*LBN-COMMENTARY By FRANK RICH:* The national yawn that greeted the war logs
is an indicator of the country’s verdict on the Afghan war itself.

*COMMENTARY By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN:* The trove of WikiLeaks about the
faltering U.S. war effort in Afghanistan has provoked many reactions, but
for me it contains one clear message. It’s actually an old piece of advice
your parents may have given you before you went off to college: “If you are
in a poker game and you don’t know who the sucker is, it’s probably you.”
In the case of the Great Game of Central Asia, that’s us.  Best I can tell
from the WikiLeaks documents and other sources, we are paying Pakistan’s
Army and intelligence service to be two-faced. Otherwise, they would be just
one-faced and 100 percent against us. The same could probably be said of
Afghanistan’s president, Hamid Karzai. But then everyone out there is
wearing a mask — or two.  China supports Pakistan, seeks out mining
contracts in Afghanistan and lets America make Afghanistan safe for Chinese
companies, all while smiling at the bloody nose America is getting in Kabul
because anything that ties down the U.S. military makes China’s military
happy. America, meanwhile, sends its soldiers to fight in Afghanistan at the
same time that it rejects an energy policy that would begin to reduce our
oil consumption, which indirectly helps to fund the very Taliban schools and
warriors our soldiers are fighting against.

*COMMENTARY By DAVID STOCKMAN:* If there were such a thing as Chapter 11 for
politicians, the Republican push to extend the unaffordable Bush tax cuts
would amount to a bankruptcy filing. The nation’s public debt — if honestly
reckoned to include municipal bonds and the $7 trillion of new deficits
baked into the cake through 2015 — will soon reach $18 trillion. That’s a
Greece-scale 120 percent of gross domestic product, and fairly screams out
for austerity and sacrifice. It is therefore unseemly for the Senate
minority leader, Mitch McConnell, to insist that the nation’s wealthiest
taxpayers be spared even a three-percentage-point rate increase.  More
fundamentally, Mr. McConnell’s stand puts the lie to the Republican pretense
that its new monetarist and supply-side doctrines are rooted in its
traditional financial philosophy. Republicans used to believe that
prosperity depended upon the regular balancing of accounts — in government,
in international trade, on the ledgers of central banks and in the financial
affairs of private households and businesses, too. But the new catechism, as
practiced by Republican policymakers for decades now, has amounted to little
more than money printing and deficit finance — vulgar Keynesianism robed in
the ideological vestments of the prosperous classes.

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