“Embarrassing, humiliating and very arrogant” are the words
that Senator Diane Feinstein (D-CA) used to describe Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech to Congress this past week. Say what you will about that
description, but there’s no doubt about another one of her comments, which was
that no American ally would have done what he did. Israel does enjoy a special relationship with the United
States, that’s not at issue, but that the Prime Minister taking advantage of
that to win re-election is deplorable.
However, in light of the above commentary, the one thing we
agree with Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on is that Iran is a much more
dangerous adversary than ISIS.
That’s proven by the influence that Iran wields in the region – Shiites
throughout the Middle East follow Iran’s lead. Mr. Graham used to the term ‘enemy,’ which connotes that no
negotiation or agreement can be reached.
Like Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Graham doesn’t want any agreement with Iran at
all, but more severe sanctions and the use of military action always on the
table. Mr. Netanyahu seems to
dictate the Republican view (with the exception of Senator Rand Paul who didn’t
applaud enough… please) of Middle East policy. The result of all this will be more instability in the
region, which will then lead to more U.S. intervention, not less.
No one wants Iran to have a nuclear weapon, of course, but
what Senator Feinstein said about needing Russia and Iran’s help in ridding
Syria of the Assad regime is true.
However, that’s simply not going to happen, and it leaves you with Chuck
Todd’s question about who are really the U.S.’s Arab allies in the region who
are able to fight ISIS and Assad.
Here’s the problem for the United States: it’s fighting a strategy battle in the Middle East while
almost everyone else is fighting a religious
war. What that means is that
the U.S. needs to greatly strength its alliances with moderate strategic
partners, Jordan and the Kurds to fight ISIS. (This column has said before that the Kurds should have
their own state - the compromise
being that the Kurds don’t get any present Turkish territory. If this upsets Turkey, so be it.) The religious war being fought by
proxies for Iran and Saudi Arabia respectively cannot include the United States
so it has to stop from getting sucked into those battles, which it hasn’t
managed to do.
But here is what’s also really messed up (understating it),
that Republican politicians in Washington will follow Mr. Netanyahu’s lead
lock-step, but in Missouri gubernatorial
candidate Tom Schweich (R) committed suicide because of a whisper campaign that
he was Jewish. When
conservative try to eviscerate the president for reminding people of the
Christianity’s darker days of religious purity, they need to re-examine their
collective righteousness because there a conservative political action
committee (PAC) that wants religious purity in its candidates. Senator Claire McCaskill who attended
Mr. Schweich’s funeral this week stated that dark undisclosed money needs to be
eliminated and that Congress should pass the Disclose Act to institute more
transparency as to who is responsible for such messages.
Citizens United did put the final nail in the coffin of honesty or transparency in our
politics, without a doubt. For those
who agree with the Supreme Court’s ruling to allow all this dark money in our
politics don’t have the high-ground when it comes to Hilary Clinton and this
e-mail scandal – that she was being illegally secretive.
When thinking about this,
always keep in mind Amy Walter’s (from the “Cook Political Report”) notion that
it is not at all about the e-mails.
It’s all about the narrative of Clinton secrecy. Helping that along, Mr. Todd enforced
the notion by saying that the Clintons follow the letter of the law, but not
the spirit of the law. Give us a break… What politician doesn’t do that? To Mrs. Clinton’s defense, what she did
is not without precedent (Colin Powell used private e-mail.) and she did not
break the law. However, did Mrs.
Clinton not think that this could be problematic and just give Republicans more
to dig through? Even though
the law wasn’t broken, you may with agree with Senator Feinstein that Mrs.
Clinton should clarify and shed light on all this. If so, then as The New
York Times Jonathan Martin said, it must be before the announcement of her
candidacy. Then again, if she
didn’t break the law, then what’s there to explain?
What’s funny about this is
that we don’t blame Mrs. Clinton for setting up her own server for
communication purposes while Secretary of State given how much more efficient
the private sector is over government in trusting that it will work well. When you think of it like that, it’s a
good idea. And if she did use the
server for official business, has anyone just asked for access to the whole
server, because that would be justified. If she cannot do that, then you have to agree with
Kathleen Parker that Mrs. Clinton has poor judgment or is hiding
something. Our feeling is that it’s
a political story that the press ate right up, simply because it is about
Hillary Clinton.
And here’s another funny
notion, slightly related. Lindsey
Graham in his interview today said that he never sends e-mail, doesn’t use
it. Mr. Graham may run for president
but does he know that not using e-mail disqualifies him for the office. Follow us here… You don’t use e-mail,
which says to anyone under 35 that you are not tech savvy, don’t understand the
internet or social media, and hence don’t understand American life today… why
would that person vote for Lindsey Graham? She or he wouldn’t.
Panel: Jonathan Martin, The New York Times; Kathleen Parker, The Washington Post; Manu Raju, Politico; Amy Walter, The Cook Political Report
A Note: Yeah,
sure… Obamacare is a disaster… that’s standard critical the line, but because
of Obamacare the number of uninsured has decreased in every state, which
disqualifies the law as a disaster.
Oh wait; we have our facts wrong. The uninsured has not decreased in every state as Kansas is
the only state that saw an increase of 4 percent. Kansas’s political body completely opposes the law, didn’t
use the federal money to expand Medicaid, and obviously didn’t set up its own
exchange. Way to go.
Program note: Good panel of journalists this week that was
underutilized in only discussing presidential politics or Hillary Clinton,
which is also presidential politics.