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"Safe At Home" < The Kerry Campaign from Mark's Dad, 60's New Leftist and Soros advisor >
Center For American Progress ^ | October 21, 2003 | Morton H. Halperin

Posted on 10/15/2004 7:41:31 AM PDT by Helms

"Safe At Home"- Sound Familiar?: "Safe at Home, Respected in the World. The Harvard Halperin's , UN advocate, 60's New Leftist and Soros-Kerry Adviser ?

And Frank Gaffney letter calling Halperin's views "Extreme"

by Morton H. Halperin

October 21, 2003

President Bush got one thing right: the greatest threat to American security is a rogue state providing a terrorist group with weapons of mass destruction and the means to deploy them to the United States. Unfortunately, almost everything he has done since Sept. 11 has made this problem worse rather than better. While some progress has been made on cooperation on intelligence and money laundering, the Administration has taken giant steps away from its initial post-9/11 strategy which involved working collaboratively through the United Nations.

This sorry record is clear not only in Afghanistan, which stands on the brink of chaosand in North Korea, which moves ever closer to developing nuclear weapons; and in Iraq but also in the United States. NOTE- Ethical equivalency

While John Ashcroft’s Department of Justice focuses on acquiring more power to conduct surveillance, every outside group that has studied this problem agrees that the key problem is the culture of the FBI and the CIA and that we need to strengthen border protections and key facilities —starting with the inspection of incoming cargoes for radioactive material. Little if any progress toward those goals has been made, and America is less safe for it today. NOTE- Kerry campaign echo

New institutions with their own career services and raisons d’être might work better than shifting around the same old structures. This is why the Air Force and the CIA came into being during the Cold War, and why the Special Forces Command was created by Congress in 1987. Urgently needed today are institutions to combat international terrorism at home and abroad and to deal with the problems that follow a military intervention in a failed state such as Iraq.

We need a new agency that has both law-enforcement and intelligence functions at home and abroad, but whose jurisdiction is limited to dealing with international terrorist groups targeting Americans. When dealing with such terrorists, there is no meaningful distinction between intelligence and law enforcement, as Al-Qaeda and other such groups operate within a complex and well-financed global network. Such a U.S. agency would indict potential terrorists as criminals and prevent terrorist acts.

At the same time, America also needs a new agency for nation building. In Iraq—as in Bosnia, Kosovo, Haiti and East Timor—the collapse of the existing authority created an immediate need for an international police force to provide stability and to help create an indigenous police force and criminal-justice system. The United States inevitably relies on its military to perform these tasks for which it has no training and capability; it does it reluctantly and poorly and comes away more reluctance than ever to intervene in similar situations.

A new civilian agency reporting to the Secretary of State should be explicitly charged with this set of tasks, endowed with the necessary resources and mandated to plan as intensively as the military before our military intervenes. It would be critical to create a robust, standby police capability with a small, permanent staff and a larger number of reservists who, like those in the military reserves and National Guard, would train on weekends and over the summer and be sent abroad in times of crisis to carry out police functions.

In addition to creating these two new agencies, the U.S. needs to work with other nations to invigorate an international regime designed to deter states from developing weapons of mass destruction and providing them to terrorist groups. This regime must be global, and the rules must apply to all nations, not simply those the United States designates as rogue or “evil.” Note the sense of equivalency as the US is lumped into the mix

The United States must recognize that it needs the cooperation of the rest of the world to bring rogue states back into the community of nations, to help failed states mend so that they do not become havens for terrorists, and to build a more open and just world so that states do not become breeding grounds for terrorism. This begins by accepting that the UN Security Council must have the lead role in helping Iraqis to regain control of their own country, NOTE- the corrupt body, OFF program>by working cooperatively with other states to find solutions to security problems, and by assisting nations that are on the path to democracy.

None of this argument is based on altruism. It is a straightforward claim that the administration’s policies to date have failed to make us safer, and that a new approach is needed to prevent rogue states from sharing weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery with terrorists who would wish us harm.

This article is adapted from an article prepared for The American Prospect special conference issue, published in conjunction with the October 28-29 New American Strategies for Security and Peace sponsored by The Center for American Progress, the Century Foundation and The American Prospect.

Morton H. Halperin is a Senior Vice President and Director of Fellows at the Center for American Progress.

http://www.americanprogress.org/site/pp.asp?c=biJRJ8OVF&b=9388


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: halperin; mortonhalperin
Kerry's Campaign Slogan: Safe At Home belongs to Mort Halperin, The rest is typical thinking of the Left; ie the UN and Bush slurs.

The Case Against the Halperin Nomination [Second Edition]

Expanded Readings From Morton Halperin's Collected Works and Rebuttals to Halperin's Defense

2 September 1993

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2 August 1993

The Honorable Bill Clinton

President of the United States

The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20500

Dear Mr. President:

Press reports indicate that you have decided personally to review some of Morton Halperin's more controversial writings before deciding whether to proceed with his nomination to the position of Assistant Secretary of Defense for Democracy and Human Rights. I commend you for this prudent step and am confident that it will spare your Administration unnecessary anguish and political costs.

The reason for this confidence is that my colleagues at the Center for Security Policy and I find it inconceivable that you would willingly associate yourself with the highly controversial views Mr. Halperin has held and publicly advocated for many years. These include positions on: national security policy, the U.S. intelligence community, American commitments to our allies, the classification of information, and the conduct of counter-terrorist activities, among many others -- positions that can only be described as extreme.

Mr. Halperin's recorded policy attitudes are, in short, ones we believe you will not easily be able to defend, nor should you have to. In the hope that we might assist you in reaching a similar conclusion, we have prepared the attached compendium of a number of Mr. Halperin's writings for your review -- and that of Members of the U.S. Senate who would have to consider his nomination should it go forward.

Sincerely,

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.

Director

1 posted on 10/15/2004 7:41:31 AM PDT by Helms
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To: Helms

2 posted on 10/15/2004 9:17:38 AM PDT by Caleb1411
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Kerry's Campaign Slogan: Safe At Home belongs to Mort Halperin, The rest is typical thinking of the Left; ie the UN and Bush slurs. The Case Against the Halperin Nomination [Second Edition] Expanded Readings From Morton Halperin's Collected Works and Rebuttals to Halperin's Defense
isn't this the father of the guy (Halperin) from ABC News who wrote the memo telling employees to hold Bush more accountable for exxagerations?
3 posted on 10/15/2004 9:40:31 AM PDT by jer2911tx (john kerry doesn't like rice, or as he calls it 'weapons of ass destruction')
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To: jer2911tx

Yep. The fruitcake doesn't fall too far from the tree...


4 posted on 10/15/2004 10:02:29 AM PDT by talleyman (Caviar emptor (a warning from the sturgeon general))
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To: TaxRelief; Huber; Howlin; Constitution Day
Where part of Kerry's campaign slogan was derived and where Mark Halperin was also derived. Very scary.
5 posted on 10/15/2004 10:07:38 AM PDT by Helms (Note- Recent Polling May Not Include The Significant Military Vote Which Is Heavily Pro Bush)
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