Posted on 09/24/2006 3:15:07 AM PDT by Alas Babylon!
The Talk Shows
Sunday, September 24th, 2006
Guests to be interviewed today on major television talk shows:
FOX NEWS SUNDAY (Fox Network): Bill Clinton (D-FIRPOTUS); Sen. Lindsey Graham, (R-S.C.); Dr. JoGayle Howard, National Zoo panda doctor.
MEET THE PRESS (NBC): Bill Clinton (D-Arkancide); Afghan President Hamid Karzai; John Danforth, former senator and U.N. ambassador.
FACE THE NATION (CBS): Sen. John McCain, (R-Ariz.)
THIS WEEK (ABC): Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, (R-Tenn.); New Jersey Senate candidates Sen. Bob Menendez, (D-N.J.), and Republican Tom Kean Jr.
LATE EDITION (CNN) : Karzai; Sen. Arlen Specter, (R-Pa.); Rep. Jane Harman, (D-Calif.); Iraqi President Jalal Talibani; Alexander Haig, former secretary of state; Richard Holbrooke, former U.N. ambassador.
Exactly. He must win reelection. Note that Clinton threw in the fact that Allen is running against RWR's Sec of the Navy?
Democrats smell an upset in the Allen/Webb race.
"Kerrey sticking up for Clinton."
Am I the only one who thinks Kerrey looks like he is sick? I noticed the band-aid on his left temple.
Allen was my early favorite, not any more. I hope he wins his Senate race, but he certainly doesn't appear to be Presidential caliber.
I have about the same attitude for Allen as I do for Frist..nice guy but not what this nation needs.
Placemark.
I just watched the first half of slick's interview on FNS and I have to say that "Unhinged" is an understatement! This is must-see TV!
Agreed. Additionally, we cannot give them a pass as much as we've done in the past, and sadly the Bush administration and the RNC does all too often.
I am not saying he is a buffoon, just that's how it looks. That Blitzer thing was really bad.
Yep. He really isn't ready for prime time.
It's going to replay at 6pm EST tonight on FOX.
"why did he let clinton keep refering to Clarks book as a reference to his (clintons) attempts to get Osama?"
"Clarke is all Clinton's got."
Byron York gives some good commentary against Clarke's book and why Clintoon shouldn't have used it as an excuse:
Bill Clintons Excuses
No matter what he says, the record shows he failed to act against terrorism.
By Byron York
I worked hard to try and kill him, former president Bill Clinton told Fox News Sunday. I tried. I tried and failed.
Him is Osama bin Laden. And in his interview with Fox News Chris Wallace, the former president based nearly his entire defense on one source: Against All Enemies: Inside Americas War on Terror, the book by former White House counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke. All Im asking is if anybody wants to say I didnt do enough, you read Richard Clarkes book, Clinton said at one point in the interview. All you have to do is read Richard Clarkes book to look at what we did in a comprehensive systematic way to try to protect the country against terror, he said at another. All you have to do is read Richard Clarkes findings and you know its not true, he said at yet another point. In all, Clinton mentioned Clarkes name 11 times during the Fox interview.
But Clarkes book does not, in fact, support Clintons claim. Judging by Clarkes sympathetic account as well as by the sympathetic accounts of other former Clinton aides like Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon its not quite accurate to say that Clinton tried to kill bin Laden. Rather, he tried to convince as opposed to, say, order U.S. military and intelligence agencies to kill bin Laden. And when, on a number of occasions, those agencies refused to act, Clinton, the commander-in-chief, gave up.
Clinton did not give up in the sense of an executive who gives an order and then moves on to other things, thinking the order is being carried out when in fact it is being ignored. Instead, Clinton knew at the time that his top military and intelligence officials were dragging their feet on going after bin Laden and al Qaeda. He gave up rather than use his authority to force them into action.
Examples are all over Clarkes book. On page 223, Clarke describes a meeting, in late 2000, of the National Security Council principals among them, the heads of the CIA, the FBI, the Attorney General, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the secretaries of State, Defense. It was just after al Qaedas attack on the USS Cole. But neither the FBI nor the CIA would say that al Qaeda was behind the bombing, and there was little support for a retaliatory strike. Clarke quotes Mike Sheehan, a State Department official, saying in frustration, Whats it going to take, Dick? Who the shit do they think attacked the Cole, fuckin Martians? The Pentagon brass wont let Delta go get bin Laden. Hell they wont even let the Air Force carpet bomb the place. Does al Qaeda have to attack the Pentagon to get their attention?
That came later. But in October 2000, what would it have taken? A decisive presidential order which never came.
The story was the same with the CIA. On page 204, Clarke vents his frustration at the CIAs slow-walking on the question of killing bin Laden. I still to this day do not understand why it was impossible for the United States to find a competent group of Afghans, Americans, third-country nationals, or some combination who could locate bin Laden in Afghanistan and kill him, Clarke writes. I believe that those in CIA who claim the [presidential] authorizations were insufficient or unclear are throwing up that claim as an excuse to cover the fact that they were pathetically unable to accomplish the mission.
Clarke hit the CIA again a few pages later, on page 210, on the issue of the CIAs refusal to budget money for the fight against al Qaeda. The formal, official CIA response was that there were [no funds], Clarke writes. Another way to say that was that everything they were doing was more important than fighting al Qaeda.
The FBI proved equally frustrating. On page 217, Clarke describes a colleague, Roger Cressey, who was frustrated after meeting with an FBI representative on the subject of terrorism. That fucker is going to get some Americans killed, Clarke reports Cressey saying. He just sits there like a bump on a log. Clarke adds: I knew he was talking about an FBI representative.
So Clinton couldnt get the job done. Why not? According to Clarkes pro-Clinton view, the president was stymied by Republican opposition. Weakened by continual political attack, Clarke writes, [Clinton] could not get the CIA, the Pentagon, and FBI to act sufficiently to deal with the threat.
Republicans boxed Clinton in, Clarke writes, beginning in the 1992 campaign, with criticism of Clintons avoidance of the draft as a young man, and extending all the way to the Lewinsky scandal and the presidents impeachment. The bottom line, Clarke argues, is that the commander-in-chief was not in command. From page 225:
Because of the intensity of the political opposition that Clinton engendered, he had been heavily criticized for bombing al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan, for engaging in Wag the Dog tactics to divert attention from a scandal about his personal life. For similar reasons, he could not fire the recalcitrant FBI Director who had failed to fix the Bureau or to uncover terrorists in the United States. He had given the CIA unprecedented authority to go after bin Laden personally and al Qaeda, but had not taken steps when they did little or nothing. Because Clinton was criticized as a Vietnam War opponent without a military record, he was limited in his ability to direct the military to engage in anti-terrorist commando operations they did not want to conduct. He had tried that in Somalia, and the military had made mistakes and blamed him. In the absence of a bigger provocation from al Qaeda to silence his critics, Clinton thought he could do no more.
In the end, Clarke writes, Clinton put in place the plans and programs that allowed America to respond to the big attacks when they did come, sweeping away the political barriers to action.
But the bottom line is that Bill Clinton, the commander-in-chief, could not find the will to order the military into action against al Qaeda, and Bill Clinton, the head of the executive branch, could not find the will to order the CIA and FBI to act. No matter what the former president says on Fox, or anywhere else, that is his legacy in the war on terror.
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MDM4N2E1MzU5ZjQ0YTA3YmJiYzEyYjQ2ZDBiNWJlYjE=
It's too similar to the fraudulent Phase II report from the Senate Intelligence Committee, where only two RINOs voted with the Dhimmicrats to push a laughable conclusions totally contrary to the evidence in the report, let alone that which they ignored.
Too bad for their plans that Billy Jeff's melt down on FNS totally overshadowed there carefully laid plans. You could tell that Bob Schieffer was only going through the motions with John McCain and that he knew anything he came up with was going to be ignored, no matter how "juicy."
I agree totally on both.
I was watching ABC, second half, now just because I now have a TV by my computer..I think Allen was provoked but he surely came off poorly whan asked about his "Jewish identity". Not ready for primetime(President) yet.
I used to get Fox an hour ealier and could watch other networks if this thread alerted me that they were worth watching.
McCain's moral posturing is a bit hard to take at any time, though. I'll just read and get the reports here.
I just would expect the toon - with all of his money, and so-called personality - to not be seen like that.
Right. I watched it once. That's enough.
Interesting and could account for part of his outburst.
memories of Bob Kerrey
Kerrey: 'So Am I, (Expletive)' (New video of freep of Sen. Bob Kerrey.)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1176487/posts
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