| Sunday, May 07, 2006 |
| Quick Takes: Sunday, May 7 |
Members of Congress want to know who the Bushies are contracting out our intelligence operations to.
Last year, contractors were "a significant majority" of analysts working at the new National Counterterroism Center (NCTC), which has primary responsibility for providing the White House and others with analysis based on foreign and domestic information, Gannon said. The proportion is even greater at CIFA, the Pentagon's new agency coordinating "force protection" at Defense Department facilities. CIFA officials have told The Washington Post that 70 percent of their workers are contractors.
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee, asked whether "the Department of Defense . . . moving into these fields with widespread expansion of powers" is "consistent with having a Director of National Intelligence?"
"What is bothersome," Gannon replied, "is that that movement that you're talking about is taking place without any supervision beyond the Department of Defense, and I think it is needed from the DNI, but also from the White House."
A greater problem, Gannon added, is that with the CIA, FBI and the Department of Homeland Security working on the civilian side, and the Pentagon expanding within its own realm, "it has confused civilian and military roles and raised alarms about the military involvement."
Growth in the military areas, however, continues. Even Athena Innovative Solutions Inc., the successor organization to MZM Inc., whose president was caught giving bribes in the criminal investigation that led to conviction of former representative Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-Calif.), has been successful in maintaining and expanding its Pentagon contracts. Not to mention the call girls and card games...
Bush tells German television that sure, he'd like to close Gitmo and put the prisoners there on trial. Next step: break it to Rumsfeld...
The Democratic leadership sets the table for Monday's Hardball, gleefully laying out what they'd do if the party takes over the House and Senate in November...
Democratic leaders, increasingly confident they will seize control of the House in November, are laying plans for a legislative blitz during their first week in power that would raise the minimum wage, roll back parts of the Republican prescription drug law, implement homeland security measures and reinstate lapsed budget deficit controls.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) said in an interview last week that a Democratic House would launch a series of investigations of the Bush administration, beginning with the White House's first-term energy task force and probably including the use of intelligence in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq. Pelosi denied Republican allegations that a Democratic House would move quickly to impeach President Bush. But, she said of the planned investigations, "You never know where it leads to." Probably? Maybe the Koskids do have a point about timid Democratic leaders...
Staying with the WaPo, a GOP pollster, the architect of the party's notorious -- and nefarious -- "southern strategy" no less -- waxes pessimistic about the House of Bush:
The recent White House shake-up was an attempt to jump-start the administration and boost President Bush's rock-bottom approval ratings, but have those efforts come too late to salvage the presidency? A prominent GOP pollster thinks that may be the case.
"This administration may be over," Lance Tarrance, a chief architect of the Republicans' 1960s and '70s Southern strategy, told a gathering of journalists and political wonks last week. "By and large, if you want to be tough about it, the relevancy of this administration on policy may be over."
A new poll by RT Strategies, the firm headed by Tarrance and Democratic pollster Thomas Riehle, shows that 59 percent of Americans disapprove of Bush's job performance, while 36 percent approve -- a finding in line with other recent polls.
Tarrance said it would be extremely difficult for any president to bounce back this late in his administration and reassert influence on Capitol Hill when his approval rating barely exceeds his party's base support and half of all adults surveyed said they "strongly disapprove" of his performance. An overwhelming 73 percent of independents disapprove of Bush's performance, and two-thirds of those "strongly disapprove." In that same poll, 30 percent of respondents said they will cast their votes in November specifically to register their displeasure with Mr. Bush, while 16 said they'd pull the lever to show their support. Meanwhile, who's the new big dog fundraiser for the DCCC? None other than Albert Gore... go figure.
In the ominous signs category, CBS News is reporting that the buzz in London is that President Bush called Tony Blair, and essentially forced out foreign secretary Jack Straw because of his strong opposition to military strikes against Iran.
The Independent suggests that a phone call from the U.S. president to British Prime Minister Tony Blair led to the removal of Foreign Secretary Jack Straw Friday.
The newspaper reports that friends of Straw believe Mr. Bush was extremely upset when Straw pronounced any use of nuclear weapons against Iran "nuts."
Both The Independent and the Guardian write that Straw's "fate was sealed" after a White House phone call to Blair. Not good signs if you don't want to see yet another war in the Gulf.
And by the way, what do we really know about what Iran has, nuke-wise? Not much. And outing Valerie Plame made things worse...
Meanwhile, the calls for Tony Blair to set a date for his departure are growing fast and furious... seems even his own party is ready to be rid of him.
And the Independent also has a disturbing story about how Thai women are mutilating themselves in a quest for porcelain skin.
And the Guardian breaks down Hugo Chavez, the man who would be Venezuela's president for life... or at least for the next 25 years...
Tags: Iran, Blair, Bush, Politics, UK, War, News, Terrorism, Current Affairs |
posted by JReid @ 5:26 PM   |
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