NDN Blog

A Tale of Three Trade Policies

When did Republicans stop supporting trade liberalization?  New US Trade Rep. Susan Schwab said that the United States "won't try to revive the [Doha] talks by being the first to make a new agricultural offer."  Remember, just one year after the Doha Round began in 2001 President Bush signed into law a farm bill that actually increased subsidies to large agribusiness companies.  For more on the failures of Presidential leadership on trade read the NDN Globalization Initiative's recent report Rebuilding the National Consensus on Trade.

Compare the administration's inaction on Doha with the Democrat who may be the next  Chair of the Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Charlie Rangel.  In an insightful article from yesterday's Financial Times, Rangel talks about supporting a new push on Doha and even the renewal of trade promotion authority for President Bush.

Another contrast to the Bush Administration's leadership failures on trade is the European Union, which is talking about overhauling its trade policy to deal with the 21st century globalize economy:

Brussels said its new strategy would strike a balance between helping to develop new markets, ensuring fair competition for European firms abroad and ensuring open access to its own markets.

"A changing global economy needs a new trade policy," said Peter Mandelson, the EU's Trade Commissioner.

NPI launches completely revamped website and new "Engage the Blogs" Memo

The new website is filled with new features and new content, including video of a multimedia talk that gives an overview of the New Politics transformation, an edited viral video introducing the Millennial Generation, and exclusive video interviews with Kos of DailyKos and other NPI fellows. All can be accessed from the front page or the video page.

We're also unveiling the next recommendation in our fall New Tools Campaign. Make sure to read “Engage the Blogs,” a memo by longtime blogger and internet strategist Jerome Armstrong, coauthor of the book Crashing the Gate. Armstrong explains how progressives can best leverage the blogs over the coming weeks and months, as well as think of them as a long-term asset.

We forward to your feedback on the new website and hope you will check back frequently in the coming weeks as new features and new content are added to the site.

Sen. Landrieu and Rep. Harman on www.ndn.org

If you missed NDN's recent events with Senator Mary Landrieu on recovery in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast a year after Katrina and with Representative Jane Harman on the state of US foreign policy, you can now watch them on our website.  To hear these informative discussions held exclusivley for NDN members, click on the links above or visit www.ndn.org.   

Immigration and the Economy

The NYT writes about the economic consequences of Congress' failure to pass comprehensive immigration reform this year.  In California and other states, growers cannot find enough migrant workers to harvest their crops and fruit is literally rotting on the trees.  The political consequences for national Republicans are just as pungent:

As they sum up this season’s losses, estimated to be at least $10 million for California pear farmers immigration legislation that would have addressed the shortage by authorizing a guest-worker program for agriculture. Many growers, a dependably Republican group, said they felt betrayed.

This is an important reminder that Republican inaction on this issue impacts all of us, not just immigrants, and posturing on border security will not fix the problem.  Read more on NDN's reaction to the Republican decision to give up on immigration reform here

Viral Video Alert: Bill Clinton on Fox News

It's been making the rounds in our office, and maybe yours by now.  Chris Wallace's interview with President Bill Clinton doesn't lack for fireworks.  Wallace starts with a "hit job" question, implicitly accusing Clinton of not doing enough to fight terrorism.  And the former President doesn't pull any punches in answering it. 

Video on the Web

As our own Pete Leyden would say, the web has gone 2.0.  The NYT has an excellent update about the state of the internet and the increasingly important role of video:

"...the world has gone batty over video. Thirty-second clips, three-minute spoofs, half-hour sitcoms, TV dramas that haven’t been shown in decades, rap videos, Hollywood blockbusters and feeds from TV news outlets big and small are flooding online. The term video itself is already starting to sound old — the equivalent of songs before the advent of MP3’s and downloads."

Progressives need to understand this technology, and how we can use it to get our message out.  If you've been wondering what Apple iTV, NBC Broadband, Google and Yahoo are up to in this space, this article is a good way to get up to speed. 

Trouble in Ohio

The scandal around Congressman Bob Ney (R-OH) appears to be coming to a head today.  The NYT reports that he is pleading guilty to charges stemming from his involvement with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff: 

The guilty plea, scheduled to be formalized in Federal Court here on Oct. 13, will make Mr. Ney, a six-term congressman, the first member of Congress to admit to criminal charges in the Abramoff investigation, which has focused on the actions of several current and former Republican lawmakers who had been close to the former lobbyist. The government will recommend that he serve 27 months in prison.

Charges related to the Abramoff scandal have been a long time coming, and are indicative of the culture of corruption that plagues Republicans in Congress.  If this Republican Congress is a rotten apple, than Ney, who until recently was a rising star in the party, was the stem clinging to the tree.  With the investigation of him finished, look for investigators to move onto the rest of the apple. 

Recently, Democrats have been focusing more on the failures of Republican governance, and less on the pervasive influence-peddling that has been a hallmark of Republican leadership since they took over the House in 1994.  It'll be interesting to see if this news leads to more talk about corruption from Democrats.

Moving from current scandals to potential future ones, students at Princeton University have shown that it is possible to hack into Diebold touch screen voting machines and change vote counts, without leaving behind any evidence of tampering.  Make sure to watch the video demonstrating the ease with which these students tampered with Diebold software.  The machine they tested on uses the same software as the 130,000 Diebold voting machines in use across America.  This discovery may lead to more states choosing alternative, traceable voting technology.  This isn't the first scandal involving Ohio-based Diebold.   You may remember Diebold CEO Walden O'Dell saying he was "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year [2004]" even as his company was selling election equipment to Ohio.   

Fighting Dirty

Any lingering questions about Republican campaign strategy in the final fifty days are being answered.  Those of you hoping for a substantive debate on the challenges facing our nation shouldn't hold your breath.  Facing the loss of control of one or even both houses of Congress, Republicans are planning on utilizing what Bill Clinton called the "personal politics of destruction" against their opponents.  The Washington Post reports that:

Republicans are planning to spend the vast majority of their sizable financial war chest over the final 60 days of the campaign attacking Democratic House and Senate candidates over personal issues and local controversies, GOP officials said.

There is no time to lament the death of civility in political debate, because the strategy is already underway.  Yesterday, House Majority Leader John Boehner said that Democrats are "more interested in protecting terrorists than in protecting the American people."  And this strategy of making outlandish attacks is being parroted by Republicans across the country, from Rick Santorum to the President in his "non-political speech" Monday night.

How effectively Democrats deflect these attacks and keep the focus on Republican failures of governance will determine who wins in November, and could also send a message that the era of Rovian character assassination politics is over.   

Bruce Lindsey's Letter to ABC

Bruce Lindsey, Bill Clinton's attorney and the CEO of the William J. Clinton Foundation, wrote to the President and Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Company, parent company of ABC last week, asking him to refrain from airing ABC's upcoming miniseries The Path to 9/11 "until [its] egregious factual errors are corrected."  The letter is reprinted below.

Criticism of this miniseries has been all over the blogs.  You can read what Simon (an ABC alumnus) had to say here.  It'll be interesting to see if uproar on the internet forces changes to The Path to 9/11, just as it did to Snakes on a Plane.

 

September 1, 2006

Dear Bob,

As you know, ABC intends to air a two part miniseries, “The Path to 9/11,” which purports to document the events leading up to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. ABC claims that the show is based on the 9/11 Commission Report and, as Steve McPherson, President of ABC Entertainment, has said: “When you take on the responsibility of telling the story behind such an important event, it is absolutely critical that you get it right.”

By ABC’s own standard, ABC has gotten it terribly wrong. The content of this drama is factually and incontrovertibly inaccurate and ABC has a duty to fully correct all errors or pull the drama entirely. It is unconscionable to mislead the American public about one of the most horrendous tragedies our country has ever known.

Despite several requests to view the miniseries, we have not been given the courtesy of seeing it. This is particularly troubling given the reputation of Cyrus Nowrasteh, the drama’s writer/producer. Mr. Nowrasteh has been criticized for inaccurately portraying historical events in the past. In response to previous criticism, he has even said, “I made a conscious effort not to contact any members of the Administration because I didn’t want them to stymie my efforts.” Indeed, while we have not been given the courtesy of a viewing, based upon reports from people who have seen the drama you plan to air, we understand that there are at least three significant factual errors:

-- The drama leads viewers to believe that National Security Advisor Sandy Berger told the CIA that he would not authorize them to take a shot at bin Laden. This is complete fiction and the event portrayed never happened. First of all, the 9/11 Commission Report makes clear that CIA Director George Tenet had been directed by President Clinton and Mr. Berger to get bin Laden (p. 199 & 508-509). Secondly, Roger Cressy, National Security Council senior director for counterterrorism from 1999-2001, has said, on more than one occasion, “Mr. Clinton approved every request made of him by the CIA and the U.S. military involving using force against bin Laden and al-Qaeda.”

In addition, ABC’s own counter-terrorism consultant, Richard Clarke, has said that contrary to the movie:

1) No US military or CIA personnel were on the ground in Afghanistan and saw bin Laden;

2) The head of the Northern Alliance, Masood, was nowhere near the alleged bin Laden camp and did not see bin Laden; and

3) CIA Director Tenet said that he could not recommend a strike on the camp because the information was single-sourced and there would be no way to know if bin Laden was in the target area by the time a cruise missile hit it.

As Clarke and others will corroborate, President Clinton did in fact approve of a standing plan to use Afghans who worked for the CIA to capture bin Laden. The CIA’s Afghan operatives were never able to carry out the operation and the CIA recommended against inserting Agency personnel to do it. The Department of Defense, when asked by President Clinton to examine the use of US troops to capture bin Laden, also recommended against that option.

-- The drama claims that former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright refused to sanction a missile strike against bin Laden without first alerting the Pakistanis and notified them over the objections of the military. Again, this is false.

-- Using newsreel footage of President Clinton, the drama insinuates that President Clinton was too pre-occupied with the impeachment and the Lewinsky matter to be engaged in pursuing bin Laden. This allegation is absurd and was directly refuted by ABC News consultant Richard Clarke in his book, Against All Enemies: “Clinton made clear that we were to give him our best national security advice without regard to his personal problems. ‘Do you recommend that we strike on the 20th? Fine. Do not give me political advice or personal advice about the timing. That’s my problem. Let me worry about that.’ If we thought this was the best time to hit the Afghan camps, he would order it and take the heat.”

While these are three examples that we are aware of that are utterly baseless, they are clearly indicative of other errors in the substance and bent of the film. Indeed, the overall tone in the advertisements we’ve seen for this drama suggest that President Clinton was inattentive to the threat of terrorism or insufficiently intent upon eliminating the threat from bin Laden. Note that the 9/11 Commission Report says:

-- We believe that both President Clinton and President Bush were genuinely concerned about the danger posed by al Qaeda.” (p. 349)

-- “By May 1998 … clearly, President Clinton’s concern about terrorism had steadily risen.” (p. 102)

-- “President Clinton was deeply concerned about bin Laden. He and his national security advisor, Samuel ‘Sandy’ Berger, ensured they had a special daily pipeline of reports feeding them the latest updates on bin Laden’s reported location.” (p. 175)

-- “President Clinton spoke of terrorism in numerous public statements. In his August 5, 1996, remarks at George Washington University, he called terrorism ‘the enemy of our generation.’” (p. 500)

We challenge anyone to read the 9/11 Commission Report and find any basis for the false allegations noted above or the tenor of the drama, which suggests that the Clinton Administration was inattentive to the threat of a terrorist strike.

Frankly, the bias of the ABC drama is not surprising given the background and political leanings of its writer/producer, Mr. Nowrasteh, which have been well-documented on numerous conservative blogs and talk shows in his promotion of this film. Mr. Nowrasteh’s bias can be seen in an interview he gave to David Horowitz’s conservative magazine Frontpage, during which he said:

"The 9/11 report details the Clinton’s administration’s response – or lack of response – to Al Qaeda and how this emboldened Bin Laden to keep attacking American interests. The worst example is the response to the October, 2000 attack of the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen where 17 American sailors were killed. There simply was no response. Nothing."

But as Sandy Berger told the 9/11 Commission: “[T]o go to war, a president needs to be able to say that his senior intelligence and law enforcement officers have concluded who is responsible.” And as the 9/11 Commission report repeatedly acknowledges, the US did not have clear evidence of bin Laden’s connection to the attack on the USS Cole before the end of the Clinton Administration (p. 192, 193, 195 & executive summary).

While ABC is promoting “The Path to 9/11” as a dramatization of historical fact, in truth it is a fictitious rewriting of history that will be misinterpreted by millions of Americans. Given your stated obligation to “get it right,” we urge you to do so by not airing this drama until the egregious factual errors are corrected, an endeavor we could easily assist you with given the opportunity to view the film.

Sincerely,

Bruce R. Lindsey

Chief Executive Officer

William J. Clinton Foundation

Douglas J. Band

Counselor to President Clinton

Office of William Jefferson Clinton

Cc: Ms. Madeleine K. Albright

Mr. Samuel R. Berger

Mr. Richard A. Clarke

Mr. Stephen McPherson

Mr. George J. Mitchell

Mr. John D. Podesta

Mr. David Westin

National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States

Flynt Leverett on the Discredited Bush Foreign Policy

I had a chance to hear Flynt Leverett, former Senior Director for Middle East affairs at the National Security Council speak at the New America Foundation yesterday.  Expanding on his essay in the September edition of the American Prospect, he talked about the decision making he observed during the year he spent as the top advisor on the Middle East at the White House.  His critique was clear: this administration is not bumbling and incompetent in their approach to the Middle East, rather they have launched a great foreign policy experiment with disastrous consequences. 

Leverett talked about the decision to walk away from diplomacy, when countries like Syria and Iran were looking to cooperate and improve relations with the United States following September 11th and the defeat of the Taliban.

He also discussed the move away from establishing a credible position on the Israeli-Palestinian question, just as US leadership was needed to restore peace and improve US credibility in the region. 

These decisions and many others were rooted in ideology and the result is a less stable Middle East where the Kissinger maxim that the US should marginalize radicals and empower moderates has been turned on its head.  Today, US policy has actually empowered radicals such as Ahmadinejad in Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, Assad in Syria, etc.

Leverett also disputed the Bush Administration line that more Democracy in the Middle East equals less terrorism, citing the three "poster children" for Middle East Democracy: Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan.  In these cases, forcing Democracy on societies not prepared for it has lead to more instability.

Finally, on a political note, I observed that Leverett never used the terms neo-conservative or neocon. Instead he referred to “Bush Foreign Policy.” I think this is smart, because it ties the discredited foreign policy to the increasingly discredited and unpopular president. Neo-conservatism did not exist as a governing philosophy before this President and it will soon go back to the Ivory Tower where it belongs. It is important that blame for the foreign policy debacles of the past six years falls squarely on the shoulders of this President, and not on a faceless ideology.

 

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