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Does OBL Matter?

Atrios notes the president’s continuing inability to decide whether Osama bin Laden is the Most Important Dude Ever or else just “not a priority” before remarking, “It’s unclear if taking Bin Laden off the world stage would really reduce any threats of terrorism – how would I know.”

Well, I wouldn’t know either. I’ll pass on some notions about this that I’ve gleaned from others. One question in dispute is the extent to which the perpetrators of things like the Madrid and London bombings have actual communication with al-Qaeda Central, i.e. bin Laden and/or Ayman al-Zawahiri. For a while, the predominant sentiment was that there wasn’t any, but subsequent investigations seem to indicate that these people were in contact with someone or other in the vicinity of Pakistan, possibly the big two. Another thing is that some folks feel that bin Laden is simply very good at doing those taped performances and written statements. Were he killed or captured, someone else would step up, but that someone might be less skilled. On the other hand, at least some of America’s counterterrorism professionals maintain that Zawahiri rather than bin Laden is actually the brains behind that stuff. I recently heard Rand Beers take the view that simply nobody knows what the answer to that question is. Which, I guess, is a longwinded way of saying it probably would make a difference to kill or capture him, but nobody seems to me to have a convincing account of how big a difference.

That said, there’s a certain importance to simply having justice be done (as Atrios writes, “some reason I thought bringing a mass murderer to justice might be a wee bit important”) especially because the President once upon a time committed us to this end and launched a war that had getting OBL as one of its main aims.

Security

Clooney: ‘My Job Is…To Beg You On Behalf Of Millions of People Who Will Die’

The world may be two weeks away from another Rwanda.

On Sept. 30, the under-manned and under-funded African Union (AU) peacekeeping force in Darfur is set to leave the country. Those 7,000 A.U. troops — dispatched over a region the size of Texas — are the only thing moderating the genocidal violence in Darfur, in which “civilians are usually killed, injured, raped, abducted or forcibly displaced.”

Over the last two weeks, the Sudanese government has “dramatically intensified” its air strikes and worked “to drain the region of witnesses,” including aid workers and foreign journalists. If the AU forces leave on Sept. 30 as scheduled, “this is a genocidal black box.”

Today, George Clooney spoke at a press conference at the United Nations, reminding the international community: “[T]his genocide will be on your watch. How you deal with it will be your legacy — your Rwanda, your Cambodia, your Auschwitz.” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2006/09/clooney.320.240.flv]

Full transcript: Read more

Politics

FLASHBACK: Bush Used to Oppose Letting Bin Laden Set National Security Priorities

Yesterday, Think Progress posted a video compilation of members of the Bush administration arguing America should outsource its national security policy to bin Laden. (As Dan Bartlett said, “So, it doesn’t matter what we say. We should be taking the — the words of the enemy seriously. They think it’s the fight of — of the war on terror, so, we must as well.”)

A Think Progress reader pointed us to an exchange from the first 2004 Presidential debate:

KERRY: You know – Osama bin Laden uses the invasion of Iraq in order to go out to people and say that America has declared war on Islam. We need to be smarter about now we wage a war on terror. [...]

BUSH: My opponent just said something amazing. He said Osama bin Laden uses the invasion of Iraq as an excuse to spread hatred for America. Osama bin Laden isn’t going to determine how we defend ourselves. Osama bin Laden doesn’t get to decide. The American people decide.

If Bush were serious about letting the American people “determine how we defend ourselves,” he would support a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq.

Security

Sen. Graham: White House Held Military Lawyers In 5 Hour Meeting and ‘Tried To Force Them To Sign A Prepared Statement’

This morning, President Bush was questioned about Gen. Colin Powell’s letter criticizing White House legislation that would authorize torture. Bush tried to downplay Powell’s letter by pointing to another letter signed by the military’s top uniformed lawyers saying they supported Bush’s plan:

BUSH: There’s all kinds of letters coming out — and today, by the way, active duty personnel in the Pentagon, the JAG, supported the concept that I have just outlined to you.

But during today’s White House press conference, a reporter cited comments by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) — a former JAG and an opponent of the Bush’s detainee policies — claiming that the White House had placed extreme pressure on the military lawyers to sign a statement, and that the lawyers had refused to sign the initial statement crafted for them by the White House:

REPORTER: Sen. Graham is telling reporters on Capitol Hill that the White House had them in a meeting for five hours last night and tried to force them to sign a prepared statement and he said reading this JAG letter they ended up writing leaves total ambiguity on interpretation, this is Sen. Lindsey Graham. What’s your response to that?

Snow acknowledged “they were asked to write a letter” but said, “if you start going into who asked whom to write letters, I don’t know.” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2006/09/JAG.320.240.flv]

Read the full transcript HERE.

Politics

As One Stand Together

John Cohn reminds us that nobody seems to have noticed the recent joint DLC/union event in which the leaders of the centrist outfit and the two major labor federations announced joint support for various things and, in particular, the DLC endorsed the Employee Free Choice Act which forces more knowledgable than I regard as vital to making it much more feasible to organize workers.

Cohn wonders a bit if this rapprochement is more tactical or strategic. Without any special insider knowledge, I would mark myself down for “strategic” simply because EFCA is really a strategic issue. Unions take stands on all kinds of issues, so pretty much anyone is bound to agree with them about some stuff and disagree about other stuff. The core issue of EFCA, however, is unions themselves — marking yourself down for labor law reform is to say you’d like to see a revivial of the labor movement in America, whereas opposing or staying aloof from it is to say you’d like to see it fade away. Let me also note that recently I’ve heard various economists of a conservative or libertarian stripe express significant skepticism that public policy measures serious influence unionization rates. That could be true, I suppose, but it makes corporate America’s die-hard opposition to organizing-friendly labor laws and labor law enforcement hard to explain.

Politics

Bush Tells Barnes Capturing Bin Laden Is ‘Not A Top Priority Use of American Resources’

Weekly Standard editor Fred Barnes appeared on Fox this morning to discuss his recent meeting with President Bush in the Oval Office. The key takeaway for Barnes was that “bin Laden doesn’t fit with the administration’s strategy for combating terrorism.” Barnes said that Bush told him capturing bin Laden is “not a top priority use of American resources.” Watch it.

Bush’s priorities have always been skewed. Just months after declaring he wanted bin Laden “dead or alive,” Bush said, “I truly am not that concerned about him.” Turning his attention away from bin Laden, Bush trained his focus on Iraq — a country he now admits had “nothing” to do with 9/11.

Capturing bin Laden, as Rep. Nancy Pelosi recently pointed out, will not necessarily make America safer because it would come five years too late. Yet, capturing or killing the man responsible for 9/11 should remain a high priority.

More from The Carpetbagger Report.

Digg It!

Full transcript: Read more

Security

LETTER: Powell Says Bush Plan To Authorize Torture ‘Would Put Troops At Risk’

Gen. Colin Powell issued a letter today sharply criticizing President Bush’s new legislation that would establish a system of military commissions to try suspected terrorists. See a copy of the letter HERE.

Bush’s proposal would “liberalize the definition of what is torture” by amending the War Crimes Act to “permit use of hypothermia, threats of violence to the detainee and his family, stress positions, ‘long-time standing,’ prolonged sleep deprivation, and possibly waterboarding.”

In his letter, Powell writes, “The world is beginning to doubt the moral basis of our fight against terrorism. To redefine Common Article 3 would add to those doubts. Furthermore, it would put our own troops at risk.

Digg it!

Read the full transcript: Read more

Climate Progress

Wildfire Season Smashes Records — and the Media Keeps Blowing the Story

wildfires2.jpg

The total acreage burned by wildfires so far this year now exceeds the total acreage burned in any year since records started being kept in 1960. As of September 13, some 8.7 million acres have burned –an area nearly twice the size of New Jersey. This exceeds the record set just last year of 8.5 million acres.

But much of the media seems unwilling to even mention the possibility that this record has anything whatsoever to do with global warming. As Climate Progress noted in August, the New York Times neglected to mention this possibility in its major wildfire story, even though the cover story of Science magazine the previous week was on research establishing the global warming-wildfire link.

The current story by the Associated Press, reprinted in the Times and the Washington Post today, offers this as the entire explanation:

Federal officials attributed the increase to two consecutive seasons of hot and dry weather that left forest and ranges parched and easily ignited by lightning.

It has been “hot and dry.” Thanks for clearing that up major media.

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