An Internet hub for moderates, centrists, and independents, with domestic and international news, analysis, original reporting, and popular features from the left, center, and right

Faux News Reveals True Motivation Behind Attacks on Pelosi

Not that reality-based bloggers didn’t know this already, but it definitely should be pointed out as frequently as possible (emphasis in original):

For weeks, conservatives have been launching hypocritical and disingenuous attacks on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) regarding her level of knowledge of the Bush administration’s torture program.

Fox News conservatives are revealing one of the underlying motives for these attacks — to diminish calls for a truth commission on torture. While interviewing Newt Gingrich, and later, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ), Fox host Neil Cavuto wondered whether “both parties will cease and desist” from investigations:

Is it a potential Mexican standoff? And by that, I mean, Senator, that Democrats feel they have the goods on the prior administration to drag out hearings on what they knew about Iraq and when. Now Republicans have the goods, presumably, on Nancy Pelosi about what she knew about interrogation and when. So to avoid mutual self-destruction, both parties cease and desist.

Mike Madden concludes that Dick Cheney’s National Torture Defense Tour is intended to turn everyone’s attention to what the Democrats knew about the Bush torture program, and away from the torture itself: who conceived it, designed it, authorized it, and carried it out:

You might have thought getting torture back in the news would be a bad move for any Republican; after all, it was the Bush administration that authorized the torturing. But the last few days have shown Dick Cheney knew exactly what he was doing when he went on TV last week and started talking about “enhanced interrogation”: It was a masterstroke of bureaucratic warfare.

Because just five days after Cheney admitted that George W. Bush personally signed off on the CIA’s plans to extract information out of detainees by no matter how they got it, the debate in Washington isn’t even remotely focused on the ethical and moral repugnance of torturing your enemies. Instead, the city is buzzing about what House Speaker Nancy Pelosi knew about waterboarding. There’s a little side conversation going about whether torture is effective — but not whether it’s wrong. And the Obama administration, which is trying desperately not to get involved in an endless battle over what Bush officials were doing behind closed doors, is getting dragged into it, too, and infuriating liberal supporters in the process.

Mike Madden doesn’t get it, either. We don’t need a debate over whether torture is wrong. It’s irrelevant, just as it’s irrelevant that torture is ineffective. Torture is illegal. It violates our own statutes, and it violates several international treaties, most notably the Geneva Conventions and the Convention Against Torture. There is no option to torture. It does not exist.

Republicans are very, very good at changing the subject. It’s one of the things they do best. Madden is right that they are playing a game of divide and conquer, and (so far) getting away with it. Reality-based bloggers, and everyone else who believes that criminal acts need to be investigated and prosecuted, should not let them do that. We should not be playing this game of what did Nancy Pelosi know and when did she know it and what did she do about it. Instead, we should be bringing the focus back to the acts themselves, and to everything Republican leaders and senior officials in the Bush administration have done over the last eight years to ensure that Congress would never be in a position to know the full extent of what was going on, and — even more to the point — to ensure that Congress would never be in a position to do anything about the little they did know.

The arguments on the right will continue to be immoral, untruthful, disingenuous, misinformed, irrational, and lacking in either logic or consistency — but that does not mean we on the anti-torture, pro-rule of law side have to accept their irrelevant, manipulative framework.

Here is one example of what I’m talking about. Mark Steyn’s column yesterday in the Orange Country Register (emphasis mine):

Question: What does Dick Cheney think of waterboarding?

He’s in favor of it. He was in favor of it then, he’s in favor of it now. He doesn’t think it’s torture, and he supports having it on the books as a vital option. On his recent TV appearances, he sometimes gives the impression he would not be entirely averse to performing a demonstration on his interviewers, but generally he believes its use should be a tad more circumscribed. He is entirely consistent.

Question: What does Nancy Pelosi think of waterboarding?

No, I mean really. Away from the cameras, away from the Capitol, in the deepest recesses of her (if she’ll forgive my naïveté) soul. Sitting on a mountaintop, contemplating the distant horizon, chewing thoughtfully on a cranberry-almond granola bar, what does she truly believe about waterboarding?

Does she oppose it? According to Speaker Pelosi, yes. In her varying accounts, she’s (a) accused the CIA of consciously “misleading the Congress of the United States” as to what they were doing; (b) admitted to having been briefed that waterboarding was in the playbook but that “we were not – I repeat – were not told that waterboarding or any of these other enhanced interrogation methods were used”; (c) belatedly conceded that she’d known back in February 2003 that waterboarding was being used but had been apprised of the fact by “a member of my staff”. As she said on Thursday, instead of doing anything about it, she decided to focus on getting more Democrats elected to the House.

It’s worth noting that, by most if not all of her multiple accounts, Nancy Pelosi is as guilty of torture as anybody else. That’s not an airy rhetorical flourish but a statement of law. As National Review’s Andy McCarthy points out, under Section 2340A(c) of the relevant statute, a person who conspires to torture is subject to the same penalties as the actual torturer. Once Speaker Pelosi was informed that waterboarding was part of the plan and that it was actually being used, she was in on the conspiracy, and as up to her neck in it as whoever it was who was actually sticking it to poor old Abu Zubaydah and the other blameless lads.

That is, if you believe waterboarding is “torture.”

I don’t believe it’s torture. Nor does Dick Cheney. But Nancy Pelosi does. Or so she has said, latterly.

The sheer dishonesty oozing out of every line in the quote above can drive you mad if you let it. Ah, but don’t you let it. There are really only four distinct points worth addressing:

  1. What do Dick Cheney and Nancy Pelosi think of waterboarding?
  2. Dick Cheney does not believe waterboarding is torture. I don’t believe waterboarding is torture. Nancy Pelosi does believe waterboarding is torture.
  3. But she did nothing about it.
  4. Nancy Pelosi is guilty under the law of conspiring to torture.

We don’t have to allow ourselves to get caught up in the amazing stupidity of these points. The answers are as follows:

  1. It doesn’t matter. Waterboarding is torture, and torture is illegal.
  2. Who cares? Waterboarding is torture, and torture is illegal.
  3. She did nothing about it because she signed an agreement not to disclose anything she learned in the briefings, but set that aside. The only way to get to the bottom of this is to impanel a truth commission to look at all the facts of this matter. Nancy Pelosi has called for such a commission. Do you support her on that?
  4. I’m no lawyer, but I think the legal definition of “conspire” includes taking an active part in planning the crime, but we absolutely need to nail that down. Nancy Pelosi has called for a truth commission that will answer all these questions. Do you support her on that?

That’s all we need to say in response to these points. If Mark Steyn and all the other torture apologists can’t or won’t or don’t want to address these points in a straightforward manner, then they need to shut up.

Cross-posted at Comments from Left Field.

  • Spot on, Kathy. Let's make sure the diversion doesn't work. I don't care one bit if Democrats get tarnished by investigations. Republicans have abandoned all pretense of having any internalized ethics. Let's pop the trunk and see ALL the details of Bush Cheney and Co. Let's call their bluff. I don't think Pelosi has anything to fear.
  • SteveK
    Among the many reasoned and logical comments Kathy makes in this post, she says: "She did nothing about it because she signed an agreement not to disclose anything she learned in the briefings..."

    This is so obvious that only those who think 'partisan points' are more important than country even bothered with this phony 'scandal'.

    Last week the wingnuts tried to sell a Pelosi Scandal... the week before it was Swine Flu... next week watch out for Texas Cession... Good god where's Tom Delay when they need him?

    The 18%ers want to talk about anything and everything except reasoned, responsible governance.
  • D. E.Rodriguez
    Kathy:

    Thank you for persevering and staying on message.

    Illegitimus non tatum carborundum

    Dorian
  • JSpencer
    Well done Kathy, and thank-you.

    About your question:

    "Nancy Pelosi has called for a truth commission that will answer all these questions. Do you support her on that?"

    Absolutely yes. Shine a bright light on this sorry business. The brighter the better.
  • daveinboca
    Looks like the moonbats have taken over this formerly balanced blog. Nancy got caught lying red-handed and only you froth-mouthed libtards either cannot or refuse to comprehend this basic fact.

    can drive you mad if you let it In the case of the author of this rubbish, it doesn't take a drive because she's a short putt away from the madhouse.
  • AustinRoth
    Oh those tricksy, tricksy Repulithugs! Getting Pelosi to lie repeatedly, constantly change her stories, and to call the CIA liars. All this, and without Rove pulling the strings!

    Who knew that Pelosi, too, is a Republican operative? Just another example of the Machiavellian nature of politics, I guess.

    http://www.scrappleface.com/?p=3680 (it was worth repeating)
  • EEllis
    You can't have one without the other. If Dems were not saying it's all Bush and Repub then Repubs wouldn't be able to hit back at Pelosi. Dems are trying to abdicate any and all responsibilities for things they knew and at the least did not contest. This may not excuse Bush and the Repubs, but I'll be damned if I would let the Dems prance around pretending they had clean hands. Pelosi and Frist don't have clean hands and the refusal to acknowledge that just shows how partisan some people are.
  • DaGoat
    I'm not a torture apologist and agree Pelosi has nothing to worry about from a criminal standpoint. The risk to her is entirely political.

    Cheney picking a fight with Pelosi is basically a no-lose proposition for Cheney. He is an ex-VP who nobody likes, Pelosi is the Speaker of the House. He has nothing to lose, politically she has a lot to lose. It's extremely unlikely he will be found guilty of anything criminal, and if he is it's extremely unlikely he'll be punished. I think Cheney sees every day Pelosi is in the news as a victory. Pelosi's silence on the torture issue, even if unproven, will reflect negatively on her to some extent.
  • Silhouette
    Unless it is found that undue coercion and deception were used to bamboozle Pelosi et al in Congress. As it most certainly was.

    Under those conditions we grant immunity to those individuals drawn into the fringe of abetting behavior against their better judgement...as Pelosi et al almost certainly were. We take the lesser players, the non-diabolical "cohorts" and grant them immunity in exchange for their testimony that fingers the kingpins of the move to legitimize illegal acts in the name of corporate profiteering in oil-rich Iraq.
  • Unfortunately, the straw man that Kathy is falling for here is an obvious one. In this blanket absolution of the speaker we are expected to take the following as gospel:

    "The GOP doesn't want a truth commission, so they are trying to point out shabby activities by the speaker as a distraction. Ergo, the speaker couldn't have done anything wrong."

    The two issues under discussion, sad to say, are almost entirely unrelated. The first question would appear to be, "did the United States engage in torture, who authorized it and will they be held accountable?"

    Fine and dandy. Le's investigate that by all means and get solid answers and policies in place for the future. Let's have a truth commission if you like. Take it away.

    Now let's look at the second set of questions.

    "Whether the policies in question amounted to torture or not, was the Speaker briefed on them repeatedly? Did she lie about knowing that these policies were in place or that the procedures were being used? After being called out on such statements and changing her story two, three, four times, did she accuse the entire Central Intelligence Agency of lying just to cover her political behind?"

    Those questions have nothing to do with torture, beyond being the subject of the statements. You can investigate torture policies AND investigate whether or not the Speaker of the House was lying about it and then tarring the CIA with her accusations. The two are not mutually exclusive, so this accusation of "distractions" is pretty thin gruel.
  • CStanley
    I agree with Jazz that the dichotomy is a false one, but I wouldn't go as far as he does in saying there's no attempt at distraction. I think it's undoubtable that the GOP leaders are quite happy to keep the focus on what Congress knew and when they knew it, and their motivation is primarily to deflect from attention on the EIT procedures themselves.

    However, even if they are keeping the pressure on Pelosi for this reason, there's still a real question as to whether she has repeatedly been using this issue as a political weapon to bring down the GOP. She's almost admitted as much in saying that she felt it was more important to work for party change in the White House than to explore any method of exercising Congressional oversight over the then sitting administration. That's blatantly politicizing an issue of national security concern, and it shouldn't be acceptable to people on either side of the aisle. I realize that her defenders say that she had no options because the briefings were classified, but we already know that she was unwilling to put her name on the letter that Jane Harman wrote (which was the logical first step to take without violating any confidentiality), and that she sent a staff member to one of the briefings that she should have attended herself and then didn't even bother to get briefed on what was discussed there. She's not likely to be guilty of anything illegal in all of this, but ethically it smells to high heaven.
  • SteveK
    daveinboca said:
    "Looks like the moonbats have taken over this formerly balanced blog. Nancy got caught lying red-handed and only you froth-mouthed libtards either cannot or refuse to comprehend this basic fact."

    daveinboca is a perfect example of how neo-republican logic 'works' with this issue.

    After five voices from the right, not a single one has noticed (let alone addressed) the elephant in the room:
    "She did nothing about it because she signed an agreement not to disclose anything she learned in the briefings..."
  • CStanley
    Steve, I did address that- even with the agreement (which I doubt would be fully enforceable if Congress is briefed on something which it believes is illegal anyway), the course of action taken by Harman was perfectly permissible and in accordance with the need for the information to remain classified- yet Pelosi was unwilling to put her name on the letter that Harman sent. Why is that, do you think?
  • mlhradio
    >>Looks like the moonbats have taken over this formerly balanced blog.

    Physician, heal thyself.

    If you find yourself saying "everyone is crazy but me", then it's usually time to start taking a look in the mirror...
  • HemmD
    jazz

    Once again, your analysis is a near miss.

    The issue all along has been the criminal matter of torture. As a crime, not only who did it, but also who planned it and who covered it up. The right has desperately tried to obscure this by first creating the tissue of feeble legal reasoning, outright lying to oversight panels, and now trying to misdirect the debate into political channels.

    You now choose to imply Kathy's case as some nefarious attempt to shield Pelosi and keep this political.


    The only partisanship here is the Right's. Nary a one is willing to back a truth commission. Covering up a crime is a crime, so let a truth commission investigate. Your final paragraph simply demonstrates how you wish to split hairs and charge Kathy with the splitting.

    "Those questions have nothing to do with torture, beyond being the subject of the statements. You can investigate torture policies AND investigate whether or not the Speaker of the House was lying about it and then tarring the CIA with her accusations. The two are not mutually exclusive, so this accusation of "distractions" is pretty thin gruel."

    No one here separates Pelosi's statements from the crime they address except you. Why? The only distractions come from your wish to play devil's advocate. Why not write an article on all the Republicans who are trying to block an investigation, or write an artricle on all those who support an investigation? Pelosi's part in this is subject to the same rigor as all other's involved. Don't distract from that yourself.
  • jwest
    Steve,

    The whole reason congress is briefed on what the CIA is doing is so they can cut off funding if they disagree.

    No one needs to disclose anything. It’s all done behind closed door.

    Do something that congress doesn’t like and the money stops. This is how our government works.
  • SteveK
    CStanley said: "Steve, I did address that- even with the agreement..."

    Yes CStanley in rereading your comment I see that you did.

    My first read didn't get past "there's still a real question as to whether she has repeatedly been using this issue as a political weapon to bring down the GOP." as I assumed that your comment was just another party-before-country rant... Sorry.

    Regarding the Harman Letter and 'who said what & when' we all pick the parts that support our opinions but all the facts ARE NOT on the table... These are the issues that need to be looked into and that is why I can't understand how anyone (other than the guilty) object to formal investigations to look into this very important issue.
  • SteveK
    JWest said: Do something that congress doesn’t like and the money stops. This is how our government works."?

    I see what your trying to say JWest, I told the same thing in 10th Grade Civics/Government class and I remember thinking that it was a great way to do things.

    Do you still believe this is how it actually works?.. What really happens? If you do would/could you please give me a recent (last 10 - 15 years) example? I'd like to get some of my youthful naivety back.
  • joeaudio
    "Do something that congress doesn’t like and the money stops. This is how our government works."

    jwest,
    Do you honestly believe this? OMFG.
    You're right that this is how it's SUPPOSED to work, but there's a nasty thing called politics that interferes.
    Unfortunately. BTW this reflects poorly on both Rs and Ds, not one or the other.
  • jwest
    Do you honestly believe this?

    Yes. Yes I do.

    This method work especially well when the subject is opposed by the party not in power in the executive branch. If not for the power to end/stall/reduce funding, what good is congress?
  • EEllis
    SteveK
    It doesn't have to happen because we know it could. Pelosi starts to raise hell and say she is going to raise hell if they do this and then they don't do it because they are afraid to piss off a powerful member of congress. They only approved the use of waterboarding on three people. The idea that they wouldn't do without it if Pelosi raised hell is debatable. The idea that Pelosi was worried that so close to 9/11 she wouldn't get reelected if she was soft on terrorist is very likely. If she got a full briefing and kept her mouth shut then how can she know accuse cia or military of criminal activity? I mean lawyers said ok, congress knew and said nothing, if it was that clear cut then something is wrong. If not then Nancy shouldn't of got up on a soapbox.
  • What a sad time for this country. Military service was once an honorable undertaking and a positive career builder for young people. Look at it now. Soldiers trained to and ordered to humiliate and degrade teen soldiers (yes, 15 year olds!), naked, cold and alone, chained, urinated and defecated on, beaten and nearly drowned. I would NEVER allow or encourage my child or any other to aspire to join a service that would lead them into outright sadism and depravity. Parents, keep them out of the military now. It can turn them into the next generation of sadistic sex offenders. Now how sad is that?

    None of the Pelosi distractions mean anything to me. Neither she nor any other legislator had any role in DECIDING or ORDERING that misconduct. And jwest, cutting off funding for the CIA is NOT a viable way for the opposition party to stop these practices, even if they could have done so, which they could not, especially without disclosing the reasons why. It's also completely lame to suggest Pelosi or others should have broken national security laws by disclosing the content of top secret briefings. And CS, we have no knowledge whether or not Pelosi "refused" to sign Harman's letter.

    So what I'm reading here from the right is they excuse the depravity that their team inserted into military service but want Dem legislators investigated for not breaking federal law to try to stop it.

    As for the CIA lying, it's already proven. They claimed to have "repeatedly" briefed Pelosi and others. Not true. Provably not true. Yes, let's investigate. Let's prosecute. Let a court decide if there's sufficient evidence to indict and if so, to convict. That's how American law works.
  • AustinRoth
    GD - go fuck yourself.

    My daughter joined the Navy less than a month ago. She did not join to learn "outright sadism and depravity", nor to become a "sadistic sex offender" - she joined to serve her county honorably, a country she loves, and you obviously hate.

    What is sad and pathetic is America-haters such as yourself spilling your vileness towards people, our Armed Services members, who have more honor, patriotism, and true valor than sick little ... like yourself ever did have, or ever will.
  • Back at you AR. Look at the Abu Ghraib photos again. Depraved, sadistic, sick sick sick. You're one of those who has defended that kind of perversion, so I'm not surprised by your comment.

    I love this country, a country that stands against sadism and depravity and torture and has fought valiantly for the international laws requiring decency in treatment of prisoners.

    You apparently do not stand against those things and now defend the same twisted tactics for which we have prosecuted others.

    Sorry to hear about your daughter. I hope Obama succeeds in assuring that she is never ordered to do those things, and that those who ordered them in the past are punished as a warning to others that even in the treatment of our enemies, we have morals, ethics and the rule of law. America is made up mostly of decent people. Those things are not decent.

    By the way, how would you feel if your daughter were a prisoner in one of those pictures? How about if she was the one holding the leash? Like that image? How patriotic.
  • joeaudio
    jwest,

    " what good is congress?"

    I often wonder about that. The Founders designed a beautiful system, but we are often poorly represented by those in Congress, whose greed and lust for power is more important to them than serving the Constitution or the people they are supposed to represent.
  • kathykattenburg
    You can investigate torture policies AND investigate whether or not the Speaker of the House was lying about it and then tarring the CIA with her accusations.

    Of course you can, so let's have at it.
  • kathykattenburg
    If she got a full briefing and kept her mouth shut then how can she know accuse cia or military of criminal activity?

    I don't know what you mean by "full briefing," but regardless of what she was told or not told in the briefing, it doesn't affect the criminality of the acts themselves.

    We need to see the CIA's notes of those meetings -- but if they contradict what Pelosi has said, that still doesn't prove anything, because Pelosi was not permitted to take notes during the meeting. None of the members of Congress who were briefed were allowed to take notes. The briefers did not want them to have records of what was said, to be able to compare their notes or talk to anyone else about them. So if only one side is allowed to take notes, and there's a contradiction or an inconsistency, by what measure of fairness do we give the benefit of the doubt to the side that forbade the other side to take notes?
  • kathykattenburg
    Nancy got caught lying red-handed ...

    So? What does that have to do with the criminality of torture?
  • kathykattenburg
    Dems are trying to abdicate any and all responsibilities for things they knew and at the least did not contest.

    Nancy Pelosi has called for a Truth Commission. Other Democrats have also called for investigations. Liberals and Democrats both inside and outside Congress have said they are willing to go wherever the facts lead. I have seen many liberal or left-leaning bloggers state outright that they are perfectly fine with holding Pelosi and other congressional Democrats responsible if an investigation shows they were complicit in torture. I have not seen any Republicans, in Congress or in the blogosphere, say they want everyone who planned, justified, and ran the torture program to be held responsible.

    I think it's Republicans who are trying to avoid responsibility, not Democrats.
  • kathykattenburg
    The whole reason congress is briefed on what the CIA is doing is so they can cut off funding if they disagree.

    In the instance of the CIA's torture program, however, Congress as a whole was not briefed. Only key members of the House and Senate intelligence committees were briefed. That's just a handful of people. Actually, maybe less than a handful.

    No one needs to disclose anything. It’s all done behind closed door.

    jwest, are you out of your mind? Congress cuts off funding for a program and no one knows that it happened, or which program was defunded, or why?

    Do something that congress doesn’t like and the money stops. This is how our government works.

    Um, but jwest, Congress has to know that the something is happening before they can decide they don't like it. Congress was not briefed about CIA interrogations policy. Maybe five or six members of Congress were briefed about CIA interrogations policy. Those five or six people were bound by law not to reveal or discuss what was said in those briefings, to anyone who was not in the briefings. "Anyone who was not in the briefings" includes all those other members of Congress who were not briefed.

    How do you imagine Nancy Pelosi and Jane Harman would have cut off funding for the CIA's interrogation program by themselves, without telling anyone else in Congress why they wanted to do so?

    I honestly and truly do not understand what is the confusion about this point. What is it you don't understand?
  • kathykattenburg
    After five voices from the right, not a single one has noticed (let alone addressed) the elephant in the room:
    "She did nothing about it because she signed an agreement not to disclose anything she learned in the briefings..."

    Steve, that's because the voices on the right -- come to that, the right in general -- is NOT reality-based. Their thinking and their arguments are not based on what is factual, true, or possible given objective reality.
  • You can investigate torture policies AND investigate whether or not the Speaker of the House was lying about it and then tarring the CIA with her accusations.

    Of course you can, so let's have at it.


    Then we probably don't disagree as much as the rest of our readers here in the comments seem to believe. I wasn't being sarcastic when I said investigations in to torture, extraordinary actions, et. al. can and should go forward. My only point was that the first source you quoted characterized any questions towards the Speakers statements and actions as being "hypocritical and disingenuous attacks."

    Sure, I'm positive that many Republicans would welcome some distraction, but it doesn't mean that the Speakers actions are above question. I'm not even going so far as to say Pelosi broke the law here. But I have watched a string of video appearances by her on the subject ( on the oh so conservative MSNBC no less) clearly showing how her story has changed and even reversed itself.

    Now, if that was the extent of it, then all we would be dealing with would be a politician lying to the public. I know... I know. Coming up next on TMV News, Scientist reveal that oceans are wet. I wouldn't lose much sleep over it. But the accusations against the CIA and the paper thin excuses for those slanders (which a couple of our more liberal readers have picked up on and tried to use in this thread) were more than a bridge too far. That was really crappy. Not illegal, but it should be politically poisonous to do that. And by the way, for those of you defending, check the Sunday show circuit. Pelosi is already trying to walk back from those accusations, saying she didn't mean to say the CIA, blah blah blah. Make that story number seven out of her on this one.

    She should pack her bags and leave. Her behavior in this affair has been disgraceful, all for the sake of winning a couple inches of turf in the political battleground.
  • DaGoat
    Steve, that's because the voices on the right -- come to that, the right in general -- is NOT reality-based. Their thinking and their arguments are not based on what is factual, true, or possible given objective reality.

    Kathy, it's dismissive and partisan attitudes like yours that gives me hope that fiscal conservatism and individual responsibility can eventually recover. Did you even listen to Obama today? Is that whole "common ground" thing just BS as far as the left is concerned?
  • kathykattenburg
    My only point was that the first source you quoted characterized any questions towards the Speakers statements and actions as being "hypocritical and disingenuous attacks."

    First of all, that is not quite what the source (Think Progress) said. Here is the exact quote again:

    For weeks, conservatives have been launching hypocritical and disingenuous attacks on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) regarding her level of knowledge of the Bush administration’s torture program.


    "Launching hypocritical and disingenuous attacks," and "characterizing any question towards the Speaker's statements and actions AS attacks" do not mean the same thing.

    And the first phrasing is accurate.

    Sure, I'm positive that many Republicans would welcome some distraction, but it doesn't mean that the Speakers actions are above question.

    I don't believe anyone has said that the Speaker's actions are above question. But the attention that is being paid to how much Pelosi knew and when she knew it and what she should have done, compared with the attention being paid to the actual war crimes that people are arguing over how much she knew, is truly bizarre. At least it is if you assume that most people think war crimes should be prosecuted.

    I'm glad you're not going so far as to say that Pelosi broke the law, because, with the information we have now, there is really no basis for anyone to think that. And I can't understand why Pelosi and her colleagues falling down on their oversight duties, as reprehensible as that might be (assuming they had a meaningful choice, which is a large assumption), overshadows and is so much more horrifying and contemptible than actually coming up with that list of torture techniques and slicing and dicing the law to try and make it fit what they wanted to do.

    She should pack her bags and leave. Her behavior in this affair has been disgraceful, all for the sake of winning a couple inches of turf in the political battleground.

    I'm sorry, Jazz, but that is extraordinarily bizarre. Truly. I have never been a Nancy Pelosi fan, but how anyone can characterize her behavior as "disgraceful" and say she should "pack her bags and leave" is beyond me when many of the same people who actually authorized and justified torture are still employed by the C.I.A.; when Jay Bybee is a federal judge one level below the Supreme Court; when John Yoo is a professor of constitutional law at one of the most prestigious public universities in the country, AND has been given a monthly column at the Philadelphia Inquirer.

    There's something really wrong with that, and I think you should think about it.
  • Say, Jazz, you might want to add to your TMV news flash: spies lie. I was pretty surprised too by your statement about Pelosi "packing her bags". Maybe she is trying to walk a public approval tight rope of defending herself weakly, then more strongly, then retreating for fear of being branded 'soft on terror' for impugning the integrity of the mighty CIA. But you know, we have legislators who have actually committed crimes; not just made some accusations against bureaucrats. Full stop.

    Now, you refer to "paper thin excuses for those slanders (which a couple of our more liberal readers have picked up on and tried to use in this thread)."

    Is it slander to say the CIA is wrong about their briefings? Let's see. The CIA said they briefed Congress "repeatedly." Bob Graham said oh yeah? What dates? They specifically said they had briefed Graham 4 times. Oops. Bob Graham is a notorious note taker and his notes are in the U of FL library. Three of the four briefings never took place. The CIA lied. Or at the least, the CIA was wrong. Now THEY'RE backtracking; all the way back. They say "Graham is correct." Should they "pack their bags" and leave in shame? Maybe they were lying, maybe they were just shabby record keepers. But there is no doubt they were WRONG.

    And what about that Panetta disclaimer? He pushes back on Pelosi, saying the CIA stands by their version. *Then* he repeats the very lawyerly disclaimer that they're not sure of their version. Remember? "This information, however, is drawn from the past files of the CIA and represents [memorandums for the record] completed at the time and notes that summarized the best recollections of those individuals. In the end, you and the Committee will have to determine whether this information is an accurate summary of what actually happened."

    The "notes" he refers to, we now know, were compiled years later, and may well be mistaken, as they surely were in Graham's case.

    Oh, by the way, one week after the CIA claims it told Pelosi about waterboarding (Graham backs her claim that it was never mentioned), the CIA gave their NIE claiming certainty about WMD. Again, whether the CIA was lying or spectacularly incompetent, they were WRONG. And that lie or incompetence led us to war. I really don't see how you get all indignant now about someone "slandering" the CIA.

    Yes, let's investigate. All of it.
  • SteveK
    GreenDreams said: "Say, Jazz, you might want to add to your TMV news flash: spies lie..."

    It seems that Jazz has gone on to a new post without taking the time to reply to the points and questions you have raised... Not worth his time it seems.

    Jazz, your non-reply speaks volumes.
  • JSpencer
    Looks like the moonbats have taken over this formerly balanced blog. Nancy got caught lying red-handed and only you froth-mouthed libtards either cannot or refuse to comprehend this basic fact. - daveinboca

    Looks like the only one here frothing is you Dave. Get a grip.
blog comments powered by Disqus
© 2005-2009 The Moderate Voice | Site design by Elegant Themes | Site customization, hosting, and security by Enxit Group, LLC