Month: October 2005

Pat Lang on CNN “Situation Room”

Pat Lang, a frequent contributor to BoomanTribune.com, appeared on today’s first segment of the “Situation Room” with Wolf Blitzer. Crooks & Liars is posting the video. Col. Lang’s bio is below the fold.

BLITZER: Turning now to our security council. Tomorrow the special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is expected to make an announcement on whether or not there will be indictments in the CIA leak case. But how much damage was actually done to U.S. intelligence by the outing of the CIA operative Valerie Plame?

Joining us now, retired U.S. Army Colonel Pat Lang, a former chief analyst for the Pentagon’s defense intelligence agency, and our own national security correspondent David Ensor. Two guys who know this subject well.

How much damage do you believe was actually done as a result of her name being released?

COL. WALTER “PAT” LANG, U.S. ARMY (RET): I think quite a lot. I mean, she actually was functioning in kind of a covered status in which she remained covered so that when she went overseas to meet people in conjunction she — the operation would be secure. And the thing she was running in particular were blown away obviously by these — this disclosure.

But I think the larger issue is that the very fact that the U.S. government seems to have in fact disclosed the identity of one of its covert officers would cause people around the world to think that we have no credibility and that we could not be trusted to protect their identities if they cooperated with us.

BLITZER: We’re seeing some pictures, by the way, as we speak, of the president down in south Florida. He’s touring some of the areas damaged and devastated, if you will, some of the people suffering as a result of Hurricane Wilma. We’ll show those pictures from time to time as they are available. Some members of the staff there with the president.

As far as you know, David, there was no postmortem official that was document submitted to the Senate or House Intelligence Committee outlining what they believe was the damage?

DAVID ENSOR, CNN NATIONAL SECURITY ANALYST: Well, that’s right. There will be once all of the judicial matters — all the trials or plea bargains or whatever we’re going have next are over with. There will be a complete damage assessment done.

But there was a quick, first, sort of operations check. And as Pat said, there clearly was damage. Her past career, any sources she may have drawn, the current career, those people who were in real trouble. Any future work she might have been able to do as a 20-year veteran, very experienced, is lost. Plus, and most importantly, all around the world anybody who is thinking of working for U.S. intelligence as a spy now sees that from time to time, at least, the U.S. hurts the home team and that’s not good.

More Pat Lang below the fold:

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Damage Done By The Revolving Door Policy

The current political domination is created in part by a long held understanding of the Revolving Door Policy, which enables individuals to move easily between political office and private industry at great profit. There are some limitations but they aren’t enough to work effectively. When that limitation is exploited by a network of well connected power brokers, the lure of wealth and power wins.

Coalition Releases Report Warning that the Revolving Door is Giving Business Interests Undue Influence Over Federal Policy and Procurement Decisions

WASHINGTON – Business interests are “capturing” the federal government and exerting undue influence over policy and procurement decisions as a result of the revolving door–the frequent appointment of corporate executives and lobbyists to public posts and the movement of government officials into lucrative jobs in the private sector. So warns a report titled A Matter of Trust issued today by the Revolving Door Working Group. The report is available on the Working Group’s website at www.revolvingdoor.info

The Revolving Door Working Group is a broad-based network of 18 organizations ranging from Public Citizen and Common Cause to Farm Aid and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. The Working Group promotes ethics in public service and an arm’s length relationship between the federal government and the private sector.

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The Revolving Door Working Group report provides a thorough analysis of the three major forms of the revolving door:

THE INDUSTRY-TO-GOVERNMENT REVOLVING DOOR, through which the appointment of corporate executives and business lobbyists to key posts in federal agencies establishes a pro-business bias in policy formulation and regulatory enforcement.

THE GOVERNMENT-TO-INDUSTRY REVOLVING DOOR, through which public officials move to lucrative private-sector positions in which they may use their government experience to unfairly benefit their new employer in matters of federal procurement and regulatory policy.

THE GOVERNMENT-TO-LOBBYIST REVOLVING DOOR, through which former lawmakers and executive-branch officials become well-paid advocates and use their inside connections to advance the interests of corporate clients.

No where is this problem more evident than it is in the current administration’s control of access to officials, legislation and opportunity. This has effectively locked out nearly all pro-Democratic or nonRepublican cooperating entities. Some have called that ‘Pay to Play’ accessability. The following excerpt and linked article is a look back at what is being actively confronted now.

The Pimping of the Presidency

Jack Abramoff and Grover Norquist Billing Clients for Face Time with G.W. Bush

  Four months after he took the oath of office in 2001, President George W. Bush was the attraction, and the White House the venue, for a fundraiser organized by the alleged perpetrator of the largest billing fraud in the history of corporate lobbying. In May 2001, Jack Abramoff’s lobbying client book was worth $4.1 million in annual billing for the Greenberg Traurig law firm. He was a friend of Bush advisor Karl Rove. He was a Bush “Pioneer,” delivering at least $100,000 in bundled contributions to the 2000 campaign. He had just concluded his work on the Bush Transition Team as an advisor to the Department of the Interior. He had sent his personal assistant Susan Ralston to the White House to work as Rove’s personal assistant. He was a close friend, advisor, and high-dollar fundraiser for the most powerful man in Congress, Tom DeLay. Abramoff was so closely tied to the Bush Administration that he could, and did, charge two of his clients $25,000 for a White House lunch date and a meeting with the President. From the same two clients he took to the White House in May 2001, Abramoff also obtained $2.5 million in contributions for a non-profit foundation he and his wife operated.

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…full article at above link

A few more links for reading and reference.

A toxic mix of money and power has sustained Republicans in the United States for a generation. Sidney Blumenthal exposes a corrupt system approaching legal nemesis.

Under George W Bush, this new system reached its apotheosis. It is a radically novel social, political and economic formation that deserves study alongside capitalism and socialism. Neither Adam Smith nor Vladimir Lenin captures its essence, though it has far more elements of Leninist democratic-centralism than Smithian free markets. Some have referred to this model as crony capitalism; others compare the waste, extravagance and greed to the Gilded Age. Call it 21st-century Republicanism.

At its heart the system is plagued by corruption, an often unpleasant peripheral expense that greases its wheels. But now multiple scandals engulfing Republicans – from the suspended majority leader in the House of Representatives, Tom DeLay, to super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff, to White House political overlord Karl Rove – threaten to upend the system. Because it is organised by politics it can be undone by politics. Politics has been the greatest strength of Republicanism, but it has become its greatest vulnerability.

The party runs the state. Politics drives economics. Important party officials are also economic operators. They thrive off their connections and rise in the party apparatus as a result of their self-enrichment. The past three chairmen of the Republican National Committee have all been Washington lobbyists.

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The sums every industry, from financial services to computers, spends on lobbying are staggering. Broadcast media firms spent $35.88 million in 2004 alone on lobbyists in Washington, according to the Center for Public Integrity. Telephone companies spent $71.97 million; cable and satellite TV corporations, $20.22 million. The drug industry during the same period shelled out $123 million to pay 1,291 lobbyists, 52% of them former government officials.

The results have been direct: the Food and Drug Administration has been reduced to a hollow shell, and Medicare can’t negotiate lower drug costs with pharmaceutical companies. In the 2004 election cycle, the drug industry paid $87 million in campaign contributions for federal officials, 69% of them flowing to Republicans.

This is what we need to correct if we’re to have any chance of regaining accountability.

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New Orleans Jazz

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Do You Voo Doo? Keep the Music in New Orleans — Listen to WWOZ

When we think of New Orleans, we all think of its rich musical heritage. In the midst of the widespread devastation of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans’ legendary public radio station, WWOZ, managed to get back on the air within days from nearby Baton Rouge. A skeleton crew of three people who had themselves lost their homes provided news, reconnecting loved ones who’d been separated from each other, and of course, playing the music that made New Orleans famous – Louis Armstrong, Buckwheat Zydeco, Little Queenie and Lead Belly. WWOZ program director David Freedman said of his station, “Our job is to try to be sure that we don’t lose this spirit that sets New Orleans apart.”

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"Grieve little and move on,"

he wrote. “I shall be looking over you. And you will hear me from time to time on the gentle breeze that sounds at night, and in the rustle of leaves.”

Bob Herbert highlights this final goodbye from Sgt. Anthony G. Jones, a soldier fallen in Iraq, to his wife, the mother of his newborn child, in his stinging rebuke of the criminals responsible for the senseless slaughter ongoing in Iraq:

Liberal Street Fighter

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