Friday, February 02, 2007

Special Comment from Keith Olbermann--Jaws 2

This Special Comment from Keith Olbermann on his Countdown program came out on January 30, 2007. While it is not as strong as some of his previous Special Commentaries, Olbermann still rips into the lies and deceit of the Bush administration. This time, Olbermann takes on Bush's references of the U.S. stopping four terrorist plots in his State of the Union address, showing them to really be the weak terrorist schemes that the administration has courageously thwarted. Instead of the terror of the movie Jaws, we are left with the bad sequel--Jaws 2.

Here is the YouTube video of Olbermann's Special Comment:



And here is the transcript from MSNBC:

West Yorkshire in England has a new chief police constable.

Upon his appointment, Sir Norman Bettison made one of the strangest comments of the year:

“The threat of terrorism,” he says, “is lurking out there like ‘Jaws 2.’”

Sir Norman did not exactly mine the richest ore for his analogy of warning. A critic once said of the flopping sequel to the classic film: “You’re gonna need a better screenplay.”

But this obscure British police official has reminded us that terrorism is still being sold to the public in that country — and in this — as if it were a thrilling horror movie and we were the naughty teenagers about to be its victims.

And it underscores the fact that President Bush took this tack, exactly a week ago tonight, in his terror-related passage in the State of the Union.

A passage that was almost lost amid all the talk about Iraq and health care and bipartisanship and the fellow who saved the stranger from an oncoming subway train in New York City.

But a passage ludicrous and deceitful. Frightening in its hollow conviction.

Frightening, in that the president who spoke it tried for “Jaws” but got “Jaws 2.”

I am indebted to David Swanson, press secretary for Dennis Kucinich’s 2004 presidential campaign, who has blogged about the dubious 96 words in Mr. Bush’s address this year and who has concluded that of the four counter-terror claims the president made, he went 0-for-4.

“We cannot know the full extent of the attacks that we and our allies have prevented,” Mr. Bush noted, “but here is some of what we do know: We stopped an al-Qaida plot to fly a hijacked airplane into the tallest building on the West Coast.”

This would, of course, sir, be the purported plot to knock down the 73-story building in Los Angeles, the one once known as the Library Tower — the one you personally revealed so breathlessly a year ago next month.

It was embarrassing enough that you mistakenly referred to the structure as the “Liberty Tower.”

But within hours it was also revealed that authorities in Los Angeles had had no idea you were going to make any of the details — whether serious or fanciful — public.

Who terrorized Southern California that day, Mr. Bush?

A year ago next month, the Los Angeles Times quoted a source — identified only by the labyrinthine description “a U.S. official familiar with the operational aspects of the war on terrorism” — who insisted that the purported “Library Tower plot” was one of many al-Qaida operations that had not gotten very far past the conceptual stage.

The former staff director of counter-terrorism for the National Security Council — now a news analyst for NBC News and MSNBC — Roger Cressey, puts it a little more bluntly.

In our conversation, he put the “Library Tower story” into a category he called the “What-Ifs” — as in the old “Saturday Night Live sketches that tested the range of comic absurdity:

What if ... Superman had worked for the Nazis?

What if ... Spartacus had had a Piper Cub during the battle against the Romans in 70 B.C.?

More ominously, the L.A. Times source who debunked the Library Tower story said that those who could correctly measure the flimsiness of the scheme “feared political retaliation for providing a different characterization of the plan than that of the president.”

But Mr. Bush, you’re the decider.

And you decided that the Library Tower story should be scored as one for you.

And you continued with a second dubious claim of counter-terror success. “We broke up a Southeast Asian terror cell grooming operatives for attacks inside the United States,” you said.

Well, sir, you’ve apparently stumped the intelligence community completely with this one.

In his article, Mr. Swanson suggests that in the last week there has been no reporting even hinting at what exactly you were talking about.

He hypothesizes that either you were claiming credit for a ring broken up in 1995 or that this was just the Library Tower story “by another name.”

Another CIA source suggests to NBC News that since the Southeast Asian cell dreamed of a series of attacks on the same day, you declared the Library Tower one threat thwarted, and all their other ideas, a second threat thwarted.

Our colleague Mr. Cressey sums it up:

This “Southeast Asian cell” was indeed the tale of the Library Tower, simply repeated.

Repeated, Mr. Bush, in consecutive sentences in the State of the Union — in your constitutionally mandated status report on the condition and safety of the nation.

You showed us the same baby twice and claimed it was twins.

And then you said that was two for you.

Your third claim, sir, read thusly: “We uncovered an al-Qaida cell developing anthrax to be used in attacks against America.”

Again, the professionals in counter-intelligence were startled to hear about this.

Last fall, two Washington Post articles cited sources in the FBI and other governmental agencies who said that hopes by foreign terrorists to use anthrax in this country were fanciful at best, farcical at worst.

And every effort to link the 2001 anthrax mailings in this country to foreign sources has also struck out. The entire investigation is barely still active.

Mr. Cressey goes a little further. Anything that might even resemble an al-Qaida cell “developing anthrax,” he says, was in the “dreaming” stages.

He used as a parallel those pathetic arrests outside Miami last year in which a few men wound up getting charged as terrorists because they couldn’t tell the difference between an al-Qaida operative and an FBI informant.

Their “ringleader” seemed to be much more interested in getting his “terrorist masters” to buy him a new car than in actually terrorizing anybody.

That’s three for you, Mr. Bush.

“And just last August,” you concluded, “British authorities uncovered a plot to blow up passenger planes bound for America over the Atlantic Ocean.”

In a series of dramatic raids, 24 men were arrested.

Turned out, sir, a few of them actually had gone on the Internets to check out some flight schedules.

Turned out, sir, only a few of them actually had the passports needed to even get on the planes.

The plot to which President Bush referred was a plot without bombs.

It was a plot without any indication that the essence of the operation — the in-flight mixing of volatile chemicals carried on board in sports drink bottles — was even doable by amateurs or professional chemists.

It was a plot even without sufficient probable cause.

A third of the 24 arrested that day — exactly 90 days before the American midterm elections — have since been released.

The British had been watching those men for a year.

Before the week was out, their first statement, that the plot was “ready to go, in days,” had been rendered inoperative.

British officials told NBC News of the lack of passports and plans; told us that they had wanted to keep the suspects under surveillance for at least another week.

Even an American official confirmed to NBC’s investigative unit that there was “disagreement over the timing.”

The British then went further. Sources inside their government told the English newspaper the Guardian that the raids had occurred only because the Pakistanis had arrested a man named Rasheed Raouf.

That Raouf had been arrested by Pakistan only because we had threatened to do it for them.

That the British had acted only because our government was willing — to quote that newspaper, The Guardian — to “ride roughshod” over the plans of British intelligence.

Oh, by the way, Mr. Bush, an anti-terrorism court in Pakistan reduced the charges against Mr. Raouf to possession of bomb-making materials and being there without proper documents.

Still, sir — evidently, that’s close enough.

Score four for you!

Your totally black-and-white conclusions in the State of the Union were based on one gray area, and on three palettes on which the experts can’t even see smudge, let alone gray.

It would all be laughable, Mr. Bush, were you not the president of the United States.

It would all be political hyperbole, Mr. Bush, if you had not, on this kind of “intelligence,” taken us to war, now sought to escalate that war, and are threatening new war in Iran and maybe even elsewhere.

What you gave us a week ago tonight, sir, was not intelligence, but rather a walk-through of how speculation and innuendo, guesswork and paranoia, daydreaming and fear-mongering, combine in your mind and the minds of your government, into proof of your derring-do and your success against the terrorists.

The ones who didn’t have anthrax.

The ones who didn’t have plane tickets or passports.

The ones who didn’t have any clue, let alone any plots.

But they go now into our history books as the four terror schemes you’ve interrupted since 9/11.

They go into the collective consciousness as firm evidence of your diligence, of the necessity of your ham-handed treatment of our liberties, of the unavoidability of the 3,075 Americans dead in Iraq.

Congratulations, sir.

You are the hero of “Jaws 2.”

You have kept the Piper Cub out of the hands of Spartacus.

2 comments:

purpleXed said...

Kieth Olbermann befittingly nominated Cliff Kincaid and “24″ as worst of the year. Here are some reasons as to why: While the media activist tries to deflect attention from major issues his favorite spy-opera attempts to dupe the audiences to suspend disbelief
not just for the show.

A media activist with a professed mission to mission is to educate the American people and to expose all myths surrounding American security has declared switching his attention from the real world to the reel world: “If Jack Bauer were in charge of U.S. forces in Iraq, we would have won by now.” This is not a quote from Fox channel’s fan mail but from “America’s Survival” a web site that warns that America is in danger of losing what our ancestors fought and died for. Why does Kincaid sounds so uncertain of the courage and capabilities of his compatriots?

What this over-fascination with Jack Bauer imply? Is it correct to infer that he has more faith in make-believe solutions rather than facing real life problems? Is this reflect he has more trust in the capabilities of fictitious characters than in the 140,000 brave men and women who put their lives in harms way so that ungrateful commentators enjoy soaps in their armchairs? When he feels frustrated that his arguments are ineffective he turns his guns on the messenger and demands not just to gag them but suggests executing extra-judicial solutions. How principles are being suspended for sake of passions is well illustrated by an example where a media activist publicly calls to destroy an entire television channel.

What is the motivation of big talk about little things? Would silencing a newly established small news channels expected to make the hard questions go away. Watchdogs like Accuracy in Media ought to probe the cakewalk crowd who promised a casual march to victory in Iraq. Cliff Kincaid should campaign for accountability of the likes of Ken Adelmen who misled the American media by claiming “measured by any cost-benefit analysis, such an operation would constitute the greatest victory in America’s war on terrorism.” Is the US any closer in getting the exact picture on the ground despite spending $ 2 billion a week?
Whether Cliff Kincaid likes it or not, ‘24’ openly “abets those to whom the rule of law is an unwelcome hindrance, and helps create the kind of climate in which human rights abuses thrive.

The London based Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture reminds cheerleaders like Kincaid that the readiness of some to torture has always been with us, along with the readiness of some to denigrate others because of their different skin colour, or cultural beliefs. “Both are aspects of the human condition that instead of indulging, civilised societies fight hard to resist. Giving up that struggle in pursuit of ratings is nothing short of a betrayal of the generations to come. “

The White House budget director, Rob Portman is asking, in the new budget, for another $365 billion over the next few fiscal years. This comes on the $433 billion that's already been spent, a total of nearly $800 billion.

This doesn't make Kincaidask what a lot of people wish to know, is this good money going after bad given the current situation in Iraq? Senator Patrick Leahy, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said the other day: It's doubly shameful because we're trying to restore places like New Orleans and the Gulf Coast here in this country. That's been held up, and this money's being wasted in Iraq. Such issues remain marginal for Kincaid's attention fixated thousands of miles away to scrutinize the contents of a channel in a language he never learnt about a place he never visited.

Eric A Hopp said...

Purplexed: Thank you for the interesting comment regarding the merging of TV drama and today's political and media culture. I don't mind if our nation's intelligence and security officials decide to take their experience to Hollywood in creating dramas, such as Fox's series 24, any more than I would not mind if Hollywood's stars decide to work for whatever pet political causes they believe in. What worries me here is a lack of disclosure on the part of the media activists who try to bridge their political agenda with the fantasy of TV spy dramas. Kincaid is not as well known to the mainstream American public in regards right-wing, conservative punditry as Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, or even Michelle Malkin. This anonymity protects him as he can use the Fox series 24 to push his ideology of hate and fear on his American Survival website. And those Americans who are not as knowlegible, or well read on the issues, will believe Kincaid's brand of hate without question.

And as for the Fox series 24? It is a fictional television drama series--and a pretty good one. It is fiction. Jack Bauer is a fictional character. Leave it as fiction. I reject Kincaid's statement of “If Jack Bauer were in charge of U.S. forces in Iraq, we would have won by now.” Oh sure--Kincaid is right that we would have won the Iraq war if Jack Bauer were in charge. If John Rambo were in charge of U.S. forces in Vietnam, we would have won the Vietnam War decades ago. Both of these statements are absurd. And yet, Kincaid mixes this fiction of Jack Bauer as the perfect Homeland Security official--the kind of man that we need to be sent to Iraq to finish the job and bring victory to the Bush administration. I certainly don't like this, any more than I like some liberal media pundits trying to use 24 as a means to criticized the conservative agenda, or conservatives using 24 to criticize the liberal's agenda. To me, 24 is still a fictional TV series.