« previous | MUCK HOME | next »
The Daily Muck
Four former CIA officials find Bush’s claim that he only recently learned of the contents of the NIE report, to be “preposterous.” One of these experts said that such intelligence would have been, as a matter of practice, included in the Presidential Daily Briefings (PDB) , which have occurred daily since last August when the Director of the NIE whispered in Bush’s ear that he had some new info on Iran. (Huffington Post)
Lawyers for Bin Laden’s former driver Salim Ahmed Hamdan have been allowed to argue that Hamdan is a prisoner of war and not an unlawful enemy combatant. Earning a coveted POW status would mean that Hamdan would be removed from the military commission process and that the Geneva Convention would apply to the terms of his detention. However, a military judge has denied him the right to call three “high-value detainees” as witnesses. (LA Times)
What's next for prisoners at Guantanamo Bay? It appears likely that the Supreme Court will rule that the U.S. Constitution protects their legal rights, but there are tougher issues to decide, like whether the current procedure is adequate. Don't expect a decision in Boumediene v. Bush and Al-Odah v. United States until early next summer, just before the court recesses. (McClatchy)
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington has released a report that details the "massive failures and billions wasted at the Department of Homeland Security." The report highlights the $24 billion spent and $178 million wasted on the failed Coast Guard Deepwater program, the $600 million spent on unworkable radiation scanners for the borders, and the $1.3 billion on the USVISIT program, which was never fully implemented. (CREW)
File this in the TPMmuckraker Department of Worst Nightmares: The Federal Aviation Administration has failed to update its runway safety plan in five years, cut funding to its runway safety office and did not appoint a permanent head of the office for two years, and now Congress reports "a high risk of a catastrophic runway collision." The worst runway collision in the nation occurred in 1991, when a passenger jet landed and slammed into a commuter plane on a runway, killing 34 people. (USA Today)
Numerous Iraqi military and law-enforcement officials brought to the U.S. as part of special intelligence and training programs have run away and are seeking asylum in this country or disappeared altogether. Intelligence officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity said nearly a dozen Iraqis fled military training facilities in the U.S., including a brigadier general who went to Canada with his family earlier this year. (Washington Times)
U.S. Special Counsel Scott Bloch has responded to the
We may not be ready for a duel yet, but senators Specter (R-PA) and Reid (D-NV) are engaged in an “affair of honor” in which Reid has called Specter a “puppet” and Specter has asserted that Reid is not fit to lead the Senate. According to Specter, Reid violated Senate Rule XIX, which prohibits the questioning of a senator’s integrity. (CQ Politics)

Comments (5)
TheraP wrote on December 6, 2007 10:13 AM:I just love David Kurtz's comment that, in effect, the NIE shows that the bush folks were so far off the mark on "who" the enemy was that they "invaded the wrong country."
Don't forget Korea, David! They actually did get the bomb!
Talk about people being focused, supposedly, on security - getting it wrong!
I also agree invading was never the right solution. But talk about trying to solve the WRONG problem!
Problem was, bush needed to be a war prez. That meant he needed a war. For some reason he decided to do the war daddy never did do right - in his view. OOOPS!
Alguien wrote on December 6, 2007 11:58 AM:TheraP wrote on December 6, 2007 10:13 AM:
"...Problem was, bush needed to be a war prez. That meant he needed a war. For some reason he decided to do the war daddy never did do right - in his view. OOOPS!"
I have an alternative theory:
whidbeygrl wrote on December 6, 2007 1:05 PM:Bush/Cheney invaded the wrong country because they thought Iraq would be an EASY war. The Iraqi army was considerably weakened by decades of stiff sanctions and Saddam was not too well liked internationally, so they figured nobody would object to see him ousted and hanged.
But above all, don't forget the OIL factor. Does N. Korea have any oil? Any opportunities for Halliburton to get contracts? If not, they are safe form any US invasion.
Iran, on the other hand..."was, is and will be a danger" according to Bush. Why? Simply because Ahmadinejad WANTS TO HOLD ON TO HIS OIL!
Next stop? Probably Venezuela.
Chavez has ruffled enough feathers and they have a LOT of OIL waiting to be drilled... They already tried ousting him in April 2002 so there's a precedent...!
Alguien is on target.
And the next step has been outlined for yeras, in the PNAC, in plain site, on their website.
They identified Syria and...was it Nigeria???....as subjects of attacks.
Israel has pretty much been focusing on Syria.
It is all clear as a bell if you look at a map of the Middle East, of the oil ports and of the pipeline routes.
Matt from Texas wrote on December 6, 2007 1:43 PM:Iran threatens control over the strait of Hormuz which of great strategical importance, as it is the only sea route through which oil from Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, as well as most of United Arab Emirates, can be transported.
Follow the oil is as key as follow the money.
Since whidbeygrl brought it up, how can the implementation of the Project for a New American Century's plans be considered the stuff of conspiracy theory? It's not like the signatories are in a position of power or as if they just signed some kind of petition without reading the words. It seems to me standard operating procedure: deny what you are doing until it is done and then fabricate a timeline that leads to "where we are now". No one will be responsible (that would be a conspiracy), there will just be smug smiles and fat pockets.
TheraP wrote on December 6, 2007 5:18 PM:I accept Alguien's caveats. He's right!
He needed a war. And he needed oil.