Mr. Todd asked fmr. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen the same question that he asked Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) last week, and he was surprised that he got the same answer. The question being who they feared more - Iran or ISIS, and both men answered Iran. But the problem is not with the answer, it's with the question.
Given Mr. Graham's track record of ill-advised foreign policy positions in the past, we'll still give him the benefit of the doubt here along with Admiral Mullen of course, that they are answering the question from a long-term strategic perspective, whereas the question is framed in terms of fear [of being attacked].
If you look at it that way, which seemed evident in Adm. Mullen's interview, then it makes perfect sense because the fact is that ISIS has too many enemies and Iran has too much influence. It's the expansion of that influence that prompts answers from these types of people. Not too mention the other significant point that Andrea Mitchell brought up, which was the question of Iran's deliver systems and how advanced those are. So on a more macro level, their answers are well-founded because beside nuclear weapons ambitions, Iran wants the same oil influence in the world as Saudi Arabia has, which makes many vested parties more than uncomfortable - summed up by NBC's Bill Neely. And lastly, Iran's position that Israel doesn't have the right to exist is completely unacceptable. It has the right, it does exist - get over it and deal. Maybe that seems trite, but if Iran only has peaceful intentions for its nuclear program then why the provocation? And it's a continuing one, because Iran must know that before the first of anything hits the ground in Israel, the United States will have already dropped hundreds. From the Iranian perspective, they play a dangerous foolish game, provoking the United States.
Tough talk... which should be delivered by the president, not by Congress in a sophomoric letter, in which it now has been established that neoconservative Bill Kristol consulted freshman Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) on the idea. Disappointingly and not surprisingly, Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS) has not second thoughts about signing it even given this week Senator John McCain admitting it wasn't thought out well unlike some of Mr. Kristol's other ideas like Sarah Palin for VP or the Iraq War.
And here's why Senator Tim Kane's (D-VA) co-sponsored bill that Congress must ratify any negotiated nuclear deal with Iran is a bad idea. First, we want to point out that Senator Kane specifically said that the letter was "an unacceptable level of contempt of the office of the presidency," the very point we touched on in our last post. In spirit, it's a good idea actually, but in practicality, a complete embarrassing disaster waiting to happen. Keep in mind that the negotiations with Iran also involves the five permanent members of the UN Security Council (China, Russia, England, The United States, and France) and Germany. If the bill languishes in Congress, which is likely - passing in the Senate and dead in the House where does that leave the deal? The others go ahead and the U.S. is left out? We impose sanctions and no one else does while Iran continues on with it's nuclear program? If the bill does pass both Houses and the president vetoes it, then what? All this only to make the United States look fractured and indecisive - very problematic.
With what seems like a Congressional majority for the legislation that gives them a ratifying say in the matter, Congress is completely hands off when it comes to a formal authorization for the use of force against ISIS, which at least on the surface seems like there would be broad consensus, but instead just killing time.
Speaking of legislation and 'problematic,' how about Congress pass a law that limits the amount of times Congress can investigate an incident of government scale, like Benghazi. Before Mr. Todd's interview with Congressman Trey Gowdy (R-SC) who heads up the Benghazi investigation.
The sixth one.
Now, fmr. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton clouded the issue with the personal e-mail controversy, but as Congressman Gowdy explain, she is but a very small part of the overall investigation. He also said that his committee was the first one to interview Mrs. Clinton and several others. This leads one to ask what the other committees that conducted investigations were doing. Mrs. Clinton did testify in front of Congress so we'll presume he's differentiating between Congressional testimony and an interview. It still makes no sense to do five investigations without interviewing all relevant officials. Admiral Mullen was part of one of those investigations and he said on the program that he was completely comfortable with what his committee did and the conclusions they came to. Mr. Gowdy's committee is doing work that should have already been done, what a waste. And bringing it full circle, Mr. Todd mentioned that Congressman Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) wants an investigation into Mrs. Clinton's e-mails. Not the most judicious use of time, wouldn't you agree?
Panel: Andrea Mitchell, NBC News; Karen Finney, fmr. DNC Communications Director; Kevin Madden, fmr. senior advisor for Mitt Romney; Matt Bai, Yahoo News
A Note to the Producers: On "Meet The Press," viewers, and the panel itself, are better served when it consists of only journalists, reporters, op-ed writers, et. al. In other words the press, and not strategists. The discussion of Mrs. Clinton's e-mails became a verbal joust between Kevin Madden and more egregiously Karen Finney (in Mrs. Clinton's defense), in which Mr. Todd has to shift from moderator to referee, which is inappropriate for "The Meet Press." That's for cable.
A political blog commenting on Sunday's "Meet The Press" on NBC and the state of the country in a broader sense. Please Note: This blog is in no way affiliated with "Meet The Press" or NBC. It is purely an opinion piece about the television program that this blog considers the "TV Show of Record."
Sunday, March 15, 2015
3.15.15: Congressional Killing of Time
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
3.10.15: Seven Dwarfed By Forty-Seven Idiots
Forty-Seven Republican Idiots...
If you actually think that what these forty-seven Republicans Senator did in signing an ill-conceived letter written by freshman Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) then you have no idea of how foreign policy should be conducted and the signal that this sends allies and adversaries alike.
Here are the seven still worthy of the office (the adults in the room): Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Senator Dan Coats of Indiana, Senator Thad Cochran of Mississippi, Senator Susan Collins of Maine, Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona, Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, who is the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. If he didn't think it was a good idea, then why would his forty-seven colleagues not heed that advice.
How did all of these supposedly experienced legislators with names like Hatch and McCain think this was a good idea? We expect counterproductive legislators like Ted Cruz or James Inhofe to sign onto such stupidity. But not the Republicans that have in fact shown some common sense like Rand Paul or Kelly Ayotte.
Way to lead your Senate caucus Mr. McConnell... Why don't you just thrown the gavel over your shoulder like a bouquet for anyone to catch.
And why are we so angry with this move? These Republican senators not only embarrassed themselves with this stunt, but all of us. Secondly, not matter what these individuals think of the president, you do not disrespect the office of the presidency. If you believe that the United States is an exceptional nation, for good or ill, you do not disrespect the lead office that is the face of our foreign policy.
Idiots...
And if you don't believe us that it was stupid and dangerous then read David Ignatius's (someone who is very critical of Mr. Obama's foreign policy) column in today's Washington Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2015/03/10/gop-senators-letter-to-iran-is-dangerous-and-irresponsible/
Maybe you think it's farce... like how Dan Milbank describes Republicania, also from today's Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/republicans-set-up-their-own-breakaway-nation/2015/03/10/1618f6d4-c749-11e4-b2a1-bed1aaea2816_story.html?hpid=z3
As idiotic and deplorable as this stunt was, we wouldn't go quite this far (but we love the provocation):
Wow, what's next?
If you actually think that what these forty-seven Republicans Senator did in signing an ill-conceived letter written by freshman Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) then you have no idea of how foreign policy should be conducted and the signal that this sends allies and adversaries alike.
Here are the seven still worthy of the office (the adults in the room): Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Senator Dan Coats of Indiana, Senator Thad Cochran of Mississippi, Senator Susan Collins of Maine, Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona, Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, who is the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. If he didn't think it was a good idea, then why would his forty-seven colleagues not heed that advice.
How did all of these supposedly experienced legislators with names like Hatch and McCain think this was a good idea? We expect counterproductive legislators like Ted Cruz or James Inhofe to sign onto such stupidity. But not the Republicans that have in fact shown some common sense like Rand Paul or Kelly Ayotte.
Way to lead your Senate caucus Mr. McConnell... Why don't you just thrown the gavel over your shoulder like a bouquet for anyone to catch.
And why are we so angry with this move? These Republican senators not only embarrassed themselves with this stunt, but all of us. Secondly, not matter what these individuals think of the president, you do not disrespect the office of the presidency. If you believe that the United States is an exceptional nation, for good or ill, you do not disrespect the lead office that is the face of our foreign policy.
Idiots...
And if you don't believe us that it was stupid and dangerous then read David Ignatius's (someone who is very critical of Mr. Obama's foreign policy) column in today's Washington Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2015/03/10/gop-senators-letter-to-iran-is-dangerous-and-irresponsible/
Maybe you think it's farce... like how Dan Milbank describes Republicania, also from today's Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/republicans-set-up-their-own-breakaway-nation/2015/03/10/1618f6d4-c749-11e4-b2a1-bed1aaea2816_story.html?hpid=z3
As idiotic and deplorable as this stunt was, we wouldn't go quite this far (but we love the provocation):
Wow, what's next?
Sunday, March 08, 2015
3.8.15: Knowing Your Adversaries
“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.
Sunday, March 01, 2015
3.1.15: Homeland Security and Immigration... and Stupidity
It's insultingly predictable that Republicans would blame
the president for the current legislative mess that is now going on in
Congress, which is what House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) did in his
interview today. To agree with
him, you would align with Hugh Hewlitt’s description that the president has
exceeded his constitutional questions authority by issuing executive orders on
immigration laws. It is these executive orders that are hence causing the
potential shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security. (By the way,
Congress managed to pass a bill keeping it open for another week. Speaker Boehner couldn’t rally is party
for a three-week extension). Because border security is an aspect of homeland
security, which relates to the immigration debate, the Republicans decided to
tie a Department of Homeland Security funding bills to the repeal of the
president's executive orders on immigration.
Coun-ter Pro-duc-tive…
In addition to not having much success blaming the president
for the current situation, Congressman McCarthy kept saying that Senator Harry
Reid, the [now] minority leader, had to decide whether he wanted to work with
Republicans, and if he did, then everything could move forward. Doesn’t Mr.
McCarthy know that Mr. Reid is no longer the person in control of the Senate –
that would be Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican from Kentucky who did the
sensible thing and split the votes.
The Republicans in the House have a rule, which is that they
will not vote on something unless there are a majority of Republicans in favor
of it. Only concerning oneself with a majority of a partiality of the House
body ensures that nothing will get done.
No longer can Republicans vote with Democrats on anything, making every
single vote a controversial issue, when they certainly shouldn’t be. The Republicans chose to tie the funding for the Department
of Homeland Security to these executive orders, but they didn’t need to
be. Is there a constitutional
question about whether the Pres. overstepped his executive authority? Possibly.
However, that should not affect the funding of a whole department, a vital one to
the safety of American citizens at that.
It's like Republicans have made the issue of immigration
into one like vaccinations, because of a few ideologues, they’re willing to put
all of us at risk.
Politically, there is something worse for Republicans than
being blamed for shutting down the Department of Homeland Security, and that
would be any respect and trust people have in them to accomplish anything. If
the Republicans spoke with one voice, giving sensible reasons for why they're
denying this funding the Department of Homeland Security, then people would in
fact listen and decide for themselves.
But now, we’re all just shaking our heads.
The Senate has taken a clean vote and a bill to fund the
DHS, and they have also passed a bipartisan immigration bill that the House is
yet to take up. DHS funding should
not wait, cannot wait.
Everyone on the panel conceded that whether the entire thing
was triggered by the President or not, Republicans were the ones who were going
to be blamed for any government shutdown due to their Congressional control. If
not for anything else, the perception of Congress’s performance has gotten
worse since the Republicans have taken over control of both Houses.
With regard to immigration at this point, Republicans have
only blocked and obstructed legislation so now anything that they do loses more
Latino votes. They've basically put themselves in a position where they can do
no right in the eyes of Latinos when it comes to immigration reform before the
motives will always be questioned.
If there is a constitutional question then Hugh Hewitt's
suggestion was of the free common sense good one which was from the Department
of Homeland Security and keep the injunction in place on Pres. Obama's
executive orders because there is an injunction at this time handed down by a
district judge.
This column agrees with the hard right in as much as House Speaker
John Boehner (R-OH) being one of the main problems in the House, be it for
different reasons. Our reason has to do with his inability to bring along the
hard right in his own party. Mr. Boehner can't reason with them, then folds to
their indefensible positions and saying things that are completely irrational,
or just plain stupid.
This brings us to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s
to a joint session of Congress this Tuesday. Here’s our basic take on the Prime Minister – he’s a real horse's
ass. His family lived in
Cheltenham, PA, a suburb of Philadelphia where he in fact graduated from Cheltenham
High School so he would understand perfectly what we mean. He’s got stubbornness that always gets
in the way of being productive, and then grows to a point to where it's counter-productivity
is feeding off of itself.
And that's what next week's speech is going to be. Hopefully,
what will happen is is what former Sen. Joe Lieberman described inasmuch as the
speech will be complementary to Pres. Obama while stating concerns about the
Iranian, maybe even turning out to be graceful. Were not confident in that happening again, but it’s not Mr.
Netanyahu’s fault.
It’s Speaker John Boehner’s. As a politician with an upcoming re-election bid, Mr.
Netanyahu’s instinct for self-political-preservation is dictating everything,
and an opportunity to get head and shoulders above his opponents with the
optics of addressing a joint session are too tempting to resist. Speaker
Boehner invited him and created a political mess that set a very bad precedent.
He disrespected the office
of the President of the United States by acting disgracefully.
So atthis point, who cares who goes to the speech and who
doesn't - everything that needs to be said has already been. And as not to lose sight of what it's
all about, the Prime Minister is going to say that the United States is making
a bad deal with Iran on its nuclear program. But as Senator Jan Schakowsky
(D-IL) pointed out, if not this deal what is the alternative? Going to war?
In his interview, potential presidential candidate, Ben
Carson's answer for what should be done in the Middle East was completely
ridiculous. He said that he would
give the military all authority to do what ever they deemed necessary to
eradicate ISIS and also Shia extremists – otherwise known as the ‘kill them
all’ policy?
What he outlined was giving the military full authority to
go to war, not only with ISIS, but Shia extremists as well. Does that mean Hezbollah, which is funded
by Iran? See where we’re going with this.
We respect the fact that Mr. Carson is perhaps the finest pediatric
neurosurgeon alive, but his view on Middle East policy and engagement is
downright idiotic.
Panel: Helene Cooper, The
New York Times; Hugh Hewlitt, “The Hugh Hewlitt Show;” Maria Hinojosa, NPR;
Chris Cillizza, The Washington Post
And one more thing:
Missouri gubernatorial candidate Tom Schweich (R) committed suicide this week,
apparently, in part, because there was a ‘whisper campaign’ against him for his
family's Jewish heritage. In Chuck Todd's interview segment with St. Louis Post Dispatch Editor Tony
Messenger, they didn’t specifically refer to the ‘whisper campaign’ as what it
really was – anti-Semitism.
Instead, they talked about it in terms of the ‘politics of personal
destruction.” Right, but our question is: How in the hell is a gubernatorial
candidate in Missouri, U.S.A. in this day and age, being destructed by attacks
on his family’s Jewish heritage. If
this does turn out to be the reason or plays a large role, that would lead us
to our second question: why aren’t
federal investigators there getting to the bottom of this?
And one more after
that: With the murder of
opposition leader Boris Nemtsov in Moscow on Friday, with the Kremlin as a
backdrop no less, one can only think that there are even darker days on the
horizon for Russians’ and their freedoms as they wander back into Mr.
Putin’s totalitarian forest.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
2.22.15: The Ripple Mr. Giuliani's Insidious Statements
The main topics of today's program all carried a whiff of
xenophobia and the ‘ol ‘otherness’ or ‘us and them’ aspect, and once again,
unfortunately, it’s was driven by Republicans.
First, there were the stupid comments this week by former
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (R), in which he said that the president was not as
patriotic as he should be; and that he didn't grow up loving the country like,
say, you and me. To not endlessly rehash what we feel our readers already know
of Mr. Giuliani’s statements, they were insidious at the least or as Nia-Malika
Henderson of The Washington Post
summed it they were ‘despicable.’
Indeed.
These kinds of statements have no place in sensible
political discourse, as doesn’t Mr. Giuliani anymore, who is senselessly trying
to remain relevant. But in trying to do so has, in fact, rendered himself
completely irrelevant and cannot be taken seriously. Ms. Henderson also was
correct when she described how most New Yorkers know Mr. Giuliani's reputation before
9/11 was not all that great, and that’s understating it. Everyone is grateful for
his stout leadership on the worst day in New York City's history, but he has now
crushed that legacy. Now Mr. Giuliani is simply a right-wing crank that doesn't
represent the views of the people he once represented.
We would call Mr. Giuliani a joke but that would be
inaccurate. More appropriately, Mr. Giuliani is the punchline to the bad joke
on Scott Walker (R), the governor of Wisconsin.
We’re of the mindset that if you call the president unpatriotic
or say that he doesn't love America hat is also to indirectly say that everyone
who voted for him also doesn't love the country which is insulting to the
majority of Americans who elected Mr. Obama twice. So for Mr. Walker to not denounce Mr. Giuliani's statements,
given at a dinner that was in fact for Mr. Walker's benefit, he is deservedly
going to get beaten up in the press for such cowardice.
Today's panel also discussed a question asked of Mr. Walker
as to whether or not he believed Pres. Obama was a Christian. Chuck Todd
accurately described that the answer seemed to leave an opening that suggested
that the president may not be a Christian. What is very obvious is that Mr.
Walker needs to be schooled up very quickly if he's serious about contending
for the presidency of the United States because right now he is certainly not
ready for prime time. These ‘I’m-not-qualified-to-judge’ answers aren’t going
to cut it anymore.
Republicans like to say that Scott Walker is a great
Republican governor in a largely Democratic state, but the fact is that Mr.
Walker despite having won three elections in four years – Republicans like to
point out - has put the state of Wisconsin into debt. And despite what Republicans say, not having unions is bad
for middle-class families that earn money in manufacturing. ‘Right to Work’ legislation simply
gives all leverage to the employer that means you can be let go from your job
arbitrarily.
And we can't let this go without mentioning Louisiana Gov.
Bobby Jindal (R). The governor said that if you are looking for someone to
criticize Mayor Giuliani, go someplace else. This column is of the mindset that
Bobby Jindal is delusional if he thinks he would be a good president. He has pretty
much run the state of Louisiana into the ground, increasing debt and cutting
education funding. And speaking to
which, he’s flip-flopped on common core education. When we think about Bobby
Jindal, we don't think about how he won't criticize a fellow Republican, our
aim goes directly to his policies.
The second semantic "controversy" stems from the
fact that Republicans are condemning the president because Mr. Obama is not
labeling ISIS as Islamic extremists. The president is calling them, rather, radical extremists. ISIS is an extremist
group that follows an extreme interpretation of the Koran, which would indeed
make them Islamic extremists. That’s what this column will call ISIS, but we completely
understand why the Administration would not use that term. We agree that the Administration
should not use that term.
This opinion column has the luxury to use such as
description, just as we have the luxury to use the term “Christian extremist”
when describing the West Baptist Church for example. That congregation takes an
extreme view of the Bible. Can the president talk about Christian extremists?
Of course he cannot because politically that's just a terrible thing to do. Our
allies in the Middle East are Muslims and we have to show them, as a country
represented by the Obama Administration, that we understand that not all
Muslims are extremists. Even, conservative columnist, Michael Gerson agreed
that you cannot alienate your allies in the region in such as way that lumps a
billion Muslims world-wide with ISIS.
So we don't have a problem with Sen. Bob Corker, Republican of
Tennessee, saying that he's going to call ISIS Islamic extremists. What we
would ask is that people understand why Pres. Obama won't use that term.
On today's program video clips showed President George Bush
saying that “Islam is peace,” and one of the fmr. Vice-President Dick Cheney
saying that the Iraq war was not a war against Islam. So there is precedent for
Mr. Obama’s tact.
One other thing that Senator Corker said that that we agree
with was about the long-standing policy of the United States that it will not
pay ransoms for American citizens captured by a group like ISIS. As we've said
before in this column, we have great sympathy for Kayla Mueller’s family, but it
must be said that Ms. Mueller knew the risks in going to Syria. She had to have
known of those risks because to go there with out knowing those risks would
have been unwise. No matter how much one's heart is in the right place one
still has to go into something like that with eyes completely open. So, no, the
United States should not change its policy on not ransoming captured citizens.
The next instance of frivolous non-inclusion is the
Republicans stance on immigration inasmuch as they are tying it to funding for
the Department of Homeland Security. The Congress has four days to resolve the
funding issue of this department while demanding that the president revoked his
executive orders on immigration.
In the interview that Chuck Todd conducted with Homeland Security
Secretary Jeh Johnson, he outlined a threat to the nation's malls, specifically
the Mall of America in Minneapolis, a city with a large Somali population. The threat came from Al-Shabab, a large
terrorist organized based in Somalia. He said that people going to the mall
should be more alert than they normally would be. He said there will be extra security - visible and not. So
in the face of these threats and in the matter of protecting American borders
and enforcing border policy, which Republicans insist on, they are threatening
a shutdown that would furlough 30,000 people in Homeland Security. Decide for
yourself whether that's smart or not.
And finally, the last in this string of disenfranchisement has
to do with voting laws.
It is heartening to know that there are many Republicans,
more than Democrats would think, that can compromise and move forward bipartisan
legislation – case in point is this new voting legislation, in light of the
Supreme Court dismissing pre-clearance in changing voting laws in certain
states, cosponsored by one of today's guests Congressman Charlie Kent (R-PA). The legislation even has the support of
Civil Rights icon Congressman John Lewis.
What we didn’t like about what Congress Kent said is that new
voting rights legislation would have to contain a provision for voter IDs,
which he agreed with. The congressman did give examples of voter fraud in his
argument for requiring voter IDs, but there was a serious problem with his two cited
examples. Both examples were of politicians who committed the fraud, not about the
average voter. Yet, voter IDs penalizes the average voter and says nothing of
the politician who is more apt to commit the fraud. If that's his best argument
that he can make for voter ID then the argument is deeply flawed.
Sherrilyn Ifill, legal defense counsel for the NAACP, described
and example of where a judge in Texas ruled that the state’s voter ID laws were
specifically put in place to disenfranchise minority voters. Whether you agree with
that judge's ruling or not, the mere conversation of votes being restricted
runs counter to what the base goal really should be which is to have as many
people focus possible. The goal should always be to increase voter turnout, not
restrict it. If you think democracy is a good thing then why not encourage more
of it.
Panel: Amy oh Walter, Cook Political Report; Nia-Malika
Henderson, The Washington Post; Michael Gerson, The Washington Post; Robert
Gibbs, fmr. White House Press Secretary
Sunday, February 15, 2015
2.15.15: U.S. Responsibility to Engage ISIS
One of the central questions on today's “Meet The Press” was
whether the United States is responsible for what is going on right now in the
Middle East and should it be its fight at this point? There is broad consensus
in the United States that soldiers should not be sent back into Iraq. This
debate comes as President Obama is asking Congress for resolution to formalize
its engagement with ISIS.
First, today's Meet the Press in terms of format, guests and
smoothness in its pacing [read: no awkward stumbles at all] was perhaps one of
the best that Chuck Todd has done since taking over as moderator. We would
still like to see interview guests on the program actually meet the press and have the journalists on the panel asking some
questions. However, today that was unnecessary as Mr. Todd asked direct concise
questions that elicited insightful and candid responses. One clear example of
this was when Senator John McCain (R-AZ) said that the American people did not
elect Republicans to majorities in both houses to see them fight within their
own ranks – over tying funding for the Department of Homeland Security to the
president’s immigration executive orders.
When Mr. Todd was interviewing Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI), he
asked the senator if the United States responsible to stay in the Middle East
with a military presence to try to stabilize the region. The senator did feel
that United States did bear some responsibility to be there, but not to go it
alone. To which, Mr. Todd then
switched to Russia and whether or not the United States should arm the
Ukrainians. (As we stated in prior columns, we are not for arming Ukraine as that
would be a mistake. Rightly, Mr. Todd noted that the Russian army would crush
Ukrainian Army.
However, it is a bit of a false equivalent to put Russia and
its aggression in the Ukraine side-by-side with what is essentially chaos going
on in the Middle East. The reason is because the United States went into the Middle
East and broke it even more than it already was. Whereas in the Ukraine, Russia
has essentially invaded that country with covert troops and tanks and whatever
hardware support that the Russian nationalists need.
[On a bit of a side note: Senator Reed said he was in favor of supplying defensive weapons to the Ukrainians in the form of radar and anti-tank missiles along with economic assistance. This is a strategy to bleed the Russians, a 'Vietnam-ing" of them if you will. After we defined it in the sixties and seventies, the United States vietnam-ed Russia in Afghanistan and will employ a bit of that strategy in Ukraine. (Just as the U.S. does to itself in the Middle East.)]
To answer the question as to whether or not the United
States bears responsibility and should be in the Middle East fighting ISIS, we
would put it this way. The worst foreign policy decision since going into
Vietnam full force has been the invasion of Iraq in 2003, so yes. It has been
the source of endless problems abroad and at home. If we hadn't spent $1
trillion in Iraq, think of all the bridges and roads that could have been
repaired, the people put to work, and the lives saved. There may not even have to have been an
interview today with the Sec. of Veterans Affairs, Robert McDonald, if had it
not been for the invasion of Iraq in 2003. There would be no need for this
president to have to go to Congress and ask for resolution to formally fight ISIS.
Incidentally, in discussions like the one that was conducted
today, it’s where Sen. John McCain is at his most levelheaded best. Sen. McCain
mentioned that in the administration's proposal for this resolution there was
no mention of Bashar Al-Assad of Syria and what to do with the regime that has
killed well over 100,000 of its citizens. We may not agree with Sen. McCain on
how the United States should engage that dictator, but he indirectly brought up
a valid point that if the administration wants a formal resolution then it has
to provide a serious proposal with details. What does it mean to formally
engage ISIS? Does that mean that there will be US ground forces fighting them
are we prepared for to see more casualties coming home from Iraq? The details have to be outlined and the
timetable has to be, to use Mr. McCain’s term, ‘conditions-based.’
Now many in Congress don't want to give the president the
resolution for political reasons - that they don't want to share in the
responsibility if things go wrong. As Sec. McDonald said in his interview,
these people need to be held accountable (900 fired for not doing their jobs), but they have not been in the case of
Congress. Congress needs to take responsibility as well, and use the power of
the purse, again noting the Mr. McCain.
But again, the administration has to present a serious proposal for this
resolution. In actuality, what the administration really seems to want is a
formal okay from Congress to keep doing what the military doing, which is
bombing the hell out of ISIS while putting no boots on the ground.
The United States does bear responsibility for what is going
on right now in the Middle East but not for everything, not the Syrian civil
war. While the discussion on the program continued, we recalled Joe Biden who
had the idea way back when that will probably end up being the end solution - that
Iraq will become in essence three different states in loose union with one
another. Think about it, if any one group has deserved to have its own state
that would be the Kurds. I think most people would agree that the Kurds are the
only ones who have kept up their end; perhaps because they are the most determined,
and self-determining people among
those in Iraq.
When Mr. Todd interviewed Sec. McDonald he showed a video
clip of the secretary verbally sparring with Congressman Mike Coffman (R-CO), and
we were glad to see. The former CEO Procter & Gamble did not sit idly by
while a member of the House of Representatives went off on some bellicose rant
to simply show up the secretary in a hearing. The secretary is holding people
accountable, and by the answers that he gave it seems as though things are
improving at the Veterans Administration. The man is obviously not motivated by
money so maybe this graduate of West Point feels the obligation to give back and
fight for the veterans, which we would call admirable. You have to give props
when they should be given, we guess. And on a final note, he illustrated that
admirability when he responded that he encouraged the administration being
listed as ‘at high risk’ to bring light to what the problems are, but what he's
also done for himself is set goals to correct those very problems. See the
graphic below:
Panel: Kathleen Parker, syndicated columnist, The Washington Post; Joe Scarborough, MSNBC's "Morning Joe;" April Ryan, White House correspondent for the Urban Radio Network ; David Axelrod, former senior advisor to President Barack Obama
And just one more
thing. There was another act of terror perpetrated last night in Copenhagen,
Denmark, in which three people died where the shooter pledged allegiance to
Isis in the name of Islam. But here's the truth about these individuals who
commit these horrible acts for ISIS and Al Qaeda – they are all going to lose
in the end, and the reason is because what they really believe in is nothing.
Ideology is not religion. Religion is faith and faith is hope and that is something that these people have
none of.
Sunday, February 08, 2015
2.8.15: Strategic Patience
Before we go in-depth for this week's column, we are listing two names at the top here - two very significant names:
Lieutenant Muath al-Kasaesbeh
Sidi Bouzid
Years from now, when discussing beginning, 21st-century Middle East, these two names will be the touchstones.
Sidi Bouzi was the Tunisian fruit vendor who immolated himself that sparked the Arab Spring three years ago. And of course, more recently Lt. Muath al-Kasaesbeh was the Jordian pilot killed by ISIS.
The Arab Spring, which right now seems like a disaster, will ultimately be viewed positively in history because it was the much needed call for citizens to act and demand just treatment, a more free society, but in the aftermath, people could clearly identify what they didn't want - e.g. the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt then, and ISIS now. Lt. al-Kasaesbeh's death is a turning point in the fortunes of ISIS because moderate Muslims have had enough and Jordan is fully in the fight.
Let's not neglect to mention the Kurdish peshmerga who's actions Secretary of State John Kerry called "brave and courageous." This is the kind of coalition the United States has to build and support in the region. In addition, as Secretary Kerry also mentioned, the Iraqi Army needs to be retrained before they are ready to advance. It just goes to show how compromised that force is that after all these years of U.S. training, they still have to be retrained.
It's a big wrinkle that doesn't get mentioned much. Right now, the U.S. needs to be able to work with the Iraqi Army, that is greatly under the influence of Iranian interests. Wouldn't stand to reason that the Iranians are agreeing to lay off a bit so that the U.S. can train Iraqi soldiers if the U.S. agrees to keep the nuclear negotiations from breaking down with the implementation of additional sanctions.
In the interview, Sec. Kerry defended the Obama Administration's foreign policy choice of 'strategic patience." In the case of ISIS, that is a policy that has worked, bearing the mind the criticism that the Obama Administration allowed ISIS to form, but the sectarian force that Sec. Kerry mentioned (what the Iraqi Army turned into) was going to happen no matter what because of Iraqi politics, more particularly the policies of fmr. Prime Minister Maliki. Sunnis in the western part of the country were going to retaliate, and ISIS results from that.
But all along, the more moderate Muslim community has had to take full control of the situation, with the Americans in a support/coordination role. But to be vested, it has to be emotional and for the Jordanians, that's exactly what happened.
Though sophisticated in its propaganda, it's banal to say that ISIS is not a rational actor so it was just a matter of time before the breaking point arrived. However, Chuck Todd asked if Vladimir Putin should be considered a rational action or completely off the deep end, even bringing up the possibility of Aspergers Syndrome (which is described on the internet as a form of highly functional autism). That last bit about the Aspergers is laughable especially hasn't it come up really when discussing Kim Jung Un for example. Former Ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul said that Mr. Putin was obsessed with the CIA, but we would amend that with also being obsessed with his own power, described as a megalomaniac.
The 'strategic patience' line of thinking doesn't seem to be the way of logic when it comes to Ukraine, however. Mr. Kerry said that the United States would supply economic and other aid to Ukraine. It's the 'other' that one would have to worry about because what that really means is that the United States is going to supply the Ukrainians with arms.
Interestingly, the panel/guests were divided on whether or not it was a good idea. David Brooks took the classic cold war position of upping the ante to let them know you mean business. The BBC's Katty Kay thought it not a good idea reasoning that putting more armaments into an already volatile situation, things will inevitably get worse. Mr. McFaul said he was in favor of arming the Ukrainians.
Arming the Ukrainians at this moment would be a very bad idea especially given the upcoming summit in Minsk, Belarus between Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany. What's complicated is that western Europe has to contend with energy concerns because Russia is a big supplier, a factor that carries much less weight for the United States' interests. Arming the Ukrainians should not be taken off the table, but only used as a last result.
Also, if American politicians are going to keep saying that local actors [read: countries] have to get involved in the Middle East if they want ISIS defeated, then why wouldn't they be advocating for the same in Europe? Especially since there is the huge difference that France and Germany are fully engaged and more than capable and willing to negotiate in their backyard. For the sake of all the people that live in Europe, when it comes to arming the Ukrainians, let's have a little more 'Strategic Patience.'
A couple of quick hits...
We're not insightful when it comes to the procedures and happening of weekly prayer breakfast that the President is obligated to attend. However, the president represents all Americans and unless they are acknowledging prayers for multiple faiths, then we shouldn't have it. (separation of church and state)
And we agree wholeheartedly with Andrea Mitchell that Senator Rand Paul doesn't get a pass on the vaccination controversy, he's a medical doctor... and now obviously an irresponsible one. Get your kids vaccinated.
Panel: Katty Kay, BBC America; David Brooks, The New York Times; Andrea Mitchell, NBC News; Stephen Henderson, The Detroit Free Press
Lieutenant Muath al-Kasaesbeh
Sidi Bouzid
Years from now, when discussing beginning, 21st-century Middle East, these two names will be the touchstones.
Sidi Bouzi was the Tunisian fruit vendor who immolated himself that sparked the Arab Spring three years ago. And of course, more recently Lt. Muath al-Kasaesbeh was the Jordian pilot killed by ISIS.
The Arab Spring, which right now seems like a disaster, will ultimately be viewed positively in history because it was the much needed call for citizens to act and demand just treatment, a more free society, but in the aftermath, people could clearly identify what they didn't want - e.g. the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt then, and ISIS now. Lt. al-Kasaesbeh's death is a turning point in the fortunes of ISIS because moderate Muslims have had enough and Jordan is fully in the fight.
Let's not neglect to mention the Kurdish peshmerga who's actions Secretary of State John Kerry called "brave and courageous." This is the kind of coalition the United States has to build and support in the region. In addition, as Secretary Kerry also mentioned, the Iraqi Army needs to be retrained before they are ready to advance. It just goes to show how compromised that force is that after all these years of U.S. training, they still have to be retrained.
It's a big wrinkle that doesn't get mentioned much. Right now, the U.S. needs to be able to work with the Iraqi Army, that is greatly under the influence of Iranian interests. Wouldn't stand to reason that the Iranians are agreeing to lay off a bit so that the U.S. can train Iraqi soldiers if the U.S. agrees to keep the nuclear negotiations from breaking down with the implementation of additional sanctions.
In the interview, Sec. Kerry defended the Obama Administration's foreign policy choice of 'strategic patience." In the case of ISIS, that is a policy that has worked, bearing the mind the criticism that the Obama Administration allowed ISIS to form, but the sectarian force that Sec. Kerry mentioned (what the Iraqi Army turned into) was going to happen no matter what because of Iraqi politics, more particularly the policies of fmr. Prime Minister Maliki. Sunnis in the western part of the country were going to retaliate, and ISIS results from that.
But all along, the more moderate Muslim community has had to take full control of the situation, with the Americans in a support/coordination role. But to be vested, it has to be emotional and for the Jordanians, that's exactly what happened.
Though sophisticated in its propaganda, it's banal to say that ISIS is not a rational actor so it was just a matter of time before the breaking point arrived. However, Chuck Todd asked if Vladimir Putin should be considered a rational action or completely off the deep end, even bringing up the possibility of Aspergers Syndrome (which is described on the internet as a form of highly functional autism). That last bit about the Aspergers is laughable especially hasn't it come up really when discussing Kim Jung Un for example. Former Ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul said that Mr. Putin was obsessed with the CIA, but we would amend that with also being obsessed with his own power, described as a megalomaniac.
The 'strategic patience' line of thinking doesn't seem to be the way of logic when it comes to Ukraine, however. Mr. Kerry said that the United States would supply economic and other aid to Ukraine. It's the 'other' that one would have to worry about because what that really means is that the United States is going to supply the Ukrainians with arms.
Interestingly, the panel/guests were divided on whether or not it was a good idea. David Brooks took the classic cold war position of upping the ante to let them know you mean business. The BBC's Katty Kay thought it not a good idea reasoning that putting more armaments into an already volatile situation, things will inevitably get worse. Mr. McFaul said he was in favor of arming the Ukrainians.
Arming the Ukrainians at this moment would be a very bad idea especially given the upcoming summit in Minsk, Belarus between Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany. What's complicated is that western Europe has to contend with energy concerns because Russia is a big supplier, a factor that carries much less weight for the United States' interests. Arming the Ukrainians should not be taken off the table, but only used as a last result.
Also, if American politicians are going to keep saying that local actors [read: countries] have to get involved in the Middle East if they want ISIS defeated, then why wouldn't they be advocating for the same in Europe? Especially since there is the huge difference that France and Germany are fully engaged and more than capable and willing to negotiate in their backyard. For the sake of all the people that live in Europe, when it comes to arming the Ukrainians, let's have a little more 'Strategic Patience.'
A couple of quick hits...
We're not insightful when it comes to the procedures and happening of weekly prayer breakfast that the President is obligated to attend. However, the president represents all Americans and unless they are acknowledging prayers for multiple faiths, then we shouldn't have it. (separation of church and state)
And we agree wholeheartedly with Andrea Mitchell that Senator Rand Paul doesn't get a pass on the vaccination controversy, he's a medical doctor... and now obviously an irresponsible one. Get your kids vaccinated.
Panel: Katty Kay, BBC America; David Brooks, The New York Times; Andrea Mitchell, NBC News; Stephen Henderson, The Detroit Free Press
Sunday, February 01, 2015
2.1.15: Considering Broader Strategies
Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates used a phrase to
serve as the theme for this week's column. He talked about was the lack of “broader
strategies” in the Middle East. He went on to say that there seems to be a
disintegration of state-type systems in that region, which is also spreading
into the north of Africa, i.e. Libya.
In all the topics discussed on today's program the notion of "broader strategies" permeated throughout. Staying with the topic of the Middle East for a moment, it is reported that ISIS has executed the second Japanese hostage. Sadly, if an individual appears in an ISIS video, clothed in an orange jumpsuit, that person's fate has already been sealed. Government officials understand this harsh reality, however people being ever-hopeful believe that there is always something that can be done to rescue that individual when in truth it's quite the opposite.
Former Secretary Gates illustrated another reality, which is the United States' strategy as it stands is not broad enough to defeat ISIS – this is the context of discussing that words like ‘defeat’ and ‘destroy’ are not realistic as goals in fighting these terrorist organizations. All of the things that Mr. Gates pointed out – that there would have to be some boots on the ground to roll ISIS back; that there isn't a sense of vision for the future as to how the region will look; and that tribalism is taking over in the Middle East creating easy de facto sanctuaries for jihadists are accurate, but Mr. Gates has the luxury of not having political contentions in making these assessments.
In terms of ISIS, we don't fully agree with Mr. Gates that the president doesn't have a broader strategy to combat them because the president's broader strategy hinges getting some kind of resolution from Congress, which would give him the option to employ some of the strategies that Mr. Gates had outlined. You be the judge as to whether you think the president consulting Congress on this is a good idea or not.
In combating, containing and disabling these terrorist organizations there isn't an effective broader U.S. strategy because everyone is skittish about putting on paper the option of boots on the ground, which would perceived as ‘going back in’ to Iraq. However, to achieve the U.S.’s stated goals, that option has to be put on the table, and no one wants to do it whether a number is outlined or not. No one, especially in the Obama Administration is signing on to that. Unfortunately Mr. Gates is correct and some number of U.S. personnel, in a significant role, is required to be on the ground if the United States wants to overwhelm ISIS.
This brings us to Congressman Paul Ryan's statement during his interview, in which he said, “it is wholly appropriate” for the Congress, and equal branch of government, to invite the head of state of another country without informing the president first.
We liked most of what Mr. Ryan had to say in today's interview (tax reform and finding common ground), however, it is wholly inappropriate for House Speaker John Boehner to invite the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to address a joint session of Congress with out consulting the president first.
This column has no problem with ninety-five percent of U.S.-Israeli policy, relations, and support. However, we have a serious problem with Prime Minister Netanyahu coming to the United States and sticking his thumb in the eye of our president, playing political games, by accepting Mr. Boehner’s invitation. It’s so self-serving and so self-interested that we find it pretty disgusting, frankly. Constitutionally, fine, the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives can invite a leader of another country to come and speak, but it's a stupid and shortsighted move to accept that invitation. In this sense, there is no sense of a broader strategy on the part of the Israeli Prime Minister or the Republicans who control the Congress.
This lack of a broader strategy theme would also make you think of Vladimir Putin in Russia and how it seems like he does not have one, as discussed today as well. However he does have a broader strategy and its simply one that Americans don't understand.
He's broader strategy is to isolate and consolidate power at home, by what ever means are available to him. For Mr. Putin it’s all a matter of control and restoration. Mr. Putin wants the Ukraine back in the sphere of a greater Russia - it's that simple - and that he'll use propaganda to win public support an obvious notion. Mr. Gates said that Mr. Putin's approval rating was 80%, to which Mr. Todd questioned the reliability of that poll considering it comes from state-controlled media. His broader strategy is to back in time and restore/create an alternately named new Soviet-type entity.
Another quick note on the interview between Mr. Gates and Chuck Todd is that Mr. Todd asked the former secretary, "If you could ask a presidential candidate one question what would it be?" Mr. Gates' reply focused on the people that the candidate would put around him or herself. He went on to say that "great presidents have a first-class temperament." Mr. Todd will certainly be bringing that up Mr. Gates’ answer during future debates and interviews with presidential hopefuls – a little cheap foreshadowing.
Also in terms of broader strategies, we liked Mr. Ryan's tone and answers in terms of trying to find common ground with the president on tax reform. One of the things discussed on the subject was the "trust fund loophole," in which the president would like to eliminate. Broadly explained, this loophole would be when you inherit assets, you would have to pay a tax that you now do not. Mr. Ryan’ argument was a very effective one that we happen to agree with. This type of tax would make it more difficult or prohibitive to pass along a family business so that it can continue generationally. When the argument is framed like that, it makes a lot of sense not to "close that loophole," doesn’t it? A small business these days is a million-dollar enterprise – that's considered small scale while not being a small amount of money to most Americans.
Like Congressman Ryan, we don't know where the points of common ground are exactly between the president, Democrats and the Republicans. However, also like Mr. Ryan, we do remain hopeful that common ground can be achieved somewhere. But will it get done?
Here we turn to CNBC's Jim Cramer who when asked if tax form will really happen, his answer was "no way." The reason that he was so definitive on tax reform not happening is easy to understand. Any compromise on tax reform inevitably is going to hit big corporations so the heads of those corporations have little incentive to support tax reform on any level. When you take the reformation of an individual's taxes off the table then you are only left with corporate and the top one-percents’ taxes to play with, and are the most difficult to alter, politically.
Up until this point, this column has been reluctant to comment on presidential politics, but we will weigh in on the subject today because of the news that Mitt Romney has decided not to run for the office for a third time. This news prompted today's panel to conclude that the Republican field is now pretty much set. We find that so interesting because the Democratic field is so up in the air. Hillary Clinton has not declared her candidacy and no one is sure who else is interested in running from the Democratic side. So as it stands right now, one party has a set field and the other has no field.
With Mitt Romney out of the running now, Jeb Bush becomes the establishment candidate for the Republican nomination – that’s who is getting most of Mr. Romney’s former key donors. Everyone on the panel seems to like Scott Walker, the governor of Wisconsin – Iowa polls like him too. In Wisconsin, as Congressman Ryan said, Mr. Walker is so popular that he was elected three times in four years, playing off of the fact that he won his first election, won a recall vote, then won reelection. This joke can carry him a long way, possibly to the nomination. Note what Jim Cramer said – Scott Walker is good for stock prices. Kathleen Parker, the syndicated columnist, said that Scott Walker's attractiveness stems from him being able to play in both pools - the very conservative base and the establishment, more corporate, donor class of the Republican Party. When you take all that into consideration, you would have to say that Gov. Walker is a form of formidable candidate.
One note here, despite the Iowa polls showing Mr. Walker at the top and given our stated conclusion, this column has decided that Iowa in terms of being a bell weather or king maker does not represent the electorate and is hence a poor one. This is especially true with the Republican base in that state. When your leader is Representative Steve King, you should simply not be taken seriously. The Iowa political tradition should be rethought.
(Back to it.) By contrast with Governor Walker, Mr. Bush has had his problems with the Republican base - common core and immigration as Kathleen Parker mentioned. There is also New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie who definitely has his problems with temperament – the kind Mr. Gates described earlier. And ultimately that's his downfall. There’s former governor Mike Huckabee, the cultural warrior, who hasn't figured out that for the most part, in this country, the culture war has been fought and Mr. Huckabee's side has lost. Young Republicans are more libertarian in a truer sense than Mr. Huckabee ever will be. Naturally then, this leads you to think about the Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul. The problem with Sen. Paul as a president is that at one moment he has good ideas then comes back with a crazy idea. In both cases, he’s unable to court any friends. To succeed, a president needs more alliances than what Senator Paul would be able to widely cultivate.
It's kind of what happened to President Obama in a way. Over the course of his presidency, his alliances have dwindled – ebbed and flowed – but ultimately have been reduced. Now he finds himself having to work doubly hard to build up those broad alliances again in the last two years of his term to accomplish anything. We’ll see how he does.
Panel: Mark Halperin, Bloomberg News; Kathleen Parker, The Washington Post; Savannah Guthrie, NBC Today Show; Jim Cramer, CNBC
In all the topics discussed on today's program the notion of "broader strategies" permeated throughout. Staying with the topic of the Middle East for a moment, it is reported that ISIS has executed the second Japanese hostage. Sadly, if an individual appears in an ISIS video, clothed in an orange jumpsuit, that person's fate has already been sealed. Government officials understand this harsh reality, however people being ever-hopeful believe that there is always something that can be done to rescue that individual when in truth it's quite the opposite.
Former Secretary Gates illustrated another reality, which is the United States' strategy as it stands is not broad enough to defeat ISIS – this is the context of discussing that words like ‘defeat’ and ‘destroy’ are not realistic as goals in fighting these terrorist organizations. All of the things that Mr. Gates pointed out – that there would have to be some boots on the ground to roll ISIS back; that there isn't a sense of vision for the future as to how the region will look; and that tribalism is taking over in the Middle East creating easy de facto sanctuaries for jihadists are accurate, but Mr. Gates has the luxury of not having political contentions in making these assessments.
In terms of ISIS, we don't fully agree with Mr. Gates that the president doesn't have a broader strategy to combat them because the president's broader strategy hinges getting some kind of resolution from Congress, which would give him the option to employ some of the strategies that Mr. Gates had outlined. You be the judge as to whether you think the president consulting Congress on this is a good idea or not.
In combating, containing and disabling these terrorist organizations there isn't an effective broader U.S. strategy because everyone is skittish about putting on paper the option of boots on the ground, which would perceived as ‘going back in’ to Iraq. However, to achieve the U.S.’s stated goals, that option has to be put on the table, and no one wants to do it whether a number is outlined or not. No one, especially in the Obama Administration is signing on to that. Unfortunately Mr. Gates is correct and some number of U.S. personnel, in a significant role, is required to be on the ground if the United States wants to overwhelm ISIS.
This brings us to Congressman Paul Ryan's statement during his interview, in which he said, “it is wholly appropriate” for the Congress, and equal branch of government, to invite the head of state of another country without informing the president first.
We liked most of what Mr. Ryan had to say in today's interview (tax reform and finding common ground), however, it is wholly inappropriate for House Speaker John Boehner to invite the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to address a joint session of Congress with out consulting the president first.
This column has no problem with ninety-five percent of U.S.-Israeli policy, relations, and support. However, we have a serious problem with Prime Minister Netanyahu coming to the United States and sticking his thumb in the eye of our president, playing political games, by accepting Mr. Boehner’s invitation. It’s so self-serving and so self-interested that we find it pretty disgusting, frankly. Constitutionally, fine, the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives can invite a leader of another country to come and speak, but it's a stupid and shortsighted move to accept that invitation. In this sense, there is no sense of a broader strategy on the part of the Israeli Prime Minister or the Republicans who control the Congress.
This lack of a broader strategy theme would also make you think of Vladimir Putin in Russia and how it seems like he does not have one, as discussed today as well. However he does have a broader strategy and its simply one that Americans don't understand.
He's broader strategy is to isolate and consolidate power at home, by what ever means are available to him. For Mr. Putin it’s all a matter of control and restoration. Mr. Putin wants the Ukraine back in the sphere of a greater Russia - it's that simple - and that he'll use propaganda to win public support an obvious notion. Mr. Gates said that Mr. Putin's approval rating was 80%, to which Mr. Todd questioned the reliability of that poll considering it comes from state-controlled media. His broader strategy is to back in time and restore/create an alternately named new Soviet-type entity.
Another quick note on the interview between Mr. Gates and Chuck Todd is that Mr. Todd asked the former secretary, "If you could ask a presidential candidate one question what would it be?" Mr. Gates' reply focused on the people that the candidate would put around him or herself. He went on to say that "great presidents have a first-class temperament." Mr. Todd will certainly be bringing that up Mr. Gates’ answer during future debates and interviews with presidential hopefuls – a little cheap foreshadowing.
Also in terms of broader strategies, we liked Mr. Ryan's tone and answers in terms of trying to find common ground with the president on tax reform. One of the things discussed on the subject was the "trust fund loophole," in which the president would like to eliminate. Broadly explained, this loophole would be when you inherit assets, you would have to pay a tax that you now do not. Mr. Ryan’ argument was a very effective one that we happen to agree with. This type of tax would make it more difficult or prohibitive to pass along a family business so that it can continue generationally. When the argument is framed like that, it makes a lot of sense not to "close that loophole," doesn’t it? A small business these days is a million-dollar enterprise – that's considered small scale while not being a small amount of money to most Americans.
Like Congressman Ryan, we don't know where the points of common ground are exactly between the president, Democrats and the Republicans. However, also like Mr. Ryan, we do remain hopeful that common ground can be achieved somewhere. But will it get done?
Here we turn to CNBC's Jim Cramer who when asked if tax form will really happen, his answer was "no way." The reason that he was so definitive on tax reform not happening is easy to understand. Any compromise on tax reform inevitably is going to hit big corporations so the heads of those corporations have little incentive to support tax reform on any level. When you take the reformation of an individual's taxes off the table then you are only left with corporate and the top one-percents’ taxes to play with, and are the most difficult to alter, politically.
Up until this point, this column has been reluctant to comment on presidential politics, but we will weigh in on the subject today because of the news that Mitt Romney has decided not to run for the office for a third time. This news prompted today's panel to conclude that the Republican field is now pretty much set. We find that so interesting because the Democratic field is so up in the air. Hillary Clinton has not declared her candidacy and no one is sure who else is interested in running from the Democratic side. So as it stands right now, one party has a set field and the other has no field.
With Mitt Romney out of the running now, Jeb Bush becomes the establishment candidate for the Republican nomination – that’s who is getting most of Mr. Romney’s former key donors. Everyone on the panel seems to like Scott Walker, the governor of Wisconsin – Iowa polls like him too. In Wisconsin, as Congressman Ryan said, Mr. Walker is so popular that he was elected three times in four years, playing off of the fact that he won his first election, won a recall vote, then won reelection. This joke can carry him a long way, possibly to the nomination. Note what Jim Cramer said – Scott Walker is good for stock prices. Kathleen Parker, the syndicated columnist, said that Scott Walker's attractiveness stems from him being able to play in both pools - the very conservative base and the establishment, more corporate, donor class of the Republican Party. When you take all that into consideration, you would have to say that Gov. Walker is a form of formidable candidate.
One note here, despite the Iowa polls showing Mr. Walker at the top and given our stated conclusion, this column has decided that Iowa in terms of being a bell weather or king maker does not represent the electorate and is hence a poor one. This is especially true with the Republican base in that state. When your leader is Representative Steve King, you should simply not be taken seriously. The Iowa political tradition should be rethought.
(Back to it.) By contrast with Governor Walker, Mr. Bush has had his problems with the Republican base - common core and immigration as Kathleen Parker mentioned. There is also New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie who definitely has his problems with temperament – the kind Mr. Gates described earlier. And ultimately that's his downfall. There’s former governor Mike Huckabee, the cultural warrior, who hasn't figured out that for the most part, in this country, the culture war has been fought and Mr. Huckabee's side has lost. Young Republicans are more libertarian in a truer sense than Mr. Huckabee ever will be. Naturally then, this leads you to think about the Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul. The problem with Sen. Paul as a president is that at one moment he has good ideas then comes back with a crazy idea. In both cases, he’s unable to court any friends. To succeed, a president needs more alliances than what Senator Paul would be able to widely cultivate.
It's kind of what happened to President Obama in a way. Over the course of his presidency, his alliances have dwindled – ebbed and flowed – but ultimately have been reduced. Now he finds himself having to work doubly hard to build up those broad alliances again in the last two years of his term to accomplish anything. We’ll see how he does.
Panel: Mark Halperin, Bloomberg News; Kathleen Parker, The Washington Post; Savannah Guthrie, NBC Today Show; Jim Cramer, CNBC
Sunday, January 25, 2015
1.25.15: Loud, Local Purists
Where we should begin this week's
column is with what is going on in Yemen and the Middle East, but instead we
are compelled to comment about the beginning of the Republican primary season
starting in Iowa with the American Freedom Summit.
We genuinely have a distaste for
the fact that Republicans wrap their conferences in these patriotic names that
are supposedly justify a false ‘more Americanism’ than everyone else.
Prospective Republican presidential candidates were trying to out conservative
one another, today’s panel noted. By that measure, it was a good decision on
the part of both Jeb Bush and Mitt Romney not to attend this "Summit"
in Iowa.
It’s ‘summits’ like these that
advance a notion that we’d like to address and that is the idea of the religion
of conservatism. You can't paint all Republicans with a single brush – we know
this, but the base of their party is so purist and vocal that they exercise
disproportionate control. So things like this American Freedom Summit are
really disappointing to Americans of all stripes. Republicans spending time
trying to out-conservative one another is a waste of time.
Law professor and commentator,
Hugh Hewlitt, on today’s panel, covered the summit and said that Common-Core
education was talked about much more than immigration. The panel didn't discuss
same-sex marriage, though it was between Chuck Todd and Mike Huckabee in their
interview, and we’re sure it didn't come up a lot in Iowa this week amongst
conservatives. The reason why is that immigration and same-sex marriage are
viewed in large part by the majority of people in the country as civil rights
issues. All people no matter what your sexual orientation or where you have
come from should be treated humanely, decently, and equally.
On the other hand, the Common-Core
education debate is more philosophical and political because now you're talking
what information we impart to our children. Do we teach creationism or do we
teach evolution, for example. Honestly, for us, this is the silliest debate
we've ever heard in terms of educating our kids. Former Arkansas governor Mike
Huckabee said that he agreed with the original intent of Common-Core, as it
pertained strictly to language arts and math. He explained that when it
extended beyond that, into the entire curriculum, that is where he turned away
from it.
In theory we agree with him, but
we would strongly oppose something like creationism beubg taught in public
schools in any state. That concept is based on a religious belief, and that
religious belief should not be part of the public education system. To restate,
the notion of creationism is make-believe and not based on any science.
This is the danger of not having
Common-Core education in an entire curriculum because outside of math and
reading, depending on who runs the school district, ridiculous notions like the
world is only 6,000 years old, which is scientifically untrue, can be
introduced as if it is fact, which would be doing a disgraceful disservice to
our children. This type of politics especially, conservative politics, is
playing a huge role in misinforming school students in the United States.
This is the Republican debate
because Jeb Bush, looking as if he is running for president, is for Common-Core
education, which makes sense to achieve the goal of all American public school
students to have a base knowledge in math, reading, writing, American History and
geography.
Baltimore Mayor Stephanie
Rollins-Blake accurately described it as going against logic so that what
they're saying does not stray outside of a very conservative way of
thinking. Most Republicans, again, are not like that; however most Republicans
are perceived that way. And when it came to the topic of same-sex marriage, Tom
Brokaw pointed out that Mr. Huckabee discussed it in purely procedural terms,
and did not bring up the religious aspect of the debate.
Conservatives, who are mostly Christian,
understandably have a problem with same-sex marriage. Christian conservatives
believe that marriage is between a man and woman; however, as you listen to Mr.
Huckabee, he is very much about strictly following the Constitution. But the
Constitution says that all men (and women of course) should all be afforded the
same rights under the law. If that is the case then you cannot allow some
people benefits of society while discriminating against others, benefits and
rights can extend from taxes to visitation rights in the hospital to wills as
they relate to marriage.
Loud local purists, the kind that
espouse a religion of pure conservatism, are no doubt damaging the Republican
party by extension also damaging the United States.
To say again, most Republicans do
not want to be painted with such a brush understandably, just as most Muslims
around the world do not want to be painted with the jihadist brush.
Tom Brokaw noted that Pres. Sissi
of Egypt stated in a speech recently that there is a problem with Islam,
referring to the violent ideologues. This continuing turmoil in the Middle East
will not cease and unless the governments of these countries can run their
countries in non-theocratic ways.
Governments who managed to maintain peace under a theocracy do so by repression of their citizenry; for example as in Iran and Saudi Arabia. The major difference between the two is that you have an overwhelming majority of one denomination of Islam over another. In the case of Iran, people are predominantly Shia and in Saudi Arabia, they are predominantly Sunni.
This brings us to Yemen, which was
run by a U.S.-friendly Sunni government that has now been overthrown by Shia
militant, backed by Iran. Yemen is quickly deteriorating into, as noted on
today's program, is a Civil War between Shia and Sunni Muslims on the Arabian
Peninsula.
White House Chief of Staff Denis
McDonough said the United States has to up its intelligence and continue its
operations in Yemen and Syria; intelligence, by the look of what's happening on
the ground, seems spotty at best.
We found the interviewee, Ahmet,
in Richard Engel’s segment, to be somewhat credible. It’s difficult to believe
that he was not tortured so for
survival purposes, when beating prisoners as he said, he is most probably
bending the truth when he said he was forced to do it. That doesn’t at
all discount the validity of his statements describing how people in Syria and
people in Europe were in frequent communication. This is something not to
be taken in any other way than with grave seriousness. Isis feels legitimized
by the United States attacking it, and it would feel further legitimized by
successfully committing a major attack against either a Western European
country or the United States, neither of which can be allowed to happen.
In Mr. Todd’s interview, Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar described these radical jihadists as insane, and not religious
adherents of Islam, and as a political ideology. We can wipe out ISIS
militarily and we can militarily end these religious conflicts. However, as
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar said, the dissension into hateful ideology (that has
nothing to do with Islam) will continue because of the absence of one universal
right – hope.
Panel: Tom Brokaw, NBC News;
Stephanie Rowlings-Blake, Mayor of Baltimore; Helene Cooper, The New York Times; Hugh Hewlitt,
commentator
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