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Obama Begins Calling American People to Console Them About Trump Being President Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 18 October 2017 13:57

Borowitz writes: "Former President Barack Obama has started calling every person in America to offer consolation about Donald Trump being President, Obama has confirmed."

Former president Barack Obama. (photo: Pete Souza/White House)
Former president Barack Obama. (photo: Pete Souza/White House)


Obama Begins Calling American People to Console Them About Trump Being President

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

18 October 17

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."


ormer President Barack Obama has started calling every person in America to offer consolation about Donald Trump being President, Obama has confirmed.

“It’s something I meant to do right after the Inauguration,” Obama said, during a brief break from the phone calls. “I feel terrible that I didn’t get to it sooner.”

The former President said that, although the phone calls are a small gesture, he felt that he had to do whatever he could to extend his sympathy about Trump being President.

“There’s a lot of pain out there that a phone call from me can never fix,” he said. “Still, I want people to know that I care.”

Carol Foyler, who has been grieving since Trump was elected, last November, said that receiving a call from Obama on Monday “meant a lot.”

“The fact that he took the time to call me, when he had three hundred million more people left to call, is something I’ll never forget,” she said.


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Trump's Missile Defense Delusion Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=37428"><span class="small">Fred Kaplan, Slate</span></a>   
Wednesday, 18 October 2017 13:50

Kaplan writes: "Trump claims that U.S. missile defense works 97 percent of the time. It doesn't, and it's a problem if he thinks that."

In this handout photo released by the South Korean Defense Ministry, a Hyunmoo-2 missile is test-fired into the East Sea on Sept. 15 during a drill aimed to counter North Korea's missile fires. (photo: South Korean Defense Ministry/Getty)
In this handout photo released by the South Korean Defense Ministry, a Hyunmoo-2 missile is test-fired into the East Sea on Sept. 15 during a drill aimed to counter North Korea's missile fires. (photo: South Korean Defense Ministry/Getty)


Trump's Missile Defense Delusion

By Fred Kaplan, Slate

18 October 17


Trump claims that U.S. missile defense works 97 percent of the time. It doesn’t, and it’s a problem if he thinks that.

uried among the many other slings and arrows of last week’s news from the White House was the following remark by President Trump to Sean Hannity on Wednesday: “We have missiles that can knock out a missile in the air 97 percent of the time, and if you can send two of them, it’s going to get knocked down.”

Trump was speaking of our missile-defense system and how easily it could shoot down North Korean nuclear missiles as they dart through the sky toward their targets. Two things need to be said about this.

First, Trump is wrong. Not even the program’s most avid boosters have ever made a claim quite this optimistic.

Second, someone needs to tell Trump he’s wrong, because if he believes what he said, he might think that he could attack North Korea with impunity. After all, if the North Koreans retaliated by firing their nuclear missiles back at us or our allies, we could shoot them down.

Here’s the problem. The United States has spent hundreds of billions of dollars developing, testing, and fielding ballistic-missile-defense systems over the past few decades. But in tests, these systems hit their target only about 50 to 60 percent of the time.

And even this record exaggerates how they would likely perform in an actual conflict. In the tests, everyone involved knows ahead of time when, where, and at what angle the missile will be launched. Also, with only a couple of exceptions, the tests have aimed an interceptor against just a single target—whereas, in a real war, the attacker would almost certainly fire a volley of missiles. The real attack might even happen at night, whereas all of the tests have been conducted in daytime.

Some have suggested that the next time North Korea tests a missile, we should shoot it down. The test numbers hint at why the Pentagon is hesitant to take up this idea. It would look very bad if we missed—and there’s as good a chance as not that we would miss.

One could argue that the missile-defense systems play some role in deterring North Korea (or some other hostile country) from launching an attack. Maybe. Kim Jong-un might think it’s possible the U.S. would shoot down one of his missiles. But if we failed at shooting down even one of them, the program’s deterrent value would shrink to nil; even if our systems were really good and the failure had been a fluke, this first impression would be the one that sticks. It might even embolden Kim in his nuclear ambitions.

Or, Kim could just compensate by firing more missiles, thus heightening the chance that some of them would get through. And if the interceptors didn’t work, then those extra missiles would wreak more damage still on the country where they exploded.

It was for this reason—the fact that the offense could easily outrace the defense, and much more cheaply—that the United States and the Soviet Union signed the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 1972, prohibiting the deployment of ABM systems (and thus requiring the dismantlement of rather extensive, but utterly ineffective, systems that had been developed and, to some degree deployed, over the previous 15 years).

President Ronald Reagan revived the idea of missile defenses with his 1983 “Star Wars” speech, followed by massive spending on a variety of exotic R&D projects, most of them involving laser weapons in outer space. (None of those programs went anywhere.)

By the late 1990s, Republicans were campaigning on fulfilling Reagan’s promise. When George W. Bush entered the White House in 2001, he announced that the United States was pulling out of the ABM Treaty—which an article of the treaty allowed with six months notice—so that he could actually start fielding anti-missile missiles.

One thing Bush did was to create a special Pentagon office—now known as the Missile Defense Agency—to manage these programs. The congressional armed services committees settled on an annual MDA budget of roughly $10 billion, and so it remained, in a bipartisan consensus, even though the programs initially tested poorly and, after a couple of years, even Bush stopped talking about it.

Still, missile-defense technology has come a long way. When the U.S. and the USSR pursued ABMs in the 1950s and early ’60s, the idea was to destroy an incoming warhead by blowing it up with an atom bomb—high in the atmosphere, or a little bit in outer space, to avoid killing people on the ground. But by the late ’60s, scientists discovered that even high-altitude explosions would shower the earth below with X-rays, destroying all electronics and communications and thus, among other things, disabling the ABM radar, so that any follow-on missiles would get through unimpeded. (This is another reason why Richard Nixon was fine with banning ABMs: Quite apart from the offense-defense arms race they were sure to incite, they didn’t work.)

Today’s missile-defense systems operate very differently. As before, radars track the flight path of an incoming missile, but the rocket that’s launched toward the missile is carrying not an atom bomb but rather a “kill vehicle”—which destroys the missile by slamming into it. When first proposed, this seemed like a preposterous notion, akin to “hitting a bullet with a bullet.” But this is exactly what it does. On a purely technical level, it is a stunning achievement that it works even some of the time.

But “some of the time” isn’t good enough for protecting a city from a nuclear missile, especially if the attacker can overwhelm the defense by simply firing an extra missile or firing the first missile from an unaccustomed angle or programming the missile to shoot out a cloud of chaff—metallic fragments—that confuse the radar, which might start following the chaff instead of the missile. It is not known whether the North Koreans have put chaff in their missiles, but it’s not that sophisticated. The U.S. and the USSR did this in the mid-1960s—the devices were known as “penetration aids”—and it’s conceivable that North Korea has obtained some crude ones from the Russians. In any case, the U.S. has not publicly conducted any tests to see whether the missile-defense radars can distinguish a missile from chaff.

The United States has three basic types of anti-missile weapons: the SM-3s, fired from Aegis-class cruisers at sea (though a land-based version is in development); Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, which South Korea recently deployed; and the Ground-Based Interceptors, or GBIs, which are based in Alaska.

THAAD has an excellent test record against short-range missiles, but it has only once been tested against medium-range missiles (those with a range of about 600 to 2,000 miles) and never against intermediate-range missiles (2,000 to 3,500 miles). So it could probably knock down a missile or two fired from North to South Korea. Could it hit a missile aimed at Guam? Unclear.

SM-3s have a similar range, but the Aegis cruiser would have to be in the right place at the right time. According to John Pike, director of GlobalSecurity.org, the Aegis tests align the interceptor, the target-missile, and the point where the two collide along a straight line; when it’s fired from a side angle, it tends not to work.

The Pentagon’s office of testing and evaluation gives these systems a mixed assessment, concluding in a recent report that they have demonstrated “a limited capability” to defend against “small numbers” of medium- and intermediate-range missiles—and “a fair capability” against short-range missiles.

The GBI is the one system designed and tested to shoot down long-range missiles—for instance, those fired at the continental United States—and even this program’s defenders, when speaking privately, hem and haw about its success rate. It has shot down a target in 10 out of 18 tries since the program began in 1999, and it’s been tested just once since 2014.

Think about those numbers. Here’s a program that is supposed to defend the nation from a nuclear attack—and (forget the mediocre success rate for a minute) it’s hardly been tested at all.

Yet this is likely the system that Trump claimed could knock out a missile in the air 97 percent of the time. He, or whoever briefed him on the subject, might have got the idea from Gen. Patrick O’Reilly, who, back in 2011, when he was director of MDA, told Congress that the GBI system’s chance of intercepting a missile was “well in the high-90s.” O’Reilly explained that, unlike the other missile-defense systems, the GBI was designed to fire more than one interceptor at incoming missiles. Specifically, it was built to fire four interceptors at each target. Mathematically, if one interceptor has a 56 percent chance of hitting a target, four interceptors would have, yes, a 97 percent chance. (It’s unclear whether it was really designed to fire four on one, or whether this was just a rationale to justify its middling test record.)

But, again, 56 percent is almost certainly an overstatement, given the less-than-realistic nature of the tests. And, in any case, Trump misunderstood the number he was given—he told Hannity that the weapon could knock out a missile 97 percent of the time, meaning “if you could send two of them,” you’ll knock out the missile for sure. No, you need to fire four to bring it up to 97 percent—and you’d need six, not two, to get it to 99 percent.

The U.S. currently has just 48 GBIs—meaning that, even if the system worked as well as the tests indicate, we would run out of interceptors after the North Koreans (or whatever foe) fired 12 missiles. The 13th missile would sail through with no interference.

Why haven’t the missile-defense systems been tested in a realistic setting? Why haven’t they been tested much at all? A fair inference is that nobody in charge takes them very seriously; nobody is even pretending that they’ll play much of a role in an actual war. All the U.S. missile-defense programs combined have been tested just 93 times since 2001. If someone were taking them seriously, they’d be tested once a month.

This is what happens when the government creates a special agency to solve a complex problem, gives it a boatload of money, but keeps it isolated from the more mainstream bureaucracy. It performs amazing technical feats—but only under circumstances that facilitate these feats.

Around the time Bush abrogated the ABM Treaty and started deploying ABM systems for the first time in three decades, Congress exempted the Missile Defense Agency from the rigorous test-hurdles that most other weapons systems have to clear. There would be, for example, no war games in which a Blue Team would man the missile-defense system and a Red Team would try to trick, overwhelm, or otherwise defeat it.

Most of the commanders in other parts of the military sort of know this, but they don’t talk about it much. There’s a mystique surrounding missile defense. It succeeds in helping deter an enemy attack only to the extent that the mystique is preserved. So the Missile Defense Agency doesn’t test the systems seriously. And the war commanders don’t talk about the subject much or integrate it into their own war games.

It’s possible Trump knew what he was doing by reciting these numbers on television. Maybe he meant to thicken the mystique. The danger, and the more likely scenario, is that he took the numbers seriously, that he thinks this stuff really works and that it gives him a magic bullet in a war with North Korea—and that, therefore, he might be more willing to go to war. It’s one thing to lull an adversary into believing the mystique—it’s dangerous if the president believes it too. If that’s what has happened, someone needs to wake up the president.


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FOCUS: If Only 'Being a Colossal Dick' Was an Impeachable Offense Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Wednesday, 18 October 2017 10:51

Pierce writes: "Every day in every way, I am sorry that the Founders didn't include Being A Colossal Dick to the list of impeachable offenses in the Constitution."

Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell. (photo: Getty Images)
Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell. (photo: Getty Images)


If Only 'Being a Colossal Dick' Was an Impeachable Offense

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

18 October 17


We could avoid some of the constant embarrassment.

very day in every way, I am sorry that the Founders didn't include Being A Colossal Dick to the list of impeachable offenses in the Constitution. Bribery, Treason, Other High Crimes And Misdemeanors, Including Ye Being A Colossal Dicke. See, it wouldn't have been that hard and at least we would be rid of embarrassing scenes like the one that played out on the White House grounds on Monday. From Josh's joint:

"The toughest calls I have to make are the calls where this happens — soldiers are killed. It's a very difficult thing. Now it gets to a point where you make four or five of them in one day, it's a very, very tough day. For me that's by far the toughest. So the traditional way, if you look at President Obama and other presidents, most of them didn't make calls, a lot of them didn't make calls. I like to call when it's appropriate, when I think I'm able to do it."

This is a guy who's just bone-deep dishonorable. He knows how readily falsifiable a claim it is. (Politico already has an account of Obama aides climbing the walls.) He backpedaled a little when asked a follow-up question about how much he really knows about what other presidents did in those situations. (Evergreen Pro Tip: Next to nothing.)

But why make the assertion at all? Because he knows that tens of millions of Americans are right now emailing and texting each other about how Obummer never called the families of soldiers who were KIA. A third of the country will believe it by Thursday no matter how much we mock it, or how often it is exposed for the sickening fabrication that it is. I'm sure Benghazi, Benghazi!, Benghazi! is in there somewhere, too.


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The GOP Is No Party for Honest Men Print
Wednesday, 18 October 2017 08:44

Krugman writes: "The GOP knows Trump is unfit for office, and many worry about his mental stability. But they'll back him as long as they think he might get those tax cuts through. So what's behind this priority? Follow the money."

President Trump and Mitch McConnell speaking to reporters on Monday. (photo: Tom Brenner /NYT)
President Trump and Mitch McConnell speaking to reporters on Monday. (photo: Tom Brenner /NYT)


The GOP Is No Party for Honest Men

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times

18 October 17

 

ccording to a new CBS News poll, almost 60 percent of the American public believes that the current Republican tax plan favors the wealthy. Some people see this number as a sign that the plan is in trouble; I see it as a sign that Republican lies are working far better than they deserve to.

For the plan does indeed favor the wealthy — overwhelmingly, undeniably. It’s shocking that as many as 40 percent of Americans don’t realize this.

It’s not difficult to see how the plan is tilted toward the very top. The main elements of the plan are a cut in top individual tax rates; a cut in corporate taxes; an end to the estate tax; and the creation of a big new loophole that will allow wealthy individuals to pretend that they are small businesses, and get a preferential tax rate. All of these overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy, mainly the top 1 percent.

READ MORE


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Iran Doesn't Have a Nuclear Weapons Program. Why Do Journalists Keep Saying It Does? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=35632"><span class="small">Adam Johnson, FAIR</span></a>   
Wednesday, 18 October 2017 08:25

Johnson writes: "When it comes to Iran, do basic facts matter? Evidently not, since dozens and dozens of journalists keep casually reporting that Iran has a 'nuclear weapons program' when it does not."

Former US Secretary of State John Kerry, left, meets with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in 2016. (photo: Frank Franklin II/AP)
Former US Secretary of State John Kerry, left, meets with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in 2016. (photo: Frank Franklin II/AP)


Iran Doesn't Have a Nuclear Weapons Program. Why Do Journalists Keep Saying It Does?

By Adam Johnson, FAIR

18 October 17

 

hen it comes to Iran, do basic facts matter? Evidently not, since dozens and dozens of journalists keep casually reporting that Iran has a “nuclear weapons program” when it does not—a problem FAIR has reported on over the years (e.g., 9/9/15). Let’s take a look at some of the outlets spreading this falsehood in just the past five days:

  • Business Insider (10/13/17): The deal, officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), aims to incentivize Iran to curb its nuclear weapons program by lifting crippling international economic sanctions.”

  • New Yorker (10/16/17): “One afternoon in late September, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called a meeting of the six countries that came together in 2015 to limit Iran’s nuclear weapons program.”

  • Washington Post (10/16/17): “The administration is also considering changing or scrapping an international agreement regarding Iran’s nuclear weapons program.”

  • CNN (10/17/17): “In reopening the nuclear agreement, [Trump] risks having Iran advance its nuclear weapons program at a time when he confronts a far worse nuclear challenge from North Korea that he can’t resolve.”

The problem with all of these excerpts: Iran does not have a nuclear weapons program. It has a civilian nuclear energy program, but not one designed to build weapons. Over 30 countries have civilian nuclear programs; only a handful—including, of course, the US and Israel—have nuclear weapons programs. One is used to power cities, one is used to level them.

If you are skeptical, just refer to a 2007 assessment by all 16 US intelligences agencies (yes, those 16 US intelligence agencies), which found Iran had “halted” its nuclear weapons program. Or look at the same National Intelligence Estimate in 2012, which concluded again that there “is no hard evidence that Iran has decided to build a nuclear bomb.” Or we can listen to the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad, which concurred with the US intelligence assessment (Haaretz, 3/18/12).

The “Iran Deal,” formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), is built on curbing Iran’s civilian nuclear program, out of fear—fair or not—that it could one day morph into a nuclear weapons program. But at present, there is no evidence, much less a consensus, that Iran has an active nuclear weapons program. JCPOA cannot be used as per se evidence such a program exists today; indeed, it is specifically designed to prevent such a program from developing down the road.

A slightly less egregious variant of this canard is when outlets suggest the JCPOA stopped an ongoing existing weapons program—though they don’t make the mistake of saying it still exists: The JCPOA “called for the elimination of economic sanctions Iran in exchange for Tehran giving up its nuclear weapons program,” USA Today (10/13/17) wrote. US and Israeli intelligence do claim that Iran once had a nuclear weapons program—but they say it ended in 2003, not in 2015 as a result of the JCPOA.

The distinction between nuclear energy and nuclear weapons is, of course, non-trivial. Every time the media mindlessly report Iran has a “nuclear weapons program” rather than a “nuclear program” (or, better, a “nuclear energy” or “nuclear power program”), they further advance the myth that Iran’s intentions or “ambitions” are to build a nuclear bomb, which is something we have no evidence it is doing or plans to do—at least since the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei issued a fatwa against building nuclear weapons in 2003 (Foreign Policy, 10/16/14).

So why do some many reporters keep mucking this up? A few reasons: It’s just a mantra repeated ad infinitum, and journalists and pundits often mindlessly repeat an oft-repeated phrase. Some, such as nuclear arms expert Jeffrey Lewis at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at Middlebury Institute, think it’s simply an issue of reporters not knowing how to express a complicated idea.

“I often see this point [about the civilian vs weapons program] mangled. I don’t think it’s malice, just a writer or editor not knowing how to express an idea,” he said on social media. “The JCPOA imposes measures that constrain Iran’s nuclear energy program to provide confidence that the program remains peaceful,” he added, offering an example of how that idea can be expressed.

Another major reason for this recurring falsehood, as FAIR (7/6/17) noted after the New York Times twice “mistakenly” accused Iran of carrying out 9/11 (one of the smears going uncorrected for over three years), is that one can say pretty much anything about Iran without any professional or public backlash. Because Iran is an Official US Enemy, and its motives are therefore always deemed sinister, the idea that it is plotting to violate the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and build a nuclear weapon is simply taken as a given. The lack of hard evidence for this is irrelevant: Intentions of those in the crosshairs of US power are always presented as cynical and malicious; those of the US and its allies benevolent and in good faith. Iran’s sinister motives are simply the default setting—no matter much evidence points to the contrary.


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