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Frank Gaffney For President?

At a panel on the threats facing Israel at the Faith and Freedom Conference in Washington Saturday, an attendee took the microphone to urge former Reagan defense official Frank Gaffney to run for president. Gaffney — who has made a career out of cooking up John Birch-like theories about Muslim infiltration — responded by saying that while has no plans to run, he wouldn’t rule out the possibility by making a “Shermanesque statement.” Watch it:

Gaffney’s thinly-veiled Islamophobia and penchant for accusing conservative bigwigs of being agents of the Muslim Brotherhood have earned him scorn from some fellow conservatives, including fellow members of the panels Gaffney sat on during the conference. At a panel Friday about Sharia law — Gaffney’s favorite topic — he faced off against Marshall Breger, a former Bush security official who has been publicly critical of Gaffney’s delusions, calling out the emptiness of the Sharia threat and warning that Gaffney’s brand of Islamoparanoid militarism would alienate American-Muslims. As Religion Dispatchs’ Sarah Posner reported, things got heated:

The moderator, neo-conservative conspiracy theorist Kenneth Timmerman, cut Breger off when he tried to defend himself against Gaffney. Gaffney, who insisted that even conservatives fail to understand the threat of a political, legal, and military takeover by shari’ah, at one point shouted “Rubbish!” in reaction to Breger. Gaffney’s fear-mongering knows no bounds, as he asserted that “if we don’t wake up, we will soon be like Britain . . . or even Saudi Arabia.” He had support on the panel, too, with the Christian Broadcasting Network’s Erik Stakelback calling him “the Paul Revere of calling out the Muslim Brotherhood.”

The crowd was clearly on Gaffney’s side, giving cheers and even a standing ovation when he would castigate Berger. Indeed, he seemed to be warmly welcomed at the event. As Gaffney wondered the halls of the conference area, he was often stopped by activists interested in taking a picture of getting an autograph, and he signed books for several minutes outside the Israel conference, staying longer to chat with admirers.

But his attacks, most notably on influential anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, got him barred from participating in any official capacity at the much bigger Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) two years ago. “[H]e has become personally and tiresomely obsessed with his weird belief that anyone who doesn’t agree with him on everything all the time or treat him with the respect and deference he believes is his due, must be either ignorant of the dangers we face or, in extreme case, dupes of the nation’s enemies,” then-CPAC Chairman David Keene told ThinkProgress earlier this year.

But apparently, for some religious conservatives at the Faith and Freedom Conference, Gaffney is a reasonable choice for president.

NEWS FLASH

Saleh Taken To Saudi Arabia For Medical Treatment | Saudi officials said that Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Salah was taken to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment one day after an attack on his presidential palace left him and other members of his ruling circle injured. Salah reportedly has shrapnel near his heart. The New York Times reports that “Yemeni officials have insisted that the president was only lightly injured. But he did not make an expected appearance on television on Friday, instead releasing an audiotape in which he slurred his words, suggesting that he might be sedated.”

Wikileaks Cables: U.S. Worked To Scuttle Haiti Gas Development Deal On Behalf Of Big Oil

Earlier this week, The Nation magazine and the Haitian weekly newspaper Haïti Liberté announced a partnership whereby they would work together to publish findings from 1,918 U.S. embassy cables — dated between 2003 and 2010 — from Haiti.

Now, the two papers have released their first article about the cables. In “The PetroCaribe Files,” Dan Coughlin and Kim Ives review an ordeal discovered within the cables involving an oil and development deal Haiti was negotiating with Venezuela and Cuba between 2006-2007.

As a part of the deal struck that year, Haiti would join the Venezuelan-led oil alliance known as PetroCaribe and it would purchase oil “only 60 percent up front with the remainder payable over twenty-five years at 1 percent interest” — a remarkably good deal for the Western hemisphere’s poorest country.

The U.S. embassy at the time noted that Haiti would save a hundred million U.S. dollars a year under the terms of the PetroCaribe deal; the saved dollars would then be earmarked for development in schools, health care, and infrastructure. Yet, under the charge of ambassador Janet Sanderson, the embassy immediately set out to sabotage the deal.

In a classified cable, Sanderson noted that the embassy started to “pressure” Haitian leader Rene Preval from joining PetroCaribe, saying that it would “cause problems with [the United States.]” Major oil companies — such as ExxonMobil and Chevron — began threatening to cut off ties with Haiti, and Sanderson repeatedly met with the energy firms to assure them that she would pressure Haiti at the “highest levels of government.” The U.S. embassy also continually warned Preval against traveling to Venezuela and collaborate with other left-wing governments in the region.

Despite this intimidation campaign, Haiti successfully completed its deal with PetroCaribe, rebuking both its superpower neighbor and the combined threats of the world’s most powerful oil corporations. Yet the story of the PetroCaribe deal outlined in the cables is a powerful tale of how multinational corporations have exerted pressure on the U.S. government to undercut development in the emerging world economies.

On Wednesday, The Nation and Haiti Liberte will publish articles detailing a campaign by the United States that pressured the country against bringing its minimum wage to $5 dollar a day. This campaign was allegedly waged under the Obama administration, where Sanderson currently works as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs.

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