Also See: [June 21 2007] Travus T. Hipp Morning News & Commentary:
Condi Rice, The Neocons, And Middle East Policy - The Profundity Of
The Level Of Incompetence In The US Government Never Ceases To Amaze
<http://leighm.net/wp/2007/06/21/tth_070621/>

In Other... News:
The war in Iraq - Multiple rockets hit the 'Green Zone', 9 Americans
killed. 5 more in other regions… 3543+-

Showdown at the White House: Neocon hawks at the White House want to
accelerate the beginning of an Iran war, and Condi Rice IS NOT backing
their attempts at tighter sanctions targeting the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard for military assault.

Rats leave sinking ship… Rob Portman, White House Budget director
announces his resignation.

Top aide to Giuliani campaign busted for cocaine. [More]

New US passport rules due next year have been postponed for 6 more
months, maybe for good.

Senate Democrat are one vote short of a veto override on the stem cell
research bill. Details.

--30--

In Washington there is no shame in being wrong; there's only shame in
losing. The neocons were wrong as hell, but they were also winners.
That's why no one should expect them to go away now. That's especially
true since their only real competition in the intellectual arena is
the cynical third-way corporatism of the Democratic party, a tenuous
and depressing alliance of business interests and New-Deal interest
groups whose most persuasive "idea" is that it is not
neo-conservatism. The neocons, wrong and stupid as they might be, at
least represent a clearly-articulated dream of unchecked greed, power
and big-stick foreign conquest that appeals in an elemental way to the
dark side of the American psyche.

Neocon II: Lie Hard With A Vengeance
Matt Taibbi

Call it the Leslie Nielsen effect. Your first attempt at a show-biz
career fizzles out and dies, but your failure is so quirky and
charming that it wins you a whole second career. Think Robert Goulet,
Bill Shatner, even John Travolta. America loves a brave second act,
particularly one that doesn't mind doing a take or two with egg still
on his face.

What the Zucker brothers did for actors, the neocons are now doing for
politics. In the first six years of the Bush presidency the
administration's ideological nucleus – a tribe of humorless
conservative revolutionaries led by Dick Cheney and including the
likes of Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Doug Feith and Elliott Abrams
– racked up a startling record in matters of official policy. From
their juking of the case for the Iraq War to their Jacobin-esque
purges within the government's intelligence apparatus to their
paranoid and sometimes criminal fragging of political enemies great
and minor, the neoconservatives working for George Bush botched
virtually every important move they made in the last six years.

Moreover, each time they used the presidency's bully pulpit to make a
prediction, be it about the post-invasion spread of democracy in the
Middle East, the utility of Iraqi oil revenues in financing the
occupation, or the chilling effect our presence in Iraq would have on
Palestinian resolve, more or less exactly the opposite ended up taking
place.

And yet, despite the walloping defeat of the Republicans in the 2006
midterm elections that seemed to spell the end of neocon rule in
Washington, the clowns are once again spilling out of the Volkswagen.
Lately the neocons seem to be all over the public airwaves, and not as
the targets of purgative public flogging or tarring ceremonies, but as
the subjects of serious interviews, with respected journalists
treating them like real human beings with real opinions. Even worse, a
few are still in office, and appear to be cooking up a last-minute
encore before the curtain finally comes down in '08.

Richard Perle, the former head of the Defense Policy Board, known in
the Beltway as the "Prince of Darkness," has been on TV a lot lately
in a much-publicized public spat with former CIA director George
Tenet, who recently accused Perle of targeting Iraq days after 9/11.
John Bolton, former UN-hating ambassador to the UN, recently won the
Bradley Prize for "outstanding intellectual achievement" – achievement
that presumably includes helping make the case for the Iraq disaster
and support for a future invasion of Iran. In his acceptance speech,
Bolton cheekily credited Tehran, Pyongyang and other rogue nations for
his success, thanking them just for "being themselves." And while
Scooter Libby crashed at trial, Doug Feith soft-landed into a tenure
track at Georgetown, where he will now teach history, a subject he
spent the past five years or so violently misinterpreting.

The neocons remain a bold presence in the media for a number of
reasons. Number one, they still have real political power. Dick Cheney
is still the vice president, and the Pentagon is still guided heavily
by the neocon-dominated Office of Special Plans (OSP), where the power
is now reportedly concentrated in an office called the Iranian
Directorate, charged with helping make the case for war with Iran.
Amid all the public hand-wringing about a congressional demand for an
Iraq withdrawal timeline, Washington is abuzz with rumors that the
neocons are loading up for one last historical Hail Mary, a "long
bomb" to throw at Tehran before Bush leaves office. The knowledge that
they are crazy enough to try something like that makes people in the
capital take them seriously.

But beyond that, there just hasn't been any effort in the media to
identify and really make clear the root causes of the Iraq policy
failure. In the current Washington mythology – a mythology reflected
in public statements of everyone from John McCain to Hillary Clinton –
the Iraq War blew up in our faces for logistical reasons, because we
didn't send enough troops, or have a sound occupation plan, or have an
"understanding of the insurgency." It was the right war, wrong
execution, wrong defense secretary. The failure had nothing to do with
the mistake of placing our bets on a radical revolutionary policy of
"pre-emptive invasion," or with the White House's authoritarian
efforts to castrate the Pentagon and the CIA and replace them with
their own intelligence-gathering and policymaking apparatuses.

The neocons may have been proven wrong in the particulars, and to
ordinary people their legacy may turn out to be a nightmarish Middle
East bloodbath and decades of debt, but in Washington they're still
revered as canny operators who swept two election seasons with a
drooling mannequin for a candidate and for years ruled Washington with
almost Caligulan abandon. They were idiots in terms of how the world
worked, but they understood power in the Beltway better than Nixon,
better than Clinton, better really than any White House clan since the
Roosevelt years. That's why they'll keep getting top billing on talk
shows and invites to all the best Washington parties, even if, as
seems likely, they leave office 18 months from now with half the
planet in flames.

In Washington there is no shame in being wrong; there's only shame in
losing. The neocons were wrong as hell, but they were also winners.
That's why no one should expect them to go away now. That's especially
true since their only real competition in the intellectual arena is
the cynical third-way corporatism of the Democratic party, a tenuous
and depressing alliance of business interests and New-Deal interest
groups whose most persuasive "idea" is that it is not
neo-conservatism. The neocons, wrong and stupid as they might be, at
least represent a clearly-articulated dream of unchecked greed, power
and big-stick foreign conquest that appeals in an elemental way to the
dark side of the American psyche. Until America rejects that dream –
and don't hold your breath for that – don't count on the Boltons and
the Perles disappearing from view.

Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor to Rolling Stone magazine. His
book, Smells Like Dead Elephants, is due out next year.

<http://adbusters.org/the_magazine/72.php?id=278#>

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