Monday, May 06, 2013

Morning Jolt . . . with Jim Geraghty

Happy Seis de Mayo! All at once, it feels like the wheels are coming off the wagon for the Obama administration.
The New White House Line: Maybe We Don't Care About Chemical-Weapons Use After All
Ladies and gentlemen, some unidentified White House official, within our government:
"How can we attack another country unless it's in self-defense and with no Security Council resolution?" another official said, referring to United Nations authorization. "If he drops sarin on his own people, what's that got to do with us?"
I realize that we're all tired of war, that we're tired of being asked to intervene in Arab countries, with their tribal loyalties and factionalism and blood feuds and cycles of revenge and seemingly endless reserves of cruelty and capacity for bloodshed. But if we don't see any purpose or value in attempting to prevent, deter, or punish the use of chemical weapons against civilians, we might as well close up shop. Every two-bit dictator and ruthless regime is watching the international response to Syria or lack thereof, and we've already sent the signal that you can probably escape serious consequence if your use of chemical weapons is hard to prove and on a small scale.
How soon they forget. According to the Times that line was uttered last August, not quite four months after Mr. Obama established his "Atrocities Prevention Board." In a speech on April 23, 2012 he said this at the Holocaust Museum:
And finally, "never again" is a challenge to nations.  It's a bitter truth -- too often, the world has failed to prevent the killing of innocents on a massive scale.  And we are haunted by the atrocities that we did not stop and the lives we did not save.
We may feel like the use of chemical weapons isn't enough to justify airstrikes, a no-fly-zone, a "safe zone" for refugees, or any other steps beyond a sternly-worded United Nations resolution,  but other countries see their own interests in what happens in Syria, and they're acting. Also this weekend:
Israel launched airstrikes into Syria for the second time in three days, said Syria and its allies, targeting what it believes are stores of advanced missiles that could be transferred to the militant group Hezbollah, amid new concerns that the Syrian civil war could widen into broader regional conflict.
Surely a lot of factors go into the decision to use military force, but it's tough to ignore that the Israeli Defense Force suddenly got a lot more active in Syria just a couple of days after Obama said that crossing the red line meant . . . well, that we would "rethink the range of options that are available to us."
The Benghazi Hearings: This Week's Must-See TV
Jake Tapper offers a preview of what we can expect from this week's hearings on Benghazi, and everyone crying "oh, this is a partisan witch hunt" can go sit in the corner.
Greg Hicks, former deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, Libya, told congressional investigators that the State Department internal review of the catastrophe at the mission in Benghazi "let people off the hook," CNN has learned.
The Accountability Review Board "report itself doesn't really ascribe blame to any individual at all. The public report anyway," Hicks told investigators, according to transcript excerpts obtained by CNN. "It does let people off the hook."
The board's report on the Benghazi attack, in which Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed in September, is being reviewed by the State Department's Office of Inspector General.
Rep. Darrell Issa, the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said Sunday on CBS that Hicks will testify Wednesday in a congressional hearing on the deadly attack in Benghazi.
"In our system, people who make decisions have been confirmed by the Senate to make decisions," Hicks told investigators."The three people in the State Department who are on administrative leave pending disciplinary action are below Senate confirmation level. Now, the DS (Diplomatic Security) assistant secretary resigned, and he is at Senate confirmation level.  Yet the paper trail is pretty clear that decisions were being made above his level.
Whom might Hicks be referring to? He specifically mentions Under Secretary of State for Management Patrick Kennedy.
"Certainly the fact that Under Secretary Kennedy required a daily report of the personnel in country and who personally approved every official American who went to Tripoli or Benghazi, either on assignment or TDY (temporary duty), would suggest some responsibility about security levels within the country lies on his desk," Hicks said.
In the interview, conducted on April 11, Hicks also makes clear that he immediately believed the September 11 attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi had been conducted by terrorists, though the White House and other officials in the Obama administration initially suggested that the attack was the result of an out-of-control demonstration against an anti-Muslim YouTube video.
"I thought it was a terrorist attack from the get-go," said Hicks, who was in Tripoli during the attack. "I think everybody in the mission thought it was a terrorist attack from the beginning."
Oh, Hey Look: Mark Sanford's Got the Momentum Down in South Carolina
Chris Cillizza: "Mark Sanford just might win. In conversations with Democratic and Republican strategists closely following the special election set for Tuesday in South Carolina's 1st congressional district, the consensus is that the former governor, not businesswoman (and sister of Stephen Colbert) Elizabeth Colbert Busch, is the candidate gaining momentum in the race's final 48 hours."
South Carolina Democratic Chairman Dick Harpootlian, imploring party activists Friday night to defeat this state's Indian-American governor, predicted next year's Democratic standard-bearer would "send Nikki Haley back to wherever the hell she came from."
Haley was raised in South Carolina and attended college here, but her parents were Sikh immigrants . . .
Asked what he meant by comment, Harpootlian wrote in an email: "Lexington County."
Riiiiiiiight.
Jazz Shaw, over at WarmerThanWarmAir.com, quips, "I realize that Harpootian has found himself in a bit of hot water, and people in such positions tend to scramble to find a way out. But as 'explanations' go, this has to be one of the weakest we've seen in a while. But on the plus side, the next time somebody makes a comment about where President Obama "is from" we can all just turn around and say, 'he was talking about Hawaii, dummy.'"
Democrats Must Be Seriously Wondering Why They Nominated McAuliffe Right Now
With the Virginia governor's race beginning like this, we can expect the Washington Post to go to red alert. Perhaps they'll prove me wrong, but I'll bet their coverage this year will make the previous cycle's coverage of George Allen's "macaca" outburst and McDonnell's thesis look restrained in comparison.
Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II has an early lead over businessman Terry McAuliffe in their race for governor, a new Washington Post poll shows, even as most voters in the commonwealth have yet to engage in the nationally watched contest.
Six months before Election Day, Cuccinelli (R) has a slender 46 to 41 percent edge over McAuliffe (D) among all Virginia voters and a significant 51 to 41 percent lead among those who say they're certain to cast ballots in November. But those numbers may change before then: The poll found that barely 10 percent say they are following the campaign "very closely" and that nearly half of the electorate says they're either undecided or could change their minds.
As far back as early 2010, a group of investors that includes Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe, announced an interest in buying International Paper Co.'s mill in Franklin. At that time, the plant was already in the midst of closing. The investors wanted to convert it into a wood-fired and biomass power plant. A company called Franklin Pellets was eventually formed.
A little more than three years later, there has not been any tangible evidence that Franklin Pellets is any closer to a groundbreaking. Within those three years, ST Paper, a subsidiary of TAK Investments, established a presence at the mill and became operational in 2012. International Paper, after shutting down the mill in spring of 2010, has since repurposed part of the mill, and began producing fluff pulp there last year. Enviva, which also makes wood pellets, identified a location in Southampton County in fall of 2011 and broke ground on its new facility in July 2012. The company anticipates beginning operations by mid-September.
Despite the lack of any publicly visible progress, some of the principals that were contacted, starting with McAuliffe, have assured The Tidewater News that Franklin Pellets can still happen.
"We are in serious negotiations. They are active and very close, and we hope to hear something in the near future," he told the newspaper Monday during a visit to Paul D. Camp Community College.
Over the weekend, McAuliffe tweeted, "We have to make sure we're preparing Virginia's students for tomorrow's jobs."
. . . "So they can then go work in Mississippi!"
ADDENDUM: Dang it, Mom gave her big scoop to the Washington Post this weekend.
Jumping into the 2016 race would mean Cruz is "trying to replicate Barack Obama," said Peggy Geraghty of Hilton Head Island, S.C. "I never agreed with Obama going for president so soon."
Geraghty said she's more interested in Sen. Rand Paul (Ky.), but worries he might not have broad appeal. As for Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.), another name often mentioned for president, she said she'll reserve judgment, but added: "He does have sparkle, so if you have to have the sparkle, I suppose he'd be good."


To read more, visit www.nationalreview.com

No comments: