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Hastert Tries To Shift Blame To Staff, Raises Prospect of ‘Cover Up’

At a press conference this morning, House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) set up his staff to take the blame for the Mark Foley scandal. Asked if he was satisfied with how his staff handled the matter, Hasert said, “I understand what my staff told me. And I think from that response, they’ve handled it as well as they should.”

Hastert, however, raised the prospect of a “cover up” led by senior members of his staff, and noted that they will be interviewed “under oath.” He told reporters, “If they did cover something up, they should not continue to have their jobs.” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2006/10/hastertstaff.320.240.flv]

It will be tough for Hastert to succeed in his efforts to pin the blame exclusively on his staff. Hastert was directly informed of Foley’s inappropriate emails last spring by both House Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) and Rep. Tom Reynolds (R-NY).

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Yglesias

I’m So Bored With the DPRK

Nevertheless, Eric Alterman, excerpting from one of his books, has a good rundown of the Bushies long-running fuckup of this policy issue. To some extent, pointing fingers is neither here nor there since we can’t just go back in time, but when you have outcomes as bad as the ones these guys are generating, it really is vitally important to note that the country is wrestling with extremely thorny problems that have gotten so thorny overwhelmingly because of George W. Bush’s appallingly poor leadership. Demands will be raised for Democrats to offer up brilliantly appealing solutions, but as on Iraq there are no brilliantly appealing solutions left precisely because the GOp has done such a bad job.

Yglesias

The Root of Evil

With Iraq a shambles, North Korean testing a nuclear device, and Iran pursuing uranium enrichment, The Washington Post‘s Glenn Kessler and Peter Baker revisit the “axis of evil” speech. They underplay, however, the extent to which the speech isn’t merely an ironic reminder of what a bad president Bush is, but was actually constitutive of Bushian badness. Usually, a speech is just a speech, but this was an exception. At the time, it was widely understood that the administration was contemplating a war to depose Saddam Hussein. Under the circumstances, lumping Iran and the DPRK in with Iraq as an “axis of evil” played as a weirdly diffuse and nonspecific threat to overthrow the governments in Teheran and Pyongyang. A threat that we had no capacity to carry out in the short term. This precipatated the recent round of nuclear crisis in North Korea and managed to undermine some then-ongoing cooperation with Iran on Taliban and al-Qaeda issues that stood some chance of leading to a broader rapprochment.

What’s more, as “axis of evil” apologists like Michael Rubin make clear, plunging the world into crisis and closing off diplomatic options was part of the plan. “Clinton administration attempts to engage the Taliban and the North Korean regime were folly. Any attempt to do likewise with Iran would be equally inane. Certain regimes cannot be appeased.” And, clearly, it’s true that some men you just can’t reach, but why should we think this phenomenon has suddenly become so widespread? And why not try? The Clinton administration’s efforts to pursuade the Taliban to give up Osama bin Laden didn’t work, but it was surely worth a shot, especially at a time when full-fledged war just wasn’t on the table as an option.

If it comes to war in the end, then good-faith efforts to resolve outstanding issues without war are integral to giving the war legitimacy. In the North Korean case, Clinton’s policy was working pretty damn well. It led to a non-ideal outcome, but things got much worse when we tried things Bush’s way. Cooperating with Iran, similarly, was paying dividends until we stopped trying it. Similarly, we reached a perfectly reasonable negotiated settlement with Libya even under Bush. It’s regime change as panacea that’s worked really, really, really poorly. It’d be nice if this worked — snap your fingers and get a better regime — but it doesn’t work, and not seeing that is just dumb.

Media

John Gibson Suggests North Korea Nuke Test ‘Balances Out The Bad News’ From Foley Scandal

Yesterday on “The Big Story,” Fox’s John Gibson suggested that the alleged North Korean nuclear test was good news. Gibson asked Washington Times editor Tony Blankley: “Does the fact that the North Koreans actually tested a nuclear weapon balance out the bad news from this Foley scandal?” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2006/10/balance2.320.240.flv]

The alleged North Korean nuclear test is not only bad news for our national security; it’s bad news for Congressional leaders like Dennis Hastert who have supported President Bush’s policy in lockstep. It’s the culmination of six years of failed policy, typified by little else than tough rhetoric.

For details, see our North Korea nuclear timeline.

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Media

Crude . . . It’s a Compliment

Ralfi let his breath out explosively and began to laugh, exposing teeth that hadn’t been kept up to the Chriatian White standard. The she turned the disruptor off.
“Two million,” I said.
“My kind of man,” she said, and laughed. “What’s in the bag?”
“A shotgun.”
“Crude.” It might have been a compliment.

That’s William Gibson’s “Johnny Mnemonic” and I like it. Smart, articulate, clever people are sometimes so smart, articulate, and clever that they fail to see that sometimes crude solutions are the best ones. Which I mention by way of introducing Ann Friedman’s column on “The Byline Gender Gap”. She’s hardly the first person to have noticed that even in the progressive media there seem to be very few women publishing things. Nor does she have an especially novel analysis of why this is the case. Indeed — and here’s where the meritorious crudeness starts to come into play — she doesn’t do much analysis of why it’s the case at all. She just sees a big problem and proposes a crude solution: “I’ve come to believe that a target percentage for women’s bylines should be set in the editorial policies of each publication, at least in the short term.”

I think she’s right. This is obviously not the most abstractly elegant fix, but I don’t think resolutions to do better in the future will have much impact unless they result in a reasonably clear operational rule of the sort suggested here.

Politics

ThinkFast: October 10, 2006

Axis of Evil update: “Nearly five years after President Bush introduced the concept of an ‘axis of evil’ comprising Iraq, Iran and North Korea, the administration has reached a crisis point with each nation.”

Three national polls released today find the American public has deep concerns over Iraq. A USA Today poll found a 56 percent majority saying that sending troops to Iraq was a mistake. A WP/ABC poll said only 35 percent approve of Bush’s handling of Iraq. According to a NYT/CBS poll, only 3 percent are saying the war is going very well.

The FBI is “struggling to reinvent itself to fight terror,” a NYT analysis shows. “If you look at, for example, the four key ingredients for counterterrorism success — agents, analysts, managers and computers — the F.B.I. is struggling to get the basics right on all of them,” an analyst says.

Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK), the Senate’s king of pork, “killed a requirement for the Defense Department to evaluate unauthorized earmarks imposed by members of Congress on the Pentagon,” Bob Novak reports.

Stock options that Sen. George Allen (R-VA) failed to report were “worth as much as $1.1 million at one point,” Bloomberg reports. Allen claimed the options were “worthless” in a story published Sunday. Read more

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