Monday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Well, this might shake up the Iraq debate a bit: “The U.S. military’s top general said Monday that the Joint Chiefs of Staff is weighing a range of possible new directions in Iraq, including, if President Bush deems it necessary, an even bigger troop buildup…. He mentioned no potential range of increases or decreases in force levels. Another possibility being considered, he said, is maintaining the current level of troops for some period beyond September.” (emphasis added)

* The relationship between the netroots and Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign has been a little awkward, but even the most die-hard Clinton critic would have to concede the senator’s campaign is making a real effort: today, on a conference call exclusively for progressive bloggers, former Amb. Joe Wilson endorsed Clinton’s campaign. (Disclosure: I was on the call.) Wilson, a fierce critic of Bush’s Iraq policy, cited Iraq as the reason for the endorsement.

* The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, owned by right-wing billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife, is not exactly known for a progressive editorial policy. It’s why this was encouraging: “The [Tribune-Review] yesterday called the Bush administration’s plans to stay the course in Iraq a ‘prescription for American suicide.’ The editorial … added, ‘And quite frankly, during last Thursday’s news conference, when George Bush started blathering about ‘sometimes the decisions you make and the consequences don’t enable you to be loved,’ we had to question his mental stability.'”

* Speaking of editorial boards, apparently the Chicago Sun-Times wants everyone to know that last week’s announcement was misconstrued — it will not be an intentionally liberal paper.

* How far gone is William Kristol? Time’s Jay Carney, hardly a liberal firebrand, takes him to task today in a thorough smackdown.

* My friend Tom Schaller has a terrific piece in the New York Daily News explaining how the International Association of Firefighters’ 13-minute video released last week is “the latest straw to bend Rudy’s back.” The 9/11 halo gets tarnished more and more all the time.

* A man with a gun walked into Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter’s office and yelled, “I am the emperor. I am here to take over state government.” Details are still a little sketchy, but there was an incident, and state troopers reportedly shot and killed the man. The governor’s spokesperson said Ritter is “shaken and rattled” but fine.

* If a writer intentionally goes easy on his government sources, he shouldn’t call himself a journalist.

* Wouldn’t it be nice if Donald Rumsfeld testified at the next hearing on the Tillman scandal?

* Every time I start to think John McCain’s campaign is toast, I remember that political reporters will do what they have to do to shamelessly bolster his effort: “On the July 15 broadcast of Fox Broadcasting Co.’s Fox News Sunday, NPR national political correspondent Mara Liasson claimed that during a July 14 New Hampshire town hall meeting, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) ‘took questions for an hour and a half and answered them all, you know, with the same kind of candor and honesty that people come to expect from John McCain.’ Later in the program, Liasson claimed that McCain ‘is a candidate who always says, you know, he puts principle above politics.'” Have these people no pride?

* Speaking of Fox News, a network personality compared to tobacco addicts to African Americans over the weekend, suggesting neither should face “discrimination.”

* Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons (R) is facing so many investigations for his various scandals that he’s created a legal defense fund.

* On a related note, Rep. John Doolittle (R-Calif.) could probably use a legal defense fund, but after the FBI raided his house, his financial backers stopped returning his phone calls. Imagine that.

* Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) was invited to attend Lady Bird Johnson’s funeral last week, but reportedly blew it off for a campaign event. Classy.

* And finally, at the risk of ending the day on a depressing note, I was struck by the story of Jonathan Aponte who, after a painful tour of duty in Iraq, reportedly paid a hitman $500 to shoot him in the leg, rather than be re-deployed. He described watching a fellow soldier shoot herself in the head in the middle of the dining hall, and said, “I was not going back one way or another. Some people can handle it mentally, but some can’t. You have to know when to say enough is enough…. Would I risk going to prison? As far as being shot at, I think it’s better.” Aponte now faces a variety of criminal charges, including assault, conspiracy, and falsely reporting an incident.

Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

Any bets that Lieberman will choose this filibuster stand as his moment to switch parties and come to the Republican rescue?

  • > “The U.S. military’s top general said Monday that the Joint Chiefs of Staff is weighing a range of possible new directions in Iraq, including, if President Bush deems it necessary, an even bigger troop buildup….

    And the scary part of this is the phrase “if President Bush deems it necessary”

  • * A man walked into Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter’s office and yelled, “I am the emperor….”

    George Bush was in Colorado?

  • Looks like Richard Mellon Scaife senses the coming Republican Extinction Event.

    Racer X beat me to the point. The house is on fire and Scaife smells smoke.

  • “…today, on a conference call exclusively for progressive bloggers, former Amb. Joe Wilson endorsed Clinton’s campaign. (Disclosure: I was on the call.)

    Well of course you were.

  • Sorry, I can’t resist this…

    A man with a gun walked into Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter’s office and yelled, “I am the emperor. I am here to take over state government.” Details are still a little sketchy…

    Was this an episode from the TV show, “Invaders from the Future”, and was that man GW Bush?

  • Anyone else catch the money quote from George Will on This Week yesterday? This was during the round table discussion toward the end of the program (about 30 minutes in if you grab the podcast).

    “About six week ago Gordon Smith of Oregon, who broke strenuously with the president last year, told me told me that by September there would be 12 Republicans with him. And the, the so dribbling out of dissent — Olympia Snow, Chuck Hagel, Gordon Smith, Lugar, Warner, Voinovich — almost looks choreographed by the Republican leadership in the Senate, who, with 20 of their seats up, exposed in 2008, they are not going to allow another election on Iraq.”

    For once, I agree with the old boy — at least as far as this has to be keeping the smarter ones among them awake nights. And it won’t be getting any more comfortable for them any time soon.

  • Good catch, CalD #10

    I was thinking that the Republicans speaking out on Iraq looked choreographed too just to lead the Cong. Dems along falsely thinking they were going to get some bipartisan support.

  • I was noticing that it was national news that one cop died in New York and I wondered what the effect of a typical day of Iraqi violence would have if it happened in the US. So I just did a quick and dirty news remix:

    If California were Iraq

    The daily California violence report is compiled by McClatchy Newspapers special correspondents in Los Angeles from police, military and medical reports. This is not a comprehensive list of all violence in California, much of which goes unreported. It’s posted without editing as transmitted to McClatchy’s Washington Bureau.

    Los Angeles
    – 5 policemen were killed and 9 others wounded in clashes between the guards of the Homeland Security agency and gunmen hiding behind the Mobil gas station downtown L.A. around 2:00am.
    – Gunmen killed an LA Times journalist working for New York Times newspaper near Shell Oil gas station south L.A. around 9:00 am.
    – 3 civilians were killed and 5 others were injured when the occupying Iraqi troops opened fire after an IED explosion targeted the Iraqi army convoy in Orange County neighborhood north east L.A. around 11:00 am. A car and a house were burnt in the incident.

    San Francisco- A civilian was killed and 3 others were wounded when mortar shells hit Fulton Fish Market district west S.F. early morning today.
    – A civilian was killed when mortar shells hit San Jose area south of S.F. around 9,00 am.
    – 2 civilians were wounded in an IED explosion in downtown area, part of Cupertino town north of Big Sur around 11:00 am.
    – 10 civilians were injured when mortar shells hit downtown area, part of Cupeertino town north of Big Sur around 1:10 pm.

  • …if President Bush deems it necessary, an even bigger troop buildup….

    lol.

    Once upon a time this country boasted that it could turn Vietnam into a parking lot…
    What blather.

    If there is one thing we’ve learned in Vietnam and now Iraq it is just this:
    Dark-haired guys and gals in sandals defending their homeland can kick your ass ten times to hell and back.

    Americans can’t conquer or pave anything.
    More troops aren’t going to do diddly-squat.
    Except get their dumb asses shot to hell.

  • i did have hopes last tuesday that the sun-times of my youth – the sun-times of bill mauldin, mike royko and others – was back, but deep inside, i knew i shouldn’t get my hopes up. tnese days (even in the post-lord black of crossharbour days) the op-ed pages feature novakula, mark steyn, and george will. and that’s just on sundays!
    of course, the tribune is still worse.

  • CB,

    Did anyone mention to Wilson that the only thing that could give the GOP a chance in this election is a candidate who the right hates so much that they would flock to the polls to vote for a Republican they don’t even like?

    Iraq is why he supports her? WTF?

  • Wes Clark testified today that it’s time to redeploy and see a smaller force. securingamerica.com has the details of his testimony.

  • I think the shadiness of the Guardian as a source for, uh, scoops on US politics isn’t something that even needs to be commented on, and my comment on the Iran war thread certainly wasn’t an endorsement of their reliability. I just wrote what I wrote because, true or not, they were broaching the possibility of an attack on Iran partly for its collateral effects of making the conservatives look good.

  • My favorite line from the AP story on Vitter: The first-term Republican said he has worked hard on his marriage and on living by the values he has long espoused as a politician.

    He has long espoused? Let’s see. During the 1990s, a New Orleans Madam and another prostitute alleged Vitter was a client when he was a state rep. And, as a House member, we know he took 5 calls on the floor from Madam Palfrey between 1999 and 2001. So by “long,” he means six years. Well, I guess that’s long enough. He’s only mostly a hypocrite.

  • I really enjoy perusing your end of the day splashes. They are not for the weak of heart. As for the last diehard 26%, I can now see what brings them to FOXNOISE: Your splashes represent the unfair and imbalanced reality of the world around us, and the weak of heart are uncomfortable unless they get their fair and balanced blather from FOX. That way they can stay in their FOXFANTASYLAND world where they are told the ways of their masters. -Kevo

  • I wonder sometimes if the WH doesn’t use the fear about an attack on Iran to help keep the people at bay and in line – you know, if we think Bush might launch an attack if provoked or backed into a corner, well then, we’d best not be too aggressive with them. It ends up giving them this protected territory where they can operate without fear of being pressed too hard.

    Not that there isn’t a faction that seems to desperately want to attack Iran – I think that certainly exists – but I think they encourage the notion that there is also a faction working against that within the administration, and that if we aren’t careful, we can tip it toward war.

    Probably just late- Monday night musings…

  • Taio, @14. Thanks; that gives us some more time to write and plead and make a stink. There’s no statute of limitation on murder; I don’t see why there should be one for getting a judicial murder un-scrambled.

    Dale, @12. If it were California, a lot of GOPers would see that report and say “Blessed be the all-seeing, all-knowing Lord, for he’s never wrong”. Move it to the red states in the Mid-West or the South and you might get a rise out of them.

    Emperor wannabe nut cases attempting to take over the government? Would have been news 7yrs ago, but we got used to the idea by now. The only new wrinkle is that *this one* got shot before he did any damage.

  • Dale,

    Oh there’s definitely still a strong element of kabuki theater in recent Republican posturing on Iraq, and a real preference for the appearance of action vs. the real thing for now. First order of business for Republicans in congress who see themselves at risk over Iraq is still to try and avoid serious primary challenges if they can. So they need to try and keep the party faithful in line until the filing deadlines have come and gone.

    After that however, they have the general election to worry about, where the same positions that endear them to their rank and file are likely to hurt them more than usual with saner folks. It’s always a bit of a tightrope — for Democrats too for that matter — but this time Republicans are in a particularly dicey position. I don’t know if you’ve picked up on recent talk about eroding support for the war in small towns and rural America, but that’s got to have some Republicans breaking out in cold sweats because that’s a major chunk of their power base. Generally they have to dominate the ex-urban areas and break even or better in the suburbs to win statewide elections — basically the inverse of the Democratic formula.

    So even a small shift in the wind in what’s left of Norman Rockwell’s America could turn 2008 into open season on Republicans even more so than ’06, and the smarter ones are already sniffing it in the wind already. Of course a few of them could also be having genuine attacks of conscience or finally waking up to cold reality or both, but it remains that they are basically screwed if we are still in Iraq as deep as we are now this time next year. So it works out the same either way.

  • “An even bigger troop buildup…”

    Right. This will be accomplished by extending tours to indefinite, mobilizing every National Guard and press ganging in dive bars.

    They got nothin’.

  • Dale, @12. If it were California, a lot of GOPers would see that report and say “Blessed be the all-seeing, all-knowing Lord, for he’s never wrong”. Move it to the red states in the Mid-West or the South and you might get a rise out of them.
    Comment by libra

    LOL you’re right. Make that Georgia!

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