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  • Why Do Libya and Egypt Hate America? by Sherif Mansour , thedailybeast.com | September 13, 2012

    Tuesday’s dramatic attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya that left four American diplomats dead was a big surprise to many, but not to me. Coming on the heels of the anniversary of 9/11 and continued public outcries in Egypt and Libya over an “insulting” U.S.-produced movie about the Prophet Muhammad led many in the Arab world to brace themselves for escalating violence as well as the inevitable rehashing of the “Why do they hate us?” debate. I am also sure that almost no one will focus on why the masses in Egypt and Libya, two countries of the Arab Spring that have recently gained greater freedoms, continue to have negative views toward America. The question then is, why do these societies continue to hate the U.S., even when so many on the streets share our values and are becoming freer and more empowered as a result? I am afraid the answer is still the same. read more »

  • Legitimate Criticism by Andrew Rosenthal, takingnote.blogs.nytimes.com | September 13, 2012

    Stung by the furious response to Mitt Romney’s attack on President Obama over the killings in Libya, some right-wing commentators have defended Mr. Romney’s right to challenge Mr. Obama on foreign policy. Just for instance, Jennifer Rubin wrote in The Washington Post that “Obama has no right to insist he is beyond criticism.” She added: “If [the media] are going to insist that holding a president accountable for his national security is out of bounds, then perhaps journalism is now farce.” Of course Mr. Obama is not beyond criticism. Of course Mr. Romney has the right to hold the president accountable for his national security. But this story isn’t about that. It’s about the fact that he made something up. He accused the Obama administration of sympathizing with those who waged the attacks, when it did no such thing. read more »

  • I Smell John Bolton by Digby , OurFuture.org | September 12, 2012

    To those still wondering if Romney might be a kinder, gentler foreign policy president, think again: read more »

  • When You Learn They’re Not Ready by Josh Marshall, consortiumnews.com | September 12, 2012

    Some moments show you when a candidate is ready or not to become President of the United States. I suspect last night will become one of those moments for Mitt Romney. The verdict will not be positive. Politics is hardball. Everything is, in some sense, fair. But campaigns are also a prism into the judgment and steadiness under pressure of a person who would be president. This was amateur hour for the opposition campaign last night, reminiscent of John McCain’s rash call four years ago to cancel the presidential debates and the campaign itself to deal with the unfolding economic crisis. There was nothing ignoble or dishonorable about McCain’s suggestion. It just showed a certain rashness that was widely viewed as unpresidential. Romney’s moment was quite different — rash and shameful. Not worthy of a president. Crass, undignified and troubling on many levels. read more »

  • Mitt's Shameful Libya Statement by Steve Kornacki, salon.com | September 12, 2012

    That it’s fundamentally dishonest hasn’t stopped Mitt Romney from repeating his central critique of Barack Obama’s foreign policy over and over – the idea that the president “went around the world and apologized for America.”  So it shouldn’t be surprising that Romney’s response to the attacks on U.S. diplomatic installations in Egypt and Libya was rooted in the same caricature of Obama as apologizer-in-chief. “It’s disgraceful,” Romney’s statement, which was released late Tuesday night, read, “that the Obama administration’s first response was not to condemn attacks on our diplomatic missions, but to sympathize with those who waged the attacks.” The foolishness of Romney’s reaction is glaring. But this hasn’t stopped other Republicans from echoing the Romney line. Again, it probably shouldn’t be surprising. This is the kind of nonsense you’ll get when one party spends four years convincing itself that a president is something he isn’t. read more »

  • The Neocons and 9/11 by Robert Parry, consortiumnews.com | September 11, 2012

    Eleven years after the fact, the key relevance of 9/11 to Campaign 2012 is that Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has surrounded himself with neoconservative foreign policy advisers much as George W. Bush did in 2001, when the neocons let their ideological obsessions blind them to the threat from al-Qaeda. In spring and summer 2001, the CIA and counterterrorism experts frantically rang warning bells, trying to get President Bush to order a full-court press aimed at stopping an attack that al-Qaeda was plotting. U.S. intelligence agencies weren’t sure exactly where al-Qaeda would strike but they were sure that something big was coming. The neocons, however, had regarded the Clinton administration’s fear about al-Qaeda terrorism as a distraction, a relatively minor concern when compared to the neocon certainty that the far greater Middle East danger came from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. read more »

  • The Deafness Before the Storm by Kurt Eichenwald, The New York Times | September 11, 2012

    It was perhaps the most famous presidential briefing in history. On Aug. 6, 2001, President George W. Bush received a classified review of the threats posed by Osama bin Laden and his terrorist network, Al Qaeda. That morning’s “presidential daily brief” — the top-secret document prepared by America’s intelligence agencies — featured the now-infamous heading: “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S.” A few weeks later, on 9/11, Al Qaeda accomplished that goal. The administration’s reaction to what Mr. Bush was told in the weeks before that infamous briefing reflected significantly more negligence than has been disclosed. In other words, the Aug. 6 document, for all of the controversy it provoked, is not nearly as shocking as the briefs that came before read more »

  • Obama’s “Smart Power” Foreign Policy Not Smart at All by John Feffer, tomdispatch.com | September 6, 2012

    Barack Obama is a smart guy. So why has he spent the last four years executing such a dumb foreign policy? True, his reliance on “smart power” -- a euphemism for giving the Pentagon a stake in all things global -- has been a smart move politically at home. It has largely prevented the Republicans from playing the national security card in this election year. But “smart power” has been a disaster for the world at large and, ultimately, for the United States itself. read more »

  • Afghanistan’s Base Bonanza by Nick Turse, tomdispatch.com | September 4, 2012

    Afghanistan may turn out to be one of the great misbegotten “stimulus packages” of the modern era, a construction boom in the middle of nowhere with materials largely shipped in at enormous expense to no lasting purpose whatsoever. With the U.S. military officially drawing down its troops there, the Pentagon is now evidently reversing the process and embarking on a major deconstruction program. It’s tearing up tarmacs, shutting down outposts, and packing up some of its smaller facilities. Next year, the number of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) coalition bases in the southwest of the country alone is scheduled to plummet from 214 to 70, according to the New York Times. But anyone who wanted to know just what the Pentagon built in Afghanistan and what it is now tearing down won’t have an easy time of it. read more »

  • Republicans Hate Obama’S Defense Cuts. The Trouble Is, They Voted For Them. by Dylan Matthews, The Washington Post | August 30, 2012

    In his speech tonight, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) decried Obama for cutting defense, saying, “We can’t afford another $500 billion in cuts to our defense budget — on top of the nearly $500 billion in cuts that the president is already making…And yet, the president is playing no leadership role in preventing this crippling blow to our military.” There’s just one problem: John McCain, and most other Republicans in the House and Senate, voted for the cuts in question. The Budget Control Act, passed as a condition for Republican support for raising the debt ceiling last summer, contains a 10 percent across-the-board cut in defense spending – the cut that McCain was referencing. It comes out to $30 billion in cuts next year and $510 billion in cuts over the next ten years. Republicans are now trying to reverse those cuts. read more »

The Latest

NEWS HEADLINES

  • Guantanamo Report Draws Fire, The New York Times | February 24, 2009

    The Pentagon official who inspected the Guantánamo Bay prison at the behest of President Obama and declared its conditions humane described himself Monday as a “fresh set of eyes” who had been given free rein to go about his work. But detainees’ lawyers and human rights groups ridiculed the 85-page report that the official, Adm. Patrick M. read more »

  • Former A.G. Held Up Torture Report, Newsweek | February 17, 2009

    A Justice Department investigation into the conduct of senior lawyers who approved waterboarding was on the verge of completion last fall when then-Attorney General Michael Mukasey raised objections to the findings, according to an e-mail from a Justice official and two legal sources who have been briefed on the inquiry. The e-mail was disclosed by Democratic Sens. read more »

  • Senate Confirms Panetta as CIA Chief , Associated Press | February 13, 2009

    The Senate confirmed Leon Panetta as director of the CIA, placing the nation's top spy agency in the hands of a government veteran valued for his skills as a lawmaker and policy manager rather than an expert at intelligence-gathering and analysis. read more »

  • Blair: Global Slump Threatens U.S. Security , BBC News | February 13, 2009

    The top U.S. intelligence official, Dennis Blair, has said that the global economic crisis is the main security concern facing America. The director of national intelligence said at least a quarter of countries had experienced some instability because of the worldwide downturn. read more »

  • U.S. 'Lost Track' of Afghan Weapons, BBC News | February 12, 2009

    The US military has failed to keep track of thousands of weapons shipped to Afghanistan, leaving them vulnerable to being lost or stolen, a report says. The report — compiled by the U.S. Government Accountability Office — was obtained by news organizations. read more »

  • Iraq Builds Ties to French, The New York Times | February 11, 2009

    Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki of Iraq signaled a desire to gradually diminish American power over Iraqi politics and increase ties to other Western powers, during a visit by President Nicolas Sarkozy of France. In a rare news conference with a Western leader who is not from the United States or Britain, Mr. Maliki gave Mr. read more »

  • Hackers Breach FAA Computers, USA Today | February 10, 2009

    Hackers broke into the Federal Aviation Administration's computer system last week, accessing the names and Social Security numbers of 45,000 employees and retirees. The agency said in a statement that two of the 48 files on the breached computer server contained personal information about employees and retires who were on the FAA's rolls as of the first week of February 2006. read more »

  • Obama Orders Cyber Security Review, The Guardian | February 10, 2009

    Barack Obama has ordered a review of America's cyber defense strategy, opening the possibility of a wholesale change to the country's approach to online security. At the moment, a wide spread of agencies are involved in protecting the U.S. from attack over the internet. read more »

  • Iraq, Afghanistan Withdrawals Delayed, CNN | February 9, 2009

    Decisions about withdrawing troops from Iraq and sending more troops to Afghanistan have been delayed until the Pentagon provides President Barack Obama with more detail about the risks and implications of the issues confronting him, according to two senior Pentagon officials. read more »

  • U.S. Outlines Aghanistan Plans, The Guardian | February 9, 2009

    The Obama administration outlined a new campaign strategy for the war in Afghanistan, scaling back the ambitions of George Bush in a shift which senior officials and diplomats described as a "new realism". Richard Holbrooke, Barack Obama's new envoy for Afghanistan, and other officials all stressed that the U.S. read more »