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Democracy Hypocrisy: Abdullah at the Ranch

The Guardian reported on Saturday that “[d]ozens of Saudi men caught dancing and ‘behaving like women’ at a party have been sentenced to a total of 14,200 lashes, after a trial held behind closed doors and without defence lawyers.”

The very next day, in the UK Independent, we learned that the Saudi government had executed six men “without sentence,” bringing “the total [number of executions] so far this year to 40, more than the country’s 33 executions in the whole of 2004.”

And today, respected Saudi Arabia analyst John Bradley writes that the Saudi regime…

…is not giving up power or changing its historically repressive domestic policies in the face of opposition, but – more predictably – closing ranks and reasserting its totalitarian rule. Emboldened by its success in the domestic “war on terror”, which got under way only after their rule was directly threatened, the al-Saud is flexing its other muscles so that the masses, too, are left in no doubt that it is back in total control.

The Bush administration’s reaction: a call for the Saudis to commit to basic human rights principles? A stern diplomatic admonition?

How about a prized invitation to President Bush’s Texas ranch for Saudi crown prince Abdullah Ibn Abdul Aziz.

Politics

Someone Please Educate Margaret Spellings

Our new education secretary Margaret Spellings, talking up some of the“revolutionary principles” of No Child Left Behind:

The second principle: respect for local control. That’s nothing new–it’s from the United States Constitution. No Child Left Behind was designed not to dictate processes, but to promote innovation and improve results for kids.

Here’s what Virginia’s Republican controlled House of Delegates had to say about the bill. The language is from a resolution calling on Congress to exempt the state from No Child Left Behind last year:

[No Child Left Behind]represents the most sweeping intrusions into state and local control of education in the history of the United States. [It will cost] literally millions of dollars that Virginia does not have.”

The resolution passed 98-1.

Politics

Throwing Stones From Glass Houses

“U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld issued a terse warning to Iraq’s new leaders on Tuesday, urging them to avoid…cronyism that could lead to corruption and sap confidence in government.” — Financial Times, 4/11/05

VERSUS

“President Bush has nominated Vice President Cheney’s son-in-law [lobbyist Philip Perry] to be the general counsel of the Department of Homeland Security.” — Washington Post, 4/1/05

Security

Rumsfeld’s Run Around Negroponte

John Negroponte, President Bush’s choice to become the first director of national intelligence, faces his confirmation hearings today. Thanks to Donald Rumsfeld, his new job could be compromised before he even takes office.

Studies, investigations and commissions looking at the 9/11 attacks and the “dead wrong” information about WMD in Iraq all discovered the same thing: a serious lack of coordination between intelligence agencies. However, Donald Rumsfeld’s Defense Department, which wants to keep its control of 80 percent of the estimated $40 billion spent on intelligence in the U.S., is already trying to pull the rug out from under the new director of national intelligence. (The most recent study into intel failures even warned Negroponte that the Defense Department would try to “run around — or over” him.)

a) Donald Rumsfeld fought against the very creation of the position. Mr. Rumsfeld told the 9/11 Commission an intelligence czar would do the nation “a great disservice” by creating reliance on a single, centralized source of information.

b) Earlier this year, the Washington Post reported the Pentagon has been secretly operating a clandestine espionage branch for the past two years after reinterpreting U.S. law to place more power directly in the hands of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. The group, called the Strategic Support Branch, was “designed to operate without detection and under the defense secretary’s direct control.” And not only did the group operate outside the public view, Rumsfeld hid it from Congress and did not coordinate it with the CIA.

c) Last week, Rumsfeld threw another wrench in the works by giving Undersecretary for Defense Intelligence Stephen A. Cambone — who has limited experience in the world of intelligence – amplified power over Pentagon intelligence operations. One senior intelligence official warned that Cambone “would be like a mini-DNI.” Officials worry this “could allow Cambone to interfere with the new intelligence chief by, for example, limiting the information he gets from the Pentagon.”

Media

York’s Fake Headlines

You may have caught National Review reporter Byron York on the Daily Show last night promoting his new book, The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy. A portion of York’s book relating to The Progress Report — the daily electronic newsletter of the American Progress Action Fund — was reprinted in The Hill last week. In it, York argues that American Progress is nothing more than a “talking points factory.” Part of his “proof” for this contention is a series of “headlines” from the Progress Report. A response written by Christy Harvey and myself appeared in the Hill today:

York’s ‘headlines’ weren’t headlines

From Judd Legum and Christy Harvey, editors, The Progress Report:

We write in response to the excerpt from Byron York’s book about the work of the Center for American Progress that appeared in the Thursday, April 7, issue of The Hill.

None of the “headlines” of “The Progress Report,” the daily electronic newsletter of the American Progress Action Fund, cited in the column by Byron York were actually headlines. Instead, York selected snippets of text drawn from the entire report. Here are the actual headlines:

- Oct. 5: “Paige Papers Over Problems”

- Oct.13: “The Stem-Cell Debate”

- Oct.18: “Troops Talk Back”

- Oct.26: “IRAQ, The $225 Billion Mess”

- Oct.28: “Defeating the Jihadists: A Blueprint for Action”

What the real headlines reveal is that “The Progress Report,” like the organization itself, presents a combination of positive policy prescriptions and criticism.

The American Progress Action Fund welcomes scrutiny of our work from York and others. (We urge everyone to go to progressreport.org and make their own conclusions.) But while York is entitled to his own opinions, he is not entitled to his own facts.

Politics

Bolton Tows the Line

If anyone was perhaps wondering whether the supposedly tough-minded John Bolton, President Bush’s nominee to be U.S. representative to the United Nations, can be expected to speak truth to power, here are some excerpts from yesterday’s nomination hearing that will answer the question.

Excerpt One:
BOLTON: The administration has submitted the Law of the Sea Treaty as one of its priorities, and I support that.
SARBANES: Simply because it’s an administration position, or does that represent your own view of it?
BOLTON: Well, I haven’t personally read the Law of the Sea Treaty. I don’t think I’ve ever read it, to be honest with you.

Excerpt Two:
BOLTON: I’m not a golfer, but I think the metaphor is You have to play it as it lays. And I know what the president’s policy is and I’m prepared to follow it.

Excerpt Three:
BOLTON: The administration’s position has been to support Taiwan becoming an observer in the WHO.

SARBANES: Is that your position?
BOLTON: Yes, I support that position.
SARBANES: I thought you supported them being a member?
BOLTON: As I said before, when I wrote as a private citizen during the 1990s, that’s what I said. And when I wrote it then, I understood it. The president has made his policy on this very clear and I support his policy.

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