Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
November 11, 2006
WB: The Toe Sucker Gets It

Billmon:

By the time congressional subpoenas start being served on the top guys themselves, it will be much harder to spin the ensuing court battles over executive privilege as matters of principle.

The Toe Sucker Gets It

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Raw obtains letter detailing Democrat’s ‘oversight priorities’

Congressman Henry Waxman (D-CA), the the ranking member of the Government Reform Committee, has long maintained a list of “oversight priorities” that would presumably be implemented under a Democratic majority, according to a letter acquired by RAW STORY.
Waxman enumerated those priorities in correspondence with chairman Tom Davis (R-VA) in February 2005, but as the minority party, Democrats have been unable to advance the agenda.
Citing the uncertain outcome of the November elections, Karen Lightfoot, spokeswoman for the Democratic Government Reform Committee staff, would not comment on which of Waxman’s initiatives would take precedence if the Democrats win the House, or on when they would likely appear on the committee agenda.
The letter, however, clearly enumerates Waxman’s priorities……

after reviewing the letter this morsel from wayne seems more plausible

According to Washington insiders, there are moves afoot to dump Vice President Dick Cheney and replace him with either John McCain or Rudolph Giuliani prior to the 2008 presidential election. Whoever succeeds Cheney will be able to campaign for the presidency with the perks that come with being an incumbent Vice President.
Since the increasingly-besieged Cheney has signaled he has no intention of voluntarily stepping down, the strategy by the Bush camp may be to force him out by presenting evidence before Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald that it was Cheney who was responsible for the compromise of CIA non-proliferation covert officer Valerie Plame Wilson and her Brewster Jennings & Associates cover firm.
Observers note the unusual professional relationship between Fitzgerald and Karl Rove’s defense attorney Robert Luskin. Insiders believe that Fitzgerald may be proffered a carefully crafted deal by Luskin whereby Rove will testify to Cheney’s primary role in the outing of Mrs. Wilson and her firm. The sealed indictment of Rove will then be retired permanently. If such a deal is worked out, Fitzgerald may then offer a deal to Lewis I. “Scooter” Libby, Cheney’s former Chief of Staff, to also testify against Cheney. With such double-barreled testimony, President Bush will then be compelled to ask Cheney for his resignation or face a very nasty and public indictment.
….
This editor wrote, “based on the arrival of James Baker and a coterie of George H. W. Bush old hands on the scene to bail out Dubya, it is clear that the Bush family does not intend to allow one of its own to be declared scapegoat.”

Posted by: annie | Nov 11 2006 8:47 utc | 1

Cheney’s still got his crime family embedded in the Dubya White House (which is now coming under new management). Now comes the crowbars and chisels, to remove it entire.
A lot of extra-Constitutional crap was concocted and crammed through the rubber stamp Congress by Cheney’s Crew, via their obsessive fixation on the Fuhrer Principle. I mean, Unitary Executive.
A lot of stove-piping of wrong and false flag intel was created or corraled by Cheney’s Crew, and foisted upon the nation via the right wing media organs. Even the Pentagon and CIA had to eat some of the shit sandwich and then go tell the nation it was real good stuff.
They resented it then. They still very much resent it.
The GOP’s recent electoral evisceration doesn’t mean a thing to Cheney. Not he; the Master of the Stiff Arm, the Stone Wall and the Big Lie was all set to just ignore messengers from the Dem Congress, and whatever subpoena they rode in on. Whether due to Pump Head or due to Bunker Mentality, he was prepared to hold out in his undisclosed location no matter how long the arm of America’s laws. He shook himself free of that years ago.
What Dick n’ Rummy cannot ignore or rebuff are the machinations of the CIA, Pentagon, and the Old Guard, all of which is now turned on, and turned against them. The small, secret wheels of the shadow government are now grinding exceedingly fine, and heading in their direction.
Payback will be a real bitch. It’s one of those occasions when hanging them twice before shooting, skinning and salting them will simply not be enough. Revenge in depth, served cold, is on its way.
Rummy is out, and Cheney is out, out of the ultimate insider’s loop. They sit in their same chairs, in their same offices, but the rug has been pulled, and everybody knows it.
People used to call them with little secrets, timely info, lists of enemies, political dirt and damage reports. But the phones aren’t ringing for Dick n’ Rummy now. They sit there, knowing damn well that all those phone calls are still going on, all around them, all around them, but no longer with their benefit in mind. The fear is gone; the orcs do not mind their masters any more.
When Dick licks his finger now and sticks it in the wind, all he tastes and all he smells is left behind from the last time he wiped himself.

Posted by: Antifa | Nov 11 2006 10:13 utc | 2

I enjoyed this piece by Fialka in the WSJ:

Dingell Cautions Fellow Democrats
Not to Seek Revenge on Republicans
By JOHN J. FIALKA
November 9, 2006; Page A4
Rep. John Dingell, who has long had a reputation as a partisan investigative bulldog, is in the unusual position of cautioning younger Democrats to resist the impulse to seek revenge on their Republican colleagues.
“Revenge makes you feel good,” says Mr. Dingell, the Michigan Democrat who, at 80 years old, is the most seasoned member of the committee chairmen taking control in the House. “It ain’t the right way to go, but it’s going to cause me some problems.”
In taking back the reins of the Energy and Commerce Committee, for which he was chairman from 1981-94, Rep. Dingell says he plans to run his panel “from the center” and work out a formula for comity that allows Republicans to participate in the panel’s decisions and investigations.

When I read that last sentence, I imagine Dingell talking to one of his Republican colleagues and saying, “Hey, friend, looks like Bush sorta hung you guys out to dry, especially with that Rumsfeld firing. Whaddya say you sharpen up the long knives and we’ll have a little fun with this lame duck bas*#@d for the next two years.”
I also enjoyed this:

Mr. Dingell also brought Republicans in on his investigations. In 1994, when Democrats lost control, some Dingell aides wrote down the formula he used to coach his investigative staff: “We learned the etiquette of dealing with our enemies: to be gentle, to treat them with the greatest care, to ask them a few nice questions, and then give them exactly what they deserve.” Mr. Dingell has it hanging on the wall of his office.

Posted by: maddie | Nov 11 2006 14:42 utc | 3

It came up earlier in one of Billmon’s columns that it would be a tactical mistake to go right for the executive, but enough lower-level indictments will necessarily reflect badly on the president and force him even farther into a corner in an attempt to distance himself from them.

Posted by: ralphieboy | Nov 11 2006 14:53 utc | 4

NY Times has a new story on the subject. It seems like Democrats are planning to go after the little fish first.

Democrats Aim to Save Inquiry on Work in Iraq
By JAMES GLANZ, DAVID JOHNSTON and THOM SHANKER
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 — Congressional Democrats say they will press new legislation next week to restore the power of a federal agency in charge of ferreting out waste and corruption in Iraq and greatly increase its investigative reach.
The bills, the first of what are likely to be dozens of Democratic efforts to resurrect investigations of war profiteering and financial fraud in government contracting, could be introduced as early as Monday morning.
The move would nullify a Republican-backed provision, slipped into a huge military authorization bill, that set a termination date for the agency, the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction. The agency’s findings have consistently undermined Bush administration claims of widespread success in the reconstruction of Iraq.
Oversight, the power wielded by Congressional committees to demand information and internal documents and to haul executive branch officials to hearings, by subpoena if necessary, is reverberating through Congress as a Democratic battle cry.
“The unilateral decision made by House Republicans to shut down this critical office should be reversed immediately,” said Senator Harry Reid, the Nevada Democrat who is poised to become the majority leader.
The House version of the bill will be introduced by Ike Skelton, the Missouri Democrat likely to take over as chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, a member of Mr. Skelton’s staff said Friday. Mr. Skelton also said he would resurrect a subcommittee on oversight and investigations that was jettisoned by Republicans to investigate military spending.
In the Senate, Carl Levin, the Michigan Democrat who is in line to become chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that seeking a new strategy for Iraq would be his primary focus, but that he would also look carefully at military contracting.
“There have been serious allegations and evidence of misconduct among suppliers,” Mr. Levin said. “And the taxpayers, of course, get socked on that. And the troops are not properly taken care of when that happens.”
Tony Fratto, a White House spokesman, said on Saturday that the administration was willing to have discussions with Congress on the proposal to extend the inspector general’s tenure. Mr. Fratto added, “We have a history of cooperating fully with and supporting inspectors general.”
Mr. Fratto said he could not speak more definitively on the subject because the legislation was yet to be released.
In a measure of the momentum behind the bill, it is expected to be introduced in the Senate by Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, along with co-sponsors Russell D. Feingold, Democrat of Wisconsin, and Joseph I. Lieberman, who won re-election as an independent in Connecticut.
“It is inconceivable that we would remove this aggressive oversight while the American taxpayer is still spending billions of dollars on Iraq reconstruction projects,” Ms. Collins said.
Mr. Reid has said that after the lame-duck session ends, the Democrats will press ahead with Congressional oversight, particularly on Iraq. But Democratic leaders have also been conciliatory in discussing broader efforts to review the administration’s initiatives of the past six years.
The imperative to investigate financial misdeeds extends beyond the military. Congressional aides said that the House government reform committee under Representative Henry A. Waxman of California might also investigate spending related to domestic security and the response to Hurricane Katrina.
The Appropriations Committee, which is likely to be led by Representative David R. Obey of Wisconsin, is likely to review more closely spending like large supplementary requests for Iraq and Afghanistan.
In addition, after the negative political fallout of corruption cases involving lawmakers, the Appropriations Committee is under pressure to curtail earmarks, which are spending measures for specific projects not sought by a federal agency but sponsored by a lawmaker — sometimes anonymously and often for a financial supporter.
Potentially explosive confrontations over foreign policy issues between Democrats and the Bush administration may be unavoidable. John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, who is expected to become the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has been a critic of the C.I.A.’s secret detention program and the National Security Agency’s domestic wiretapping program.
It is unclear how far chairmen like Mr. Rockefeller may push the administration to obtain more information about secret programs. The committee, like many others, has often degenerated into partisan rancor over the past two years, and Mr. Rockefeller, like other incoming chairmen, has told colleagues that one of his priorities is to restore the committee’s historic bipartisanship.
But there is unlikely to be much downside for the Democrats in going after waste and fraud in government contracting, particularly in the Iraq war, which is not only unpopular with the American public but also where corporate giants like Halliburton, Parsons and Bechtel have committed highly publicized missteps in the rebuilding program.
Investigations by the Iraq oversight agency, led by Stuart W. Bowen Jr., have already led to convictions of American occupation officials on bribery charges and uncovered many instances of substandard construction.
Mr. Bowen’s investigations of Halliburton have uncovered tens of millions of dollars of charges for work that achieved little in the way of results, but apparently met the letter of the company’s contract with the United States to repair oil facilities. Mr. Bowen has also found that Halliburton has been using federal loopholes to impede investigations of its work by declaring nearly all information about company activities in Iraq to be proprietary, or sensitive because it could aid the company’s competitors.
So it came as a surprise to many that Mr. Bowen’s office was directed to go out of business on Oct. 1, 2007, by an obscure provision in an authorization bill that President Bush signed last month. The termination language was quietly inserted into the bill by staff members working for Representative Duncan Hunter, the California Republican who now leads the House Armed Services Committee.
As in the bill that the president signed, the new Senate proposal would expand the pot of money that Mr. Bowen could investigate, but it would not set a hard deadline for the agency’s work to come to an end. Both the House and Senate measures extend the deadline at least into 2008, by most readings, but the House measure would also add about $2 billion — for training and equipping Iraqi security forces — to the amount that the agency could investigate, a Congressional staff member said. Representative Nancy Pelosi, the California Democrat who is expected to become the House speaker, said she would strongly support that legislation.
“Democrats want the inspector general to stay at work until the job is done,” Ms. Pelosi said. “Those individuals and companies responsible for shoddy work or fraudulent billing practices must be held accountable.”
Several officials on Capitol Hill said that the locus of resistance to extending the tenure of Mr. Bowen’s office came from the State Department, which believes that its own inspector general should begin taking on the job of investigating reconstruction in Iraq. But that notion finds resistance among some lawmakers who distrust the administration’s will to investigate itself.
Outside the reconstruction program, some agencies are likely to be singled out for special scrutiny, not only the Pentagon, but also the Central Intelligence Agency and Federal Bureau of Investigation. Incoming Democratic chairman have said they plan to review the C.I.A.’s secret detention and interrogation program for important terrorism suspects and what some lawmakers have said is the sluggish pace of the F.B.I.’s effort to transform itself into a counterterrorism agency.
The Homeland Security Department has had at least some scrutiny from Congress in recent years, most particularly related to its performance and that of the Federal Emergency Management Agency during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
But the new Democratic leaders, their aides said, intend to significantly broaden the oversight efforts, a step that may include more frequent subpoenas for administration officials who have declined to appear for some hearings, as was the case in the hurricane investigation.
One area that almost certainly will draw additional oversight is mass-transit security, said Dena L. Graziano, spokeswoman for Representative Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, who is expected to take over the House Committee on Homeland Security.
And Democrats have long argued that the administration is too focused on aviation security, and has failed to devote enough money or attention to preventing bombings like those that have occurred in Madrid and London. Some Democrats, nursing years of slights at the hands of Republican appointees in federal agencies who ignored or brushed aside hundreds of their letters asking for information, are eager for answers. The Senate Judiciary Committee has staff members trying to compile a complete list of unanswered questions.
Some Democrats said before the election that they would inquire more deeply into some issues, asking for fuller accountability among senior officers and civilian officials at the Pentagon over the harsh treatment of detainees at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
“I think the accountability for Abu Ghraib has not yet been accomplished in terms of finding out who was involved, at what level,” said Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island.
For all the pledges of rigorous oversight, Democrats are moving warily, fearful of a misstep, mainly in national security areas, that could return them to the sidelines as a minority party.
That may explain the focus on less volatile issues like waste and fraudulent spending and why few Democrats are proposing inquiries on hot-button issues, like the underlying rationale for the war in Iraq or the underpinning for the administration’s counterterrorism policies.
Agendas are likely to shift over time, particularly in the House, where the leadership lineup will not be known with certainty for weeks. In addition, the transfer of majority control in both chambers means Republicans and Democrats must switch offices in the House and Senate. Republicans will be forced to dismiss some committee staff members, and Democrats will expand their workforce, in some committees nearly doubling staff size.
In a telephone interview, Mr. Skelton said that in the past, “the Congress has not worked, and has not asked the tough questions or held the administration to account.”
But he said it was the responsibility of every Democrat taking over a subcommittee chairmanship also to apply more scrutiny to government action, and not just those of subcommittees specifically charged with that mandate.
“Our subcommittee chairmen will be able to bring oversight back to their individual subcommittees,” he said.
David Johnston and Thom Shanker reported from Washington, and James Glanz from New York. Eric Lipton contributed reporting from Miami, and Mark Mazzetti and Rachel L. Swarns from Washington.

Posted by: izzet | Nov 12 2006 1:41 utc | 5

This editor wrote, “based on the arrival of James Baker and a coterie of George H. W. Bush old hands on the scene to bail out Dubya, it is clear that the Bush family does not intend to allow one of its own to be declared scapegoat.”

Oh, to be a fly on the wall at Bush Family household:
Barbara: Oh, my beautiful mind will not stand for it. George, do something! They’re gonna eat my poor baby boy alive!
George The Elder: (mumbling) … fuckin’ little shit deserves it.
Barbara: WHAT?!?!?
George The Elder: (clearing throat) I said I’ll take care it right away, dear.

Posted by: Sizemore | Nov 12 2006 17:52 utc | 6