I generally only use the term in relation to those historical movements and governments in Italy, Germany, Austria and Spain. And I usually call the Hitler regime "National Socialist"' "Nazi" is an abbreviation of "National Socialist".

Here's a sample of the analyses at HNN. Robert Paxton:

Jonah Goldberg knows that making the Progressives, Woodrow Wilson, Theodore Roosevelt and FDR the creators of an American fascism – indeed the only American fascism, for George Lincoln Rockwell and other overt American fascist or Nazi sympathizers are totally absent from this book – is a stretch, so he has created a new box: Liberal Fascism. The Progressives and their heirs who wanted to use government to rectify social and economic ills, and who, in Goldberg’s view, thereby created an American Fascism, acted with good intentions, rarely used violence, and had nothing to do with Auschwitz. Even so, they share an intellectual heredity and a set of common goals with the European fascists. So they go into the “Liberal Fascist” box.
Roger Griffin focuses on analyzing the pseudohistorical methodology Goldberg uses, e.g., when Goldberg argues, "Woodrow Wilson was the twentieth century's first fascist dictator". (!!) This is important, because obsessive footnoting and citing of authorities is ironically one characteristic of a lot of anti-intellectual rightwing propaganda:

[Goldberg's book] owes its success partly to masquerading as a serious work of academic analysis, one which mendaciously claims to unmask the conventional wisdom within the political and historical sciences on the subject of fascism as politically biased and conceptually confused. Its true purpose is to uncover subterranean (and, to the non-paranoid, wholly fictitious) links between contemporary U.S. Democrats and the values of the same Axis regimes the U.S. fought so heroically on D-Day and beyond to rid the world of genuinely fascist totalitarian regimes. [my emphasis]
Of all the essays in this collection, Griffin's has the most stuffy academic tone. But he makes some very good points, including a really usefull summary of the academic consensus (such as it is) within the last decade on defining fascism.

Griffin does use the silly Republican grammar of "Democrat politics" at one point in his essay. But he makes an interesting side remark about the Frankfurt School philosopher Herbert Marcuse:

The idea that the U.S. under FDR was a totalitarian society in this sense is another example of the distortion of language and history that permeates this book (Marcuse accused liberal society of being totalitarian but at least this was based on a consistent Marxist critique of capitalism).
Actually, Marcuse's analysis was also based on a Freudian psychoanalytic understanding of the increasing role of guilt and internal psychological repression that Freud observed in advanced 20th century societies.

Marcuse's essay collection Negations: Essays in Critical Theory (1973) includes a philosophical essay on the rejection of liberalism by the National Socialists, "The Struggle Against Liberalism in The Totalitarian View of The State". It originally appeared in German in 1934 as "Der Kampf gegen den Liberalismus in der totalitären Staatsauffassung" in the main Frankfurt School journal, the Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung.

Matthew Feldman also describes the pseudohistorical nature of Goldberg's propaganda tract. He gives this description of the conceptual hash with which Goldberg and his like-minded admirers operate:

Yet even [Mussolini's book] The Doctrine of Fascism would not be fascism in Goldberg's hands. For fascism is not fascism here. It is anything Goldberg wishes it to be; notably trends in modern American politics and culture that he clearly dislikes. ... this is certainly not a book for anyone attempting a better understanding of fascist ideology, although it may be a useful barometer of the so-called "culture wars" in the contemporary United States. At points, Liberal Fascism even admits as much; for example, "one of the main reasons I've written the book [is] to puncture the smug self-confidence that simply by virtue of being liberal one is also virtuous" (317-8). Indeed, the book's first paragraph already sets out the real antagonists in Goldberg's account, namely "[a]ngry liberals" and "besieged conservatives." Regrettably, his hostility better characterizes the rhetoric of ideological rivals like fascism and communism – radical right-wing and radical left-wing, respectively, despite Goldberg's sleight of hand – rather than one end of a democratic spectrum. And you certainly wouldn't know that fascists and communists fought it out on the streets and battlefields for very different ideological doctrines. Instead, reading Liberal Fascism, you might think they rather liked one another.
I would add that in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s, the Social Democrats also fought it out physically with the Nazis and other far-right groups allied with the Nazis, even though the Social Democrats (SPD) and the Communists never managed to cooperate actively in support of the Weimar Republic. The Catholic Center Party, on the other hand, which along with the SPD was one of the two core parties of the Weimar Republic, was severely handicapped in the early 1930s as street violence escalated because they didn't have their own party militia/fighting group/goon squad.

Chip Berlet:

Fascism, Nazism, Communism, the [Franklin] Roosevelt administration, and the modern Welfare State share degrees of government intervention in the economy. They are not equivalent, and there is no evidence that government planning leads to totalitarianism any more than drinking tea leads to opium addiction. This is a classic logical error.
Berlet also comments on the often under-estimated influence of the John Birch Society (JBS) on present-day Republican politics. The JBS is a virtual mother ship of bad ideas:

While working on an investigative article in the early 1980s, a harried Reagan White House switchboard operator mistook who I was and plugged me into the office of presidential adviser and ultra-conservative guru Morton Blackwell. We had a marvelous discussion about how important the John Birch Society literature was for training young conservatives; how he had shelves full of JBS material in his office; how he shared the JBS books with the White House Staff; and how he was trying to see if JBS and similar literature could be sent to U.S. embassy libraries around the world. Marginal ideas? Not.

Jonah Goldberg does not list the John Birch Society as a major source, but he should have, since his book is like a compendium of JBS articles published over the last fifty years. These ideas are now ubiquitous among right-wing populists in the Tea Party movement. Am I suggesting that Birchers, the Christian Right, and right-wing libertarians have taken over the Republican Party? Yes, although old-fashioned conservatives and political pragmatists are putting up a splendid fight for control of the Party. Do I think right-wing TV, radio, and print media are awash with right-wing conspiracy theories pioneered by the Birchers? Yes, that’s what my research shows. [my emphasis]
Berlet also adds an important cautions to liberals and progressives about assuming that anyone who attacks bankers or finance capital is a potential ally for progressive causes. Some of them are just anti-Semitic rightwingers.

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Sunday, January 24, 2010

The "Conan Obama" article

One channel of communication that is especially popular among Republicans that the Democrats don't use in the same way is the old-fashioned e-mail chain letter. But Peter Daou says this article by Hofstra political science professor David Michael Green: How to Squander the Presidency in One Year: Hey, Conan Obama: How About Now? Can You Hear Us Now? CommonDreams 01/22/10.

I can't help but sympathize with the opening sentence:

There's only one political party in the entire world that is so inept, cowardly and bungling that it could manage to simultaneously lick the boots of Wall Street bankers and then get blamed by the voters for being flaming revolutionary socialists.
But I don't really approve of this piece. It sounds like cynical concern-troll arguments to me. This kind of argument can give the one making it the satisfaction of washing their hands of any of the sins of the Obama administration. Purity is a good feeling.

But purity is more likely to be found in theology or meditation than in politics. The sociologist Barrington Moore, Jr., did a whole book on the dangers of purity in politics, Moral Purity and Persecution in History (2000). I have reservations about his main argument, especially his very superficial treatment of the concept in the Hebrew Bible. But he does have some very informative chapters on the French Revolution and the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre.

I'm not saying that David Michael Green is like French Queen Mother Katharina von Medici out to slaughter the Huguenots in 1572. If I had to guess from this article alone, I would say he's more likely a cynical hawkish Democrat in the process of becoming a cynical hawkish Republican. He sneers at Obama for not talking about the "war on terrorism" and echoes Republican and Pod Pundit complaints that Obama spent time mending fences with foreign countries alienated by the criminal, crackpot policies of his predecessor. Green even says, addressing Obama, "You're running around the world, apologizing for America everywhere you go!" That's a stock Limbaugh/FOXist charge and it's bunk.

He sneers at the idea of health care reform, again echoing the current Pod Pundit conventional wisdom that he should have been concentrating more on jobs than on this silly boring health care reform nonsense. He also at the same time blasts Obama for not being more effective on getting health care passed, buys into the stage-managed image that Obama was leaving the health care reform to Congress, and criticizes him for making deal with Big Pharma and the health insurance lobby over health care. He's throwing charges on the wall to see what sticks, in other words, without worrying too much about the factual details or whether the charges even make sense together.

And Green offers this dubious piece of authoritarian analysis, blasting Obama for not playing to it:

Americans, especially in times of crisis, want their daddy-president to pick a point on the horizon and lead them to it. Often - especially in the short term - they don't even care that much which point it is. They will happily follow a president whose policies they oppose if he will but lead. [my emphasis]
He accuses Obama of never naming enemies anywhere, which is an accurate enough charge as far as Obama's relationship to the Republican Wrecker Party goes. But, for better or worse, Obama has been very clear about naming The Terrorists and Afghan insurgents and Pakistani insurgents and the group in Yemen that calls itself "Al Qa'ida" and of course Bin Laden's Al Qa'ida as deadly enemies requiring a military budget as large as that of the whole rest of the world combined. In dealing with states like Iran and Venezuela, Obama's restraint in treating sometime adversaries as enemies is one of the most positive contributions he's made.

Sure, it makes me want to join a Trappist monastery or something when I hear, for instance, Senior White House Adviser Valarie Jarrett on Sunday's Meet the Press talking like anyone who doesn't echo the White House line in the same clone-like way she does is completely clueless about the world. But I'm not inclined to use a hodge-podge of attacks borrowed from all across the political spectrum to trash what credibility Obama and the Democrats have left - and I actually think they have a substantial amount left if they're willing to tap into it - in order to show how pure my political principles are.

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Gates visits Pakistan, Osama bin Laden takes credit for bungled Detroit bombing attempt

Robert Gates, Obama's Republican Secretary of Defense, has been visiting India and Pakistan, with the latter being less than thrilled with his performance as their guest. Meanwhile, a tape has surfaced of Osama Bin Laden claiming responsibility for the attempted Christmas bomb attack on a plane landing in Detroit.

Al Jazeera reports on the tape in Bin Laden warns US of more attacks 01/24/10, with an audio of the Arabic original itself. But I'm very skeptical of the extent to which Bin Laden's Al Qa'ida group exercises even that much direction over terrorist cells in Yemen or elsewhere. Given how pathetic the Detroit attempt was, it must be some kind of desperation that makes Bin Laden want to take any kind of credit for it. In any case, to talk about Al Qa'ida as a worldwide force of super-terrorists and a threat comparable to the nuclear-armed Soviet Union, which was the main justification for the Long War when we called it the Cold War, is nuts.

Juan Cole analyzes the Gates visit to Pakistan in Gates Strikes out In Pakistan;
Obama's AfPak Policies in Disarray
01/24/10. From Pakistan's point of view, the Afghanistan War is a sideshow to their long-running conflict with India over Kashmir. Gates also apparently slipped up and admitted the Xe/Blackwater mercenaries are performing military operations inside Pakistan. And some Pakistanis thought Gates was even giving approval to India to launch military operations against Pakistan - both countries are nuclear powers - in the even of another terrorist attack like that in Mumbai (Bombay) in 2008. Cole sums it up this way:

The message his mission inadvertently sent was that the US is now increasingly tilting to India and wants to put it in charge of Afghanistan security; that Pakistan is isolated; that he is pressuring Pakistan to take on further counter-insurgency operations against Taliban in the Northwest, which the country flatly lacks the resources to do; and that Pakistani conspiracy theories about Blackwater were perfectly correct and he had admitted it.
The central role that the Pakistan-India conflict plays is one of the major weaknesses of the US/NATO Afghanistan War approach. Both India and Pakistan view the Karzai government as pro-Indian. Pakistan's cooperation with NATO against the Taliban insurgent groups in Afghanistan will always be limited so long as they see the Kabul regime as an ally of India against Pakistan:

Gates had one strike against him, since he came to Pakistan from India. Moreover while in New Delhi he clearly was a traveling salesman for the US war materiel industries, who would like to pick up some of the $60 billion India is planning to spend on weapons in the next few years. During the Cold War, the US had mainly supplied Pakistan's military, and had been lukewarm to India, which Washington felt tilted toward Moscow. The current shift of US strategy to wooing India to offset growing Chinese power in Asia is taken by some Pakistanis as a demotion.

Then, he encouraged a greater Indian role in Afghanistan, including, according to the Times of London, possibly in training Afghan police. Pakistan considers Afghanistan its sphere of influence and the last thing it wants is a role for Indian security forces in training (and perhaps shaping the loyalty) of Afghan police. Germany is currently in charge of the police training program, but India is afraid that in the next few years NATO will depart, and that Pakistan will then redeploy its Taliban allies to capture the country for Islamabad's purposes. India is also concerned about significant Chinese investments, as in a big copper mine, in Afghanistan. So New Delhi is considering the police training mission. [my emphasis]
Cole describes Pakistan's recent military role in relation to Afghanistan this way:

To be fair, the Pakistani military committed tens of thousands of troops to these two campaigns, in Swat and South Waziristan, and is in fact attempting to garrison the captured areas so as to prevent the return of the Pakistani Taliban. In the past two years, the Pakistani army has lost over 2,000 soldiers in such fighting against Taliban in the Northwest, a little less than half the troops the US lost in its 6-year Iraq War.

The Pakistani military campaigns of the past year, however, have not targeted those radical groups most active in cross-border raids into Afghanistan-- the Quetta Shura of Mullah Omar's Old Taliban, the Haqqani Network of Siraj Haqqani in North Waziristan, or whatever cells exist in Pakistan of the largely Afghanistan-based Hizb-i Islami (Islamic Party) of Gulbadin Hikmatyar. Washington worries that the effectiveness of its own troop escalation in Afghanistan will be blunted if these three continue to have havens on the Pakistani side of the Durand Line. And, Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani worries that the US offensive in Afghanistan will push thousands radicals over the border into Pakistan, further destabilizing the country's northwest.
The Haqqani group and warlord Gulbadin Hikmatyar were both considered brave mujaheddin freedom fighters back in the days when the US and the Saudis were actively supporting the Islamic resistance to the Soviet occupation.

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