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Security

GOP Rep. Backs Up Romney: ‘Absolutely’ Russia Is Our ‘Number One Geopolitical Foe’

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) appeared on CNN this morning and discussed Mitt Romney’s campaign trip abroad. An early Romney endorser, Chaffetz was asked about Romney’s recent remark that Russia “is without question our number one geopolitical foe.”

Chaffetz told CNN’s Soledad O’Brien that Romney was right: Russia is “absolutely” the U.S.’s top geopolitical adversary before O’Brien bails him out by mentioning other top U.S. adversaries:

O’BRIEN: Here’s what Governor Romney said to Wolf Blitzer on March 26: Russia “is without question our number one geopolitical foe. They fight every cause for the world’s worst actors.” Do you think that is true? Russia is our “number one geopolitical foe”?

CHAFFETZ: Well, as you look at behind the scenes what’s going on — and how they support terrorism; how they supported some of the worst actors in the world, including Iran; if you look at what’s going on in the cyber-security front, some of the classified briefings we hear there — absolutely.

O’BRIEN: Worse than North Korea? Worse than Iran? Worse than China?

CHAFFETZ: Well, look, those are probably your top three. But certainly you cannot dismiss the Russians even though sometimes they stay out of the news.

Watch the video:

Romney’s comment about Russia drew widespread, bipartisan ridicule. Former George W. Bush Secretary of State Colin Powell denounced the remark as a “cataclysmic sort of pronouncements,” and called on Romney to be more “mature.” Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) said the comment was “naïve.” Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), a Romney supporter, dodged a question about the comment. A Russian politician, for his part, said Romney’s comment could portend “a full-scale crisis” in relations should he be elected president.

On an Obama campaign conference call Monday, former Undersecretary of Defense Michèle Flournoy said that while “everyone recognizes that the relations with Russia will be difficult” at times, the Russians have helped the U.S. in international coalitions against Iran and North Korea’s nuclear programs — a fact noted by the Washington Post when it described Romney’s “number one geopolitical foe” remark as “puzzling.” Flournoy went on to say: “Frankly, we woudln’t be able to sustain this cooperation if we go back to the Cold War and treat russia as our biggest enemy in the world.”

CNN’s Will Cain asked Chaffetz about the Syrian civil war, where Russia supports Bashar al-Assad’s embattled government. Cain asked for “some specifics”: “How would [Romney] handle the situation in Syria were he president?” Chaffetz responded that Romney would “work very closely with” and “strengthen” Israel.

Election

Top Romney Surrogate Defends Campaign’s Decision To Withhold Tax Returns, Tells Critics To ‘Get Over It’

Congressman Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) with Mitt Romney

Utah Representative Jason Chaffetz (R), a top-tier surrogate for the Mitt Romney campaign, told The New Yorker’s Washington correspondent Ryan Lizza that Mitt Romney shouldn’t have to release his tax returns, and that critics of the candidate’s decision to hide his vast fortune in overseas bank accounts should “get over it.”

Lizza, a panelist on CNN’s Starting Point program, asked Chaffetz to respond to fellow Romney surrogate Haley Barbour’s comment yesterday that he felt Romney should release his tax returns.

LIZZA: What’s your position on that? Should Governor Romney release all those tax returns? Right now he’s in a very unique position for a presidential candidate, he’s only released one year and a summary of 2011.

CHAFFETZ: Governor Romney has paid 100 percent of his taxes that are owed, he’s complied 100 percent what the law requires, um…

LIZZA: No I’m sorry Congressman, I was just asking if you think he should release them, not if he’s complied with the law. Should he release his tax returns?

CHAFFETZ: I think he has released the tax returns.

[Laughter and crosstalk]

LIZZA: Just yes or no, should he release them or not.

CHAFFETZ: No! No, I don’t…He’s been very successful, he’s released everything that he’s required to release, including paying more than 16 percent of his income to charitable givings. I think it’s a diversionary tactic. Most people, they don’t care about this. Governor Romney’s been very successful, get over it. It’s a reality.

Watch it:

Mitt Romney would be the first presidential candidate in over three decades to refuse to release a substantial number of recent tax returns. His campaign released one year of tax returns during the primaries, as fellow Republicans piled on his decision to keep the forms secret. Even Romney’s own father George, who ran unsuccessfully for the Republican presidential nomination in 1968, released 12 years of tax returns.

The returns have proved to be yet another wedge issue in the Romney camp. Aside from former Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, Newt Grinrich, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry all called on Romney to release his tax returns earlier this year. And as it happens, so did Mitt Romney, who pledged to release his returns in April, after he secured the GOP nomination. “I’ll release my returns in April, and probably for other years as well,” he said during a January primary debate in South Carolina. He has yet to do so.

Justice

GOP Rep Suggests Arresting Attorney General Eric Holder

For more than two years, House Oversight Chair Darrell Issa (R-CA) has tried to exploit the tragedy of a federal law enforcement agent’s death as part of a crusade against Attorney General Eric Holder, most recently by successfully pushing to hold Holder in contempt of Congress despite objections from the House Republican leadership. Last week, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) upped the ante even further by suggesting that the House GOP could unilaterally attempt to have Holder arrested:

Chaffetz, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, told Fox News that there are three options moving forward — going through the U.S. attorney, taking civil action or instructing the House sergeant at arms to “take control of the situation” with an arrest.

However, he acknowledged the House had received a letter from Department of Justice instructing the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia to not pursue legal action.

The Utah congressman predicted that some people will call for Holder’s arrest, but said the House would “try to exhaust” its other options first.

Watch it:

As a reminder, this entire incident concerns Republican anger that Holder has not complied with a subpoena to turn over documents that are not subject to congressional subpoena. Surely, that is an offense worthy of arresting a sitting cabinet official.

Climate Progress

GOP Budget Calls For Fire Sale Of Public Lands While Preserving $40 Billion In Tax Breaks To Big Oil

By Jessica Goad, Manager of Research and Outreach, Center for American Progress Action Fund.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) released the GOP budget yesterday morning.  In all the coverage about the  massive shortcomings of the budget, many may have missed the proposal to sell off millions of acres of the public lands that belong to all of us.

Tea Party favorite Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) is credited with adding the language, which says:

Sales of Unneeded Federal Assets:  In the last year alone, Republicans put forth proposals to sell unneeded federal property.  Representative Jason Chaffetz has proposed to sell millions of acres of unneeded federal land. Likewise, Representative Jeff Denham’s bill to authorize the sale of billions of dollars worth of federal assets would save the government money, collect corresponding revenue, and remove economic distortions by reducing public ownership.  Such sales could also potentially be encouraged by reducing appropriations  to various agencies.  If done correctly, taxpayers could recoup billions of  dollars from selling unused government property.

This is likely referring to Chaffetz’s bill, H.R. 1126, the “Disposal of Excess Federal Lands Act of 2011.”  The radical proposal would force the government to sell off 3.3 million acres of public lands in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Wyoming to the highest bidder, without specifying how American taxpayers would receive a fair compensation for them.

Selling off public lands—including national parks—has recently been high on various Republicans’ wish lists.  Read more

Climate Progress

Along With Slashing Medicare And Drilling Everywhere, Republicans Propose Selling Federal Lands To Reduce The Deficit

By Jessica Goad, Manager of Research and Outreach, Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Congressional Republicans and presidential candidates have suggested a variety of options for dealing with our country’s budget woes, such as slashing Medicare, reducing federal spending to 1966 levels, and drilling everywhere. Today, the House Natural Resources Committee used much of a hearing on designating wilderness areas to discuss another radical proposal: selling off 3.3 million acres of lands that belong to all Americans without clarifying how taxpayers would receive a fair return for them.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT), is a Tea Party favorite who voted against the debt ceiling compromise bill because it “cuts too little in FY 2012.” His “Disposal of Excess Federal Lands Act of 2011” would force the Interior Department to sell 3.3 million acres of lands in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Wyoming to the highest bidder. Chaffetz justified his bill at the hearing today saying:

It is neither logical nor responsible for the federal government to own or manage surplus lands.

Chaffetz has led the charge against America’s public estate, including a cosponsorship of a bill to remove protections from 60 million acres of wilderness-quality lands to give access to corporate interests.

He made the determination of which acres to include in his land sale bill based on a government report from 1997, even though there are updated estimates available in various “resource management plans” issued by the government. As Mike Pool, the witness from the Interior Department stated today, the bill “would be unlikely to generate revenue.”

Selling off federal lands is an antiquated and radical policy option that has been debated since President Teddy Roosevelt first started setting aside lands for future generations to enjoy. More recently, the 1970s and 1980s gave life to the Sagebrush Rebellion in which a handful of westerners sought to sell and transfer the public’s land to state and private interests. As independent California television station KCET put it:

Every 10 to 15 years or so, western politicians have used the national forests and parks as anvils on which to hammer out their anti-Washington anxieties.

Politicians who choose to focus on only the face value of public lands are ignoring an incredibly important economic engine in the West — the conservation economy made up of the men and women who work in recreation, restoration, and renewable energy development. Additionally, public lands, such as national parks, national forests, wilderness areas, and national historic sites, have far more value than just what the acreage is worth. Protected areas provide clean air and clean water at no cost at all to the American taxpayer — as just one example, the clean water flowing from national forests has been valued at $7.2 billion every year.

Climate Progress

GOP Rep. Chaffetz Pushing Legislation To Sell Off Public Lands

Earlier this year, Gov. Gary Herbert (R-UT) said it’s “worth exploring” selling off much of his own state to help pay down the national debt, agreeing with an earlier call from Rep. Dennis Ross (R-FL).

Now, another Utah politician is introducing legislation to do just that. Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) has introduced legislation that would sell off nearly 1 percent of the Bureau of Land Management area in 10 states:

While other members of Congress will be pressing Tuesday to set aside some federal lands as wilderness, Rep. Jason Chaffetz will push legislation to dispose of “excess” swaths of the West to help pay down the federal debt. [...] “While there are national treasures worthy of federal protection, there are lands that should be returned to private ownership,” Chaffetz said in introducing his legislation earlier this year. “If the land serves no public purpose and is ‘identified for disposal,’ let’s return it to private ownership.” Chaffetz said the sale would equate to barely 1 percent of Bureau of Land Management area and less then a half a percent of all federal lands. In addition to Utah, the bill would affect public lands in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon and Washington.

There will be a hearing on Chaffetz’s bill today at the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands.

Security

Chaffetz Mocks Neocons On Afghanistan: ‘There’s Always An Argument To Stay There Forever’

Neocons and right-wing war hawks have been attacking their Republican colleagues recently for expressing doubts about carrying on the wars in Libya and particularly Afghanistan. The neocons have alleged that Republicans calling for withdrawal from Afghanistan are drifting toward “isolationism.”

That fight was on full display on CNN last night when neocon Wall Street Journal oped writer Bret Stephens took on Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) for questioning the U.S. presence in Afghanistan. “The grownups have left the field of the Republican Party,” Stephens said mockingly. Chaffetz fired back, saying the neocons are presenting a plan to stay in Afghanistan “forever”:

HOST CHRISTINE ROMANS: Congressman, a decade and a trillion dollars, there are those who say we risk throwing away great progress if we pull back too quickly and too soon for political reasons.

CHAFFETZ: Well, there’s always an argument to stay there forever. There are those of us that believe a good conservative position is to redefine the mission. In fact, one of the failings I think the Obama administration has is that it has not defined what success is. [...] I just don’t think we should be there with our men and women and I don’t want to pay for it.

Watch it:

Given that Chaffetz mentioned that he didn’t want to pay for the war in Afghanistan, it’s worth it to point out that the Pentagon said yesterday that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and homeland security operations have cost the United States $1 trillion so far, which, according to one analyst, “doesn’t tell you is how much money has been appropriated by Congress, which is $1.2 trillion.” Other estimates have concluded that by 2021, the total cost of the wars will have exceeded $2 trillion. Indeed, when President Obama was deliberating the Afghanistan troop surge in November, 2009, he reportedly “received a private budget memo estimating that an expanded presence [in Afghanistan] would cost $1 trillion over 10 years, roughly the same as his health care plan.”

Security

AEI Analyst: Attack On USIP ‘Most Head-In-The-Sand Neanderthal Effort Of The Year’

After the bi-partisan effort to defund the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) over the winter failed — at least for the 2011 fiscal year — two Republicans are renewing attacks on the Congressionally-chartered and -funded organization with a new approach.

In late May, Reps. Chip Cravaack (R-MN) and Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) introduced an amendment to the Defense Authorization Act that would go beyond defunding — it would repeal the 1984 law that established USIP.

So far, the American Enterprise Institute’s resident moderate Norman Ornstein has issued the measure’s harshest denunciation, writing in Roll Call last week that the pair of Congressmen had won the “dubious distinction” of undertaking the “Most Head-in-the-Sand Neanderthal Effort of the Year”:

[T]his is not some collection of pointy-headed peaceniks — USIP has been engaged in serious and risky work, hand in hand with our military, in Iraq, Afghanistan and other trouble spots. It is engaged in mediation, nation building and other efforts to reduce conflict and save lives.

Defenders like Ornstein frame the debate over USIP’s existence in terms of national security. Indeed, as Rep. Mike Honda (D-CA) and USIP president Richard Solomon point out, USIP is active in conflict areas where the U.S. is fighting wars — and others where it is not — often doing jobs that direct work for the U.S. government won’t allow.

Chaffetz and Rep. Anthony Wiener (D-NY) led the effort to defund USIP last winter. Both lawmakers wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed in February calling for defunding, but labeled USIP a “fine think tank.” Chaffatz and Wiener went on:

The USIP has a role to play in our modern world, but the level of taxpayer support that this private organization receives is excessive…. Although there have been no oversight hearings on the USIP since 1985, the organization’s value is not in question — only its need for taxpayer funding is.

Since Chaffatz signed this op-ed too, he should explain what changed since the time of its writing. After all, as February’s defunding battle shows, USIP can have its taxpayer funding taken away while allowing it to retain its Congressional charter. This latest episode seems like a mere work-around for defunding after the bid failed through to make it through the final budget for the 2011 fiscal year.

Security

Following Outrage Over TSA Screenings, GOP Reps. Chaffetz And Hoekstra Lead Revived Calls For Profiling

In recent days, the right has worked themselves into hysteria over the TSA’s new, more invasive screening protocols, with right-wing media magnate Matt Drudge breathlessly hyping the latest video of an intrusive pat down, and Tea Party Nation founder Judson Phillips demanding the impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. While the TSA has promised to revise the methods to make them less intrusive, many conservatives have turned to one of their favorite solutions to the national security threat de jour: ethnic profiling.

In separate interviews on the radio show of the far-right birther website World Net Daily, Reps. Pete Hoekstra (R-MI) and Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) both called for profiling as a means to better address the threat to air travel. Chaffetz specifically advocated for ethnic and religious profiling, though he said those traits shouldn’t be “solely” considered:

HOST: Is [profiling] something that you would advocate?

CHAFFETZ: Absolutely. Well, now that it’s become an outrage and people say, well we still need to secure an airline, how do we do that? Two things need to happen. One is profiling. Not based solely on someone’s religion or based solely on someone’s race.

In an interview today, Hoekstra — who is the ranking Republican member of the House Select Committee on Intelligence — also gave an passionate endorsement of profiling:

HOEKSTRA: The words profiling are toxic from a political standpoint. But the bottom-line is there are certain parameters that you can use in profiling that would narrow the scope of who you really target. … But it only makes sense to do some type of profiling so that you can focus the resources where they need to be focused. So we should consider it. … Sure, profiling is okay. You know, you do it everywhere in life — it only makes sense. You just need to make sure you do it right.

Listen to a compilation of Chaffetz and Hoekstra:

While these GOP lawmakers provide legitimacy, as Media Matters notes, conservative media figures have led the effort to use “the public backlash against airport security screenings as an opportunity to renew their calls for racial profiling.” Conservative Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer lamented, “The only reason we continue to do [pat downs] is that people are too cowed to even question the absurd taboo against profiling.” On Fox and Freinds last week, in his typically simple fashion, host Steve Doocy commented, “I like the idea of the profiling.” Meanwhile, right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh said, “There’s a simple way to stop this stuff; it’s called profiling.” And in an editorial, the conservative Washington Times complained, the “TSA believes an 80-year-old grandmother deserves the same level of scrutiny at an airport terminal checkpoint as a 19-year-old male exchange student from Yemen.”

As is the case with Chaffetz and Hoekstra, the conservative argument is predicated on the notion that profiling is “enormously successful,” as Fox News host Sean Hannity put it. But in reality, this is not the case. Aside from the obvious civil rights concerns with ethnic or religious profiling, the practice is actually “probably worse than random screening in the real world” at defeating terrorists, a mathematical analysis published in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science last year found.

Indeed, recent terror suspects undermine the notion that terrorists “all look alike.” Shoe bomber Richard Reid was a white, Jamaican-born British citizen; underwear bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutalla was Nigerian; and “Jihad Jane” Colleen Renee LaRose, who was arrested in March on charges that she wanted to “wage violent jihad,” was a “petite” blond-haired, blue-eyed 46-year-old American woman.

Because of the problems in creating a mold, profiling “diverts precious law enforcement resources away from investigations of individuals…who have been linked to terrorist activity by specific and credible evidence…[and] ignores the possibility that someone who does not fit the profile may be engaged in terrorism.”

If conservatives don’t believe the data, they need only ask former Bush Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who has called profiling “misleading and, arguably, dangerous.”

Security

GOP Rep. Jason Chaffetz Willing To Investigate Bush For Torture: I Have No ‘Hesitation Whatsoever’

This afternoon, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT), a member of the House Government Oversight Committee, appeared on MSNBC’s The Dylan Ratigan Show to talk about what he feels should be the GOP’s legislative agenda.

At one point, Chaffetz started to list off a number of investigations — like probing the Countrywide “Friends Of Angelo” scandal — he wanted to conduct in the House of Representatives now that Republicans are in control of that body. Ratigan asked the congressman how “far back” he thinks is “appropriate” for these investigations. He noted that Chaffetz had not listed a “torture investigation.” Chaffetz responded by saying that that “may be on the list as well. I’m not afraid of going after the Bush administration”:

RATIGAN: How far back do you think is appropriate? Because the one thing that’s not on this list is for instance a torture investigation.

CHAFFETZ: Well, it may be on the list as well. I’m not afraid of going after the Bush administration. I wasn’t brought here by the establishment. When I ran for congressman in 2008, I’m just a freshman year, George W. Bush, Orrin Hatch, and Bob Bennett, three Republicans, they campaigned against me. So I don’t mind going back and looking at ‘em. So I don’t have any hestitation whatsoever.

Watch it:

In endorsing investigations of the Bush Administration’s use of torture, Chaffetz is advocating a position that the Obama administration has thus far refused to take. Just this week, the Justice Department announced that it will not pursue any sort of criminal charges against officials who ordered the destruction of CIA tapes depicting torture of terrorist suspects during the Bush Administration. In an interview with NBC’s Matt Lauer that aired last night, former President George W. Bush repeatedly admitted to authorizing waterboarding, a practice that is illegal.

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