Have you heard that we won the Iraq War? Well, sure, we've still got 142,000 troops there, we're spending $12 billion per month on it and hundreds of Iraqis per week are dying violent deaths. What's more, none of the fundamental political questions that divide Iraq's murderous factions have been settled, and the place is poised to collapse into genocidal anarchy--which might engulf the entire region--should President Obama withdraw our troops too hastily. So we're going to have to stay, well, perhaps forever.
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Eric Alterman: TNR's more significant sin is to weaken the bond between Israel and liberal American Jews--which is to say, most of them.
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Eric Alterman: The next generation of right-wing journalists are largely apparatchiks.
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Just Don't Call It 'Journalism'
Eric Alterman: By refusing to acknowledge Fox News's avowed partisanship, its MSM defenders diminish the work of honest journalists who try to play fair.
I first noticed this phenomenon just before the inauguration, when I did a Hardball spot with a Bush flack named Ron Christie. I later learned from his bio that Christie's "depth of knowledge and service in the American political scene, combined with his unique experience at the highest levels of global and domestic policy-planning, makes him one of the leading authorities on the state of the world today." This is good to know because during our brief tête-à-tête with Chris Matthews, the man gave every appearance of being seriously deranged. Our topic was whether, after eight years of his presidency, Bush had succeeded in uniting or dividing the nation. Christie answered the question by explaining that Bush had united America because he kept us safe. He kept repeating this, apparently unaware that even if it were true, it had nothing to do with the question. Is Canada united because it has not been attacked? Is Bosnia? Is Iran? Were Spain and England attacked to call attention to their internal divisions? Though he may not have understood this, Christie's views echoed those expressed by Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell, who blamed the 9/11 attacks on God's anger at America for its toleration of abortion, homosexuals and the like--to say nothing of the responsibility for the attacks his argument implies for the fellow who happened to be president while our intelligence agencies were asleep at the switch.
In the context of our discussion, Christie's robotic responses were a bit baffling. But in the context of a White House memo leaked in December, his comments--like so many we heard in Bush's final days--became intelligible. Bush "kept the American people safe," the memo told his flacks. And in their endless exit interviews, Bush and Cheney returned to this talking point. Here's Cheney with Fox's Chris Wallace: "The actions that we took, based on the president's decisions and based on some outstanding work by the intelligence community and by the military, has produced a safe seven and a half years." And again, to CBS's Mark Knoller: "We've managed to keep the nation safe from further terrorist attacks for the last seven and a half years." At the same time we heard from ex-Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan in the Journal: "At least Bush kept us safe." Bush speechwriter Peter Wehner added in USA Today, "Bush Kept U.S. Safe." And on it went.
In fact, this claim, too, is nonsense. Sixteen US intelligence agencies reporting together in 2006 found that Bush's misadventure in Iraq has "helped spawn a new generation of Islamic radicalism," according to the New York Times, and that "the overall terrorist threat has grown since the September 11 attacks." A 150-page Government Accountability Office report issued in November found virtually every agency in Bush's government woefully unprepared to "keep us safe." For instance, the Department of Homeland Security "lacks not only a comprehensive strategy with overall goals and a timeline but also a dedicated management integration team to support its management integration efforts." It has failed to coordinate with other agencies such as FEMA, the Justice Department or the Agriculture Department to undertake the most fundamental survival tasks in the event of disaster.
In fact, Bush left the nation in greater peril than it was in on August 6, 2001, when he was informed that Osama bin Laden was "determined to attack in US" and responded, "All right, you've covered your ass now," before deciding to spend the rest of the day fishing. You can look it up.
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