US Senate flexes muscles on control of the war?

I was really delighted to learn from the WaPo today that,

    The Senate defied the White House yesterday and voted to set new limits on interrogating detainees in Iraq and elsewhere, underscoring Congress’s growing concerns about reports of abuse of suspected terrorists and others in military custody.
    Forty-six Republicans joined 43 Democrats and one independent in voting to define and limit interrogation techniques that U.S. troops may use against terrorism suspects, the latest sign that alarm over treatment of prisoners in the Middle East and at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is widespread in both parties. The White House had fought to prevent the restrictions, with Vice President Cheney visiting key Republicans in July and a spokesman yesterday repeating President Bush’s threat to veto the larger bill that the language is now attached to — a $440 billion military spending measure.

The interrogation rules are, as I have argued endlessly on JWN all along, a really important issue in themselves. We have yet to see whether, as the deliberations over this particular spending bill proceed, the Senate negotiators can succeed in imposing their will (or a substantial portion of it) on the generally much more unprincipled people in the House of Representatives, and on the unarguably more unprincipled man in the White House. But 90 Senate votes are certainly enough to overturn a Presidential veto, if it should come to that, if all those Senators just hang in there…
It was Sen. John McCain (R, AZ), who had led the fight in the Senate on this issue, and he prominently mentioned the anguished communications he had had from Capt. Ian Fishback. (Thank you, Capt. Fishback: One person’s principled actions can indeed make a difference in the world.) The WaPo piece noted that McCain’s key allies in this battle were “Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.), a former military lawyer, and Armed Services Committee Chairman John W. Warner (R-Va.) ” Alert readers might note that none of these three named sentaors is affiliated with the supposed “opposition” party here in the US…
The McCain measure would limit all US forces– and also, I think, all “other government agencies”, codewords for the CIA– to using only interrogation techniques authorized in the U.S. Army Field Manual on Intelligence Interrogation. If enacted, this legislation would materially improve the situation of the 10,000 or more people around the world– mainly, in Iraq and Afghanistan– who are currently in the custody of US forces.
This is in itself a great reason to support this legislation– and also, to give due credit to Sens. McCain, Graham, and Warner for their postion.
But I wonder: Is this also the beginning of a broader process whereby the US Congress attempts to regain more control of the country’s war-fighting processes and decisionmaking in a broader sense? Under the Constitution, only Congress can “declare war” on foreign enemies, but it is up to the executive branch to handle the waging of the war– within the broad, continuing parameter that Congress always retains the power of the purse.
But back in October 2002, both houses of Congress disgracefully fell asleep at the wheel of their very solemn responsibilities regarding declaring (that is, initiating) a war, and they gave GWB a totally blank check to do whatever he wanted with regard to Iraq. And since then, whenever he’s come back in with one more bloated war-spending request after another, they have continued to give him a blank check– and even, as I recall, to allocate him meven more war-fighting mega-bucks than what he was asking for.
And now, as we know, states and localities throughout the country– not only in our hurricane-ravaged Gulf coast region– are paying the price for those failures by Congress to take a responsible stand on war-spending.
In one sense, the fight over the interrogation rules can be seen as a tiny microcosm of the broader battle over control over this war effort thathas run– continues to run!– so horribly amok. The White House had tried to argue to the senators that tightening the interrogation rules “risked undermining US success in the war on terror”. The senators confronted that argument head-on and said, “No it won’t.”
Maybe as a next step they’ll look at the whole ball of wax, and say, “You know what, the whole ‘war on terror’ as currently being fought by the Bush administration isn’t actually reducing terror at all… It’s time for a radical rethink here.”
We can hope… And maybe as a way of pushing this process forward, we should all mail copies of General Odom’s great remarks to any US Senators and members of Congress that we can think of!

Dem party think-tank’s plan for partial withdrawal from Iraq

    Note: This post contains what I think is a handy little table comparing different withdrawal and redployment plans, including this latest one. If you want to go straight to the table and skip the analysis, click here.

In the absence of any strong leadership from leading Congressional Democrats
for the movement to withdraw the US occupation troops from Iraq, it has been
left to some think-tanks and private individuals to formulate their (our)
own plans in this regard.  The latst comes from an interesting source:
the fairly influential, middle-of-the-line Democratic “Center for American
Progress
“.  It is called “Strategic Redeployment“.  You
can download a PDF file of the whole, fairly easy-to-read text
here

.

I know one of the two co-authors– Larry Korb, a hard-nosed but
smart and personable defense intellectual who used to work at the Brookings
Institution in DC, when I had a two-year fellowship there way back when.
(By the way, though the sub-title of the plan is “A progressive plan for
Iraq and the struggle against violent extremists”, people should not really
be misled by the use of the word “progressive” there.  In my experience,
this term often doesn’t mean the same thing inside US politics– and certainly
not inside Democratic Party politics– as it means elsewhere in the world.
 Inside the Dem Party, it often denotes a particular kind of technocratic,
social-engineering approach to problems more than a leftist orientation…
And that is the case here.)

There is quite a lot to applaud in the SR report, though I think it also
has a number of notable shortcomings.  Perhaps most significantly, coming
as it does from a think-tank that is heavy with Dem Party politicos, is that it spells out directly the fact that,

Opponents of President Bush

Privatization without limits or shame

The Bush administration’s desire to put profit into the wallets of private business owners knows no bounds.
Remember what I wrote here, about the BBC reporter pleading with first responders in New Orleans to start dealing urgently with the corpses still– ten days into the emergency– littering the city?
Now we know why those first responders, who do very difficult jobs for low pay and generate “profits” for nobody, had orders not to deal with the bodies. In today’s WaPo, Ceci Connolly and Dan Eggen write that

    After several days of preparations, the beleaguered Federal Emergency Management Agency and its private contractors began a methodical effort to locate and retrieve corpses and body parts from the floodwaters, trapped inside submerged buildings or tangled in debris…
    The bodies are being processed by Kenyon International Emergency Services, a Houston firm with close ties to the Bush administration. Kenyon employees were dressed in white suits, gloves and surgical masks. Company officials have said identification could take weeks in some cases, and next of kin will not be notified until the bodies are turned over to the state of Louisiana.
    Reporters were turned away by police in attempts to accompany recovery teams or view them at close range, and authorities said Friday that the restrictions were in place to protect the privacy and dignity of the dead.

Do you think it couldn’t get any worse than this? Well, over in Iraq, meanwhile, US commanders on the ground are starting to speak out in public– well, at least to the WaPo– about the dire problems the private mercenary forces there are causing them.
This article, by Jonthan Finer, tells us that

    Recent shootings of Iraqi civilians, allegedly involving the legion of U.S., British and other foreign security contractors operating in the country, are drawing increasing concern from Iraqi officials and U.S. commanders who say they undermine relations between foreign military forces and Iraqi civilians…
    “These guys run loose in this country and do stupid stuff. There’s no authority over them, so you can’t come down on them hard when they escalate force,” said Brig. Gen. Karl R. Horst, deputy commander of the 3rd Infantry Division, which is responsible for security in and around Baghdad. “They shoot people, and someone else has to deal with the aftermath. It happens all over the place.”

And then there’s the situation at Baghdad airport. There, as Ellen Knickmeyer and Naseer Nouri tell us— still in the WaPo–

    A standoff over a multimillion-dollar security bill owed by the Iraqi government shut down Baghdad’s international airport Friday and severed Iraq’s last safe route to the outside world…
    The dispute concerned a payment, now totaling $36 million, owed British-based Global Strategies Group for running the airport’s security. The $4.5 million monthly contract was signed by Iraq’s previous government and has gone unpaid since January as the current government tries to renegotiate it, Iraqi officials confirmed. Global shut down airport operations for 48 hours in June in a dispute over the same contract.

I guess this later report from AP tells us that the airport did finally reopen early Saturday. But think about it. As any pulp-fiction writer knows, the airport that lies close to a capital city is always a crucial node of national security…
These days, it is not only– or even mainly– Iraqis who need to have safe access to and through Baghdad International Airport. In fact, most Iraqis have a number of other possible ways of getting in and out of the country. Mainly, by road, which is not as dangerous for them as it is for the Americans and other foreigners inside the country.
It is the thousands of US troops and diplomats in and around Baghdad who are most reliant on being able to use the airport. In the event of a major crisis in Iraq, it could be literally their only way out.
So what did the Bushies do:

    (A) Approach the challenge of assuring the security of this vital node with appropriate seriousness, or
    (B) Hand it over to their profit-making pals in “Global Strategies Group” so they could skim their X percent off the top of the contract?

You guessed! It was B. If there really is a huge crisis in Iraq and the US people there need to exit the city very fast– do you think they could rely on the profit-takers still to be there for them??
Actually, you think this is bad. But I found an even worse wrinkle in the Baghdad airport story, over at the NYT. There, Richard Oppel writes that,

    After Global Strategies closed the airport at dawn on Friday, infuriated Iraqi ministry officials dispatched their own troops to secure the airport. But the Iraqis turned back to avoid a confrontation with American soldiers who had already hurried to the airport from their nearby base, according to Iraqi officials and Global Strategies…
    Giles Morgan, a spokesman for Global Strategies, said the … American military sent troops to guard the airport… specifically because they had been informed that Iraqi forces were on their way to take control.
    “The Ministry of Transportation said they were deploying interior ministry personnel to secure the perimeter, and it was on that basis that the U.S. military deployed the quick-reaction forces they have standing by at the airport,” he said.
    The acting Iraqi transportation minister, Esmat Amer, said the Iraqi government had “ordered the forces to pull back after American forces were deployed at the first checkpoint on the road,” according to The Associated Press. “We did not want to create a confrontation.”

How’s that again?? The Bush administration keeps telling us that they want to be able to pull US troops out of Iraq, some day– just as soon as the Iraqi forces are ready to take over the country’s security themselves…
The Iraqi security commanders try to send forces over there to the airport– and the US sends troops to prevent them doing that?? What the heck is going on?

Saddest image of Katrina

I think my saddest image/story from Katrina was watching Matt Frei on the BBC TV newsfeed yesterday evening racing round New Orleans with his cameraman, pointing out the many dead bodies he encountered and pleading, pleading with any emergency personnel he met as to when somebody would do something to deal with them.
Many of the bodies were very bloated and visibly decaying. Elementary principles of public health– not to mention human decency– would indicate they needed dealing with, respectfully, as a matter of prime urgency.
All the “first responders” Frei spoke to– maybe four or five different groups of them– said they had either “no orders to deal with the bodies”, or that they had orders not to deal with the bodies.
At times, Frei looked like he was about to lose it on the air. I kind of wish he had done.
I looked for a link to this reporting on the BBC website today, but found none.
Where is “the plan”? Surely any emergency-management plan worthy of the name has a section on the effective, respectful, and speedy steps to be taken to deal with corpses? These would include, I should imagine, identification and documentation of the corpses, bagging them, and getting them to a refrigerated holding-space a.s.a.p.
I see that FEMA chief “Brownie” has now been reassigned elsewhere.
But I wonder if he or others responsible for emergency management in this country has ever thought for a moment how they would feel if it were their beloved aunty who was trapped in the nursing-home or otherwise unable to evacuate… or their dear old Dad who ended up face-down and bloating in the stew of water/ industrial pollutants/ crap that will be swirling through the city’s streets for many days to come.
Lord save us all.

Katrina, misgovernance, etc.

Laura Rozen of War & Piece has been providing great coverage of Katrina-related developments.
(I’m afraid I’ve been a little busy with other things this weekend. One of them was running the Charlottesville Women’s 4-Miler yesterday. I do figure this whole struggle to remake our country as a decent, caring community is one that we need to be in for the long haul… So we need to pay attention to both the mens sana aspect of our lives and the corpore sano aspect… I’ve also been doing a lot of Quaker stuff: we had a Meeting for Business today which was fairly complex.)
Anyway here are some highlights that Laura’s compiled:
* New Orleans police and firefighters traumatized
* A great Open Letter from the New Orleans Times-Picayune to President Bush… Worth reading the whole text there, espeically the call for Bush to fire FEMA chief Michael Brown….
* Commentaries from German TV stations on the disaster
* This story from the UK Guardian, which uses a very moving photo that turns on its head the ugly anti-Black racism that has marked some of the commentary about the people who did not evacuate New Orleans before the levees broke, and
* An L.A. Times story about the resignation of the Pentagon ‘s “inspector-general” amid, as Laura says, “accusations of blocking investigations of senior Bush officials; allegations of forging press releases, blocking an investigation into an Air Force official’s deal with Boeing, withholding information from Congress… the usual.”
… Thanks so much, Laura!

Katrina, accountability, and structural change

If you Google for “disaster management graduate courses” you can find many fine institutions of higher education in the US and elsewhere that offer just such training. So you might think that the person appointed by Prez Bush to head the Federal Emergency Management Agency– the lead federal agency coordinating responses to Hurricane Katrina– might be someone with some, uh, background or experience in this important field?
Think again. As Laura Rozen of War and Piece revealed yesterday, Michael D. Brown, who has headed FEMA since 2003, “has no qualifications.” Rozen wrote that before he won the FEMA job, Brown,

    was an estate planning lawyer in Colorado and of counsel for the International Arabian Horse Association Legal Department.

The fact that Brown has terrifyingly little experience of managing disasters did not prevent him from going on CNN last night and, in essence, blaming the people who did not get out of New Orleans when the instructions to evacuate were issued for the fate that subsequently befell them.
No word from Brown, though, about how the scores of thousands of people without cars, or the hundreds of patients and staff in the city’s hospitals and nursing homes, were supposed to leave the city without any adequate logistical help being offered them.
Readers who haven’t read much yet about the situation in the city’s hospitals can get a general picture of what things were like in the large, publicly-owned “Charity Hospital” today– five days into the city’s trauma– from this AP account.
The US military/ National Guard was finally able to get some good convoys into Norlins today. Hopefully the humanitarian situation of those still in the city can improve as public order is restored and– just maybe– a rational plan for relief, belated evacuation and recovery gets underway.
But things will continue to be really tough for the two million or so (former) residents of the Gulf Coast for many months or even years to come. Can and should all of those towns and cities actually be rebuilt? How will the water- and storm-management plans be improved to deal with the even heavier storms that will be coming in over the decades ahead, thanks to global warming?
In addition, the consequences for the US economy will most likely be huge.
Paul Krugman had a strong column in the NYT today. He concluded it with this:

    I don’t think this is a simple tale of incompetence. The reason the military wasn’t rushed in to help along the Gulf Coast is, I believe, the same reason nothing was done to stop looting after the fall of Baghdad. Flood control was neglected for the same reason our troops in Iraq didn’t get adequate armor.
    At a fundamental level, I’d argue, our current leaders just aren’t serious about some of the essential functions of government. They like waging war, but they don’t like providing security, rescuing those in need or spending on preventive measures. And they never, ever ask for shared sacrifice.
    Yesterday Mr. Bush made an utterly fantastic claim: that nobody expected the breach of the levees. In fact, there had been repeated warnings about exactly that risk.
    So America, once famous for its can-do attitude, now has a can’t-do government that makes excuses instead of doing its job. And while it makes those excuses, Americans are dying.

This idea that the Bush administration– and many other members of the US political elite– has a fundamental lack of understanding, or even an active contempt, for the fundamental demands of good governance is something I’ve been arguing for a while now. It’s a theme I hope to explore more here in JWN in the weeks ahead.
You see it (as Krugman noted) both at home and abroad.
I think one of the things that the Bushies and most other members of the US economic hyper-elite here seem to lack is any solid concept of egalitarian, democratic governance. They seem to have no concept of “we’re all in this together”– or even of the “we” to which such a statement might apply. I think that rather than thinking of themselves as fundamentally co-equal members of a democratic citizenry, they see themselves more in the way feudal leaders used to: people who because of their privileged economic and social position are “born to rule”– while the rest of us poor suckers are left to scrabble on our own for what we can get.
You see this in so very many aspects of US life: the lack of any national health insurance or social safety net; the intense privatization of so many functions that in other–much more developed– countries are carried out by the government; the deeply engrained hostility to taxation; the general climate of entitlement, hyper-individualism, and meanspirited-ness that those feudalists foster.
For my part, I’m going to be an optimist. I’ll certainly do everything I can do to provide help to the poor, the sick, the lame, and the disadvantaged of Norlins and the other Gulf Coast communities. But I think the best thing that any of us inside the US who really care about the fabric of our society can do over the longer haul is to commit to the struggle for deepseated structural change… All the Red Cross collection bins in the country can’t substitute for what a truly accountable (and decently resourced) network of national and state-level governments needs to do in a situation of major disaster. And nor should private organizations have to do these things… Not in any fundamentaly egalitarian national community in which people truly felt that “we are all in this together.”

“We were misled”: the indictment

Frank Rich has a good column in the NYT today, in which he makes many of the same points about the moral and political cowardice of the Democratic Party Leadership that I made here last week.
He gives due praise to both Sen. Chuck Hagel and Sen. Russ Feingold for standing out against the crowd and starting to speak abut the need for a (relatively) speedy exit from Iraq.
Rich also notes this:

    As another politician from the Vietnam era, Gary Hart, observed last week, the Democrats are too cowardly to admit they made a mistake three years ago, when fear of midterm elections drove them to surrender to the administration’s rushed and manipulative Iraq-war sales pitch. So now they are compounding the original error as the same hucksters frantically try to repackage the old damaged goods.

I agreed with that diagnosis from Hart when I first read it. I well recalled the extreme weeniness of the Dems in the lead-up to the 2002 midterm elections, when they were easily stampeded by the Bushies into signing off on a carte-blanche resolution that empowered the Prez to invade Iraq whenever he wanted to.
But why should these same Democratic leaders seem so afraid, now, to step forward quite frankly and say “I was misled back in October 2002”?
Surely, the fact that they were all, actively and intentionally misled at the time into believeing various things about Iraq that turned out not to be true– and that were known at the time by many in the administration to be a lot less true than they were being portrayed as being– should be part of the indictment against this extremely deceptive and hypocritical administration?
It need not reflect (too) badly on a person who’s only a Senator or a member of the House of Representatives if she or he did not know all the truth at the time about, oh, Saddam Hussein’s relationship with Osama Bin Laden, or the state of Iraq’sWMD programs… Especially given that all those people in Congress– like all the rest of us– were being actively lied to about those issues by the administration, and had relatively little access to any “independent” sources of information.
So someone, please tell me. What’s wrong with Senators Joe Biden, John Kerry, Hillary Clinton; Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, and the rest of them that they can’t stand up and say: “We were misled; and you people in the Bush administration were leading the network of people who misled us!”
Why can’t they say that? … Anyone?

Dem-hawks ruling the party roost

In a midnight post here last night I noted that Republican Senator Chuck Hagel has now clearly and openly joined the ranks of those calling for a speedy pullout of the troops from Iraq.
But what about our much-vaunted “opposition” party here here in US, you might ask? Where does the Democratic Party now stand on the Iraq War?
David Ignatius had a great column in the WaPo last Friday in which he wrote,

    This should be the Democrats’ moment: The Bush administration is caught in an increasingly unpopular war; its plan to revamp Social Security is fading into oblivion; its deputy chief of staff is facing a grand jury probe. Though the Republicans control both houses of Congress as well as the White House, they seem to be suffering from political and intellectual exhaustion. They are better at slash-and-burn campaigning than governing.
    So where are the Democrats amid this GOP disarray? Frankly, they are nowhere. They are failing utterly in the role of an opposition party, which is to provide a coherent alternative account of how the nation might solve its problems. Rather than lead a responsible examination of America’s strategy for Iraq, they have handed off the debate to a distraught mother who is grieving for her lost son. Rather than address the nation’s long-term fiscal problems, they have decided to play politics and let President Bush squirm on the hook of his unpopular plan to create private Social Security accounts…

[This para added in Tuesday a.m. for further clarification.] Ignatius is not some lefty or Quaker. He’s a pillar of centrism and realism with great links inside the US security agencies (especially the CIA, which he’s written a lot about.) Perhaps because of that, he’s a supreme realist, very well grounded in an understanding of what’s going on in the Middle East– a region he knows a lot about on his own account, too.
In his WaPo column, he had nothing but contempt for the man most Democrats think of as their leading foreign-affairs spokesmen, Delaware Sen. Joe Biden. Ignatius described him as

    a man who — how to put this politely? — seems more impressed with the force of his own intellect than an objective evaluation would warrant. Listening to Biden, you sense how hungry he is to be president, but you have little idea what he would do, other than talk . . . and talk.

He (Ignatius) also puts together a clear list of what the Dems need to do:

    America … needs a real opposition party that will lay out new strategies: How to withdraw from Iraq without creating even more instability? How to engage a world that mistrusts and often hates America? How to rebuild global institutions and contain Islamic extremism? How to put the U.S. economy back into balance? A Democratic Party that could begin to answer these questions would deserve a chance to govern.

That is an excellent and well considered list. Thanks for that, David.
In today’s WaPo, Peter Baker and Shailagh Murray had a depressing piece in which they described the problems in the Democratic Party in more depth:

    Amid rising casualties and falling public support for the war, Democrats of all stripes have grown more vocal this summer in criticizing Bush’s handling of the war. A growing chorus of Democrats, however, has said this criticism should be harnessed to a consistent message and alternative policy — something most Democratic lawmakers have refused to offer.
    The wariness, congressional aides and outside strategists said in interviews last week, reflects a belief among some in the opposition that proposals to force troop drawdowns or otherwise limit Bush’s options would be perceived by many voters as defeatist. Some operatives fear such moves would exacerbate the party’s traditional vulnerability on national security issues.

Oh, the poor babies! because the Democratic leaders– very few of whom have sons or daughters in the military–don’t want to be painted as “wimps and weenies”, even more of the sons and daughters of the lower classes are going to have to continue to be sent to fight, and die, in Iraq. To make the esteemed senators feel good. Certainly not because there is, in fact, any way to “win” in Iraq. There ain’t. And the longer the now inevitable US withdrawal is delayed, the greater will be the dimensions of the ultimate loss and debacle… And the greater the number of the children of the lower-income folks here in the US who’ll end up dead and wounded.
(And, it goes without saying, the greater the numbers of Iraqi casualties, and the broader the circles of fitna and instability radiating out from Iraq.)
Oh well, never mind about that. Figures like Senate Minority leader Harry Reid, Sen. Joe Biden, Sen. Hillary Clinton, and Sen. John Kerry — remember him?– are all determined that they and their party should not look “defeatist.”
Gimme a break.
Baker and Murray do note that Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin was bold enough to break with the party leadership last week

    to become the first senator to call for all troops to be withdrawn from Iraq by a specific deadline. Feingold proposed Dec. 31, 2006.

Okay, a lot better than nothing! (But how about April 30, 2006, instead?)
The writers also noted that, “In delivering the Democrats’ weekly radio address yesterday, former senator Max Cleland (Ga.), a war hero who lost three limbs in Vietnam, declared that ‘it’s time for a strategy to win in Iraq or a strategy to get out.'”
H’mm. I guess that position is better than nothing… But it still leaves open the idea that there might indeed be, somewhere, somehow, a strategy to win in Iraq. And what might that be, Max?
The WaPo writers note that Sens Reid, Biden, and Clinton all rejected Feingold’s approach, “reasoning that success in Iraq at this point is too important for the country.”
It honestly boggles the mind. Where is this “strategy for success”? What defines success? Why do these Senators even imagine that there’s the possibility of “winning” in Iraq– at a time when it is increasingly evident that the army’s top brass is quite convinced that the situation there is unwinnable.
Of course, none of these Dem-hawks even stops for a moment to define what “winning” would look like. Nor do they explain exactly why it is that “winning” in Iraq is so important for Americans’ interests. (If it’s the old “credibility of our strategic posture” argument, let me head for the exits quickly. That tired old canard of an “argument” can’t haul any water any more.)
Rick Klein, writing in the Boston Globe last week, placed a bit more flesh on the bones of the story the waPo journos were telling about the arguments being put about by the Dem-hawks:

    ”Having the strongest military in the world is the first step, but we also have to have a strong commitment to using our military in smart ways that further peace, stability, and security around the world,” Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Democrat of New York, said at the Democratic Leadership Council in Columbus, Ohio, last month.
    … Clinton has called for adding 80,000 troops to the armed services, [Oh yes, the Tom Friedman line from two months ago, Hillary. And as I asked back then: where are you going to get these recruits, precisely?]… at a time when Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has called for a streamlined force with greater emphasis on technology.
    Senator Evan Bayh, Democrat of Indiana, hit the presidential proving ground of Iowa early this month to warn that ”people don’t think we [Democrats] have the backbone” to deploy the military, and said Democrats must overcome that perception to be successful in future elections.
    Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has laid out a doctrine of rebuilding alliances while making clear that ”force will be used — without asking anyone’s permission — when circumstances warrant.”

It’s worth reading all of Klein’s piece. He does note that,

    not all Democrats have joined the shift. Liberal groups such as Moveon.org are calling for an immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq. Howard Dean has mostly remained silent on foreign affairs as chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

Actually, for Howard Dean to remain silent on the war is, I think, an unforgivable defection from the clarity with which he spoke out against it during the Democratic primaries in early 2004. Or is the situation inside the party now so bad now that we should be grateful that at least he hasn’t joined the chorus of the uber-hawks, but is remaining decently “silent”?
Klein noted a lot more bad news about the party’s stand, as well. Including this:

    The top Democrats in the House and Senate issued a report last month that harshly critiqued Bush administration efforts to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists. The report — endorsed by the House minority leader, Nancy Pelosi, and the Senate minority leader, Harry Reid — details Iranian and North Korean steps toward building nuclear weapons, and lagging efforts to secure ”loose nukes” in Russia that could fall into the hands of terrorists.
    The report calls for the United States to engage in more direct negotiations with Iran and North Korea, and for the talks to be reinforced with military pressure, including ”the possibility of repeated and unwarned strikes.

So there we have it: support for militarism, beefed-up armed forces, unilateralism, and “preventive” strikes is alive and well in Washington, and is living high on the hog in the Democratic Party chambers there.
(Billmon commented last week that: “At some point, the voters are going to expect the Dems to come up with a more coherent strategy. And if that strategy is simply neocon lite — i.e., we want to bomb Iran, too, but we’ll do it more effectively — they’ll probably stick with the genuine article. To paraphrase Harry Truman: Give the voters a choice between a neocon and a neocon, and they’ll pick the damned neocon every time.”)
All in all, then, regarding this country’s relationship with the rest of the world it looks as if things will carry on getting worse for some time ahead, before they start to get better. We can’t, after all, beat something with nothing. We can’t hope to change things very substantially for the better until we have an opposition party that is worthy of the name– and that’s willing to start articulating and working toward a view of the world in which the US truly does hold up the standard of human equality and human freedom.
Russ Feingold, though: There’s a person I can support. Him, and Chuck Hagel, and a few others more or less equally distributed between the two parties.
Wouldn’t it be nice, though, to have an opposition party round here?

Good sense from a Republican Senator

Anti-war currents (and anti-Bush currents) are now stirring on a whole new level within Bush’s own party in the Senate. On Monday (US time), US News & World Report published this interview with Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel.
That USNWR piece by Kevin Whitelaw starts out with this landmark quote from Hagel:

    “Things aren’t getting better; they’re getting worse. The White House is completely disconnected from reality… It’s like they’re just making it up as they go along. The reality is, we’re losing in Iraq.”

Amont the other great quotes there from the Senator:

    “I don’t know where the vice president is getting his information from. It’s not where I’m getting mine from. This administration at the top