Exhuming McCarthy

by Eric Martin What Glenn said: When discussing the McCarthyite DOJ witch hunt spawned by Liz Cheney and Bill Kristol, I wrote yesterday:  now that "we have real, live, contemporary McCarthyites in our midst — Liz Cheney and Bill Kristol — launching a repulsive smear campaign, we'll see what the reaction is and how they're treated by our … Read more

When You Gotta Go, You Gotta Go…Galt?

by Eric Martin Following in the fine tradition of tax allergic Colorado Springs, the government of the State of Arizona has penned one peculiar "Dear John" letter to its constituents: The people of Arizona kept their upper lips stiff when officials mortgaged off the state’s executive office tower and a “Daily Show” crew rolled into … Read more

Jon Swift

He deserves Paradise who makes his companions laugh -The Koran (or perhaps a Hadith) If you haven't heard already, the blogger known as Jon Swift has died rather suddenly, and far too soon regardless. His real name is Al Weisel. His mother posted this comment on his blog. I don't know how else to tell you … Read more

Isildur’s Bane

by Eric Martin Elrond and Cirdan counselled Isildur to destroy the Ring immediately in the fires of Mount Doom. But Isildur refused, saying: "This I will have as weregild for my father's death, and my brother's. Was it not I that dealt the Enemy his death-blow?" -The Silmarillion: "Of the Rings of Power and the … Read more

Out of Control on Videotape

by Eric Martin Digby cites the New York Daily News' version, but there's something short and sweet (and crow-ish) about the take from Murdoch's Post: The video that unleashed a firestorm of criticism on the activist group ACORN was a "heavily edited" splice job that only made it appear as though the organization's workers were … Read more

Should We Talk About the Weather?

by Eric Martin While it depresses me to no-end that so many on the Right side of the spectrum insist on obfuscating the nature of the climate change crisis by making sophomoric arguments - like pointing out that sometimes it snows in February, and that the presence of snow in winter supposedly disproves climate change – at … Read more

The Beltway Brothers

by Eric Martin How prevalent, and perverse, has Republican obstructionism gotten?  This prevalent and perverse: White House press secretary Robert Gibbs tweets, "Senate proves bipartisanship possible — 70 support tax cuts for businesses who hire the unemployed plus more investment in infrastructure." Except, just a few days ago, the Senate had to block a Republican … Read more

Everybody Knows the Fight Was Fixed

by Eric Martin This post from Kevin Drum ties-in nicely to recent conversations on this site: Sure, you already know this. But it never hurts to post a reminder with a nice graphical memory aid. Nickel summary: the richest of the rich have gotten even richer over the past two decades — 400% richer for … Read more

I’m the Only One to Give Back Your Stolen Guns

by Eric Martin Via Adam Serwer, Spencer Ackerman on just the most recent findings of extreme misconduct, and law breaking, on the part of Blackwater: Employees of the CIA-connected private security corporation Blackwater diverted hundreds of weapons, including more than 500 AK-47 assault rifles, from a U.S. weapons bunker in Afghanistan intended to equip Afghan policemen, according to … Read more

The Party of Life!

by Eric Martin Anti-abortion activists often claim that exemptions from abortion bans for life/health of the mother provide too-wide a loophole and allow for de facto legal abortion.  However, this is what abortion bans without such exemptions look like: The cruelty of Nicaragua's extreme abortion ban is undeniable in the case of Amelia (an alias), … Read more

A Century of Fakers

by Eric Martin In a recent piece in Foreign Policy magazine, James Traub struggles to divine the true nature of the Obama administration's foreign policy posture – in particular, the quality of the Obama administration's predisposition to pursue engagement with other regimes and institutions, regardless of the makeup of said organizations.  In this, Traub agonizes over the … Read more

Career Opportunities

by Eric Martin One year out, there is an overwhelming consensus amongst economists and non-partisan observers that the stimulus enacted by Congress and the Obama administration has saved and/or created millions of jobs.  Kevin Drum quotes David Leonhardt writing in the Times: Just look at the outside evaluations of the stimulus. Perhaps the best-known economic research … Read more

Spring Cleanin’

by Eric Martin Thanks to Slarti's efforts, this blog will now have a fully functional, updated blogroll with clickable links (that will take you to actual blogs).  I know, how exciting! Anyway, you can leave suggestions in the comments for new blogs to add, but no guarantees as this technomological knowledge/functionality could desert us at … Read more

Let’s Not Dust Off that Mission Accomplished Banner Just Yet

by Eric Martin

As has been widely reported, U.S. forces – working in tandem with Pakistani intelligence official – recently captured one of the Taliban’s top military commanders: Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar.  While this is potentially very good news for the Obama administration’s efforts in Afghanistan, the extent of its significance will not be known for some time.  It could signal, at last, that Pakistan is serious about providing meaningful cooperation in the effort to combat the Afghan Taliban movement (which Pakistan has heretofore been sheltering and supporting). 

However, it is important not to jump to conclusions and presume that this one gesture by Pakistan represents full buy-in.  Along these lines, Spencer Ackerman lets optimism get the better of circumspection: 

2.  The Pakistanis will go after the Quetta Shura Taliban. Remember all those hand-wringing newspaper stories about the Pakistanis refusing to go after their old proxies in the Afghan Taliban?…If the so-called ‘Quetta Shura’ Taliban led by Omar thought the Pakistani military and intelligence service still had its back, that’s over, in a very dramatic way.[…]

3. The U.S-Pakistan relationship is working…The Baradar capture vindicates the Obama administration’s decision to hug Pakistan tightly, with a big new aid package and less public pressure, in the hopes of yielding complementary Pakistani security moves against the Taliban and al-Qaeda (more even than the bloody Swat and South Waziristan campaigns last year) down the road. If analysts were looking for a big, clear sign of Pakistani strategic intent — keep the Taliban on hand as an Afghan Plan B or throw in more heavily with the Americans? — here’s something big and clear.

While those scenarios are certainly possibilities (and would be good news for U.S. efforts in Afghanistan), it is also possible that Pakistan offered the Baradar chip as a one-off concession for various ulterior purposes – some better than others (more below). 

We shall know in the coming weeks and months.  If Pakistan is truly serious about rolling up the Quetta Shura (the council of Taliban leaders that have been taking refuge in Quetta, Pakistan while plotting attacks and strategy in Afghanistan, particularly the south), then we should see a steady stream of arrests and/or assassinations of high level Taliban figures in Pakistan.  After all, Pakistani intelligence likely has a very good idea of how and where to locate the Quetta Shura members (and other groups/individuals in Pakistan). In the alternative, if those Afghan leaders get chased back to Afghanistan, then they should presumably be easier for U.S. forces to target.

An absence of such a laundry list of kills/captures will be its own response to Spencer’s optimistic take. 

In the meantime, let’s look at some other possibilities:

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Break the Neck of this Apartheid

by Eric Martin Daniel Levy rightly diagnoses the malady afflicting Israel at this juncture: it is infected with a deadly pathology, and yet the two medical teams prescribing treatment vary between ignoring and covering up the disease on the one hand, to offering a mild painkiller that offers no real relief on the other. In his … Read more

Number One with a Bullet

by Eric Martin Imagine if the Surge didn't work, and we didn't achieve victory in Iraq?  Then you might read stories such as these: An English based group called Maplecroft that studies human rights, the environment, terrorism, and politics issued its latest Terrorism Risk Index that found Iraq the number one country in the world … Read more

Pride: In the Name of Love

by Eric Martin While Andrew Sullivan laments that Flynt and Hillary Mann Leverett might be correct in their analysis of the strength and resilience of the Iranian regime vis-a-vis the Green movement, Sullivan nevertheless accuses the pair of being "gleeful" in tone while mustering evidence of the soundness of their predictions as compared to those of their critics and opposing viewpoints. Daniel Larison rejects the accusation and … Read more

Dead Prez Open Thread…

by Eric Martin Here's an open thread to play with for the holiday weekend.  I'm actually going away with my brother and some friends to celebrate his impending loss of bachelorhood.  My odds of returning in one piece are even at best.  The odds that my wife will accept me back, slightly less. Perhaps some baby pics … Read more

That Word “Abandon”…

by Eric Martin It is not uncommon to hear pundits, politicians and commentators color their warnings about withdrawal from Afghanistan by hearkening back to the period following the withdrawal of Soviet forces from that same country.  According to the narrative offered by these concerned historians, the United States "abandoned" Afghanistan in the wake of the Soviet defeat … Read more

One Foot in the Grave My Friend, a Foolish Step to Take

by Eric Martin Recent revelations regarding a "death list" of so-called high value al-Qaeda suspects  (including U.S. citizens in some instances) targeted for assassination on the say-so of the Executive branch has raised several thorny ethical, legal and Constitutional questions with respect to the attempt to counter transnational terrorist organizations.  While a blanket grant of authority to the Executive branch to use … Read more

Letting Bin Laden Rewrite the Constitution

by Eric Martin Very quotable Dahlia Lithwick on our collective terrorist derangement syndrome, and its corrosive effects on the rule of law: Moreover, each time Republicans go to their terrorism crazy-place, they go just a little bit farther than they did the last time, so that things that made us feel safe last year make … Read more

We Can Wipe You Out Anytime

by Eric Martin Glenn Greenwald makes a very good point about recent revelations that the President is claiming the authority to assassinate U.S. citizens that the President labels "terrorists."  But even if you’re someone who does want the President to have the power to order American citizens killed without a trial by decreeing that they are Terrorists (and … Read more

In Case of Looming Invasion, Break Glass

by Eric Martin The new NIE Annual Threat Assessment on Iran is consistent with my theory that Iran does not intend to build an actual nuclear weapon any time soon, but rather wants to bring capacity to the point that they can do so on short notice should the need arise.  From the NIE Annual Threat … Read more

Family Values

by Eric Martin Amazingly, experts in interrogation at the FBI are getting results in their interrogations of the underpants bomber.  This, despite not being tortured, not being subjected to military commision's rules and regulations, despite his being mirandized and despite having an attorney present.  None of this should come as a surpirse or even warrant highlighing … Read more

When the Power Runs Out, We’ll Just Hide

by Eric Martin Life imitates art: an honest to goodness Galt's Gulch is beginning to take shape in Colorado Springs, and boy are the residents bringing to life the theory that government is never the solution.  Behold, paradise's lost and found: This tax-averse city is about to learn what it looks and feels like when budget cuts slash … Read more

Parley Parlay

by Eric Martin There have been multiple media reports of late about a still-forming policy of outreach to certain Taliban factions in an effort to seek a negotiated end to the myriad conflicts in Afghanistan.  Robert Dreyfuss provides his take here.  See also, here (reports that Mullah Omar would sever ties with al-Qaeda), here (pdf from Brookings), here and here (a pessimistic … Read more

MC’s Should Know their Limitations

by Eric Martin

As a general rule, a nation should avoid making threats that it cannot back up.  Such gestures tend to lessen the credibility of the party making the threat, and shine a spotlight on the impotence of said nation at the same time.  Neither is helpful.  And yet, Secretary of State Clinton make just such a threat recently in the service of seeking to compel China to cooperate on a new sanctions regime aimed at Iran:

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warned China on Friday that it would face economic insecurity and diplomatic isolation if it did not sign on to tough new sanctions against Iran for its nuclear program, seeking to raise the pressure on Beijing to fall in line with an American-led campaign.

Speaking to students at the École Militaire, the prestigious French war college, Mrs. Clinton said, “China will be under a lot of pressure to recognize the destabilizing effect that a nuclear-armed Iran would have” in the Persian Gulf, “from which they receive a significant percentage of their oil supply.”

In reality, the United States is financially and economically dependent on China, a country that holds nearly $1 trillion in U.S. debt and is an indispensable trading partner.  We are hardly in a position to weaken ties to China.  Further, China's far-reaching economic clout, and the its attractiveness as a trading partner, means that China has little to fear from European nations and other states that view the Iran nuclear issue as a lower order priority.  And China knows this quite well. 

Oddly enough, the anxiety that Clinton tried to exploit – China's dependence on Gulf oil, and the United States' influence with the oil producing Gulf states – is one of the very reasons that China is so reluctant to take up broad-based punitive measures against Iran.  China views Iran as a uniquely valuable ally given its status as outside the U.S. orbit, and thus, not likely to be influenced by U.S. pressure in case of any increased tensions between the U.S. and China.  Why would China burn its one reliable source of oil in the Gulf in an effort to hammer Iran back into the U.S. sphere of influence which would render Iran without a lifeline going forward?

Rather than showing signs of concern, China shot back at the Obama administration over the weekend, taking a swipe at the United States' penchant for viewing any and all locales around the globe as its legitimate "spheres of influence" (the faraway Persian Gulf in this instance) while denying other powerful nations' claims to similar prerogatives. 

Just days after United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton used the occasion of a speech in Paris to lecture China on its national security interests and warned Beijing of "economic insecurity and diplomatic isolation" if it did not sign onto new sanctions against Iran, China hit back.

On Saturday, Beijing escalated its rhetoric against US arms sales to Taiwan, which it views as part of its territory, by suspending all military exchanges with the US, summoning the American ambassador to Beijing and using Clinton's own language about "long-term implications". […]

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said of the US's US$6.4 billion arms package for Taiwan that Washington should "truly respect China's core interests and major concerns, and immediately rescind the mistaken decision to sell arms to Taiwan, and stop selling arms to Taiwan to avoid damaging broader China-US relations".

The official Xinhua news agency followed this up with hints that the sales could damage diplomacy involving the US's efforts to get China's backing in its nuclear stand-offs with Iran and North Korea. It said the sales "will cause seriously negative effects on China-US exchanges and cooperation in important areas, and ultimately will lead to consequences that neither side wishes to see".

A commentary in the official China Daily chimed in, "From now on, the US shall not expect cooperation from China on a wide range of major regional and international issues. If you don't care about our interests, why should we care about yours?"

Not exactly chastened, huh?  This is reminiscent of the repeatedly stymied attempts to compel Pakistan to weaken its strategic position vis-a-vis India by attacking its proxies and allies in Afghanistan, whileworking for the stabilization and consolidation of power in Kabul of an Indian friendly regime, because doing so would assist U.S. interests in one of Pakistan's neighboring states.  Remarkably, or not, Pakistan finds our entreaties unpersuasive, and puts its own interests ahead of ours in its own backyard.  That Pakistan's position was not obvious from the beginning is a testament either to our ignorance or the overestimation of our ability to dictate terms on such vital matters.  Either way, the results have been a hash.

Daniel Larison has an excellent discussion of the underlying dynamic brought into focus by this episode: the unipolar world of unmitigated power and influence (to the extent it existed) has come and gone, as has the Cold War bipolar world in which the U.S. was given wide latitude by virtue of its position opposite the U.S.S.R.  In its wake is a multipolar world that is not as interested in Washington's leadership to the extent that it continues to demand compliance with its narrow, uncompromising, self-referential interests.  Speaking of Clinton's threat:

The threat and the policy behind it take for granted that there is still some united international community that is ready and willing to impose isolation on “rogue states” and their allies. As far as Iran is concerned, such a community does not exist and has not existed for over a decade. Aside from the Gulf states and Egypt, concern over Iran’s nuclear program is purely that of major Western industrialized countries. No one else cares, even if their governments publicly profess boilerplate concern over nuclear proliferation…For that matter, most European governments are not all that interested in isolating Iran, much less Iran’s more powerful allies. We have an Iran policy designed for the 1980s or early 1990s, and it is absolutely ill-suited to the world in which we now live.

Leaving aside the folly of the Iran policy that Clinton is advancing with this threat, as a matter of our relationship with Beijing this sort of talk is reckless. It’s almost as if our government had threatened the USSR with diplomatic isolation because of its support for Cuba, but it is actually much more ridiculous than that. Maintaining stable, good relations with Beijing has to be an important priority for the administration. It seemed as if the administration understood that during the President’s visit to China. Now it is unclear whether they really do understand that the U.S. has no leverage, diplomatic or otherwise, to make China do anything it does not want to do. The Chinese government probably sees Clinton’s threat as the sort of empty, desperate bluster that it is. Unfortunately, this is now what passes for a statement of administration policy towards Iran: making empty threats against a major power on which we have become financially and economically dependent. The good news is that it may have minimal effect on U.S.-Chinese relations because it is an empty threat. The bad news is that it reduces Washington’s credibility that much more in the eyes of all other states.

Mousavizadeh observes, “Conventional American leadership, it is now evident, is as unwelcome in the person of Barack Obama as in George W. Bush.” Of course, it would be. The problem was never the person or the manner in which U.S. policies were carried out, but it was first and foremost the substance of those policies. Obama has followed his predecessors in continuing U.S. foreign policy much as it has been carried out since the end of the Cold War, but he is faced with a world that neither wants nor has to put up with it as often as it once did. The best approach for a real, sustained engagement policy begins with recognition of the way the world is now.

There are multiple centers of power, their interests will sometimes diverge from ours, and the issues that we have declared to be global issues in which all states have common interests often do not matter to other major powers or these conflict with their interests in a significant way. In the future, other powers will become even more capable of advancing their interests and ignoring our demands. This means that Washington has to begin reassessing which interests are genuinely vital to U.S. security and prosperity, and which are extraneous or left over from the Cold War and the last twenty years of activist policy. Once the government does this, it should reach the conclusion that halting or limiting Iran’s nuclear program is not worth damaging or wrecking relations with major powers.

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Open Thread/Baby Blogging

by Eric Martin An open thread with some gratuitous baby Eric mugging for the camera.  Similar pose, one he's really trying to work into more of his shoots.  Artists. Finally, an action pose.  He loves to stand up already – with daddy there to spot him of course.  Although he'll claim he doesn't need the … Read more

Maybe Obama Should Publicly Campaign for Each GOP Candidate?

by Eric Martin Then maybe they would, one-by-one, drop out of their respective races in order to oppose Obama's agenda.  After all, he's managed to get the GOP to come out in opposition to tax cuts, paygo, a freeze on discretionary spending, cuts in discretionary spending and a commission dedicated to deficit/debt reduction.  From Sam Stein (via Benen) Some … Read more

Courting Disaster

by Eric Martin Listening to critics of Obama's decision to try certain terrorist suspects in civilian courts, one gets the impression that Obama is taking a big risk, and that civilian courts are either ill-equipped to handle such cases, or the rules governing the proceedings in those venues create too big an advantage for defendants.  Obama's critics … Read more