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CrisisPapers Donating Member (271 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 08:56 AM
Original message
Bush & Co.: Desperate Desperados
| Bernard Weiner |

Let's go behind the news and try to figure out what the Bushevik reactions to Lamont's victory and the liquid-bomb terror plot tell us about the current political situation in the U.S.

From where I sit, those reactions by Administration officials and their mass-media lapdogs make Bush&Co. look positively desperate, as if they are beginning, at last, to appreciate that they could lose big in November. They're firing the huge guns now in hopes of frightening away their enemies.

By suggesting that Ned Lamont and those who voted for him are somehow in the same league with al-Qaida -- as Cheney and Lieberman and Mehlman and others did -- clearly indicates that they're frightened enough to pull out all the stops, legit or not, no distinctions made. Karl Rove at his most Rovian.

Many of those who voted against Lieberman in Connecticut were moderates, some of whom even supported Bush in previous elections. A national poll the other day showed that nearly one in five of those who voted for Bush in 2004 now say they'll vote for a Democrat in November.

Nearly two-thirds of the American public now believes that the Bush Administration made a big mistake by invading and occupying Iraq. Those are the people who voted for Lamont. In effect, Bush and his fellow desperados are telling the majority of the American people that voting for an anti-war, pro-democracy candidate is akin to supporting terrorists.

HIGHLIGHT THEIR WORDS

If the Democrats possess any wisdom and cojones, they will leap on the fact that the Bush Administration thinks most Americans are treasonous, aiding and abetting the enemy. Let the GOP pay for that gross political miscalculation, with no letup. The Busheviks charge that anyone who disagrees with them is a witting or unwitting traitor. Let's see how the American people will like biting that big one.

MoveOn and the DNC should take those words from Cheney and Lieberman and Limbaugh and O'Reilly and the others and play them back in TV spots from now until November.

As for what Lieberman is really up to, if I were a gambler I'd place a small wager that Joe is a made man. He might well have been promised a Cabinet post or major judicial or diplomatic appointment by Rove and Bush as long as he stays in the race; reportedly, Rove said "the boss," meaning Bush, will do everything he can to make Lieberman's independent campaign a winning one. Of course, Lieberman also has been humiliated and wants his revenge so badly that he's willing to take down Lamont and the party and the country with him. Nice guy, Sore Loserman.

Lieberman has been carrying Bush&Co.'s water for years, and on many more issues than just the war. But it's the war that Rove and Cheney and Mehlman are focusing on. Why? The Republicans have little positive to run on, since virtually every thing they touch turns into either a disaster or a catastrophe -- and they've got that 800-lb. Iraqi negative that stands out just a tad to American voters. (As I write this, Bush, with a 33% approval rating, remains trapped with little more than the support of his fundamentalist base.)

ROVE'S NON-STOP BARRAGE

That Iraq negative has to be flipped into something positive. Despite the fact that there is no evidence that Bush&Co. have made Americans any more safe under their tenure (more likely, we're less safe), more citizens give higher marks to the Republicans on the terrorism issue than they do on the Iraq issue, where Democrats get the nod. Ergo, Iraq has to be folded into the war-on-terror, even though there were precious few, if any, terrorists in secular Iraq prior to the U.S. invasion and occupation.

So, from now until Election Day, it's going to be a non-stop barrage of "stop-'em-in-Baghdad-rather-than-in-America," as if that makes any sense whatsoever. The framing set-up: The terrorists who hit us on 9/11 and who wanted to hit us again five years later with their liquid-bombs on airplanes are part of the same army of "Islamic fascists" that we're battling in Iraq. That's it. That's the sole message.

Doesn't matter that it's not true, that nationalist insurgencies have lives and motivations all their own. The GOP will keep on pounding and pounding that message home. Their hope is that yet again they can bamboozle just enough former-Bush voters to stick with the Republicans. Then they will claim yet another victory, aided, as usual by Rove's patented dirty tricks and likely felonious fraud at the polling machines. That's why it's absolutely vital that all those who value electoral integrity take their election officials to court, if necessary, to get a fair and honest vote count in November.

A RUSHED ANNOUNCEMENT

Now we come to the U.K. terror plot. We don't know all the facts yet, but this alleged conspiracy seems to be genuine, possibly the "Big One" that has been expected since 2001. It's possible that the attack on the 10 or so airlines could have been activated relatively quickly -- perhaps to take place in a few weeks, on September 11.

The Brits, using solid police work and counter-terrorism intel -- as opposed to the Bush method of bombing and torture -- reportedly had these alleged terrorists under surveillance for more than a year.

How did it happen that they waited to pounce, and announce, one day after Lamont's breakthrough victory in Connecticut revealed for all to see that maybe the emperor didn't have any clothes on at all? It's too fishy by half.

Blair and Bush were in communication on this plot for days, perhaps much longer, before the arrests were announced. In other words, Bush and thus the GOP leadership had been given a heads-up by the Brits, which allowed them time to prepare their public position. On the day before the London announcement, Cheney (who rarely talks to the press) had a rare teleconference with select reporters to lay the foundations for the GOP spin that will be the party's main strategy in the run-up to November: fear and fright, our muscular policies will protect you, stay with us. Ken Mehlman, the GOP chief, made similar comments, along with various rightwing pundits and columnists.

The whole operation has got Karl Rove written all over it: an onslaught of carefully rolled-out denunciations of Democrats who they can suggest are allied with "Islamic fascists" because they don't support the President and his war-on-terrorism policies. ("You're either with us or with the terrorists," remember that one?)

MSNBC has reported that British police and intelligence officials felt rushed by Bush Administration insistence on making the arrests sooner than they wanted to. Since those under surveillance had not yet purchased airline tickets, and some hadn't even obtained their passports, the police and counter-terrorism honchos wanted more opportunity to gather evidence and track down possible contacts with other unknown conspirators.

But the Bush Administration -- worried about a possible "dry run," they claimed -- leaned on Blair to move immediately. And, wouldn't you know it, the result was that the news cycle for days afterward was dominated by liquid-bombs 24/7, while the disaster that is happening in Iraq and Lebanon, the behind-the-scenes planning for an attack on Iran and Lieberman's momentous defeat in Connecticut virtually disappeared from the news.

IRAQ CONFLATED WITH G.W.O.T.

The Bush Administration invented a non-existent Iraq/terror connection to bamboozle the Congress and American public in the rollup to the war in 2003 -- that Saddam Hussein was somehow tied in to the mass murders of 9/11. They are still doing it by conflating the war in Iraq with the "global war on terror." (Lest we forget, there were no terrorists to speak of in Iraq until the U.S. bombed and occupied that unfortunate country; Saddam's one major pro-terrorist sin, so far as I can determine, was to give $25K to Palestinian families whose children blew themselves up in Israel; this action certainly was not a threat by Iraq to invade its neighbors, and certainly was in no way a threat to the U.S.)

When 9/11 happened, Condoleeza Rice described the mass murders as an "opportunity" for the Administration to mobilize its forces to push its domestic and foreign agenda. Rice also views the destruction in Lebanon not as a tragedy but as an "opportunity" to shape a new Middle East order; it's just "birth pangs," she said. Now, the London plot provides the Busheviks with yet another "opportunity" to try to hang the "soft-on-terrorism" albatross around the necks of the Democrats, to keep them from taking back the House in November.

A White House official, who spoke on condition of not being named, was quoted about the liquid-bomb plot by Agence France Press: "Weeks before September 11th, this is going to play big," said the official, adding that some Democratic candidates won't "look as appealing" under the circumstances.

IT'S BARE-KNUCKLES TIME FOR DEMS

So how should the Democrats respond? And respond they must, or risk being "framed," in all uses of that term, as "weak on national security," or, worse yet, as apologists and aiders & abetters of terrorists, in short as traitors to America.

This is political hardball, and the Dems had better get their heavy hitters out there swinging away at the Republicans' desperate tactics. No whining, no complaining how unfair Cheney and the rest of the gang are. Just hit back hard, using the Busheviks' own words to demonstrate how the Bush Administration is harming our national security by flailing around the world in reckless military adventures (incompetently carried out as well) and by not doing what needs to be done to beef up security around our ports, airlines (freight still mostly unscreened), nuclear power facilities and chemical plants.

Believe it or not, the Bush Administration even took $6,000,000 away from new bomb-detection programs!

It's time for Democrats, progressives, Independents, Libertarians, moderate Republicans and others to unite openly to defeat this Republican crew in November. This may be the last good chance we get to take them down.

-- BW
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bluerum Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 09:15 AM
Response to Original message
1. Sowing fear, death and destruction is the mo .
Their knee jerk, hit back, kill'em all methodologies appeal to the basest of human emotions and fears. It is sickening to watch the leaders of the free world destroy so much.





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leveymg Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 10:10 AM
Response to Original message
2. How can one speak of a "thwarted" plot when police agents were an
Edited on Tue Aug-15-06 10:10 AM by leveymg
inherent part in leading the conspiracy from the very beginning?

That makes this terrorist conspiracy as much a conspiracy of state as it is a real terrorist plot.

Furthermore, the timing of the arrests, as this article makes clear, was chosen for political reasons. That is simply an abuse of the intelligence process, one that should result in the cancellation of the security clearances of those officials who interfered with the operation.
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Bernard Weiner Donating Member (22 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 10:48 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Bernard Weiner responds
This claim that police agents were "leading" the London bomb-plot conspiracy is most interesting, but I have seen no evidence or even surmise that this was so. It would be most helpful if you could supply some reliable websites or publications that have published such a charge. Thanks.
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leveymg Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 11:08 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. Hi, Bernard. The evidence is suggestive, but it's there.
Tell me what other conclusion is possible? This plot was penetrated and closely surveilled for more than a year. I find it inconceivable that there wasn't at least some element of agent provocateur in the management of this counter-terrorism operation. There always is, and that's the way it has been going back to the Czar's Okhrana and the Russian Social Revolutionaries. It's a subject I've been studying since long before 9/11.

Anyway, here you go:

http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/08/10/us.security/index.html
Agent infiltrated terror cell, U.S. says
Air travel in chaos after plot to bomb airliners exposed


Friday, August 11, 2006; Posted: 3:33 p.m. EDT (19:33 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Terrorists were in the "final stages" of a plot to simultaneously blow up as many as 10 jets leaving Britain for the U.S., sending the planes and thousands of passengers into the Atlantic Ocean, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Thursday.

British and Pakistani authorities teamed up to thwart the attacks, and 24 men were arrested in overnight raids in Britain, authorities said.

An undercover British agent infiltrated the group, giving the authorities intelligence on the alleged plan, several U.S. government officials said. (Watch as neighbors describe the dramatic arrests -- 2:18)

The men had not bought plane tickets, the officials said, but they were in the process of perusing the Internet to find flights to various cities that had similar departure times.

Two of the suspects recently traveled to Pakistan and later received money wired from there, senior U.S. government sources said. (Watch why the plot is 'suggestive' of al Qaeda -- 2:21)


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leveymg Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 11:12 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. More
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14278216/
Details emerge on alleged plot to bomb airliners

SNIP

U.S. officials say British investigators had the terror cell under close surveillance for several months, keeping the U.S. informed, then adding more specifics just within the past several days.

For the past several days, the FBI has feverishly looked for any potential ties to terrorists in the U.S., but has not found any.

“We literally in the last couple of weeks have had hundreds of FBI agents around the country tracking down every lead, and we have not found to date any plotters here in the United States,” FBI Director Robert Mueller told NBC.

SNIP

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leveymg Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 11:22 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. More: Juan Cole: The Pakistan Connection
I would expect that after the capture of one of the original planners in May 2005, Pakistani ISI was working inside the cell, and later one or more MI5/6 supervisory control agents brought in double-agents on the British side. - Mark

http://www.juancole.com/2006/08/pakistan-connection-pakistani-police.html
Friday, August 11, 2006

The Pakistan Connection

Pakistani police on Thursday arrested a number of UK Muslims within Pakistan who were also suspected of involvement in the "Liquid Bomb Threat."

British authorities say that they have been investigating the group behind the airplane bombing plot for "about a year." The Scotsman says that the investigation began in 2005.

US authorities were only told about some details two weeks ago, apparently. It may be that the British counter-terrorism community learned its lesson from the loose lips of the Bushies in summer of 2004. I argued then that from what we could tell from open sources, it seemed likely that the Bush administration played politics with information about a double agent in Pakistan who was helping monitor a London al-Qaeda cell. It seems likely that the election-year leak allowed budding terrorists like Mohammad Sadique Khan to escape closer scrutiny, and so permitted the 7/7/05 London subway bombings to go forward.

This time, the MI5 and MI6 and the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) may not have told Washington everything.

The Financial Times has an interesting observation I haven't seen elsewhere:


' British security officials suspected the innovative use of liquid explosives smuggled on board could have evaded airport detection devices. They said the method of attack, if used to blow up an aircraft over the ocean on a flight from the US to the UK, could potentially have been used repeatedly because its detection would have been all but impossible after the event.

One official said: “We were very lucky to have acquired the intelligence about the modus operandi of the attacks. If we hadn’t got the intelligence, they probably would have succeeded and there would have been little or no forensic evidence showing how they had done it. The modus operandi could have made waves of attacks feasible.”

British police had liaised closely with US law enforcement agencies for some time, although US officials said they learnt the intelligence pointed to threats against specific US airlines only in the past two weeks. '


So how did we find out about this plot, and the deadly mode of operation, which might otherwise have been so hard to detect? The investigation was kicked off by an arrest in Pakistan "last year." (AP says the arrest in Waziristan was "a few weeks ago", but I think AP is confusing the contribution of some recent arrests to the case with the initial capture of the key informant a year ago).

Most of the investigation was carried out in the UK, but the Pakistanis are said to have provided "an important clue."

AP says:


' A Pakistani intelligence official said an Islamic militant arrested near the Afghan-Pakistan border . . . provided a lead that played a role in ``unearthing the plot.''


So this capture takes place roughly June, 2005.


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Bernard Weiner Donating Member (22 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 01:01 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. Bernard Weiner response#2
All the news stories tell us is that apparently there was a planted informant inside or close to the plotters' cell. From this, you make the giant leap to that alleged informant being involved in "leading" the conspiracy. Sorry, can't go there, at least not until we learn more. You ask what other conclusion is possible? Here's one: The British authorities, having learned of this group a year ago, did what the Americans find difficult to do: infiltrated an informer into the group. He reported back what they were up to. That may be it.

You seem to want to believe that this person was an agent provocateur "leading" the group to carry out a massive attack using liquid bombs on airplanes, but my alternative scenario is just as believable as yours. I suggest that until more actual evidence is presented, either through official leaks or in the court proceedings to come, we hold off making quick judgements about what this alleged informant was up to.

Who knows? Over time, you may be proven correct. My guess is that no such evidence will emerge validating your theory, but, regardless, our cause is not served by making unsupported charges this early in a constantly unfolding story. The truth will out; patience.
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leveymg Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 03:23 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. Please see the extended debate on that subject at DKOS
in the string that follows my amended cross-post.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/8/15/131718/996

Thanks
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grasswire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 02:10 PM
Response to Original message
8. yep
".....This is political hardball, and the Dems had better get their heavy hitters out there swinging away at the Republicans' desperate tactics."

Which is precisely why I won't vote for someone who can be sucked into being "gentlemanly" by the RNC again. Gore fell for it. So did Kerry. So did Edwards.

No more. Look like Karl Malden, act like Harry Truman. Give 'em hell.
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