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Ian McColgin
11-10-2006, 05:59 PM
I started researching this and found that my favorite local guy, Sean, had written it better than I would have . . .

Published on Friday, November 10, 2006 by CommonDreams.org

Walking Through the Gates of a Well-Laid Trap

by Sean Gonsalves

Stay the course: a played-out phrase that’s become synonymous with the Bush administration bungling of Iraq.

Bogged down in a guerrilla war to which there is no military solution short of genocide, the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld was supposed to be a signal from President Bush that he’s finally listening – that the thumpin’ the Grand Ol’ Party took in the mid-term elections was supposed to signal an end to stay-the-course-ness.

Then he goes and nominates Robert Gates to be the new Defense Secretary. It’s a pretty clever desperation move – a trap really. Rumsfeld is gone. Bush comes off as a lot more humble in his press conference. He’s talking bipartisanship.

But, peep the trap.

Gates and Rummy sip from the same ideological Kool-Aid jug. And if the Dems shoot down the nomination, Bush and wounded Republicans can accuse Democrats of not acting in a spirit of “bipartisanship.” Even worse, should the Democrats not confirm Gates, they would be – are you ready for this – “playing politics” with the all-important position of Secretary of Defense during a war! Voila – the stage for the 2008 presidential race is set.

Brilliant, in a Machiavellian kind of way.

Now, if you really do want to see a change of course, you have to be asking: Gates? Are you serious?

Gates joined the CIA in the late 1960s but left to serve on the staff of the National Security Council in 1974. He went back to the CIA in late 1979 and worked his way up the ranks, serving as deputy director from April 1986 to March 1989.

He was nominated to become the head of CIA in 1987, but withdrew his name after it became clear the Democratically-controlled Senate would reject the nomination because of his role in the Iran-Contra affair.

Gates was nominated again for CIA director in May 1991. The second time was the charm. He was confirmed, despite questions about his alleged role in giving intelligence to Saddam during the Iran-Iraq war.

Two years later, Lawrence Walsh, the independent counsel investigating the Iran-Contra affair, issued his final report. Gates wasn’t indicted but he wasn’t exactly exonerated either. Walsh wrote that he was skeptical of Gates’ repeated denials. “In blunt terms,” journalist James Ridgeway reported for Mother Jones, “Walsh thought Gates was a liar. It was only for a lack of evidence that he eventually gave up trying to indict him.”

It would be worth asking Gates now if he thinks his efforts to overthrow a democratically-elected government in Nicaragua were successful given Daniel Ortega’s recent comeback. And why does he think he’ll fare better with Iraq?

But these aren’t the only questions hanging over Gates. According to investigative reporter and author Robert Parry, who tracked the CIA in the 1980s, Gates was involved in “a special team to push through another pre-cooked paper arguing that the KGB was behind the 1981 wounding of Pope John Paul II,” despite evidence that CIA analysts knew that the claim was bogus.

No surprise, then, that it was on Gates’ watch that the CIA failed to predict the fall of the Soviet Union – probably the most embarrassing moment in CIA history.

This politicizing of intelligence is what led Sen. Tom Daschle in the 1991 confirmation hearings to say: “My questions regarding whether or not Robert Gates participated in the politicization of intelligence culminate in my deep concern about what we can expect from Robert Gates if he is confirmed as the next director of Central Intelligence.

“Again, I ask my colleagues,” Daschle continued, “if Robert Gates cooked the books to advocate the ideological position of the administration while serving as deputy director for intelligence and deputy director of Central Intelligence, is it possible that U.S. intelligence under his guidance will continue to politicize intelligence? My answer is, ‘We cannot afford to take that chance’.”

Rumsfeld was also criticized for distorting reality and only wanting to hear intelligence that suited his narrow ideology.

Bush says he’s in a bipartisan listening mood, but nominates Rumsfeld’s ideological body-double? A well-laid trap for staying the course.

Sean Gonsalves is a Cape Cod Times staff writer and a syndicated columnist. E-mail him at sgonsalves@capecodonline.com

Copyright 2006 Sean Gonsalves

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glenallen
11-10-2006, 06:16 PM
I trust Bush even less now than I did last week.
Last week he was a man-killer lion.
This week he's a gut-shot man-killer lion and we have to stalk him into the tall grass.

Bob Smalser
11-10-2006, 06:39 PM
You expected him to name Noam Chomsky as SECDEF?

JimD
11-10-2006, 06:40 PM
You expected him to name Noam Chomsky as SECDEF?

Well, no. But that would certainly have been changing the course.:D

Donn
11-10-2006, 06:52 PM
Ian (and Sean) probably would have settled for Fat Teddy Bare.

Bob Smalser
11-10-2006, 07:04 PM
Ian (and Sean) probably would have settled for Fat Teddy Bare.

At least Chomsky is both a responsible adult and an original thinker. And even a patriot in his own way.

That's more than many other candidates Nancy Pelosi would have been happy to confirm.

Bruce Hooke
11-10-2006, 07:26 PM
Interesting. For a somewhat different take on the matter, check out this article from the Christian Science Monitor:

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1110/p01s02-usfp.html

Bob Smalser
11-10-2006, 07:39 PM
For a somewhat different take on the matter, check out this article from the Christian Science Monitor:


'Cept it didn't say much. If anything it was upbeat. If they were downbeat they woulda brought up Iran-Contra.


And in this case, a change in style might result in a change in substance. Skilled at building consensus, a realist who adapts to conditions as he finds them, Mr. Gates might find it easier to urge a change in course in Iraq than did Donald Rumsfeld - who was a chief architect of the administration's Iraq policies, after all.



The ideal SECDEF understands strategy and can out think most of his flag officers, yet has the wisdom to gainfully employ the experience they bring to the table.

George Marshall and Caspar Weinberger were two of the most effective.

Osborne Russell
11-10-2006, 07:51 PM
The ideal SECDEF understands strategy and can out think most of his flag officers, yet has the wisdom to gainfully employ the experience they bring to the table.

That stuff is second, at best. To serve the Chimperor you must grasp that domestic political concerns trump all.

BrianW
11-10-2006, 09:14 PM
I trust Bush even less now than I did last week.
Last week he was a man-killer lion.
This week he's a gut-shot man-killer lion and we have to stalk him into the tall grass.

Have ya read Peter Capsticks Death in the long grass...?

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v136/BrianW/stuff/deathinthelonggrass.jpg

Mrleft8
11-10-2006, 09:19 PM
Just another one of daddy's old buddies getting the tap to try to save junior's ass from frying.

glenallen
11-10-2006, 09:36 PM
Have ya read Peter Capsticks Death in the long grass...?

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v136/BrianW/stuff/deathinthelonggrass.jpg

Not yet, Brian. Is it worth reading?

Mrleft8
11-10-2006, 09:44 PM
Heeeeere kitty kitty kitty..... OOOOF GAH! ARRRRGH!!! WAHHHH! BANG BANG! GLUB GLUB...... Some one call a..... Thud.....

BrianW
11-10-2006, 10:25 PM
It's an interesting collection of African safari adventures. Even though it reads as if they are were all Capsticks experiences, the truth seems to be that he collected many of them in the pub.

Meerkat
11-10-2006, 10:56 PM
Already signs of change with the move towards re-ba'athification.

Bob Smalser
11-11-2006, 07:49 AM
Just another one of daddy's old buddies getting the tap to try to save junior's ass from frying.

For the sake of all of us, I hope he can. There's a lot more than just junior's ass on the line.

Mrleft8
11-11-2006, 07:51 AM
You got that right Bob.....

Donn
11-11-2006, 08:29 AM
It's an interesting collection of African safari adventures. Even though it reads as if they are were all Capsticks experiences, the truth seems to be that he collected many of them in the pub.

I've read most, if not all of Capstick's books, and thoroughly enjoyed them. The best, IMO, are his biographies of famous big game hunters. A Man Called Lion, the biography of John Taylor, is one of the best, as is Warrior: The Legend of Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen .

glenallen
11-12-2006, 12:42 PM
I've read most, if not all of Capstick's books, and thoroughly enjoyed them. The best, IMO, are his biographies of famous big game hunters. A Man Called Lion, the biography of John Taylor, is one of the best, as is Warrior: The Legend of Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen .

I'll read some of it on your recommendation, Donn.
By the way, do you have HORTUS THIRD?
I have a copy I'll let go if you want it. Good shape!

Harry Miller
11-12-2006, 01:57 PM
On our national radio show "The Current" I listened to two interviews:
one with Mel Goodman who didn't like Gates - mostly stemming from his involvement in Iran-Contra and a much more positive one from Arnold Vedlitz who works with Gates at Texas A & M. Vedlitz sees Gates as a pragmatist rather than an idealogue. This positive appraisal is echoed today in our local newspaper from which:

[Robert Gates is not just another faceless former director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

He has been a strong critic of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. He has condemned the American isolation of Iran.

He is cut from a different cloth than Bush, Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and the clique of neo-cons that has caused so much havoc in the last five years.

Gates belongs to the pragmatic Republican old guard, which constituted the inner circle of former president G.H.W. Bush.

Gates is a member of the Iraq Study Group, co-chaired by James Baker, who, as Bush Sr.'s secretary of state, built the 1991 Gulf War coalition that overturned Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait.

Unlike Bush, Baker and Gates are proponents of dealing with one's adversaries. "It's not appeasement to talk to your enemies," Baker said recently.

Baker has already been exploring avenues of Syrian and Iranian co-operation in Iraq.]

(editorial by Haroon Siddiqui, the Star's editorial page editor emeritus)

I am quite hopeful.

Lew Barrett
11-12-2006, 03:55 PM
At least Chomsky is both a responsible adult and an original thinker. And even a patriot in his own way.

That's more than many other candidates Nancy Pelosi would have been happy to confirm.


Bob, your wide range never fails to amaze and impress! I wouldn't have pegged you for a guy who listened to Noam Chomsky, much less respected him for his different point of view.

Donn
11-12-2006, 05:03 PM
By the way, do you have HORTUS THIRD?
I have a copy I'll let go if you want it. Good shape!

Thanks, but I have 2 copies. The one I'm using, and a backup copy for when this one falls apart. I've already gone through one copy, and it took over an hour to move all my post-it notes with taxonomy changes from the old copy. I buy used library reference desk copies for $20-25 each.