Thursday, January 17, 2008


Teflon diplomacy

On Tuesday, Condi made an "unscheduled visit" to Iraq -- a "detour" that tore her away from the Riyadh horse-trading session -- to praise a new Iraqi law, which she described as forward progress toward national reconciliation. We can believe her because why?

First, Condi is speaking. Her "mushroom cloud" tendency toward hyperbole begs scrutiny of her every word. Second, the lack of political progress in Iraq undermines the Surge™ and Bubble Boy can't tolerate bad news. When an Iraqi opportunity arose -- the parliament passed a new law, yippee! -- Condi flew to the rescue to offer a glowing review. Typical lecondel, her trip was an exercise in teflon diplomacy, espousing unrealistic optimism that won't stick, denying dire consequences of the conflicts on the verge of igniting into renewed sectarian strife.

Since my B.S. meter cracked long ago from one too many WH lies, everything this administration says and does falls by default into one of two categories: Con Jobs or ITMFA. Reading Wednesday's Washington Post and the NYTimes accounts confirmed my cynicism. Each reported on Rice's remarks, the new law, and added interesting tidbits unique to their respective articles.

Beginning with the Washington Post (with emphasis):

In a 20-minute news conference in the heavily fortified Green Zone, Rice said the recent passage of a law intended to make it easier for former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party to return to civil service jobs would encourage Iraqi unity despite its potential shortcomings.

"This law, the 'accountability and justice law,' is clearly a step forward for national reconciliation," she said. "It is clearly a step forward for healing the wounds of the past."
Clearly, it is not.

[Keep reading... more after the jump.]
The law seeks to address the Bush administration's controversial decision in 2003 to force most Baath Party members, who were largely Sunni Muslims, out of government jobs. The decree helped give rise to the Sunni insurgency that continues to this day.

Some Shiite and Sunni lawmakers said the law would allow thousands of former low-level Baath officials to return to their government jobs. But critics, mostly hard-line Sunni lawmakers, say the measure could actually force out some former Baathists still working in the government.
The NYTimes offered more details and reactions to the new law. And they ain't so good (with emphasis).
...the new law has loopholes that some critics have said may ultimately make it more restrictive than the old one. Although Ms. Rice acknowledged that the new measure remained controversial, she praised it as an example of Iraq’s emerging democracy.

“I don’t know of any law that has ever been passed that is everything that everybody wants,” she said. “That’s the nature of democracy. The law will be more than some people wanted. It will be less than some people wanted. That’s the nature of democratic compromise.”

Some leaders said the law would give more jobs to ex-party members, while providing purged Baathists with pensions, which the old process did not do. But some hard-line Shiite politicians who supported the law, and minority Sunni political party members who did not, agreed that the legislation was even more restrictive than the original process, and that it would be used to justify further purges.

One clause prohibits former Baathists from working in several of Iraq’s most important ministries, including Foreign, Interior and Defense, despite American plans to integrate more Sunni Arabs into Iraq’s security forces. Critics of the law said it could have the opposite of its intended effect, and eventually rekindle sectarian bloodshed after the current lull in violence.
Unbelievable. Both Shiites and Sunnis concur that the new law is worse than the old version that sparked the insurgency. But Condi? Her teflon diplomatic reflex shrugged off the negatives in favor of platitudes, smiles, photo ops, and enthusiastic attaboys. Shouldering the tough work needed to achieve sustained détente -- not her mission.

Promoting the success of Bush's Surge™ and manufacturing good news out of Iraq is Condi's Job One, an endeavor the mainstream press readily undertakes. The Iraqi government accomplished something political. Oh, call a press conference, start spreading the news, ignore the dark clouds breaking the horizon, and keep the message upbeat. If bad stuff happens -- and it probably will -- the Administration will move the goal posts and stall for time. Meanwhile, Bush can count on Rice to spread happy talk, words rolling off the lecondeling tongue like water ricocheting off a duck's ass.

Google News headlines about Condi in Iraq

Observe the following lecondeling spin for the sheer audacity of its robotic Bushie loyalist script. From the WaPo article:
"When I hear that the surge was to give the Iraqi people a chance for political reconciliation, I say that's absolutely right," Rice said, referring to last year's U.S. troop buildup. "And while it hasn't always moved as fast as some of us sitting in Washington would like, it has certainly moved."
Like Cheney's bowels after a bagel binge. Now read Bush's remarks from the NYTimes:
“A political system evolves and grows,” he said. “It grows when people have confidence. It grows when the grass roots begins to agitate for change. It grows when there’s alternatives. There’s competition emerging.”
Is "competition" George's quaint term for "purge"?

The NYTimes article also delved into "a national oil revenue sharing law and an agreement on the contested northern city of Kirkuk," added cause for worry. Snip:
On Sunday, a broad swath of sectarian, ethnic and secular parties formed a coalition to push for greater central controls on regional hydrocarbon resources and to set aside a planned popular referendum on the status of Kirkuk, an oil-rich city that Iraq’s powerful Kurdish alliance regards as part of the semiautonomous region of Kurdistan.

The coalition pits nationalist interests against the Kurdish and Shiite parties, including the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council, which have pushed for more regional power. Competing Kurdish and Arab claims for Kirkuk, which remains among Iraq’s most troubled areas, remain a particularly delicate problem, which American officials have compared to a ticking time bomb.
I don't know who the "American officials" are but Condi "clearly" avoided the controversy. A happy face applied to her diplomatic excursion, she willfully deceives us (and herself as role of Bush enabler) by negating the downside of the volatile situation in Iraq.

The WaPo report ends with a curious episode -- a raging fire required an Iraqi oil refinery "shutdown." A military spokesman disavowed that the fire ignited due to "coalition overflight" contrary to what "Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani suggested... ...An engineer at the refinery said employees suspected that followers of anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr were behind" the inferno burning at the facility "near the southern oil-rich city of Basra."

An investigation has commenced but I doubt we will hear much about it. The investment in "the success" of the Surge™ and our Big Media shills won't bother most of us with full details. The incident could simply drown in the hum of progress in Iraq and Condi's refrain, "clearly a step forward."




There's more: "Teflon diplomacy" >>

Monday, December 3, 2007


None Dare Call It Art


Tonight I thought we might all benefit by visiting an art gallery. If you are in New York any time soon you should visit the New York Public Library's main Fifth Ave. branch. It has put up mugshots of several well known administration figures. The Daily News has a slide show. In the alternative, the AP has a video story.



UnitedOffensiveIII's "liner" notes after the break.




Mug shots' of Bush, Cheney featured in library exhibit

The New York Public Library is displaying an unusual set of photographs: images of Bush administration officials doctored to make them look like police mug shots.

The half dozen pictures were created by two Brooklyn artists, Nora Ligorano and Marshall Reese, as part of a privately financed exhibit called "Line Up" in the landmarked public space on Fifth Avenue.

Also in the mug shot gallery are images of Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, former Bush adviser Karl Rove, former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

The dates on each image match days when each official spoke about Iraq in ways the artists consider criminal - with sound clips of them speaking, along with a camera flash going off and a prison door closing.

Some have criticized the library for displaying political satire in an institution that receives public funding.

Matthew Walter, spokesman for the New York Republican State Committee, said: "It is simply inappropriate to have political attack in the form of egregious doctored photographs of the president and other high-ranking officials who have dedicated their lives to public service in a taxpayer-funded building frequented by schoolchildren and the general public."

The library said the exhibition "has no political agenda."

The photographs are part of a larger exhibit called "Multiple Interpretations: Contemporary Prints in Portfolio at the New York Public Library," which will be up through Jan. 27.

The library has a long tradition of collecting political satire and caricature, library spokesman Herb Shaer said Friday.

"It's the mission of the library to document what's happening in the culture, and this is an artist's response to what's happening to the world around them," he said.






There's more: "None Dare Call It Art" >>

Wednesday, July 25, 2007


Didn't FDR and Truman Talk To Stalin? Didn't Nixon Talk To Mao?

This morning M.J. Rosenberg makes a point that is so obvious, it is profound. We have been so long under the yoke of foreign policy incompetence we forget

A President isn't likely to meet any foreign leader (thug or not) if he or she did not perceive that doing so is in the national interest.
He notes further that
FDR met with Stalin and Nixon with Mao who, between them, killed more innocent people than anyone in history (actually, each dictator alone might have done that). Neither President met with their evil counterpart as a favor to the latter but to advance national interests.
Making her argument the way Hillary does seems to imply that a presidential meeting with a foreign head of state is some kind of reward for good behavior. That is exactly what George Bush and Condi Rice think.

Of course, it should not be surprising that the foreign policy views of George Bush and Hillary Clinton as to when a president should meet with a foreign leader are in harmony. After all both Condi Rice and Madeleine Albright were shaped by their relationships with Josef Korbel -- Madeleine's father and Condi's mentor. I need to read Korbel's books to find out for sure. I do know one thing, yesterday Hillary made Madeleine available to explain just why Obama is naive. I guess Condi was busy.

After 16 years maybe we need some new ideas about when to use Presidential diplomacy?




There's more: "Didn't FDR and Truman Talk To Stalin? Didn't Nixon Talk To Mao?" >>

Sunday, May 20, 2007


John Ashcroft and Condi Rice pre-9/11

I was mucking around trying to find comments made by John Ashcroft about civil liberties (all I could find were a couple of rants at Wash U) when I ran across this little comedy routine. The topic, the run up to 9/11, just isn't funny. It does contain a forgotten gem concerning John Ashcroft's personal priorities.



As I have said before, for John Ashcroft to object the Bush administration must have been up to something really bad.




There's more: "John Ashcroft and Condi Rice pre-9/11" >>

Friday, May 4, 2007


Hu's in China

I thought it might be fun to lighten up after a long serious week. Pour yourself a stiff drink and go outside and enjoy the fresh air. Smoke 'em if you got 'em. Otherwise, just enjoy. The following is an oldie, but a goodie.




There's more: "Hu's in China" >>

Thursday, May 3, 2007


Rice Meets Syrian Foreign Minister.

Secretary of State Condi Rice met with Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem for thirty minutes today during an international conference on Iraq held in Egypt.

"The meeting was frank and constructive. We discussed the situation in Iraq and how to achieve stability," Moualem told reporters.

According to the Rueter's report "The meeting marks an abrupt change in the policy of U.S. President George W. Bush, who stopped contacts with Syria on the grounds that Damascus had not complied with U.S. demands."

Secretary Rice also exchanged pleasantries with Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki during lunch.

Thank you Madam Speaker for showing Condi how to do her job. Now if her boss would just follow your lead we might find our way safely out of Iraq.

Baby steps, Condi, baby steps. This diplomacy stuff is hard work, hard work, but you will get the hang of it. Maybe you ought to call your "big sister" Madeleine Albright. I am sure she can give you some pointers.

____________________

For those wondering about the Madleine Albright reference, Secretary Albright's father was Condi Rice's professor and mentor.




There's more: "Rice Meets Syrian Foreign Minister." >>

Sunday, April 29, 2007


Give That Gal A Medal For Creative Use Of The Internet

Over at firedoglake Christy Hardin Smith has posted something on this morning's Condi Rice Magical Sunday Morning Talking Head Tour called "So Much For That "Imminent Threat" Talking Point." The post focuses on deconstructing Condi's appearance on Stephanopoulis's talking head show this morning. Smith concludes it

Sucks when your political party becomes synonymous with political dirty tricks, lying, incompetence and failure, doesn't it, GOP bigwigs? But then again, what did you expect when you sold your party's soul for a few pieces of K Street silver and bought a fetid turdblossom in a poke with it? Chickens, meet roost.
What is wonderful about this post is that it is truly multimedia. It comes with its own extremely appropriate music video: "Little Lies" by Fleetwood Mac. Very creative. Probably violates Fleetwood Mac's copyright, but I am willing to argue "fair use." Check it out if you haven't seen it.

Now if we could talk the Sunday morning talking head shows into using music videos in the background.




There's more: "Give That Gal A Medal For Creative Use Of The Internet" >>