[Mb-civic] The Cave Man Speaks - Howard Kurtz - Washington Post Op-Ed

William Swiggard swiggard at comcast.net
Fri Jan 20 10:48:14 PST 2006


The Cave Man Speaks

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 20, 2006; 8:42 AM

I began noticing in recent months that administration officials were 
taking credit for the lack of another terrorist attack on America since 
9/11.

This, I thought, was risky business, since no matter how much security 
is beefed up, no many how many terrorists are investigated, there is no 
way in an open society to block every conceivable attack. And if 
administration officials want to boast that their policies have kept 
America safe, are they willing to accept the blame if another attack 
takes place?

Cheney was at it again yesterday, calling the safety record "no 
accident." Maybe. Maybe the administration's efforts have contributed to 
the four-year lull, or maybe we've been lucky, or some combination thereof.

Another one of those Osama tapes surfaced on al-Jazeera yesterday, as 
you undoubtedly know, and from his undisclosed cave he claimed that 
there have been no attacks because al-Qaeda is still making 
preparations. This may be little more than bluster, since the terrorist 
organization has obviously suffered serious damage. And bin Laden is a 
master media manipulator; remember when he put out a tape just before 
the Bush-Kerry election?

But after the bombings in London and Madrid, not to mention the al-Qaeda 
efforts in Iraq, who can really say there won't be another attack on 
U.S. soil?

No matter what the question yesterday, Scott McClellan kept saying we 
have the terrorists "on the run." I hope he's right and that "on the 
run" doesn't turn out to be like Dick Cheney's "last throes" in Iraq. 
Because political bluster isn't going to win this war on terror.

"Al-Jazeera today aired an audiotape from Osama bin Laden in which he 
makes fresh threats against the United States but also offers a 
long-term truce if unspecified 'just' conditions are met," says the Los 
Angeles Times 
<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-011906tape_lat,0,5233956.story?coll=la-home-headlines>. 
"The White House said the intelligence community was analyzing the data 
and said the U.S. would never shrink from pursuing terrorists who 
attacked the country on Sept. 11, 2001."

Osama reads the polls: "The statement noted that American opinion polls 
had shown the nation's desire to withdraw its troops from Iraq and its 
feeling that it is better that Americans 'don't fight Muslims on their 
lands and that they don't fight us on ours,' " says the New York Times 
<http://nytimes.com/2006/01/20/international/middleeast/20tape.html?hp&ex=1137819600&en=b43636cd35e7d5d5&ei=5094&partner=homepage>.

Al-Jazeera said the tape was made last month, and "American intelligence 
and counterterrorism officials speculated that Al Qaeda leaders had kept 
the recording on the shelf, timing its release for maximum propaganda 
value," says the Chicago Tribune 
<http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0601200171jan20,1,5464712.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed>.

The New York Post <http://www.nypost.com/news/worldnews/59342.htm> 's 
banner is "DROP DEAD," and inside: "BUSH: NUTS TO OSAMA'S WHEEZING, 
WHINING BID FOR A TRUCE."

We hope that's clear.

Now for some Beltway politics. The New Republic's Ryan Lizza 
<http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=w060116&s=lizza011906> is, ah, blunt 
about the acting House majority leader:

"Republicans seem oblivious. Given the Democratic strategy on this issue 
-- a laser-like focus on the personalities and specific practices of the 
current crop of Republican investigatees -- it boggles the mind that GOP 
members are about to make Roy Blunt their majority leader. There is a 
reason why Howard Dean was celebrating Blunt's rise Tuesday and why some 
Democrats in the Great Hall yesterday were gleefully joking that they 
hoped to soon add a 'Blunt Reform' plank to their package.

"Think of just about any current scandal involving a Republican in 
Washington and Blunt is at the center of it. To wit:

"Abramoff. Blunt signed three letters to Interior Secretary Gale Norton 
asking her to stop the Choctaw Indians from opening a casino that would 
have competed with the tables of Abramoff's Indian clients. Blunt 
personally met with Abramoff or his fellow lobbyists (the records are 
unclear) when Abramoff was working the Mariana Islands issue. . . . 
Blunt had 'friend of owner status' at Abramoff's Signatures restaurant, 
meaning he ate for free.

"K Street Project. Blunt was DeLay's liaison to K Street -- he was 
DeLay's DeLay.

"Alexander Strategy Group. Blunt was closely associated with the now 
disbanded firm run by ex-DeLay aides who are at the center of the 
Abramoff investigation. A detailed report put together by Public Citizen 
notes that 'Ten of Blunt's biggest contributors have hired the Alexander 
Strategy Group as their lobbying firm' and that the firm did some 
$500,000 in fundraising and consulting work for Blunt.

"Duke Cunningham. Blunt reportedly flew four times on the corporate jets 
of companies run by Brent Wilkes, the defense contractor accused of 
bribing Representative Cunningham with millions of dollars in cash and 
gifts.

"Pay to play. Blunt once mysteriously added a provision beneficial to 
tobacco giant Altria, for whom his wife and son are lobbyists, to a 
Homeland Security bill. (It was removed when it became public.)"

My question is, how many lawmakers have similar records?

In a "GOP Lameness Watch," Washington Monthly's Kevin Drum 
<http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2006_01/008036.php> 
spotlights "what may be the lamest criticism ever of an elected official:

" Republicans mounted a fierce counteroffensive . . . accusing Mr. Reid 
of using his Senate office to prepare political documents.

" 'Does Mr. Reid think that using an official government office for 
political purposes is ethical?' asked Brian Nick, a spokesman for the 
National Republican Senatorial Committee .

"Do Republicans really think they're going to score points by accusing 
Reid of the dastardly sin of using his office to prepare attacks on the 
opposition? Lee Atwater would be ashamed."

Reid, meanwhile, has apologized for putting out a press release -- which 
likens Republicans vowing to stamp out corruption to John Gotti 
promisiong to clean up organized crime--saying the tone was too harsh, 
the Washington Post 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/19/AR2006011903106.html> 
reports today.

Who was Abramoff meeting with at 1600 Penn? Slate's John Dickerson 
<http://www.slate.com/id/2134512/> wants to know:

"Jack Abramoff was the Typhoid Mary of Potomac Fever: He sucked up to 
people in power and showered them with gifts and favors in hopes that 
they would forget who they worked for and think they worked for him. Did 
White House aides succumb? McClellan's argument for not telling us is 
that staff in the executive branch should be allowed to deliberate 
without fear of disclosure. Staffers can't give honest advice if they're 
constantly worried about how the public might react to every meeting 
they might hold. The courts upheld the idea when they rejected attempts 
by both the General Accounting Office and private watchdog groups to sue 
for the records detailing which representatives of which oil, gas, and 
coal companies helped Dick Cheney write the administration's energy policy.

"But like the government car, the 'executive deliberation' perk can be 
abused. In this case, the White House isn't protecting its sensitive 
decision-making process; it's merely shielding itself from 
embarrassment. Congress may not have a legal right to demand records of 
meetings, but under the circumstances, Bush should voluntarily 
relinquish them to the public. Taxpayers may not have a right to sit in 
on every meeting and read every memo, but they should know whether 
Abramoff succeeded in putting his interests ahead of theirs inside the 
White House as well as Congress. The Bush campaign returned Abramoff's 
donations to help remove the stink. But it won't be able to fully 
fumigate until officials let us know who they met with and why."

HuffPost blogger Eric Boehlert 
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eric-boehlert/how-the-press-played-dumb_b_14076.html> 
says the media lost sight of K Street (don't blame us, we work on L Street):

"In the wake of disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff's guilty plea on Jan. 
3, some press outlets did their best, belatedly, to explain the crooked 
lobbying empire Abramoff had built with the help of Rep. Tom DeLay. And 
specifically, some news outlets addressed the K Street Project, the 
DeLay/Abramoff/Santorum/Norquist pay-to-play money machine that's 
playing a pivotal role in the GOP's deepening ethical morass. (Read a 
smart, concise description of the K Street Project here 
<http://thinkprogress.org/2006/01/13/k-street-project/>.) But even then, 
the media's descriptions have often been half-hearted at best. Appearing 
on the Don Imus radio show recently, Newsweek's Evan Thomas mentioned, 
'this thing called the K Street Project,' as if he'd just heard about 
the day before over lunch at The Palm.

"In truth, there's not a serious reporter in Washington, D.C. who for 
the last three years did not know exactly what the K Street Project was. 
(The GOP openly boasted about it.) The K Street Project was, hands down, 
the most important behind-the-scenes development in terms of how 
power/legislation was bought and sold inside the Beltway and represented 
an epic story with endless angles and repercussions. And yet for the 
last three years those same serious MSM reporters participated in a 
virtual boycott of the story, refusing to detail corruption inside the 
GOP. (Curious, because during the Clinton years the press couldn't stop 
writing about alleged Democratic funny money scandals that never 
actually materialized into criminal wrongdoing by prominent Dems.) Only 
in recent weeks, after Abramoff pleaded guilty and DeLay's grip on power 
loosened, have reporters felt confident enough to cross the street -- to 
explain what the K Street Project is.

"And yes, boycott really is the word that described the MSM's previous 
don't-ask/don't-tell policy regarding the K Street Project. It's true 
that on June 10 2002, the Washington Post and the New York Times both 
published articles detailing the creation of the K Street Project. 
(Again, GOP leaders were practically advertising it.) But then the cones 
of silence went up."

At Power Line, John Hinderaker 
<http://powerlineblog.com/archives/012871.php> has a problem with 
yesterday's NYT 
<http://nytimes.com/2006/01/19/politics/19inquire.html?hp&ex=1137733200&en=b2d19138276c4ad4&ei=5094&partner=homepage> 
scoop on the report of the last living independent counsel:

"The New York Times reports on David Barrett's investigation into 
alleged misdeeds by Clinton cabinet officer Henry Cisneros. . . . 
Someone leaked it to the Times. The Times' angle on the story is that 
Barrett's eleven-year investigation exemplifies what went wrong with the 
independent counsel statute, 'an important post-Watergate law.' (So 
important that it has been repealed, to pretty much everyone's relief.)

"What most struck me about the Times story was how they characterized 
the person who leaked Barrett's report to them, thereby enabling them to 
beat most of their competitors to the story:

" A copy of the report was obtained by The New York Times from someone 
sympathetic to the Barrett investigation who wanted his criticism of the 
Clinton administration to be known .

"Isn't that delightful? This particular leaker was no whistle-blower and 
no patriot; just a partisan with an axe to grind. But after the Times 
has printed dozens (hundreds, probably) of stories critical of the Bush 
administration based on leaks by Democratic bureaucrats, we're still 
waiting for the paper to write: 'A copy of the report was obtained by 
The New York Times from someone sympathetic to the Democrats' position 
who wanted his criticism of the Bush administration to be known.'"

Actually, it wasn't someone who wanted Barrett's criticism "known," 
since it would have been known yesterday when the report was released. 
It was someone who wanted the prosecutor's arguments above the fold on 
the Times front page, where it ended up, by giving the paper an exclusive.

Washington Post ombudsman Deborah Howell 
<http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/washpostblog/2006/01/deborah_howell_.html> 
has clarified, but not apologized for, her mistake on Abramoff:

"I've heard from lots of angry readers about the remark in my column 
Sunday that lobbyist Jack Abramoff gave money to both parties. A better 
way to have said it would be that Abramoff 'directed' contributions to 
both parties."

The avalanche of nasty comments about Howell -- calling her a shill, a 
whore and worse -- have prompted washingtonpost.com executive editor Jim 
Brady 
<http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/washpostblog/2006/01/shutting_off_co.html> 
to shut down this site's new comments feature:

"There are things that we said we would not allow, including personal 
attacks, the use of profanity and hate speech. Because a significant 
number of folks who have posted in this blog have refused to follow any 
of those relatively simple rules, we've decided not to allow comments 
for the time being. It's a shame that it's come to this. Transparency 
and reasoned debate are crucial parts of the Web culture, and it's a 
disappointment to us that we have not been able to maintain a civil 
conversation, especially about issues that people feel strongly (and 
differently) about."

CBS's Vaughn Ververs 
<http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/publiceye/main500486.php?author=Vaughn_Ververs> 
weighs in:

"What I saw was certainly aggressive criticism, some off-base, some more 
on-point. There were a lot of attacks on Howell's ability to be an 
ombudsman and on the paper for its reporting. And there were an awful 
lot of calls for Howell to resign or be fired over the issue. (It was 
clear that few of the commenters had a solid grasp of exactly what the 
role of an ombudsman is, or who Howell reports to). . . . [T]he 
discussion was hardly one that could be considered respectful, or even 
civil.

"This unfortunate chain of events leaves everyone in the new media 
landscape in worse position. The Post, laudably, was making an effort to 
engage readers in a dialogue -- just as so many press reformers have 
clamored for. By closing that comment door, they've perhaps taken a step 
backward from trying to be more open in the future.

"More than that, the news audience has been terribly served by a few 
loudmouths incapable of having a rational discussion."

Responding to a negative piece is a political art, but in this column by 
Daily News gossip Lloyd Grove 
<http://www.nydailynews.com/news/gossip/story/383967p-325939c.html>, 
Kerry's guy goes nuclear:

"Sen. John Kerry's flack traded barbs with the author of a soon-to-be 
published GQ mag article claiming that loyal Democrats, especially 
former Kerry aides, wish the once and probably future Presidential 
candidate would just go away.

" 'You read GQ to pick suits and ties, not to pick a 
commander-in-chief,' Kerry's mouthpiece David Wade E-mailed me 
concerning Michael Crowley's hit piece, which claims party activists 
believe the Massachusetts senator 'blew his best chance and that he's 
"delusional," as I repeatedly heard, to think he's still wanted.'

"Wade responded hirsutely: 'As a GQ fashionista would say, the 
magazine's political coverage has the longevity of the Soul Patch and 
the sophistication of The Mullet. I won't lose sleep over the 
inside-the-beltway musings of a reporter too young to shave and the 
Chardonnay-drinking pals he met on the cocktail party circuit.'

"Crowley, who pointed out that he's 33 while Wade is only 30, retorted: 
'David Wade should show more respect for his elders. A juvenile response 
like that is what you get from someone without a real defense. And, by 
the way, maybe if John Kerry understood fashion better, he wouldn't have 
gone on those windsurfing outings, which made his own staff cringe.' "

That kind of response just guarantees that the GQ piece will become a 
must-read among the cognoscenti.

In other news, Amazon is offering a weekly online talk show starring 
Bill Maher 
<http://www.latimes.com/business/custom/cotown/la-fi-amazon19jan19,0,706310.story?coll=la-tot-promo&track=widget>. 
And did anyone know that Martha Reeves 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/19/national/19reeves.html> of Vandellas 
fame is now a member of the Detroit City Council? Was there dancin' in 
the streets?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2006/01/20/BL2006012000543.html?nav=hcmodule
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