The Imperial Vice Presidency: "Reining in Cheney"
Back in the good ol' days, it was often said that the Veep was a do-nothing position, just filling a slot in case of Presidential death, removal from office, etc... My how times have changed...
Former CIA Analyst Ray McGovern writes:
Quick! Anyone! Who can put the brakes on Vice President Dick Cheney before we have another war on our hands? Current and former intelligence analysts are reacting with wonderment and apprehension to his remarks last week on the nuclear program of Iran and his resuscitated spinning on why attacking Iraq was the prudent thing to do.
There he goes again, they say—trifling with the truth on Iraq and now taking off after Iran. Does he really have the temerity to reach into the same bag of tricks used to convince most Americans that Iraq was an immediate nuclear threat? Will his distinctive mix of truculence and contempt for the truth succeed in rationalizing attacks on Iran on grounds that US intelligence may have underestimated the progress in Iraq’s nuclear weapons program 15 years ago?
[...]
Cheney, nonetheless, has done little to disguise his admiration for Israel’s policy of preemption. Ten years after the attack on Osirak, then-Defense Secretary Cheney reportedly gave Israeli Maj. Gen. David Ivri, then the commander of the Israeli Air Force, a satellite photo of the Iraqi nuclear reactor destroyed by US-built Israeli aircraft. On the photo Cheney penned, “Thanks for the outstanding job on the Iraqi nuclear program in 1981.”
Looking again at the Cheney-Imus dialogue last week, Cheney, after expressing deep concern over Iran’s “fairly robust new nuclear program,” repeated basically what Condoleezza Rice had said earlier in the week—“Iran has a stated policy that their objective is the destruction of Israel.” Imus then brought up the subject of preempting Iran, asking, “Why don’t we make Israel do it?”
Cheney’s response should give all of us pause:
“Well, one of the concerns people have is that Israel might do it without being asked, that if, in fact, the Israelis became convinced the Iranians had significant capability, the Israelis might well decide to act first, and let the rest of the world worry about cleaning up the diplomatic mess afterwards.”
The vice president’s nonchalance betrays the apparent equanimity with which he regards such a possibility. His words are bound to endear him further with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, but the tone, as well as the words, are poison to 1.3 billion Muslims.
- Ted Kahl's blog
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The legal case against war with Iran - start with Afghanistan
The first thing that they are going to do is make a legal justification for pre-emptive strikes in Iran, whether they are strategic aircraft and/or missle strikes at targets identified by the intelligence groups on the ground already. Iran of course, will retaliate in Iraq either directly or indirectly through the existing insurgent networks.
The basis of these strikes will most likely be justified claiming the umbrella of the War Powers Resolution he got from Congress for the Afghanistan invasion. This resolution was sought only after he failed twice to obtain approval from the UN. The resolution gives him very broad powers which he is to this day overreaching with in many instances in homeland security. In hindsight, a UN approval probably would have been better for all of us, then Bush would not have this ambiguous power that he now uses as a club.
A good description of these powers are found in the following article by Francis Boyle from CounterPunch, over two years ago. Sorry about the length, but the whole thing is very prophetic.
Bush Administration diplomacy: use Halliburton first
There is still a ray of hope that war can be avoided in Iran, and that hope hinges on Halliburton making money.
Halliburton diplomacy angle now dead
Well, one day later it's reported that Halliburton won't be allowed to make any money in Iran. So the corporate welfare/diplomacy effort is dead. Now the only way for them to make money is for us to go break some stuff for them to fix. Get ready for the draft...
"The business environment in
"The business environment in Iran..." statement by Lesar, is just another way of saying, "Let's get out of Dodge before Dubya pulls the trigger."
And, you're exactly right. After we have broken it, and own it, Halliburton will be back for another $20 billion or so -- small change to the BA revolving credit account called the US Treasury.