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The Price Of Loyalty (A must read from Jonathan Alter)

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Nightwing Donating Member (489 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-30-05 07:20 AM
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The Price Of Loyalty (A must read from Jonathan Alter)
Nov. 7, 2005 issue - The posthumous purple heart rested near the folded American flag on the modest dining-room table of his parents' home in Cleveland. Edward (Augie) Schroeder, a Boy Scout turned Marine, was killed along with 13 other soldiers on their fifth trip into Al Hadithah, Iraq, to clean out insurgents. Their fifth trip. "When you do something over and over again expecting a different result," Augie's grieving father, Paul, told me, "that is the definition of insanity." As the death toll of American soldiers in Iraq reached 2,000 last week, Paul Schroeder concluded that the military had not sent enough troops to Iraq to do the job properly and that the president was incompetent: "My son's life was thrown away, his death was a waste." Then, noting that he shared a birthday with his boy, he broke down and said he would not be able to celebrate his own birthday anymore.

The Schroeders were on my mind as I watched Patrick Fitzgerald's skillful press conference. He laid out the seriousness of blowing the cover of CIA operatives. He explained clearly why Scooter Libby had been indicted. He even struck a blow against rogue prosecutors (like Kenneth Starr, though he didn't mention him) whose staffs routinely leak to the media in violation of the law. But Fitzgerald was wrong on one count, at least metaphorically. "This indictment is not about the war," he said. Oh, yes, it is.

According to Fitzgerald, Libby had conversations with at least seven other government officials about Joseph and Valerie Wilson that he did not disclose to the grand jury. Why were top White House officials and Vice President Cheney so concerned about an obscure former diplomat like Wilson? Because he had the temerity to offer public dissent. By showing how evidence of Saddam's WMDs had been cooked, Wilson undermined the very reason Augie Schroeder and the rest of the U.S. military went to war. He was more than "fair game," as Karl Rove called him. He was a mortal threat.

This has been the Bush pattern. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill presciently says a second tax cut is unaffordable if we want to fight in Iraq—he's fired. Bush's economic adviser Larry Lindsey presciently says the war will cost between $100 billion and $200 billion (an underestimate)—he's fired. Army Gen. Eric Shinseki presciently says that winning in Iraq will require several hundred thousand troops—he's sent into early retirement. By contrast, CIA Director George Tenet, who presided over two of the greatest intelligence lapses in American history (9/11 and WMD in Iraq) and apparently helped spread "oppo ammo" to discredit the husband of a woman who had devoted her life to his agency, receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

<snip>

The good news about the president's bad week is that even his conservative backers are no longer willing to keep quiet when they think he's wrong. And Fitzgerald was so impressive that the normal White House response—to savage the critic—was not an option this time. So Karl Rove survives, but the fear he stoked is easing. Four years after September 11, we're beginning to get our democracy back.

More at: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9865068/site/newsweek/
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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-30-05 07:56 AM
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1. i hope i'm alive long enough to read what
history will say about the 00 and 04 elections and the bush admin.

i suspect college courses will taught re: the corruption and theft.

i wonder if a truly in depth job can be done on the supremes and what went on with them.
with the indictments of libby and revelations about rove growing every day -- what do they think?
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AussieDave Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-30-05 08:11 AM
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3. Before Rehnquist took the long downward escalator ride
to his eternal reward, I hope he met the soldiers and Marines who have died in Iraq because of his actions in 2000 - actions have consequences and I don't think even he realized how catastophic his court's infamous Bush V Gore decision/theft would turn out to be.
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teryang Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-30-05 08:00 AM
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2. We're beginning to get our democracy back?
Don't I wish that that were true.
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