Spanish Withdrawl

In a previous post I suggested that the Madrid bombing and Socialist victory in the immediately following election was a victory for Al Qaeda because it allows them to plausibly claim to have enough power to change the outcome of Western elections. (Notice how the ‘plausibly claim’ lets us avoid getting into the hair-splitting and … Read more

Lack of Discussion

Imagine I suspected that someone broke into a house by stealing a key from its owner. If you later showed that someone else broke into another house by smashing a window, would you think that this showed I was wrong about the first person stealing a key? No? Then why is this considered a passable … Read more

Earth Day and Conservatives

I don’t think it is actually Earth Day, but San Diego had its hugemongous EarthFair in Balboa Park. It is billed as the “largest free annual environmental fair in the world”. So I figure it offers a good excuse to comment on environmentalism. Personally I think of environmentalism, by which I mean an idea that … Read more

What the Heck

My Movable Type blog is taunting me. Whenever I try to go to the main editing menu I get the following error:”Can’t call method “description” on an undefined value at lib/MT/App/CMS.pm line 296.” WTF? I haven’t changed anything to my templates in months and I haven’t done anything but upload posts in months either. Help, … Read more

Social Security Crisis

Thought I would hit you with a previous post of mine on one of my (least) favorite topics. I find it really sad that a really obvious crisis looms, and no one wants to take any of the hard steps now. Sheesh people, I understand procrastination (notice the time I post most of my articles … Read more

Tough Steps

Matthew Yglesias has an interesting post:

Indeed, I would say that the major flaw of American efforts at democracy-promotion is a failure to recognize that the bipartisan tradition of realpolitik was not some fifty-year long silly error. I think it’s true that, some time ago, this ceased to be a viable strategy and that we ought to revise it. Still, there are many things to be said in its favor. People need to really think about that before they advocate abandonning it. If you’re prepared to give up the gains of dictator-promotion (and I am) then you need to face up to what you’re doing. What Bush has been trying to do is discover a cost-free democracy-promotion scheme. Thus you get the very odd Iraq bank-shot.

This is half-way to a really good point. The problem is that all sides use rhetoric implying that there is some sort of cost-free or super-cheap democracy promotion scheme. An uncharitable view of Bush’s rhetoric would be that you invade Iraq and PRESTO you get a U.S.-friendly democracy right afterwards. Obviously he never says any such thing directly, but the fact that he never outlines the (rather significant) costs makes it an implication (perhaps a fair implication, perhaps not). Many of Bush’s opponents, especially in Europe, seem imply that if only the U.S. would quit fucking up, PRESTO democracy or at least peace would come to the Middle East. This is closely related to the fantasy that if only the U.S. would apply pressure to Israel that peace would come to the Middle East. Obviously they don’t say so directly, but the fact that they never outline steps about the significant changes that would need to come about other than the U.S. not fucking things up makes it an implication (perhaps a fair implication, perhaps not).

While each side may decide to tacitically deny the difficulty of the project, I think in their more candid moments each realizes that the Middle East has to be changed and that the changes are likely both to be very difficult to implement and very costly for the West.

But neither side wants to deal with difficult and costly, that doesn’t sell well.

So many on the right act as if a quick war will bring democracy to the Middle East and the left act as if a lack of Western military action will bring peace to the Middle East. And any useful debate fails to occur.

Let me be clear in my views:

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9/11 And the Need to Prove Policing Can Stop Terrorism

Now that I have my angry post out of the way I want to talk about 9/11 and policing.

The US is a country with one of the largest unsecured borders in the world. It is also one of the most open large societies in the world. This has many advantages: an economy so excellent that people are willing to immigrate to become what counts as poor here, an intellectual culture so vibrant that we make an outsized number of the world’s scientific discoveries, the freedom to move about a huge and varied land mass for almost any reason imaginable. But terrorism exploits this openness.

Let me first be clear about my understanding of 9/11:

I don’t believe it could have been stopped by acceptable levels of increased security. I don’t believe it would have been stopped by the current levels of security, and we are willing to put up with far more than we would have before the attack.

I believe it is highly unlikely that it would have been stopped by ‘increased intelligence’ in any level which we would have found acceptable before 9/11. One of the most intensive intelligence capabilities in the history of the world, employed during the Cold War, still missed Soviet moles in some of our most sensitive branches of government. Long-term undercover agents penetrating our most secretive branches ought to be somewhat easier to detect over decades than the relatively short-term (1-3 years) planning employed by the 9/11 attackers who merely need to get into the country. Yet still there were agents who went undetected for years and years.

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Who is playing politics with 9/11?

It is becoming increasingly obvious that Democrats are playing up the 9/11 investigation as a purely political game–which is to say not to find a better way of developing useful intelligence, but almost completely as a club with which to bash Bush. This is illustrated by the fact that they allude to the amorphous idea … Read more

9/11 Navel Gazing

There has been much recent discussion about the presidential briefing and relating to 20/20 hindsight regarding 9/11. See for example Edward, Matthew Yglesias , and Kevin Drum. Kevin almost gets it right with, “Look, I know there’s a perfectly good case to be made that the PDB merely states generalities and doesn’t warn of a … Read more

Rational Thought

Been slammed at work too much to do much of anything, but in the 10 pages of the Reppert book I’m reading I found a quote which sheds light on quite a bit of the way we engage in political discussions” If you were to meet a person, call him Steve, who could argue with … Read more