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Kit Bond Faux Concern About Russia

bond25Senator Kit Bond (R-MO) went on the radio show of right-wing extremist Frank Gaffney to lay out his problems with the New START treaty. Bond’s chief complaint is that he thinks the verification framework in the new treaty is weak and cited classified intelligence that gave him concerns about Russia’s trustworthiness. As Josh Rogin reported, Bond is using this as justification to call for a delay in holding a treaty vote. He stated:

Obviously the classified details are available to my colleagues in the secure reading room, but I can certainly share with you my conclusions. And I think by pushing the New START treaty, the administration is taking us down a very dangerous path… I think the treaty is very weak on verification, especially compared to previous treaties like START and the INF treaty.

What makes this absurd is not just that Bond is wrong about the strength of New START’s verification measures, it is also that by calling for the delay and rejection of New START on the grounds of weak verification, Bond is ensuring that there will be absolutely no monitoring of Russia’s nuclear arsenal – ever.

First things first though, Bond is wrong. The verification measures in New START are just as, if not more, vigorous than the previous START treaty. Proportionally, under the New START treaty there will be more inspections per facility than there were under the previous START treaty. Senator Richard Lugar has also noted that New START “will provide more transparency than START I, rather than less. The numbering system for warheads and delivery systems is much more transparent than before.”

The claims made by Bond and Senator Jim Risch (R-ID) about classified intelligence showing Russia can’t be trusted, were debunked not just by the Administration and Senate Democrats, but by Republican Senators Johnny Iskason (R-GA) and Bob Corker (R-TN) who saw the same intelligence just before they voted for the treaty in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

But even if New START was weaker on verification than old START the fact is that it is still better the current system of verification – which is zilch. There is no verification regime currently in place, because the old START treaty expired last December. It has been 311 days since the US has had inspectors on the ground monitoring Russia’s nuclear weapons. Bond claims to want a very strict verification and monitoring regime. Yet his approach of delaying and obstructing the New START treaty results in a situation where there is no verification regime.

If a Senator is truly concerned about Russia’s nuclear arsenal they would support New START, because without the treaty Russia is no longer constrained and could do whatever it likes with its nuclear arsenal and the US would have absolutely no idea what they were up to because of the absence of any verification measures. In other words, Kit Bond is a massive hypocrite.

GOP Senate Candidate Mark Kirk Says He Backs ‘Across The Board Reductions’ In Defense Spending

This past Sunday, the Illinois Democratic and Republican nominees for U.S. Senate Rep. Mark Kirk (R-IL) and Alexi Giannoulias debated a variety of issues on NBC’s Meet The Press.

At one point, host David Gregory pressed Kirk about his support for extending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, rightly stating that doing so would conflict with the congressman’s stated goal of lowering the U.S. budget deficit. Kirk responded by noting the need for “spending restraint” to rein in the budget deficit, and complained that congressional leaders are “not interested” in it “at all.” He then went on to explain, “I back spending restraint across the board. At the DOD, like no second engine for the F-35 Fighter, closing down joint forces command, across the board reductions“:

GREGORY: Congressman, how could we afford to make permanent tax extensions now, with the Bush tax cuts in this climate?

KIRK: Because especially in this climate, we have Congressional leaders that are not interested in spending restraint at all. For example, I back spending restraint across the board. At the DOD like no second engine for the F-35 Fighter, closing down joint forces command, across the board reductions.

Watch it:

Kirk’s statement makes him the third Republican running for Senate this year who has gone on the record as saying that defense cuts are necessary in order to deal with the budget deficit. Earlier this month, Sen. Johnny Isakson (GA) told a local news station that reducing the deficit “begins with the Department of Defense.” A few days later, Kentucky candidate Rand Paul criticized Republicans for exempting the military from waste-trimming, telling Gwen Ifill that cutting defense spending “has to be on the table.”

If these Republicans are really serious about reining in the defense budget, they can look to The Sustainable Defense Task (SDTF) report released earlier this year. Assembled by Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) and consisting of the nation’s leading defense and budget experts, the SDTF identified nearly $1 trillion in waste that can be cut from the defense budget over the next ten years simply by eliminating outdated Cold War-era programs. They could also reference a recent report by CAP experts Lawrence Korb and Laura Conley that lays out $108 billion in defense cuts in the current 2015 budget forecast.

Update

A defense consultant who was at a recent meeting about the defense budget at the Pentagon told Reuters that pressure from the president’s deficit commission combined with the Tea Party mvovement may have a “significant impact in terms of accelerating the contraction in defense funding“:

The grim reality is that the midterm elections are going to have a significant impact in terms of accelerating the contraction in defense funding,” said Jim McAleese, a Virginia-based defense consultant. [...]

But he acknowledged growing pressure on defense spending from a presidential deficit-reduction panel, the Tea Party movement, and the upcoming elections, said McAleese, who attended the meeting.

GOP House Candidate Pantano Comes Out As EMP Enthusiast

In a wide-ranging interview with Danger Room’s Noah Shachtman, North Carolina Republican Congressional candidate Ilario Pantano explains why he thinks “We’ve become too reliant on technology” in the way we fight wars:

Folks, one day we’re going to be in a fight with an enemy using [an] EMP [gadget-frying electro-magnetic pulse] and we better remember how to use a compass. We better remember how to use smoke. We better remember how to engage the enemy the old-fashioned way because one day we may lose our strong technical advantage. We certainly found that out as we fought primitives, whether it was in Iraq or Afghanistan.

I’m not sure if it’s quite right that we “lost our strong technical advantage” in Iraq or Afghanistan as much as we faced — and are facing — insurgencies that, despite being staffed by “primitives,” have developed and deployed a variety of tactics that have significantly shrunken that advantage.

But the real fun is Pantano’s electro-magnetic pulse (EMP) alarmism, which is basically the national security version of birtherism. As a Weekly Standard editor told Rob Farley for this article on EMP, “I don’t go for that EMP stuff. Kind of more interested in dangerous scenarios that might actually happen.”

Interestingly, this Stratfor article — which also happens to be posted on Pantano’s own campaign website — concludes that an EMP attack requires “the kind of complexity and uncertainty that well-trained terrorist operatives seek to avoid in an operation“:

Besides, a ground-level nuclear detonation in a city such as New York or Washington would be more likely to cause the type of terror, death and physical destruction that is sought in a terrorist attack than could be achieved by generally non-lethal EMP. [...]

The EMP threat has been around for more than half a century and there are a number of technical and practical variables that make a HEMP attack using a nuclear warhead highly unlikely.

Maybe Pantano should try reading his own website.

Van Jones Condemns The ‘Greenwashing Of Hate,’ Affirms That ‘Immigrants Lead Greener Life Styles’

Today, the Center for American Progress (CAP) released a report entitled “From a “Green Farce” to a Green Future: Refuting False Claims About Immigrants and the Environment.” The report, written by researcher Jorge Madrid, “strikes down many of the false arguments regarding immigrants and the environment, provides a clearer picture of immigrants’ environmental contributions, and outlines real environmental solutions that can cut carbon and curb climate change.”

On a press call on the report’s findings earlier today, Van Jones, who leads CAP’s Green Opportunity Initiative, echoed the warnings issued in the report. “There are other organizations that are trying to drive wedges between communities that are seeking solutions,” stated Jones. More specifically, Jones noted that “there is a greenwashing of hate that is going on in our country.” Anti-immigrant front groups are using “green concerns as a bludgeon against immigrants and low-income communities.” However, Jones points out that it’s possible to “have an America that is green and prosperous and welcoming of newcomers.” In fact, “immigrants are not a problem when it comes to the greening of a America, they are disproportionately part of the solution. Immigrant communities live greener life styles and support greener policies.”

Madrid produced similar findings:

  • The assumption that immigrant-driven population growth alone drives the U.S. carbon footprint is false. The 10 highest carbon-emitting cities are home to the smallest immigrant populations. The cities with the lowest carbon footprint, on the other hand, have an average immigrant population of 26 percent.
  • Immigrants, especially recent immigrants, tend to lead “greener” lifestyles than the native-born and are more likely to use public transportation and practice sustainable habits like compact living, conservation, and recycling.
  • Immigrants, who are largely low income, are also more likely to have their lives disrupted by extreme weather events and other adverse effects of climate change. Immigrants are disproportionately hurt by the dirty energy economy and face unique environmental challenges. Consequently, they fight for greener solutions, including challenging the use of hazardous pesticides in the agricultural fields where many immigrants work.
  • 2010 polls of key electoral states find that immigrant-rich communities overwhelmingly favor policy that will create green jobs and tend to support congressional candidates who back efforts to fight global warming.
  • I’ve written extensively about the claims made by anti-immigrant “environmental” front groups in the past. Those organizations include NumbersUSA, the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), Progressives for Immigration Reform, and others. Most recently, FAIR released “The Environmentalist’s Guide to a Sensible Immigration Policy.” The report connects immigration to “pollution, sprawl, congestion, and ecological degradation,” complaining that “so-called environmentalists pretend as if this connection does not exist.”

    On the call, Madrid noted that “It’s important that we not let these kind of false answers go unanswered or unchallenged.” Madrid explained that environmentalists aren’t “ignoring” the connection between immigrants and environmental degradation, rather, evidence actually suggests the contrary. “These organizations are not part of the mainstream environmental movement,” affirmed Madrid. A representative from the Sierra Club who happened to be listening to the call backed Madrid’s claims.

    Fox News ‘Quietly’ Launches Latino Website That Bears Little Resemblance To Fox News

    Yesterday, Fox News “quietly” launched a new, bilingual website, FoxNewsLatino.com. “We’re aiming at Latinos whose first language is English, who inform themselves in English, who are deeply American, but share some of the cultural sensibilities of their parents or grandparents,” explained the site’s editor, Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush. Though the site “won’t be refreshing the content every 10 seconds,” it will focus on “longer features and analyses of news of particular interest to Hispanics.”

    However, the site also brings out Fox News’ sensitive side when it comes to the Latino community. While Fox News Latino does indeed provide coverage of the issues that Latinos care about (particularly immigration), the tone and angle of the stories written for its Latino audience differ remarkably from what the main Fox News website is telling its presumably mostly white viewers and readers.

    For example, one of the more recent immigration articles featured on the Fox News main website is “Obama Is Our ‘Me First’ Point Guard, Especially On Immigration,” an opinion piece by Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX) which basically complains that the Obama administration isn’t deporting enough people. Smith’s writing didn’t make it to the Fox News Latino website, though I’m sure the Latino community is interested in what he has to say. However, “Record Number of Deportations in 2010” did.

    Fox News Latino also prominently features a video of California gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman’s (R) housekeeper, Nicky Diaz Santillan, telling her story in “Whitman Housekeeper Speaks Out.” However, the main site largely seeks to discredit Diaz Santillan’s accusations with Fox News host Greta Van Susteran writing “I still think Gloria Allred [Diaz Santillan's lawyer] is wrong…” Other posts on Whitman featured on the main Fox News website that didn’t make it to Fox News Latino include “Whitman’s Woes: California Candidate Pushes Back” and “Whitman Camp Alleges Collaboration in Illegal Housekeeper Story.”

    A major theme of Fox News Latino’s site that the Miami Herald observes is “whether the political controversy over immigration will mobilize Latin voters next month.” While the main Fox News website reports that “Latinos still strongly support Democrats,” an opinion piece on Fox News Latino tells a different story. In “Why Democrats Can’t Count on Us,” Galina Espinoza scolds Democrats for not passing immigration reform and indicates that it may result in “a cultural shift in political allegiance” amongst the Latino community towards Republicans. Another Fox News Latino exclusive, “A New Flavor for the Tea Party: Hispanic” further suggests that “although in the past Hispanics have overwhelmingly voted Democratic, the growth of the Tea Party movement has made voting patterns are more unpredictable this election cycle.” According to the author, Carolyn Salazar, “anecdotal evidence suggests that an increasing number of Hispanics are bolting both parties and joining the grass-roots [Tea Party] group.”

    Aside from the Spanish-language content, there are also a few stories posted on Fox News Latino which have been conveniently left off of Fox News’ main site. “Latino Group Calls Louisiana Political Ad Offensive” and “Who’s Afraid of Spanglish?” are nowhere to be found on FoxNews.com. In the past, Fox News has reported quite extensively and largely in favor of the English-only movement.

    Obviously, Fox News is a private news company and like all companies it must cater to the needs and interests of its consumers. However, if they were really as “fair and balanced” as they claim to be, I would expect a little more cross-over between Fox News Latino and the main website. Comments on several of the pieces indicate that even Fox News Latino readers are a bit baffled, if not outraged, by the news company’s pandering. One piece which did make it on both sites: “Aguilera y su esposo se separan,” or “Christina Aguilera separates from husband.”

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