RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
FOCUS: The President Plays With Matches, and the Whole World Burns Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=31568"><span class="small">Rebecca Gordon, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Tuesday, 19 December 2017 13:04

Gordon writes: "'I've just heard that my family home near Carpenteria is literally in flames at this moment,' a friend told me recently. She was particularly worried, she said, because 'my mom has MS. She and my dad got the call to evacuate after midnight last night. They were able to grab a few photos, my sister's childhood teddy bear, and the dog. That's it. That's all that's left.'"

Donald Trump. (photo: Guardian UK)
Donald Trump. (photo: Guardian UK)


The President Plays With Matches, and the Whole World Burns

By Rebecca Gordon, TomDispatch

19 December 17

 


[Note for TomDispatch Readers: Just a reminder that, in this traditional season of giving, despite the remarkable generosity of so many of you in response to my recent letter pleading for funds, TomDispatch still needs support as 2017 ends. It’s not complicated, really. We don’t have ads. We don’t have a paywall. You really are what keeps us going, which is why, twice a year, we plead for donations like this. Whatever you decide to give, it does matter when it comes to TD. So do, if the spirit moves you, check out our donation page (and the offers of signed, personalized books in return for contributions of at least $100 -- $125 if you live outside the United States). And for those of you who have already given, I just can’t thank you enough! Tom]

In June, an American Green Beret was reportedly strangled to death in Mali by U.S. Navy SEALs, allegedly in connection with a shadowy money-skimming scheme.  (The military is currently investigating.) In July, The Intercept, the London-based research firm Forensic Architecture, and Amnesty International revealed that a drone base used by U.S. forces in Cameroon was also a site for illegal imprisonment, brutal torture, and even killings on the part of local forces. (The military is investigating.) In August, according to a blockbuster investigation by the Daily Beast, U.S. Special Operations forces took part in a massacre in which 10 Somali civilians were killed.  (The military is investigating.)  In October, four Special Operations soldiers were killed in murky circumstances during an ambush by militants in Niger.  (The military is investigating.)

This spate of questionable, scandalous, or even criminal activity involving U.S. forces in Africa should come as little surprise.  Over the last decade and a half, operations on that continent have been expanding and evolving at an exponential rate.  A token number of U.S. troops has grown into a cast of thousands now carrying out about 10 separate missions per day, ranging from training to combat operations, which are up 1,900% since last year alone.  U.S. commandos sent to that continent have jumped from 1% of special ops forces deployed overseas in 2006 to nearly 17% today, the highest total outside the Middle East.  There have also been numerous indications of U.S. forces behaving badly from one side of the continent to the other.  Few in the mainstream media or among those tasked with oversight of such operations have, however, taken any significant notice of this.

“We don’t know exactly where we’re at in the world, militarily, and what we’re doing,” said Senator Lindsey Graham, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, in the wake of the ambush in Niger.  More recently, Congressman Ted Lieu of the House Foreign Affairs Committee added, “From combating al-Shabaab in Somalia to Boko Haram in Nigeria, U.S. military personnel are deployed across the African continent with little public scrutiny or awareness.”  This attention deficit helped set the stage for the recent scandals that have forced lawmakers and the public to take some notice.

The situation of the U.S. military in Africa is, in some respects, not unlike that in California, where TomDispatch regular Rebecca Gordon begins her latest article.  There, climate-change-charged dry weather and unseasonably warm temperatures made the state a tinderbox that recently burst into a series of devastating wildfires.  The U.S. military has created its own tinderbox in Africa, where longtime expansion without oversight has led to a series of blazing scandals.  And all of this is just a small part of the larger story told by Gordon -- of a world filled with the dry underbrush of decades of failed U.S. policies and of a president with a penchant for setting fires.  Once, ignoble political calculations, futile strategies, ideological idiocy, and intellectual ineptitude provided flashpoints capable of sparking foreign policy failures, conflicts, or ruinous domestic policies.  Today, writes Gordon, the commander-in-chief functions as a one-man flamethrower, setting blazes the world over as a matter of whim and embracing the inferno as an end in itself.

-Nick Turse, TomDispatch


The President Plays with Matches
And the Whole World Burns

’ve just heard that my family home near Carpenteria is literally in flames at this moment,” a friend told me recently. She was particularly worried, she said, because “my mom has MS. She and my dad got the call to evacuate after midnight last night. They were able to grab a few photos, my sister’s childhood teddy bear, and the dog. That’s it. That’s all that’s left.”

My friend’s parents are among the thousands of victims of the 240,000-acre Thomas fire, one of California’s spate of late-season wildfires. Stoked by 80-mile-an-hour Santa Ana winds, plenty of dry fuel, and 8% humidity, such fires are devouring huge swaths of southern California from Los Angeles to Santa Barbara. Months of dry weather and unseasonably warm temperatures have turned the southern part of the state into a tinderbox.

Once again the country watches in horror as firefighters struggle to contain blazes of historic voracity -- as we watched only a couple of months ago when at least 250 wildfires spread across the counties north of San Francisco. Even after long-awaited rains brought by an El Nińo winter earlier in 2017, years of drought have left my state ready to explode in flames on an increasingly warming planet. All it takes is a spark.

Sort of like the whole world in the age of Donald Trump.

Torching Jerusalem

The crazy comes so fast and furious these days, it’s easy to forget some of the smaller brushfires -- like the one President Trump lit at the end of November when he retweeted three false and “inflammatory” videos about Muslims that he found on the Twitter feed of the leader of a British ultra-nationalist group.

The president’s next move in the international arena -- his “recognition” of Jerusalem as the capital of the state of Israel -- hasn’t yet slipped from memory, in part because of the outrage it evoked around the world. As Moustafa Bayoumi, acclaimed author of How Does It Feel to be a Problem? Being Young and Arab in America, wrote in the Guardian, “The entire Middle East, from Palestine to Yemen, appears set to burst into flames after this week.” Not surprisingly, his prediction has already begun to come true with demonstrations in the West Bank, Gaza, and Lebanon, where U.S. flags and posters of President Trump were set alight. We’ve also seen the first rockets fired from Gaza into Israel and the predictable reprisal Israeli air attacks.

Trump’s Jerusalem announcement comes as his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, pursues his so-called Middle East peace initiative. Kushner's new BFF is Mohammed bin Salman, the heir apparent to the Saudi throne. We don’t know just what the two of them talked about during a late night tęte-ŕ-tęte as October ended, but it probably involved Salman’s plans to jail hundreds of prominent Saudis, including 11 fellow princes. They undoubtedly also discussed a new, incendiary Israeli-Palestinian “peace plan” that the U.S. and Saudi Arabia are reportedly quietly circulating.

Under this proposal, according to the New York Times,

“The Palestinians would get a state of their own but only noncontiguous parts of the West Bank and only limited sovereignty over their own territory. The vast majority of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which most of the world considers illegal, would remain. The Palestinians would not be given East Jerusalem as their capital and there would be no right of return for Palestinian refugees and their descendants.”

If this is the “deal of the century” that President Trump plans to roll out, then it's no surprise that he’d prepare the way by announcing his plans to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem.

That move reveals a lot about Trump’s much vaunted deal-making skills when it comes to the international arena.  Here he has made a major concession to Israel without receiving a thing in return, except words of praise from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (and from evangelicals in this country). Given that Israel came into possession of the eastern half of Jerusalem through military conquest in 1967, a method of acquiring territory that international law views as illegal, it was quite a concession. The ultimate status of Jersalem is supposed to be a subject for the final stage of Palestinian-Israeli negotiations, not a gift to one side before the talks even begin.

Behind this concession, as far as can be seen, lies no strategic intent of any sort, not in the Middle East at least. In fact, President Trump was perfectly clear about just why he was making the announcement: to distinguish himself from his predecessors. (That is, to make himself feel good.) “While previous presidents have made [moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem] a major campaign promise, they failed to deliver. Today, I am delivering.”

“Some say,” he added, that his predecessors failed because “they lacked courage.” In point of fact, Trump did not exactly “deliver” either. Just like his predecessors, he promptly signed a semi-annual waiver that once again delayed the actual embassy move for six months.

Pyromania?

Rather than serving a larger Middle East strategy, Trump’s Jerusalem announcement served mainly his own ego. It gave him the usual warm bath of adulation from his base and another burst of the pleasure he derives from seeing his name in the headlines.

In his daily behavior, in fact, Trump acts less like a shrewd dealmaker than a child with pyromania, one who relieves anxiety and draws attention by starting fires. How else to explain his tendency every time there’s a lull in the coverage of him, to post something incendiary on Twitter? Each time, just imagine him striking another match, lighting another fuse, and then sitting back to watch the pyrotechnics.

Here is the grim reality of this American moment: whoever has access to the president also has a good shot at pointing this human flamethrower wherever he or she chooses, whether at “Little Rocket Man” in North Korea or Doug Jones in Alabama (although that flame turned out to be, as the British say, a damp squib).

The Middle East has hardly been the only part of the world our president has taken visible pleasure in threatening to send up in flames. Consider the situation on the Korean peninsula, which remains the greatest danger the world faces today. Who could forget the way he stoked the already glowing embers of the Korean crisis in August by threatening to rain “fire and fury like the world has never seen” -- an obvious nuclear reference -- on North Korea? And ever since it’s only gotten worse.  In recent weeks, for instance, not only Trump but his coterie have continued to ramp up the rhetoric against that country. Earlier this month, for instance, National Security Adviser General H.R. McMaster renewed the threat of military action, saying ominously, “There are ways to address this problem short of armed conflict, but it is a race because [North Korean leader Kim Jong-un]’s getting closer and closer [to having a nuclear capacity to hit the United States], and there’s not much time left.”

In September, Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, reinforced this message in an interview with CNN. “If North Korea keeps on with this reckless behavior, if the United States has to defend itself or defend its allies in any way, North Korea will be destroyed.”

Indeed, Vipin Narang, a nuclear nonproliferation specialist at MIT, thinks the Trump administration may already have accepted the inevitability of such a war and the near-guarantee that South Korea and Japan will be devastated as well -- as long as it comes before North Korea can effectively launch a nuclear strike on the U.S. mainland. “There are a lot of people who argue that there’s still a window to stop North Korea from getting an ICBM with a nuclear warhead to use against the United States,” he commented to the Washington Post. “They’re telling themselves that if they strike now, worst-case scenario: only Japan and South Korea will eat a nuclear weapon.”

You don’t exactly have to be an admirer of Kim Jong-un and his sad outcast regime to imagine why he might be reluctant to relinquish his nuclear arsenal. North Korea remains the designated U.S. enemy in a war that, almost seven decades later, has never officially ended. It’s situated on a peninsula where the most powerful nation in the world holds military exercises twice a year. And Kim has had ample opportunity to observe how Washington has treated other leaders (Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi) who gave up their nuclear programs. Certainly, threats of fire and fury are not going to make him surrender his arsenal, but they may still make Donald Trump feel like a real commander-in-chief.

Home Fires Burning

It’s not only in the international arena that Trump’s been burning things up. He’s failed -- for now -- to destroy the Affordable Care Act (though not for lack of striking matches), but the GOP has successfully aimed the Trump flamethrower at any vestiges of progressive taxation at the federal level. And now that the House and Senate are close to reconciling their versions of tax legislation, the Republicans have made it clear just why they’re so delighted to pass a bill that will increase the deficit by $1.5 trillion dollars. It gives them a “reason” to put to flames what still remains of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal of the 1930s and President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society of the 1960s.

House Speaker Paul Ryan gave a vivid sense of where that presidential flamethrower could be aimed soon when he told radio host Ross Kaminsky, “We're going to have to get back next year at entitlement reform, which is how you tackle the debt and the deficit.” The goal? Cutting appropriations for Medicare and Medicaid, programs shepherded through Congress in the mid-1960s by Lyndon Johnson. These achievements helped realize his vision of the United States as a Great Society, one that provides for the basic needs of all its citizens.

Meanwhile, when it comes to setting the American social environment on fire, President Trump has already announced his post-tax-bill target du jour: welfare "reform."

Welfare reform? Not a subject he even mentioned on the campaign trail in 2016, but different people are aiming that flamethrower now. The Hill reports the scene as Trump talked to a group of lawmakers in the Capitol basement:

“Ticking through a number of upcoming legislative priorities, Trump briefly mentioned welfare reform, sources in the room said.

“‘We need to do that. I want to do that,’ Trump told rank-and-file lawmakers in a conference room in the basement of the Capitol. The welfare line got a big applause, with one lawmaker describing it as an ‘off-the-charts’ reception.”

We know that getting “big applause” guarantees that a Trump line will also get repeated.

At a time when “entitlement” has become a dirty word, we’d do well to remember that not so long ago it wasn’t crazy to think that the government existed to help people do collectively what they couldn’t do as individuals. As a friend said to me recently, taxes are a more organized way of crowd-funding human needs.

Who even remembers that ancient time when candidate Trump, not yet an arsonist on the home front, promised to protect Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security? President Trump is a different matter.

It seems likely, however, that at least for now the Republicans won’t push him on Social Security because, as Paul Ryan told the Washington Post’s "Wonkblog," the Republicans don’t have enough votes to overcome a Senate filibuster and the program is too popular back home for a super-majority of Republicans to go after it.

Why can they pass a tax “reform” bill with only a simple majority, but not Social Security cuts? The tax bill is being rushed through Congress using the “reconciliation” process by which differences in the Senate and House versions are smoothed over to produce a single bill.  This only requires a simple majority to pass in each house. The Senate's “Byrd Rule,” adopted in 1974, prohibits the use of the reconciliation process to make changes to Social Security. Thank you, former West Virginia senator Robert Byrd!

In addition to the programs that made up Johnson’s “War on Poverty,” he also signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Trump’s Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity is already hard at work setting fire to the latter, as the president continues to demand evidence for his absurd claim that he won the popular vote in the 2016 election. He must be having an effect. At least half of all Republicans now seem to believe that he indeed did win that vote.

And before we leave the subject, just a couple of final notes on literal fires in the Trump era. His Department of Transportation has been quietly at work making those more likely, too. In a move supported by fans of train fires everywhere, that department has quietly reversed an Obama-era rule requiring that trains carrying crude oil deploy, as Reuters reports, “an advanced braking system designed to prevent fiery derailments... The requirement to install so-called electronically controlled pneumatic (ECP) brakes was included in a package of safety reforms unveiled by the Obama administration in 2015 in response to a series of deadly derailments that grew out of the U.S. shale boom.”

Government data shows there have been 17 such derailments of trains carrying crude oil or ethanol in the U.S. since 2006.

Then there’s the fire that has probably destroyed my friend’s house in southern California even as I wrote this. Donald Trump can hardly be blamed for that one. The climate in this part of the world has already grown hotter and drier.  We can certainly blame him, however, for turning up the heat on planet Earth by announcing plans to pull the United States out of the 2015 Paris agreement on climate change, overseeing the slashing of tax incentives for alternative energy (amid a bonanza of favors for the fossil fuel industry), and working to assert an oil, gas, and coal version of American “energy dominance” globally.  From the world’s leading economic power, there may be no larger “match” on the planet.   

A Flame of Hope

What hope is there of quenching the Trumpian fires?

There is the fact that much of the world is standing up to him. At this month’s climate accord follow-up meeting in Paris, billionaires Bill Gates and Richard Branson announced “a dozen international projects emerging from the summit that will inject money into efforts to curb climate change.” The head of the World Bank insisted that the institution would stop funding fossil fuel programs within the next two years. Former American officials spoke up, too, as U.S. News & World Report observed:

“One by one, officials including former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, billionaire [and former New York City mayor] Michael Bloomberg, and former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry insisted the world will shift to cleaner fuels and reduce emissions regardless of whether the Trump administration pitches in.”

I take comfort, too, in the extraordinary achievements of international civil society. Consider, for example, the work of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), this year’s recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. This summer, as a result of a campaign it led, two-thirds of the world’s nations -- 122 of them -- signed the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, which outlaws the use, production, and possession of nuclear arms. That treaty -- and the Nobel that rewarded its organizers -- didn’t get a lot of coverage in the United States, perhaps because, predictably, we didn’t sign it.

In fact, none of the existing nuclear powers signed it, but the treaty remains significant nonetheless. We should not underestimate the moral power of international agreements like this one. Few of us remember the 1928 Kellogg-Briand pact, which outlawed recourse to war for the resolution of international disputes. Nevertheless, that treaty formed the basis for the conviction of Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg for their crimes against peace. By implication, the Kellogg-Briand treaty also legalized a whole set of non-military actions nations can now take, including the use of economic sanctions against countries that violate international norms or laws.

ICAN leaders Beatrice Fihn and Setsuko Thurlow (herself a Hiroshima survivor) believe that, over time, the treaty will change how the world thinks about nuclear weapons, transforming them from a necessary evil to an unthinkable one, and so will ultimately lead to their elimination. As Fihn told the BBC’s Stephen Sackur, “If you’re uncomfortable with nuclear weapons under Donald Trump, you’re probably uncomfortable with nuclear weapons” in general. In other words, the idea of Trump’s tiny fingers on the nuclear trigger is enough to start a person wondering whether anybody’s fingers should be on that trigger.

The world’s reaction in Paris and ICAN’s passionate, rational belief in the moral power of international law are like a cool drink of water on a very hot day.



Rebecca Gordon, a TomDispatch regular, teaches in the philosophy department at the University of San Francisco. She is the author of American Nuremberg: The U.S. Officials Who Should Stand Trial for Post-9/11 War Crimes. Her previous books include Mainstreaming Torture: Ethical Approaches in the Post-9/11 United States and Letters from Nicaragua.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Alfred McCoy's In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, as well as John Dower's The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, John Feffer's dystopian novel Splinterlands, Nick Turse’s Next Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead, and Tom Engelhardt's Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: Senator Franken, Do Not Resign (An Open Letter) Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=63"><span class="small">Marc Ash, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 19 December 2017 11:59

Ash writes: "While confronting sexual harassment is strongly supported by vast majority of Democrats and Progressives, the perception widely held among them is that you have been targeted for political ends, and it is a deeply troubling concern."

Minnesota senator Al Franken, his wife Franni Bryson (left) and staff arrive at the U.S. Capitol on December 6, 2017, the day Franken announced he would be resigning 'in the coming weeks.' (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Minnesota senator Al Franken, his wife Franni Bryson (left) and staff arrive at the U.S. Capitol on December 6, 2017, the day Franken announced he would be resigning 'in the coming weeks.' (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)


Senator Franken, Do Not Resign (An Open Letter)

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

19 December 17

 

am writing to urge you to reconsider the decision you recently announced to resign your duly elected U.S. Senate seat.

While confronting sexual harassment is strongly supported by vast majority of Democrats and Progressives, the perception widely held among them is that you have been targeted for political ends, and it is a deeply troubling concern.

I would recommend that you and your Democratic Senate colleagues take a moment to review the petition on Change.org urging you not to resign. It now has over 72,000 signatures. Specifically, note the number and names of women who have chosen to stand on your behalf.

It is, as you said, ironic indeed that you have come under intense pressure to resign while the president and Republican members of Congress rallied around Roy Moore, turning a conveniently blind eye to the mind-boggling implications that would have resulted from caucusing with a known child predator.

The allegations against you, on the other hand, seem custom-made to cast you in a light that would encourage sexual harassment reform advocates within your own party to oppose you. The only complaint that had real substance, however, was the first one, made by Leeann Tweeden – and Tweeden’s association with Fox News’s right-wing provocateur Sean Hannity alone should cast significant doubt on her motives.

Of the other allegations there just isn’t much grist. In total, four of the other six accusers remain anonymous, and in the other two cases, the photographic evidence presented does more to vindicate you than validate the allegations against you.

Your Democratic colleagues in the Senate, in calling for your resignation, appear to be acting with genuine concern and good intentions. Sexual harassment in the workplace affects millions of Americans in a myriad of venues throughout our country. It is and always has been a cancer within our society. It must stop.

There is at the same time an unavoidable political component to all things Congressional. The dynamics of the special Senate election in Alabama unsurprisingly created a highly charged and divisive atmosphere. There seems to have been some strategic maneuvering on the part of Senate Democrats in dealing with the appalling allegations against Roy Moore and the outrageous conduct of Donald Trump. To an extent, you may be facing greater scrutiny than these allegations taken on their merits justify, due to the current climate.

You are the duly elected U.S. Senate representative of the people of the state of Minnesota, based on your commitment to pursue an agenda they support. You owe it to the Minnesotans who sent you to Washington to see that mission through.

Hold that seat and do their will.



Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Bob Corker Is Shocked - SHOCKED! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Tuesday, 19 December 2017 09:44

Pierce writes: "When you've got a bill being compared to the Fugitive Slave Act, you've got a really dead fish on your hands."

Senator Bob Corker. (photo: AP)
Senator Bob Corker. (photo: AP)


Bob Corker Is Shocked - SHOCKED!

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

19 December 17

 

still think the Abomination of Desolation is going to pass and that the president* will sign it, the latter because, at this point, he’ll sign anything they put on his desk. But word’s got around about how bad this bill really is—when you’ve got a bill being compared to the Fugitive Slave Act, you’ve got a really dead fish on your hands—and the Republicans are now looking like such big fools in the gyrations they’re doing trying to pass it that they’re pretty much writing the Democratic commercials for 2018 every time they get in front of a microphone. Monday’s carnival act was Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee, who’s retiring after this term and who, apparently, would like us to believe that he’s already checked out.

Corker, you may recall, opposed the original Senate tax bill because it will send the deficit spiraling into the Van Alen Belt, and he is what the pundits like to call a “deficit hawk.” Late last week, though, he came around and announced that he would be voting for the bill, which pretty much put paid to any Democratic attempt to jam things up, Lisa Murkowski having already been swayed by the vision of oil derricks against the Arctic sky and Susan Collins being god knows where from one moment to the next. However, at the last minute, a number of people—most notably, David Sirota and the crew at the International Business Times—noticed that a late revision in the bill would stand to make both Corker and the president* a pile of dough. From Bloomberg:

The change, which would allow real estate businesses to take advantage of a new tax break that’s planned for partnerships, limited liability companies and other so-called “pass-through” businesses, combined elements of House and Senate legislation in a new way. Its beneficiaries are clear, tax experts say, and they include a president who’s said that the tax legislation wouldn’t help him financially. “This last-minute provision will significantly benefit the ultra-wealthy real estate investor, including the president and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, resulting in a timely tax-reduction gift for the holidays,” said Harvey Bezozi, a certified public accountant and the founder of YourFinancialWizard.com. “Ordinary people who invest in rental real estate will also benefit.” James Repetti, a tax law professor at Boston College Law School, said: “This is a windfall for real estate developers like Trump.”

As it happens, Corker also is heavily invested in real-estate holding companies, so cynical souls like me, and like anyone else who has a pulse, have begun to notice that Corker clipped his own wings as a deficit hawk to support a bill that will make him even richer than he is now. Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn then went on This Week With The Clinton Guy Shocked By Blowjobs and middle Corker quite nicely.

STEPHANOPOULOS: [This provision] apparently was added at the last minute. Why was that done? Why was it necessary to include that provision?
CORNYN: Well, we were working very hard. It was a very intense process. As I said, the Democrats refused to participate. And what we’ve tried to do is cobble together the votes we needed to get this bill passed.

OK, so Cornyn didn’t say flat-out that they were trying to tempt Corker off his perch but, as I always say, a nod is as good as a wink to a blind trust. Naturally, on Monday, Corker pronounced himself shocked—SHOCKED!—at the suggestion that he might have changed his position because he stood to profit handsomely from doing so. To his credit, he got back to the IBT. What he told them, however, depends mightily on your personal faith in coincidence.

In a series of rapid-fire telephone interviews, Corker asked IBT for a description of the provision, and then criticized it. But minutes later, he called back to walk back that criticism, saying he wanted to further study the issue, and that it was more complex than he initially understood it to be. Despite potentially holding the fate of the entire tax bill in his hands, Corker told IBT that he has only read a short summary of the $1.4 trillion legislation. “I had like a two-page summary I went through with leadership,” said Corker. “I never saw the actual text.” Despite not reading the bill -- and having time to read it before the final vote scheduled for this week -- he reiterated his support for the bill to IBT, support he announced hours before bill’s full text was publicly released on Friday.

Looked at in the best possible light, Corker’s conundrum illustrates the unseemly haste with which this transformational adjustment of the tax code was cobbled together in order to get the president* and the congressional Republicans a “win” before Christmas. At worst, it looks like Corker got bought off. (#CorkerKickback started trending almost immediately on your electric Twitter machine.) Corker’s current position is to loudly demand a probe into how this dubious provision that will enrich him found its way into the bill. To quote a film that seems to be all the rage:

“Your winnings, sir.”


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
It Would Be Far Worse for Trump to Fire Rosenstein Than to Fire Mueller Print
Tuesday, 19 December 2017 09:41

Rangappa writes: "Just as Mueller's appointment did not start the Russia investigation, his removal would not end it either."

Rod Rosenstein. (photo: ABC)
Rod Rosenstein. (photo: ABC)


It Would Be Far Worse for Trump to Fire Rosenstein Than to Fire Mueller

By Asha Rangappa, Just Security

19 December 17


Firing Rod Rosenstein would be far more effective, and far more dangerous, than firing Robert Mueller.

ll eyes are on what Donald Trump will do, as the oracles on Twitter and the Hill have predicted that the president may fire special counsel Robert S. Mueller around the holidays. Trump’s lawyers have denied that he is considering such a move, and Trump himself has not directly criticized Mueller. However, Trump has recently expressed dissatisfaction with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, calling him “weak” and a threat. Along with those comments, the Washington Post reports that “Trump appeared to be contemplating changes in the Justice Department’s leadership.” In short, there’s a good chance that the guillotine is poised for Rosenstein, not for Mueller—and if so, that is cause for even greater concern for all who care about the integrity of the Russia investigation and, yes, the rule of law.

It’s important to remember that the Russia investigation existedbefore Mueller was appointed. In fact, the inquiry into Russia’s interference began as a counterintelligence investigation in June 2016, almost a year before Mueller came on the scene. Mueller was appointed as the special counsel in the wake of Trump’s firing of former FBI director James Comey to insulate the investigation from interference and (ironically) accusations of bias. Mueller simply stepped into an already-existing investigation and carried it forward with a team of prosecutors with greater independence but still oversight from the Justice Department.

Just as Mueller’s appointment did not start the Russia investigation, his removal would not end it either. As I wrote following Comey’s firing, FBI investigations have a life of their own and cannot easily be killed: By law, the FBI is required to investigate any potential violation of federal law to its final resolution. Further, FBI investigations—particularly complex ones, like a deep probe into Russian interference—have a propensity to expand. That is, in the course of investigating one person, or crime, additional subjects or violations of law might be uncovered. In such situations, new cases would be opened.

When we refer to the Russia investigation, then, we are really referring to multiple—perhaps even dozens—of cases involving many individuals. Some of these, like the charges against Paul Manafort and Rick Gates or the plea deals with George Papadopoulos and Michael Flynn, have already entered the judicial system. Other investigative leads, like subpoenas and document requests, are undoubtedly outstanding. In short, this train has left the station, and firing Mueller won’t stop it. The FBI would be compelled to pick it up and pursue these leads—perhaps with even greater rigor if its independence were under doubt after a Mueller firing.

Nevertheless, the FBI can only pursue its investigative efforts with the assistance of a prosecutor. Obtaining evidence, either through the criminal process or grand jury testimony, and knowing which investigative avenues to pursue to build a case require the active participation of an attorney who can go into court and facilitate each step. Mueller, obviously, is fulfilling that function right now. But, although many people may not realize it, so is Rosenstein.

Rosenstein is effectively Mueller’s boss. Although, under the special counsel regulations, Mueller does not have to report to Rosenstein day to day, he does need to check in with the DAG three months before the end of the fiscal year with a status report on the progress of the investigation, and Rosenstein has the power to “determine whether the investigation should continue.” Separately, Rosenstein has the power to require Mueller to “provide an explanation for any investigative or prosecutorial step” and can prevent Mueller from pursuing any action if, in his view, he believes that it is “inappropriate or unwarranted” under departmental practices. If he does so, he must report this decision to both the Senate and House Judiciary Committees. The fact that, six months into Mueller’s appointment, no such report has been made, and Mueller continues to take significant investigative and prosecutorial steps (including, most recently, obtaining tens of thousands of transition-team emails from the General Services Administration) suggests that Rosenstein is on board with the breadth, scope, and direction in which Mueller is taking the investigation.

Removing Rosenstein and replacing him with a DAG who is at the very least more sympathetic to Trump could have drastic repercussions for the investigation. The new DAG could burden the special counsel with a requirement to provide an explanation for every move he makes and then decide that they aren’t necessary or appropriate. In fact, because Mueller is required to provide the DAG with at least three days’ notice in advance of any “significant event” in the investigation, she would have plenty of time to intervene and challenge Mueller’s actions (and a less scrupulous DAG could even leak Mueller’s plans to the White House or others). A new DAG would even have the ultimate, er, trump card: She could decide at some point that the investigation should not even continue at all.

Of course, any attempt to override a decision by Mueller would need to be reported and justified to Congress. However, given the increased clamor of some GOP members and right-leaning media outlets against the Mueller investigation, a DAG’s rationale for pushing back on Mueller’s investigation would find a receptive audience in some circles, including on the Hill. The situation is delicate, and the DAG has a powerful platform to shift the balance of power against the investigation. Imagine the next DAG simply expressing doubts about Mueller in testifying before Congress, instead of projecting the level of confidence Rosenstein expressed last week before the House Judiciary Committee. Those are important moments in the life of this investigation, and a DAG not fully committed to the rule of law but to insulating the president and the White House from political and legal accountability could wreak havoc.

And while it’s true that any permanent replacement for the DAG position would be required to go through a Senate confirmation hearing, Rosenstein would in the meantime be replaced by someone else. One path would involve turning to the attorney who’s next in line at the DOJ: Rachel Brand. Brand may, of course, continue Rosenstein’s efforts, but because she didn’t personally appoint Mueller and has implicit notice that her own job is on the line, holding as steady as Rosenstein has so far would require withstanding extraordinary pressure. None of us truly knows how a person will operate under such conditions. Another path available to the president would be finding a Senate-confirmed official somewhere in the administration (Trump would not be restricted to picking someone from the DOJ) under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act. An admittedly longer shot would be to pick anyone inside or outside of the government to serve as acting DAG as a recess appointment if the Senate is out of session for 10 days in a row.

In short, the president has one move he can make in which the benefits to him might outweigh the costs. Since Rosenstein is his own political appointee, Trump has great discretion in deciding whether to remove him, and he can do it quickly and directly. And by removing Rosenstein but not touching Mueller, Trump can claim that he is in fact not trying to interfere with the Russia investigation at all: Indeed, it could be very hard to prove otherwise, which insulates him significantly from further obstruction charges. Firing Rosenstein but keeping Mueller gives the president the ultimate political and legal protection, and the crystal ball–gazers need to consider it.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Trump's Tough Talk Can't Hide the Incoherence of His Foreign Policy Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=34297"><span class="small">Ishaan Tharoor, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Tuesday, 19 December 2017 09:37

Tharoor writes: "On Monday, President Trump delivered what his administration billed as a landmark address on national security, outlining once more the tenets of his 'America First' doctrine."

Donald Trump. (photo: AP)
Donald Trump. (photo: AP)


Trump's Tough Talk Can't Hide the Incoherence of His Foreign Policy

By Ishaan Tharoor, The Washington Post

19 December 17

 

n Monday, President Trump delivered what his administration billed as a landmark address on national security, outlining once more the tenets of his "America First" doctrine. Nothing he said was particularly surprising. The speech, like so many Trump addresses, hinged on a recitation of his triumphs, real and imagined. He appealed to his right-wing, nationalist base, growled about the need to strengthen borders and cast America as a protagonist "engaged in a new era of competition."

"We are declaring America is in the game and America is going to win," Trump said, offering up a vintage bromide. He included many of his greatest (and tangentially foreign-policy-related) hits: references to his "principled realism;" how the "forgotten man" in America was no longer forgotten; the dangers of supposedly unchecked immigration; and the wondrous success of the stock market since Trump came to power.

Noah Rothman, a conservative commentator, described the address as "a slightly downbeat stump speech from the 2016 campaign trail."

The speech also came on the same day the White House released its National Security Strategy, a lengthy document that is meant to serve, as my colleague Anne Gearan put it, as "a kind of mission statement that guides policymaking" throughout the federal government. It has been a feature of American governance since former president Ronald Reagan issued the first NSS in 1987, though Trump officials unsurprisingly claim that this is the fastest any administration has put out such a document.

For all his bravura and tub-thumping patriotism, the dissonance between Trump's words and his administration's now-stated policy was impossible to ignore. Rothman argued that the written document displayed "a relatively conventional Republican approach to foreign affairs," a phrase that describes neither Trump's remarks — both on Monday and in general — nor the experience of the past year, which has been marked by erratic presidential behavior and mixed messaging.

The confusion may be understandable in one sense: On Monday evening, a White House official admitted that it was unlikely Trump had read the entirety of the 70-page strategy document.

Everyone from analysts to lawmakers, generals and foreign governments now has to pick through a number of contradictions, which include (but are certainly not limited to) the following issues:

  • The NSS named both China and Russia as countries that "are determined to make economies less free and less fair, to grow their militaries, and to control information and data to repress their societies and expand their influence." But Trump, in his speech, was conspicuously silent on Russian interference in the U.S. election, and he praised Russian President Vladimir Putin for thanking him over the weekend after Russia successfully foiled a terrorist attack using intelligence provided by the CIA.

The situation is "illustrative of what a good case officer" Putin is, said former director of national intelligence James R. Clapper Jr. to CNN. "He knows how to handle an asset, and that's what he is doing with the president."

  • The NSS harps on "American values" — a theme dear to Trump, who champions a much different vision of American identity and culture than his predecessors. "There can be no moral equivalency between nations that uphold the rule of law, empower women, and respect individual rights and those that brutalize and suppress their people," declared the NSS. "Through our words and deeds, America demonstrates a positive alternative to political and religious despotism."

Of course, much of Trump's politicking in 2017 has seen the White House cozy up to political despots and tone down the nation's traditional messaging on democracy and human rights.

  • The new strategy declares that the United States "must upgrade our diplomatic capabilities to compete in the current environment." Meanwhile, Trump is seeking drastic cuts to the State Department, the agency driving U.S. diplomacy, and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has endured a difficult year in office that might be followed by his exit next month.
  • When discussing the threat of Islamist extremism, the NSS document largely eschews the phrase "radical Islamic terrorism" in favor of "jihadist terror." That's a term both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama frequently used — for which they earned Trump's angry derision throughout the election campaign in 2016.

There are other signs that no one quite knows who is driving U.S. foreign policy or setting the official line. During his speech, for instance, Trump patted himself on the back for extricating the United States from the Paris climate accord — effectively making his country an international pariah — and refusing to certify Iran's compliance with the nuclear deal forged with the United States and other world powers. But the latest defensive authorization bill, signed just last week by Trump, identified climate change as a "direct threat to the national security of the United States." And as European leaders seek to keep the deal with Iran intact, Congress called Trump's bluff last week and chose not to snap sanctions back on Tehran — passing the buck back to the president.

"The bottom line is that the president is the policymaker equivalent of the Tasmanian Devil," wrote Ilan Goldenberg, a Middle East expert at the Center for a New American Security. "His advisers seriously deliberate on important options, only to have Trump enter and turn everything wildly upside down. The idea that in this environment an administration can put out a comprehensive national strategy that will have any impact whatsoever is pure fantasy."


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 1401 1402 1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409 1410 Next > End >>

Page 1403 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN