Chuck
Hagel Mauled in Bizarro World of US Senate
Juan Cole; public intellectual, prominent blogger, essayist and professor of history. (photo: Informed Comment)
By Juan Cole, Informed Comment
01 February 13
he confirmation hearing in the Senate for Chuck Hagel, President Obama’s nominee for Secretary of Defense, was painful to watch because it displayed the tomfoolery, pretense, self-righteous know-nothingism, and embarrassing lack of contact with reality that dominate the landscape of America’s broken democracy. It was like watching a Nebraska ordinary Joe set upon by circus freaks– a phalanx of moral midgets, stalking cat-men, vicious lobster boys and ethical werewolves.
Those who regretted that Hagel seldom stood his ground, often just deflected persnickety questions, and sometimes was made to recite the catechisms of Neoconservative orthodoxy, should remember that what is important in Washington is willingness to conform orally, regardless of what one actually believes or how one acts. Hagel might agree to look like he is being pushed around by his former colleagues, for the sake of their face and his. He won’t agree actually to be pushed around once he is in office.
Ted Cruz, a Texas tea partier who probably won’t be
there after Texas turns blue in a few years, tried to carry out a Fox News-style ambush of Hagel. He
played a 2009 Aljazeera interview of Hagel on the issue of nuclear disarmament.
At one point a caller
called in from London with a rambling statement, who made an argument that
there is a double standard, with the US and its allies free from international
law on things like possessing and using nuclear weapons, whereas other
countries are held to stricter standard. He said that this unequal application
of the law was clear in that Omar al-Bashir, the president of Sudan, had been
convicted of war crimes in Darfur by the International Criminal Court, but
Israeli leaders, who had committed war crimes against the Palestinians, had
been held harmless. He went on rambling, complaining about alleged war crimes
the Sri Lankan government committed against the Tamil Tigers, then the host
asked him for a question and to finish up. When Hagel responded, he began by
saying he agreed with the caller’s point. It is obvious to me that he was
agreeing that there had been a double standard, and he later said it should be
overcome with regard to nuclear disarmament by the US and Russia taking the
lead to reduce stockpiles. The caller had a thick accent and it wasn’t even
clear that Hagel understood everything he said in his rant, much less meant to
agree with it. Is Cruz saying that Hagel was agreeing about Sri Lanka, too?Cruz insisted that Hagel should have disagreed with the caller about Israel having committed war crimes, given that Jews were victims of war crimes. Cruz is a truly bright and energetic man, with a Princeton education, who clerked for Rehnquist. He knows very well that he is lying about Hagel. And he knows that Israel is guilty of plenty of war crimes. He managed to make Hagel deny this obvious fact, however. Cruz’s performance underlines the importance of Christian Zionism in reinforcing the crackpot conviction in the US senate that it is impossible ever to say anything slightly negative about Israeli policy (the only country in the world so exempted).
Ironically, Cruz’s implausible grandstanding
occurred on the same day when, as the New York Times headline put it, “U.N. Panel Says Israeli
Settlement Policy Violates Law “
In fact, a British court issued an arrest warrant for Tzipi Livni for
her role in launching the attack on Gaza in 2008-9, and it is not clear
that she can travel to the UK without fear of arrest. The charge, Senator Cruz?
War crimes.
Ah, and then there is
Lindsey Graham, the Red Queen of the Senate (who is the essence of the pedantic
governess and asks through-the-looking-glass questions like: “Divide a loaf by
a knife: what’s the answer to that?”).
Graham wanted to know why Hagel voted against the 2007 senate
resolution declaring the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps a
terrorist organization.
The reason that was a
dumb resolution is that terrorism is defined in the US civil code as the
deployment of violence by a non-state actor against civilians for political
purposes. Since the Revolutionary Guards are a kind of Iranian national guard,
they are not a non-state actor. They are therefore not a terrorist
organization. They may deploy terror, but it is state terror. (The senate also
said they were terrorists because they were guilty of killing US troops in
Iraq. First of all, there is no evidence that is true. Second of all, killing
troops is not terrorism, it is an act of war). Graham’s position is illogical
and makes a hash of any reasonable definition of terrorism.Graham wants to pile on illogical charges against Iran and its institutions in order to force the US into a war on that country, which is 3 times more populous and much more geographically vast than Iraq. Because, like, Iraq went so well, I guess.
Then the Red Queen went after Hagel for having said that the “Jewish lobby”
intimidates people. He demanded, “Name one person here who’s been
intimidated by the Jewish lobby . . . Name one dumb thing we’ve been goaded
into doing due to pressure by the Israeli or Jewish lobby.”
Hagel said he didn’t have
anyone in mind.The irony, of course, is that Graham is himself part of the Israel lobby, and there he was intimidating Hagel for complaining about having been intimidated!
All the congressmen and senators know that the
Israel lobby intimidates them or tries to, on a daily basis. Ernst Hollings
complained, “you can’t have an Israeli policy other than what AIPAC gives you
around here.” AIPAC is the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the de
facto foreign agent of the Israeli government in the United States, which gets
away with not having to register as such because it has bought off or
intimidated Congress. 22-year Illinois veteran of congress Paul Findley has
also complained about this. And, just read former AIPAC lobbyis M.J. Rosenberg regularly to get the inside scoop on how AIPAC
pressures Congress, including against the president. As Graham knows, there
is a whole book by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt about the Israel lobbies,
which will soon be supplemented by further publications documenting all the … intimidation.
The Israel lobbies work by threatening to give money to a rival in the next
primary or election. Since races in many districts are close, and since there
is no wealthy, organized lobby for the Palestinians or Arabs, it is crazy for a
US politician to risk AIPAC’s ire. AIPAC doesn’t always win, and recognizing
its effectiveness as a lobby is not to buy into the bigotted notion of Jews
secretly controlling Gentiles. In fact, denying that the Israel lobby exists is
not only willful blindness, it is itself a form of anti-Semitism, since such a
denial depicts Jews as inherently unlike Cubans, Armenians, Indians, Latinos
and all the other ethnic groups that lobby Congress.
The long arm of these lobbies is something about
which I have a little personal experience.
Senator John McCain then
attacked Hagel for having predicted that the surge or troop escalation ordered
by George W. Bush would be a huge mistake. The Iraq War was fought under false
pretenses (that the Saddam Hussein regime was two years from having a nuclear
weapon and had big stores of biological and chemical weapons, and that it was
behind the 9/11 attacks and trained al-Qaeda in the use of chemical weapons–
all of these pretexts for war being wretched, bald-faced lies). The Neocons
promised McCain’s committee a short inexpensive war of $60 billion, over within
6 months. Instead it turned into a quagmire that cost thousands of American lives
and some 33,000 badly injured veterans who lead diminished lives. McCain was a
cheerleader for the war, then a skeptic, then a cheerleader, and now he has
decided that the troop escalation was a success.If the ‘surge’ was a success, it was a minor one in a vast and pockmarked terrain of abject failure. But there are plenty of reasons to question the David Petraeus narrative of a successful surge. In Baghdad, the horrible civil war that killed tens of thousands in 2006 gradually subsided through 2007 mainly because the Shiites ethnically cleansed Sunnis from mixed neighborhoods. The US troop escalation was complicit here because it disarmed the Sunni neighborhood militias first, exposing them to night-time attacks by the still-armed Mahdi Army and Badr Corps. I have talked to Iraq vets who were on the ground and saw this process unfold with their own eyes; they say everyone knew that was what was happening. The turning of Baghdad into a largely Shiite city, while it tamped down violence, could hardly be called a big success (it had been about 50/50 Sunni and Shiite in 2002 before the Americans came).
The other element of the surge was the creation in
al-Anbar Province and elsewhere of “Awakening Councils” or “Sons of Iraq,”
essentially clan-based Sunni Arab militias willing to fight the Sunni-Muslim
radicals who had asserted themselves in the Sunni Arab center-west of the
country. Shiite prime minister Nouri al-Maliki opposed this program, which
resulted in 80,000 armed Sunni militiamen, as a threat to the future public
order in Iraq. After the violence began subsiding somewhat, he declined to bring more than about 9,000 of the Sons of Iraq
into government security forces. The others were either cut off altogether or
given small stipends. Some were hunted down and killed by the Muslim radicals,
once they no longer had the protection of being in an organized unit. Some of
the Sons of Iraq had been terrorists in 2005-2006, and al-Maliki refused to
amnesty them, having them arrested and tried.
The big news from Iraq these days is precisely the continued
discontent of Sunni Arab Iraqis, some of them (like the Abu Rishas) from
families that had joined the Awakening Councils. They are demanding increased
stipends for their service under Petraeus, demanding that hundreds of Sunni
Arab youth arrested arbitrarily be released, demanding that the stigmatization
of Sunni Arabs and the barring of them from public service be ended, and
demanding that the pro-Iran, pro-Syrian, Shiite Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki,
step down.
So the “surge” didn’t
account for the decline of violence in Baghdad, and its Awakening Councils
created as many problems as they solved, and created expectations that continue
to roil Iraqi politics and perhaps threaten a break-up of the country.
I’d say Chuck Hagel got
it about right.https://jhaines6.wordpress.com/2013/02/01/chuck-hagel-mauled-in-bizarro-world-of-us-senate/
1 comment:
Libtard bull. Jhaines can rot in her liberal new age tomfoolery and slander those who are vetting another of Obozo's commies. This broad thinks Obozo is a good guy and will make any excuse she can to make him look good, when all you have to do is look at what he DOES. Look at the anti-Constitution garbage that clown does on a daily basis. Sick.. sick... sick New age crock o crap.
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