IRAQ
Bush's 'Closest Friend' Leaves Iraq
Prime Minister Gordon Brown yesterday announced that he will trim
Britain's forces in Iraq nearly in half, withdrawing
2,500 troops by early 2008. "The next important stage in delivering
our strategy is to hand
over security to the Iraqis, and it is to move from a combat role
in the rest of Basra province to overwatch," Brown said in a speech to
Parliament. Politically, this move will be popular with the British
public, which favors
a U.K. troop withdrawal. It will also distance Brown from former
Prime Minister Tony Blair, whose unwavering
support for the Bush administration's Iraq policies led
to domestic political defeats for his Labor Party. Strategically,
it will likely help the security situation in southern Iraq. Since an
early September withdrawal of British forces from Basra, attacks in the
region have dramatically decreased. In his speech yesterday, Brown
explained that since British forces "handed over our base in Basra City
in early September, the present
security situation has been calmer."
DWINDLING COALITION OF THE WILLING: Brown's announcement comes after a visit
to Iraq last week, where he had initially announced that 1,000
British troops would withdraw from Iraq by the end of 2007. A senior
British official told the AP yesterday that by the end of 2008, all
the country's troops may be out of Iraq. After the United States,
Britain has the largest force in Iraq. Approximately 170 British troops
have died since the March 2003 invasion, and public support for the war
continues to wane. A recent PIPA poll shows that 65
percent of Britons want troops out of Iraq within a year.
Yesterday, "more
than 2,000 people marched from London's Trafalgar Square to
Parliament to demand a complete withdrawal of British troops." In
another sign that Bush's infamous Coalition of the Willing continues to
dwindle, the Czech Republic also yesterday announced that it would be withdrawing
its 100 troops.
REMOVING A TARGET: When the
British first announced in February that it would possibly withdraw its
troops, the Bush administration tried to spin the news as progress. "I
look
at it and see it is actually an affirmation that there are parts of
Iraq where things
are going pretty well," said Vice President Cheney. But the Basra
region, where Britain's troops are concentrated, has been the central
front in a "turf
war between rival Shi'ite groups." British troops were "frequent
targets"; 41 soldiers were killed this year, the most since 2003. A
Nov. 2006 Pentagon report to Congress contradicted Cheney's claims of
success, listing "Basra as one of five cities outside Baghdad where
violence remained 'significant.'" But since British troops have
begun to leave the region, the security situation has improved.
Yesterday, Brown noted, "In the last month, there have been five
indirect fire attacks on Basra Air Station compared with 87 in
July." Basra residents have "begun
strolling riverfront streets again after four years of fear." "The
situation these days is better. We were living in hell. ... [T]he area
is calm since their [the British] withdrawal," said Iraqi housewife
Khairiya Salman. The need to remove coalition forces in order to
improve security in Iraq was underscored by a British think tank report
released yesterday. The Oxford Research Group analysis concluded that
the "'war
on terror' is failing and instead fueling an increase in support
for extremist Islamist movements."
SMEARING THE BRITISH: Earlier
in the year, the Bush administration had no shortage of praise for the
Britain's work in Iraq. In February, Cheney said that British forces
had "made
progress in southern Iraq." In July, Bush said of Brown, "I
found a person who shares [my] vision and who understands the call." But when word broke that Britain would
begin withdrawing its forces, the White House lost no time in
criticizing its ally. "There's
concern about Brown," a senior White House foreign policy official
told The Daily Telegraph, adding that there has been "'a lot of
unhappiness' about how British forces had performed in Basra." In
August, Ret. Gen. Jack Keane, who was vice chief of staff during the
2003 Iraq invasion and remains a key adviser to the Bush
administration, accused
the British of plans to "cut and run." He argued that instead of
withdrawing, the British should escalate the number of troops in Basra,
similar to Bush's failed "surge" in Baghdad.

ETHICS -- RIGHT WING LAUNCHES
BASELESS
SMEAR CAMPAIGN AGAINST 12-YEAR OLD SCHIP RECIPIENT: Two
weeks ago, the Democratic radio address was delivered
by a 12-year old Graeme Frost, who was involved in a severe car
accident three years ago and received access to medical care because
of the Children's Health Insurance Program. Following the speech, conservatives began
launching baseless attacks on Graeme and his family. A poster
at Free Republic asserted that Graeme and his sister Gemma attend wealthy schools that
cost "nearly $40,000 per year for tuition" and live in a
well-off home. The smear attack against Graeme has also taken firm
hold
in the right-wing blogosphere. The National
Review, Michelle
Malkin, Wizbang, Powerline,
and the Weekly
Standard blog have all launched assaults on the Frost family. The
story is slowly working its way into traditional
media outlets as well. Here are the facts the right wing distorted
in order to attack Graeme: First, Graeme has a scholarship to a
private school. The school costs $15K a year, but the family only pays
$500 a year. Second, the Frosts bought their "lavish house" 16
years ago for $55,000 at a time when the neighborhood was less safe.
And finally, the Frosts make $45,000 combined and over the past few
years they have made no more than $50,000 combined. Since the address,
right wing bloggers have been harassing the Frosts, repeatedly calling
their home
to get information about their private lives.
MEDIA -- JOE WILSON CALLS OUT
ROBERT
NOVAK FOR 'LYING' ABOUT CIA LEAK: Over the weekend,
conservative columnist Robert Novak, who infamously outed
undercover CIA agent Valerie Plame in a July 2003 column,
spoke at "a
seminar on the CIA leak case at the 2007 Society of Professional
Journalists Convention." Novak claimed that Plame's
husband, Amb. Joe Wilson, "was
not terribly exercised about" the column when he spoke to him prior
to publication. "Instead," claims Novak, "Wilson focused on not being
portrayed as simply an opponent of the Iraq war." In an interview with Talking Points Memo's Greg Sargent yesterday, Wilson disputed
Novak's claims, calling him a "chronic
liar." "When I talked to him it was not about what he was writing,"
Wilson told Sargent. "The purpose of my phone call to him was to tell
him that it
was not appropriate for him to be telling strangers in Washington that
my wife works for the CIA." Additionally, Wilson said "that
Novak's claim that he hadn't forcefully objected to the naming of
his wife was a severe distortion, based on the fact that Wilson
couldn't say anything direct about it to Novak without confirming it."
According to Sargent, The
Hill, which reported Novak's remarks, never
contacted Wilson for comment.
TERRORISM -- WHITE HOUSE LEAK OF
BIN LADEN VIDEO FORCES INTELLIGENCE COMPANY TO END OPERATIONS: The
Washington Post reports today that Search for International Terrorist
Entities (SITE),
a private intelligence company, gave the White House an advanced copy
of an Osama bin Laden video last month under the condition that the
government
keep the video secret until it was officially released by al Qaeda.
Within hours, however, the video was leaked to cable news shows. "The
founder of the company...says this premature disclosure...destroyed
a years-long surveillance operation that the company has used to intercept and pass along secret messages,
videos and advance warnings of suicide bombings from the terrorist
group's communications network." The breach spurred al Qaeda to shut
down its intranet network and online communications. Nick Grace, the
founder of clandestineradio.com who tracked the
network shutdown, said, "It was both
unprecedented and chilling from the perspective of a Web techie.
The discipline and coordination to take the entire system down
involving multiple Web servers, hundreds of user names and passwords,
is an astounding feat, especially that it was done within minutes." The
government did not deny the leak charge, but "some intelligence
officials called
the incident regrettable."
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"Two months after vowing to roll back broad new wiretapping
powers won by the Bush administration," the New York Times writes,
"Congressional Democrats appear ready
to make concessions that could extend some of the key powers
granted to the National Security Agency." Glenn Greenwald suggests that
"the
picture is more complicated
and less depressing than this NYT article suggests."
In a new report, the Iraqi government wants the United States to "to sever
all contracts in Iraq with Blackwater USA within six months and pay
$8 million in compensation to each of the families of 17 people killed when the firm's guards"
opened fire in a Baghdad last month. The Iraqis also want the United
States to
hand over the guards involved in the incident for possible trial in
Iraqi court.
Army chief of staff Gen. George Casey said the Army "will need three or four years to recover from the strains of repeated
deployments to Iraq even
with a planned drawdown of US forces next year."
"Almost 40% of the people displaced from New Orleans by
Hurricane Katrina" lived "below
the poverty line last year,"
according to a Census Bureau survey. The survey also found that "nearly
a third of those who fled the hurricane could not find jobs last year,
and thousands more weren't trying."
President Bush's SCHIP veto has caused "fresh
divisions" among Senate Republicans. "Because the president and
Republican leaders are not pushing a positive health care agenda,
a lot of people are not comfortable opposing anything that has children
in it," Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) told Roll Call that the "lack of a
forceful positive agenda" has "sort of split our caucus."
"Americans are hearing much less from the Bush administration
about democracy for the Middle East than they did a year ago. As Shiite Iran rises, the
White House has muted its calls for reform in the region as it
redirects policy to reembrace Sunni Arab allies -- who
run, to varying degrees, authoritarian regimes."
Six years after 9/11, "the 'war on terror' is failing and
instead fueling an increase in support for extremist Islamist
movements," according to the Oxford Research Group, a British think
tank. The group stated that a "fundamental
re-think is required" if al Qaeda is to be rendered ineffective.
And finally: In the introduction of his new
book, "I Am America (And So Can You!)," Stephen Colbert
writes, "I
AM NO FAN OF BOOKS.
AND CHANCES ARE, IF YOU'RE READING THIS, YOU AND I SHARE A HEALTHY
SKEPTICISM ABOUT THE PRINTED WORD. WELL, I WANT YOU TO KNOW THAT THIS
IS THE FIRST BOOK I'VE EVER WRITTEN, AND I HOPE IT'S THE FIRST BOOK
YOU'VE EVER READ. DON'T MAKE A HABIT OF IT."
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After gay marriage opponents failed to block the measure, Oregon
is
expected to join eight states "that have approved partnership
rights in some form for same-sex couples."

VIRGINIA:
The city of Alexandria "is expected to pass a resolution tonight
renewing its commitment to extend public services" to undocumented
immigrants.
NEW
YORK: Terrorism experts believe Gov. Eliot Spitzer's (D) plan to give
drivers licenses to all immigrants help national security.
CALIFORNIA:
Gay marriage proponents "will launch a multimillion-dollar advertising
campaign this week to 'open hearts and minds'" of Californians.
HEALTH CARE: "Laws aimed at breaking legal hurdles that prevented
hundreds of doctors and nurses from volunteering to help Hurricane
Katrina victims in 2005 are gaining momentum in states."

THINK
PROGRESS: Fox News: global warming's "indisputable" effects mean
oil is "more accessible."
THE
HORSE'S MOUTH: One of Gen. David Petraeus's own advisers says his
testimony on Iraq was "potentially misleading."
TRAILHEAD:
Slate's new political blog with original reporting and analysis.
RISING
HEGEMON: Exactly a month ago, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) claimed
there would be a "major" political "breakthrough" in Iraq in just a few
"weeks."

Since British forces "handed over our base in Basra City in early
September, the present security situation has been calmer."
-- British PM Gordon Brown, 10/8/07,
after announcing a withdrawal of British troops from Iraq
VERSUS
"A contagion of violence would likely spread beyond Iraq's borders, and
much of the effort that's gone into fighting the global war on terror
would be dissipated."
-- Vice President Dick Cheney, 9/14/07,
on what would happen if the United States were to withdraw from Iraq
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