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Security

George Allen: Investigate Cheney Over CIA Leak

Last week, it was revealed that Scooter Libby told a federal grand jury that his “superiors,” including Vice President Cheney, had authorized him in the summer of 2003 to leak classified information to help defend the administration’s Iraq policy.

Sens. George Allen (R-VA) and Jack Reed (D-RI) were asked about the revelations today on Fox News Sunday. Both Reed and Allen (a top presidential hopeful among conservative activists) said the Cheney leak needs to be investigated:

REED: I think it’s inappropriate, I think it’s wrong, and I think that this calls into question in terms of [Fitzgerald's] investigation of the conduct of the Vice President and others, perhaps. And I think he has to look closely at their behavior. And again, it just seems to me —

WALLACE: You’re saying he should be investigating the Vice President?

REED: Whoever the superiors are that are supposedly allegedly leaked or authorized a leak by the individual in question, Mr. Libby, I think the investigation has to go forward.

WALLACE: Senator Allen?

ALLEN: The prosecutor here, Mr. Fitzgerald, seems to me to be a very articulate, professional prosecutor, and I think the facts will lead wherever they lead, and I think he will prosecute as appropriate. … I don’t think anybody should be releasing classified information, period, whether in the Congress, Executive Branch or some underling in some bureaucracy.

For more on why Cheney need to be investigated, read CIA director Porter Goss’ editorial, Loose Lips Sink Spies.

Security

Hagel: United States “In More Trouble Today Than We’ve Ever Been” In Iraq

Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) sounds the alarm on Iraq:

WOLF BLITZER: A lot of people around the world here in the United States warning of Iran’s nuclear ambitions and saying, ‘You know what, we heard the same warnings about Iraq and it’s now been proven the U.S. was wrong.’ How concerned are you that U.S. intelligence has it right right now, if they do have it right?

HAGEL: Well, intelligence is always imperfect. We understand that. It’s a mosaic of pieces, and it’s judgment, and how you use those pieces coming together with some judgment that then will result in a policy. I go back to the conversation we just had here, the three of us, over the last five minutes about Iran. We must be very careful what we’re doing here, because in my opinion, three years in Iraq, things haven’t gone the way the administration said and others said it was going to go. In fact, I think we’re in more trouble today than we’ve ever been in Iraq…

UPDATE: On the same program, former Iraqi prime minister, Ayad Allawi said he was worried that a civil war would errupt in Iraq: Read more

Politics

Roberts: If the President Does It, It’s Not Illegal

Sen. Pat Roberts on the separation of powers:

TIM RUSSERT: Senator Roberts, let me ask you a very serious question. Do you believe that the Constitution gives the President of the United States the authority to do anything he believes is necessary to protect the country?

ROBERTS: Yes, but I wouldn’t say anything he believes. I think you go at it very, very carefully. And that’s been done by every president that I know of.

In other words, the Constitution gives President Bush absolute power as long as he’s extra careful. Roberts should stick with Nixon’s version, it’s simpler.

Politics

Ex-Bush Advisor: Lowery to Blame for ‘Overshadowing King Celebration’

Ron Christie, former advisor to President Bush, rolled out a new line of attack on Rev. Joseph Lowery today. Instead of claiming Lowery’s remarks last week had “politicized” Coretta Scott King’s funeral, Christie said the real problem was that Lowery had driven the spotlight away from King’s legacy:

CHRIS WALLACE: Were you offended by what Rev. Lowery said about President Bush at the funeral? He is a lion of the civil rights movement. Mrs. King and her husband were protestors their whole lives. Would it be wrong for him not to bring up the issues he was concerned about?

CHRISTIE: He was a lion in the civil rights movement and he is an eloquent man and will go down in history as an important figure. Where I take exception, he was in a celebration of the life of Coretta Scott King, a remarkable woman who had remarkable accomplishments. Unfortunately, Rev. Lowery’s comments have seemingly overshadowed that celebration.

Rev. Lowery’s remarks at King’s funeral were no different in tone than eulogies given at funerals for other civil rights icons, like Rosa Parks or Martin Luther King Jr. The only reason they received special attention is because conservatives decided to attack them as “classless” and “too political.” It’s not Lowery’s fault when the right-wing tries to manufacture another “Wellstone moment.”

Media

Brooks: Liberal Blogs Are Semi-Nuts and They Insist on a Stalinist Line of Discipline

From this morning on the Chris Matthews show:

DAVID BROOKS: Whoever the Democratic candidate, that is the weakness of the Democratic party, they’ve got the blogs and the netroots who are semi-nuts and they insist on a Stalinist line of discipline.

CHRIS MATTHEWS: I love your objectivity.

DAVID BROOKS: It’s objectively true. I did a psychoanalytic test.

We love you too David.

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