Clarke on Iraq

Among Richard Clarke’s most pertinent comments concerning the “war on terror” today are his observations on the war in Iraq–a war he opposes. He recently appeared on Larry King Live and offered three reasons why the Iraq invasion was a setback in the “war on terror”:

Number one, it diverts us from reducing the vulnerabilities here at home, like protecting the rails from attacks like the one on Madrid. We’re spending $180 billion in Iraq. We should be spending that money reducing our vulnerabilities to terrorism here at home, much more than we are. The railroads, the chemical plants, they are all still unprotected.
The second way it reduces the war on terrorism is by inflaming the Islamic world and helping, as Rumsfeld said in his internal memo, helping create more terrorists more rapidly than we can capture or kill them, because of the hatred in the Islamic world generated against the United States by our needless invasion of Iraq.
And the third way, of course, was it actually took troops and intelligence assets away from the hunt for bin Laden. We’ll probably catch bin Laden here shortly, but it’s two years too late. In those two years, al Qaeda has morphed into a hydra, a multi-headed organization, so that by the time we catch him now, it won’t matter very much, because all of these al Qaeda-like organizations have grown up around the world, like the group that attacked in Madrid.
The point is, the war in Iraq was not necessary. Iraq was not an imminent threat to the United States. And by going to war with Iraq, we have greatly reduced our possibility to prosecute the war on terrorism.

This, in the simplest terms, is the case against our attack on Iraq. Well said.

So-Called “Blogs” Exposed: The Secret’s Out

Down in the seedy bowels of the underqround Internet . . .

Republicans have accused Democratic U.S. House candidate Stephanie Herseth of maintaining a secret Web page to receive campaign donations raised from ads on liberal groups’ Internet sites.
But a Herseth campaign official scoffed at the charge, saying the Web page is not secret and can be found easily with a standard search of the Internet.
. . .
Jason Glodt, executive director of the South Dakota Republican Party, said the Herseth campaign arranged the special Internet donation site to prevent most South Dakotans from knowing about Herseth’s relationship with such liberal groups.
The Herseth Web page takes campaign donations from people directed there from Internet sites called “blogs,” which are online bulletin boards that feature journals, opinionated articles and messages.
“There’s a reason she’s got that secret site. She doesn’t want to advertise the fact she’s doing this,” Glodt said Thursday.
“I think the real point is you judge a person by the friends they keep, and look where she’s focusing her fund-raising efforts,” Glodt said. “Anybody can look at these blogs and the content, and realize the values they are promoting are completely contradictory to the South Dakota values she purports to represent.”
However, Herseth campaign spokesman Russ Levsen said that particular Internet page merely takes donations from people who find out about the campaign when they visit political blogs that feature Herseth ads.
“I would dispute the premise that it’s secret because it’s an open site on the Internet that anybody can get to,” Levsen said.
The supposedly secret Web site is one of the first results when an Internet user does a standard search for the terms “blog” and “Herseth” on the Google search engine, Levsen said.
. . .
People who click on those blog ads are taken to a separate page on Herseth’s Internet site, where they can donate to her campaign. There is no link on Herseth’s main campaign site to take Internet users to the blog-related page.

Via Talking Points Memo.
UPDATE: Ringleader Kos reveals the secret passage.
If Resonance suddenly vanishes, you’ll know why.

Departing Contestants: Free Rice-A-Roni at the Door

This is news to me:

As she prepares to leave her job at the end of the year, Ms. Rice, the president’s national security adviser, now finds herself at the center of a political storm, furiously defending both the White House and her own reputation.

I’ve heard rumors of Secretary of State Powell quitting at the end of the term, but not Rice. If true, this a strange way to report this tidbit–buried in an article.
Looks like our “steady leadership” is becoming increasingly fluid.

Repent and Be Jailed

Looks like law enforcement have a new interrogation tool:

A repentant Texas man went to police after seeing Mel Gibson’s controversial film The Passion of Christ and confessed to murdering a 19-year-old woman who was pregnant with his child, authorities said on Thursday.
Police had thought Ashley Nicole Wilson, who died on Jan. 18, had hanged herself, but Dan Leach, 21, went to them on March 9 to admit that he had killed her, said Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Jeannie Gage.
Leach wanted to seek redemption after talking to a friend and seeing the movie about the last hours of Christ’s life, she said.
“He mentioned that speaking with the friend and seeing the movie The Passion of Christ made him feel remorse,” Gage said.

Unfortunately, I don’t think this film will be a very effective tool with our olive-skinned guests at the Cuban concentration camp.

Unity Day

In the spirit of Unity Day, why not throw some coinage here.
I saw footage from the bigwig fund-raiser. The candidates lined up on stage with Carter, Clinton, and Gore for the photo op. It looked like Senator Edwards squeezed his way in so he could stand by Clinton. The Clinton/Gore handshake lasted all of one second, then it looked like Clinton wanted to have a high five and Gore turned away. Kind of funny.
Thanks to this guy for making this all possible.

Governing by Principle, Not Polls

Remember that debate over the establishment of the Department of Homeland Security? Not a very significant issue for the country, right?
Joe Conason interviewing Richard Clarke:

McClellan also said that although you criticize the creation of the Department of Homeland Security in the book, you had attempted to become the No. 2 in that department and were passed over — and that’s yet another reason why you wrote this critical book.
They’re trying to bait me, and they’re trying to get me to answer all these personal issues. You know, the fact is that Tom Ridge opposed the creation of the Department of Homeland Security. George Bush opposed the creation of the Department of Homeland Security. And then one day, they turned on a dime and supported it. Why?
As I said in the book, the White House legislative affairs people counted votes. Senator [Joseph] Lieberman had proposed the bill to create the Department of Homeland Security — and the legislative affairs people said Lieberman has the votes; it’s going to pass. They said, “You’ve got the possible situation here, Mr. President, where you’re going to have to veto the creation of the Department of Homeland Security. And if you don’t support it now, if you don’t make it your proposal, not only will it pass but it will be called the Lieberman bill.”
The Lieberman-McCain bill.
The Lieberman-McCain bill, in fact. So that there were two outcomes possible. One in which we have this Frankenstein department, created during the middle of the war on terrorism, reorganizing during the middle of a war. That was possible. It was also possible that a second thing would happen, and that was that Lieberman would get credit for it. And therefore the president changed his position overnight, and became a big supporter of the Department of Homeland Security.