BLOOD FOR OIL? [Andrew Stuttaford] Well, well, well - the Iraqi archives are beginning to reveal their secrets. Documents obtained by the Daily Telegraph from the bombed-out Iraqi intelligence HQ seem to show Germany's intelligence services attempted to build closer links to Saddam's secret service last year. Most interesting is the revelation that the Iraqis offered to give lucrative contracts to German companies if the Berlin government helped prevent an American invasion of the country. Posted at 09:43 PM AN APOLOGY FROM THE BBC? [Andrew Stuttaford] Well, no, but British satirical magazine Private Eye attempts to fill the gap: ”In the past three weeks, we at the BBC may have inadvertently given the impression through all our outlets that the Allied incursion into Iraq was a reckless political act which was militarily ill-conceived in every respect, unsupported by the Iraqi people, who regarded it as a ruthless invasion of their sacred homeland, and which was certain to end in total disaster. News headlines such as “Coalition Bogged Down In New Vietnam”, “Baghdad Will Be Worse Than Stalingrad”, “Blundering Coalition Forces On Brink Of Humiliating Defeat By Saddam’s Super-Elite Special Republican Guard” may have given the impression that we believed in some way that the war was not going quite as well as planned. In the light of recent events, we now accept – albeit with a very bad grace – that the coalition forces seem for the time being to have got away with it, and that large numbers of Iraqis, though clearly paid by the CIA to do so, may have appeared to be not entirely displeased at the downfall of a regime which, whatever its faults, did at least for 30 years guarantee the stability of a potentially explosive mix of Shias, Sunnis and Kurds, who will now undoubtedly plunge the whole region into a state of chaos which will threaten the peace of the world. Whilst apologising for any confusion to which our reports may have given rise (and allowing for the fact that they could be broadcast only under monitoring restrictions imposed by the Iraqi authorities), we now realise that the only hope for future peace is for the hated Bush/Blair imperialist aggressors to be replaced at once by a French-led UN force of Russian troops of the type who were so successful in bringing peace to the Muslims of Groszny.” Posted at 09:17 PM DECONSTRUCTING JIHAD [Kathryn Jean Lopez] "What the Koran Really Says About Jihad" For a map of the campus, see here. The Science Center is just north of Harvard Yard. If you Posted at 08:12 PM THE YEAR OF RUSSIAN ARMS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From English Pravda: Russian Weapons Make All Countries Feel Safe Posted at 03:49 PM GOT NRO? [NRO Staff] Have you found NRO useful/informative/entertaining over the past month (and/or more)? Consider making an investment in its future today. Donate to NRO. And thank you! Posted at 03:46 PM LIMERICKS [Jed Babbin] Many weeks ago, before the progress of Hans Blix's pension accrual was so rudely interrupted by the First Marine Division, the Third I.D., the Air Force, naval aviation and everything else we have that goes boom -- well, almost everything -- we invited you to complete the following limerick: There once was a nation called France With apologies for the delay, out of the hundreds of entries, here are the winners: Second prize (two copies of my novel, and one NR coffee mug) goes to: Joe St. Martin for: There once was a nation called France First prize (one copy of my novel, and two NR mugs) goes to: Doug Fuller for: There once was a nation called France Good on 'ya, guys. Please contact K-Lo by e-mail and we'll get your prizes on the way. Posted at 03:45 PM MUGABE, AGAIN [Andrew Stuttaford] Castro, it seems, has not been the only dictator to take advantage of the world’s preoccupation with Iraq. It turns out that Chirac’s pal Mugabe has also taken the opportunity to arrest hundreds – or perhaps even thousands – of his opponents. Posted at 03:43 PM THE WAGES OF SIN [Rod Dreher] ...is the death, perhaps, of a company. Angered by the flagrant dishonesty of management, which concealed a scheme to protect the pensions of its top executives should the company go into bankruptcy, American Airlines' flight attendants have scrapped their approval of the company's rescue plan. They're going to revote now. If AMR goes under, it'll be management's fault. You can't treat working people like dirt and expect them to say, "Thank you sir, may I have another?" Posted at 01:51 PM DISCOVER ISLAM -- OFASCISM [Rod Dreher] Before he was thrown in jail on a fraud conviction, professional anti-Semite and white supremacist David Duke was the honored guest of a Bahraini group called "Discover Islam," and appeared on an al-Jazeera talk show. Islam is a religion of peace. I know, I know, we're not supposed to hold all Muslims responsible for the actions of some. But Duke appeared as a guest on only the most popular satellite network in the Arab world. Had Pat Robertson invited Duke on "The 700 Club" to share his views about the Jews, everyone and his brother would have condemned the television evangelist, and rightly so. So is the Islamic world giving al-Jazeera and "Discover Islam" a pass? And if so, what does that tell us? And what does our giving them a pass tell us about the double standard we allow Muslims? Posted at 01:44 PM SPEAKING OF ART [Kathryn Jean Lopez] I left off the link to Saddam's collection yesterday. Here it is. Posted at 11:03 AM POUNDING PIPES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The Washington Post comes out against the White House nomination of Daniel Pipes to this congressionally funded U.S. Institute of Peace. In it they make clear that a) they haven't read beyond a column or two of his b) they've faithfully read all the CAIR press releases on him and c)--my favorite--the war on terror ought to end immediately to keep CAIR happy. Posted at 10:12 AM FINALLY, SOME GOOD NEWS IN THIS QUAGMIRE OF A WAR [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Artwork has been recovered in Jordan. Posted at 09:56 AM YOU'VE HEARD IT BEFORE. NOW ACT! [NRO Staff] GET 4 FREE ISSUES OF NATIONAL REVIEW! That's right: We'll send you 4 FREE issues of National Review at absolutely no risk to you. If you're impressed by National Review's superior writing style, analysis, and wit, we'll send you the next 12 issues for a total of 16 in all! for only $19.95. Click here for details. Posted at 08:15 AM I'D RATHER BE STEWED [Jonah Goldberg] The president of PETA wants to be barbecued. Posted at 07:10 AM NORTH KOREA DEFECTIONS [Jonah Goldberg] Up to 20 nuke scientists and other officials get out of dodge. Can't be bad news. And it looks like Nauru was a big help. Gotta love teeny-weeny countries. Posted at 07:05 AM TRANSLATION ISSUES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The North Koreans aren't actually reprocessing their fuel rods....at least not yet. Posted at 02:21 AM WHAT A SADDAM TRIAL WOULD LOOK LIKE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From Ruth Wedgwood. Posted at 12:01 AM Friday, April 18, 2003 FROM YOUR FAVORITE SAUDI ENGLISH-LANGUAGE DAILY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] An entire generation of young Iraqi young men has been exterminated by million-dollar uranium-headed missiles, cluster bombs and “mothers of all bombs” over the past 13 years. Not since the European rape of Africa or the Indian wars in America has there been such an unequal conflict. Posted at 11:47 PM SAUDIS WANT SANCTIONS TO STAY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Now Iraq is under an occupying power and any request for lifting sanctions must come when there is a legitimate government which represents the people... and which can comply with its duties toward lifting sanctions," Faisal told reporters after the meeting in the Saudi capital Riyadh. Posted at 11:44 PM AT LEAST SEVEN IRAQI EX-LEADERS IN SYRIA [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 11:36 PM EXCEPTION TO A RULE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From a reader: I've got a question that maybe you can pass on to all those Marines who say there is no such thing as a "former Marine." What do they call Scott Ritter? Posted at 11:25 PM SCOTT PETERSON ARRESTED [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Vindicating FNC. A few days ago, some California law-enforcement authority was holding a press conference and ran file footage of him jogging simultaneously. Posted at 11:20 PM UN-AMERICAN AMERICAN [Rod Dreher] American Airlines executives give capitalism a bad name. Posted at 10:42 PM MORE ON CHRETIAN'S CANADA [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From Michelle Malkin: Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien is vacationing in the Dominican Republic this weekend, where he will tee off with former U.S. President Bill Clinton for the newly inaugurated Soft-on-Terror Masters Tournament. While Chretien golfs, his fellow countryman and favorite accused terrorist Ahmad Said Khadr is still on the loose. Khadr, an Egyptian-born Canadian citizen, is considered by intelligence officials to be the highest-ranking Canadian within Osama bin Laden's inner circle. He studied computer science at the University of Ottawa and worked for an Ottawa-based Islamic charity, Human Concern International, which was generously subsidized by Chretien's government.Keep reading here. Posted at 05:46 PM FULL CIRCLE WITH TOLKIEN [John J. Miller] K Lo, To drive your Tolkien correspondent completely nuts, send him this link to my Wall Street Journal article from last year on Birzer's book and other Middle Earth matters. Posted at 05:05 PM MORE KABBALAH STUFF [Jonah Goldberg] From a reader: Dear Jonah: Posted at 05:01 PM CORNERED! [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Sorry for the series of blockquotes here (oh, so unfamilar!), but I know there are many of you who will enjoy this. I am reading through some missed e-mails from the past few weeks and just came across this one: This evening I decided, for once, to crack open a good book instead of spending the evening bathed in the warm glow of The Corner. So there I was twenty pages into J.R.R. Tolkien's Sanctifying Myth by Bradley J. Birzer, when the strangest thing happened. The author, surveying reviews of The Simarillion, wrote "Even National Review, which had unwaveringly supported Tolkien since the early 1960s, gave The Silmarillion but guarded praise. There 'are gaps and bulges in the narrative,' Richard Brookhiser complained. Still, Brookhiser compared Tolkien to Dante and concluded that the book 'is a worthy prequel to The Lord of the Rings, and no discredit to the man who devoted so much time to it.'" Tell me the truth: is this one of those I-can-check-out-anytime-but-never-leave sort of deals? Posted at 04:52 PM IT'S FORMER, M'AM [Kathryn Jean Lopez] I got a lot of these after publishing a "retired Navy guy" letter yesterday:
Consider the record corrected. And thanks to all you guys and gals who read us. Posted at 04:24 PM THE POPE ON THE WAR, ON THE RECORD [Kathryn Jean Lopez] ROMA - There’s war in Iraq. A war strongly opposed up to the last minute by the Catholic Church. Opposed but never condemned, judging by what was said by its supreme authority, the pope. It's worth reading. Posted at 03:54 PM BUY IT! [NRO Staff] GET NR’S ACCLAIMED BOOK OF CLASSIC KID’S STORIES! This big, beautifully illustrated book of over 40 children's tales--personally selected by Bill Buckley--is a must for every family. Includes stories by literary giants Mark Twain, Lewis Carroll, Jack London, L. Frank Baum, Louisa May Alcott, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Rudyard Kipling, Bret Harte, Thornton Burgess, Howard Pyle, and many more. Makes a great birthday gift (and a perfect reward for that excellent report card!). Over 10,000 already sold! Only $29.95 (free shipping and handling!), and just $24.95 for additional copies.Click here for details. Posted at 03:47 PM THEY DON'T DO TRUTH [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Syria may be poised to expel Iraqi Baathists. Syria previously said there weren't any in Syria. Posted at 03:36 PM WE WON’T OVERSTAY OUR WELCOME [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The Iraqis won’t let us. That’s very cool. Posted at 03:34 PM SLOW TO THE STORY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] I hadn't realized this (this, from a Steyn piece): ...they're cheerfully on the side of TotalFinaElf, the Western corporation closest to Saddam Hussein. Total had secured development rights to 25 percent of Iraqi oil reserves, a deal that depended on Saddam remaining in power. TotalFinaElf's largest shareholder is a subsidiary of Montreal's Power Corp. Power Corp's co-chief executives are Paul Desmarais Jr., who sits on the Total board, and his brother Andre Desmarais. Andre Desmarais' father-in-law is the prime minister of Canada, Jean Chretien. Canada refused to join the war to liberate Iraq on ''principle.'' Posted at 01:39 PM I KNEW... [Jonah Goldberg] That Madonna article would annoy people. From a reader:
To say that Kaballah is a Jewish mystical tradition predating organized religion is a contradiction in terms and a completely stupid thing to say. Posted at 01:34 PM NO MORE SHOCKING AND AWING [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Sony won’t make the videogame after all. Posted at 01:32 PM ARAFAT'S CONGRESSMEN [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Three U.S. reps visit Arafat, breaking a U.S. boycott. Darrell Issa is the Republican in the group. Posted at 01:08 PM DECK OF 51 [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Jed Babbin has checked in elsewhere on NRO. Posted at 12:36 PM MADONNA [Jonah Goldberg] From : USA Today: The wake-up call came seven years ago, when Madonna began studying Kabbalah. The Jewish mystical tradition predates organized religions and offers a path to fulfillment based on spiritual laws of the universe. Some aspects parallel Judaism. Rather than studying the Talmud, an academic interpretation of Jewish law, Kabbalists embrace the Zohar, a mystical interpretation devised by decoding ancient texts rather than accepting literal accounts. Conversant in Kabbalistic teachings and origins, Madonna considers herself a student, not a guru. Now, I'm no expert on the Kabbalah, but I know Madonna isn't either. Most rabbis were forbidden to study the Kabbalah -- I think -- at least until they were 40 years old. And I know most were discouraged from ever taking it up at all. Why? Because the Kabbalah is so complicated, so esoteric, so allusive, if you don't really know what you're talking about you can be easily and dangerously misled. How anyone could think Madonna is anything more than a New Age poser is beyond me. Posted at 12:36 PM THE COMICAL ALI DOLL [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 10:55 AM SAVING FACE DAY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] It's PR day for Saddam. Abu Dhabi has just aired an audio tape purportedly from him. A rambling motivational message to not give up to the infidels. You know some of the antiwar types love this stuff--"evidence" the U.S. has failed. In the audio, once again, he makes no attempt to prove the date, or to otherwise laugh in the Coalition's collective faces. Posted at 10:27 AM IRAQ'S MARSHES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The U.S. saves the planet--literally. Posted at 09:26 AM THE MATH OF MARRIAGE [John Derbyshire] That fight you just had with your spouse was governed my differential equations. Posted at 09:15 AM ANGEL OF DEATH [John Derbyshire] Rick, You will never again read a book on the beach without reflecting on the fact that you are doing it. I am the Angel of Death. Posted at 09:13 AM DECK OF CARDS [John Derbyshire] This business with issuing our troops a deck of cards has got me remembering that old Wink Martindale classic about the soldier caught dealing out a deck of cards in church. Posted at 09:12 AM ANOTHER AXIS COUNTRY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] North Korea announces it is reprocessing nuclear fuel rods. Posted at 09:03 AM ABU DHABI... [Kathryn Jean Lopez] ...is airing video of Saddam, reportedly taped on April 9--the day his statue was toppled. Nice propaganda move. Makes you think Disinformation Guy is still alive. Posted at 09:00 AM IRAQI NATIONAL MUSEUM [John Derbyshire] Just one point on the mailbag responding to my piece on the Iraqi National Museum. Several readers have objected to my saying that these antiquities are better off in private hands, as then they would not be available for public view. Well: (1) This is not true. Public exhibitions often include items loaned from private collections. (2) They haven't exactly been available for public viewing recently--the Iraqi National Museum has been closed to the public for years! (I am sorry, by the way, that I called Sir Leonard Woolley "Sir Edward." There are few fact-checkers on the web...) Posted at 08:55 AM SADDAM’S ART COLLECTION [Kathryn Jean Lopez] There could be a job opening for him at Forbidden Planet. Posted at 08:23 AM TRICK [Rick Brookhiser] I don't know what the trick is, I've just always been able to do it--planes, buses, beaches. Now will I be like the old man in the joke who was asked if he slept with his beard over or under the blanket, and died of the anxiety of trying to figure out which it was? Posted at 07:45 AM MONICA GETS A TV SHOW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Reality TV, of course. No word if Bill Clinton will appear on Mr. Personality. Posted at 07:39 AM DEAD OR ALIVE? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Chemical Ali's dead may be a rumor, though in this Sky News piece, a Brit. commanding official sticks by the previous story. Posted at 07:30 AM GOOD MORNING [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Sorry for the radio silence, as Jonah would say. NRO is on a semi-break today, no new posting on the homepage. That said, there is a lot from yesterday to read and it's a great time to catch up on anything you missed from the rest of the week. Meanwhile, they'll be activity in here, so check back now and again. Posted at 07:18 AM Thursday, April 17, 2003 GREAT PIC [Jonah Goldberg] This is my kind of peace rally. Print it out and give it to protestor.
Posted at 05:11 PM FROM BEHIND ENEMY LINES [Jonah Goldberg] I'll have a commentary on "Marketplace" the public radio show. It's not the best thing I've ever done, but it was kind of fun. I'm sure the liberals will complain. But that could be fun too. UPDATE: It will air tonight. Posted at 04:05 PM MICHAEL KELLY'S LAST COLUMN [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 03:59 PM THE MARSHALL CHRONICLES [Stanley Kurtz] James Taranto has a great take on Josh Marshall’s charge that the Bush administration’s has been deceiving the American people about it’s foreign policy. Taranto links to Jonah’s pieces about Marshall, and to one of mine as well. But I think a lot of people may have missed Marshall’s reply to me, and my second reply to him. You can read all that in my piece, “The Vision Thing.” Posted at 03:53 PM DASCHLE, NOT CATHOLIC [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Tom Dashcle has been told by the Sioux Falls diocese to stop calling himself Catholic. Not quite an excommunication, but certainly no tolerance either. Posted at 03:03 PM RE: PUTIN CRITIC DEAD [John Derbyshire] "Shot in the chest several times. Even the BBC suggests the obvious." Worst case of suicide I ever saw... Posted at 02:56 PM PUTIN CRITIC DEAD [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Shot in the chest several times. Even the BBC suggests the obvious. Posted at 02:47 PM RE: RE: TROLLOPE [John Derbyshire] Rick: That would be "Framley Parsonage." I know what you mean about Trollope. It doesn't do to read two or three of his books at a sitting. You start to get the feeling that you could cut up his stuff and sell it by the yard. (Which, in fact, is sort of how he wrote them.) Best to leave long intervals between Trollopes. But tell me: How do you manage to read on the beach? I cannot read--read a book, I mean, as opposed to a copy of NEWSWEEK-- (a) in a garden, (b) on a beach, or (c) in a plane. I have been trying all three for years, but can't master any of them. What's the trick? Posted at 02:07 PM RE: TROLLOPE [Rick Brookhiser] John, I must confess that I don't find even Trollope's top drawer to be very high. There is funny ecclesiastical politicking in Barchester Towers, and the details of being an MP are interesting. But Trollope is my beach author. I take him to the Caribbean, where the lulling surf makes it almost impossible to concentrate anyway; the lack of anything to concentrate on in his pages is thus no problem. Indeed, I once had a surprising experience, in the novel with the proud, impoverished curate who is obsessed by the loss of a check (the names do escape one). I realized with a shock that I was...engaged. Posted at 01:12 PM DR. ATKINS, RIP [Rod Dreher] Lift a glass of ranch dressing at lunch today to Dr. Robert Atkins, who has died from injuries suffered from a fall he took on the icy streets of Manhattan during the recent freak snowstorm. Dr. Atkins' theories about low-carb/high-protein dieting were scorned for decades, but have recently received scientific validation. They have certainly helped many of us lose lots of weight, and keep it off. Posted at 01:02 PM SADDAM AND SON DISCOVERED FLEEING IRAQ! [Jonah Goldberg] Here's the reconnaissance photo. Posted at 12:00 PM WATCHED THE STATUE TOPPLED? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Was Saddam in town when his statue came down in what people are now calling Freedom Square? Speculation, from Reuters. Posted at 11:58 AM SHOCKED AND AWED [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From the Moscow Times: As the war in Iraq winds to its inevitable end, uneasy reflections are taking over Russia's political and military elite. No one in Moscow ever seriously believed that Saddam Hussein might indeed "defeat" the allied forces. But the speed and decisiveness of the offensive has bewildered many. Posted at 11:19 AM OBSERVER OFFICE PARTIES [Rick Brookhiser] Jonah, No prob. I'm already thinking of ways to work "shyster" into my next Observer column. Posted at 11:13 AM SUBJECT: RICH, HAS IT BECOME THIS BAD? [Rich Lowry] E-mail: "As a dedicated Corner reader I know that you love your team, but honestly, is this necessary?" Posted at 10:55 AM ACTUALLY, JONAH [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Please only have cash gifts sent my way. Posted at 10:31 AM RE: THE TIMES [Jonah Goldberg] From a reader: JG: Posted at 10:24 AM MORE ON THE CLINTON MILITARY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From a retired Navy guy: I was in the Navy from 1994 to 1999 and I can attest to everything that Mac Owens mentions. Doing more with less was, of course, everyone's buzz word, but you would be absolutely amazed at the levels that this would reach. My ship, a Spruance Class Destroyer, had three gas turbine generators to run our engineering plant, and we were lucky if two (the minimum required) were working in the first four years I was onboard. The third was mostly used as spare parts. Because of reductions in force, our Captains (actually holding the rank of Commander) were so concerned about their advancement position that they would volunteer for every underway opportunity, and gave their junior officers no opportunity to learn for themselves. They would have to inform the captain of the smallest, most routine things (a ship within 3000 yards) and had no authority to make decisions. Our ship was the best in the squadron, performance-wise, but there was no pride because the captain only viewed it as a way to improve his chances for advancement. It was excellence by decree. I have never seen such a large group of broken men in my life. Turnover among our best and brightest was amazing. Among our E-5's, two of the top three in 1999 (myself included) separated from the Navy at the end of their enlistments, and the numbers throughout were probably well over 50%. And I was in personnel, so I had it easy! I almost reenlisted after 9/11, and felt guilty for being out and not being able to serve when my country needed me (my wife and I were awaiting notification that a child had been placed with us from Korea), and I often wonder what it would be like to serve a Commander-in-Chief that I respected. What a novel concept. Posted at 10:14 AM I DON'T MEAN TO BE RUDE [Jonah Goldberg] But if I could ask readers to resist the temptation to cc me on their email to other NRO writers unless there's a real compelling need? I don't want to discourage email, I live off of it. But I'm having a very, very hard time reading just my own email about the stuff I write. If I start reading the email you guys send to Derb, Dreher, etc., all I will do is read email and nothing else. I'm not saying I don't want to hear from you if you're furious about an editorial decision -- though those really should go to K-Lo these days -- I'm just saying please use your judgement. Posted at 10:13 AM BLIX WANTS BACK IN [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Wasn't he going to retire? Posted at 10:09 AM TIM ROBBINS VS. ALEC BALDWIN [Jonah Goldberg] Lots of readers want me to switch from Baldwin-bashing to Robbins-smashing. I'm certainly open to the suggestion, but I have to admit I don't think Robbins is nearly as dumb as Baldwin. Oh sure, Robbins politics are detestable, but I do think Robbins is actually pretty bright and clever. I don't like him. But one should give credit where due. I have lots of new readers since those early days, but let me be clear: I really, really do think Baldwin is not very bright. He reminds me of a white middle class version of the self-educated prison philosophers from "In Living Color." Tim Robbins, on the other hand, has made some smart movies and if he hadn't gone into acting I'm sure he'd have turned out to be quite successful at the profession God chose for him -- managing a chain of stores specializing in scented candles and exotic beads from South America.
Posted at 09:59 AM A COMMUNION GIFT. SPRING BIRTHDAY GIFT. ANYDAY KID GIFT. [NRO Staff] GET NR’S ACCLAIMED BOOK OF CLASSIC KID’S STORIES! This big, beautifully illustrated book of over 40 children's tales--personally selected by Bill Buckley--is a must for every family. Includes stories by literary giants Mark Twain, Lewis Carroll, Jack London, L. Frank Baum, Louisa May Alcott, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Rudyard Kipling, Bret Harte, Thornton Burgess, Howard Pyle, and many more. Makes a great birthday gift (and a perfect reward for that excellent report card!). Over 10,000 already sold! Only $29.95 (free shipping and handling!), and just $24.95 for additional copies.Click here for details. Posted at 09:58 AM RE: THE OBSERVER [Jonah Goldberg] Rick - I hear you re the Observer. I did say it's a fun paper. I really don't dislike it, Joe C.'s column notwithstanding. But the editorial really was awful, especially when you consider the fact that you do have a relationship with them. Their etymology was bad and a Nexis search would have stopped them in their tracks. A phone call to you might have done the trick too. Anyway, I hope I didn't make the next office party uncomfortable for you. Posted at 09:45 AM THE PEEVISH TIMES [Jonah Goldberg] From the New York Times editorial, "North Korea Blinks: The breakthrough came when North Korea stopped insisting on one-on-one talks with Washington. The Bush administration wanted a broader regional meeting. The invasion of Iraq may have given North Korea second thoughts, but pressure from China was probably more significant. Maybe I'm missing something but this strikes me as just blanket assertion and petulance on the part of the Times. After all, even if China's pressure was "more significant" than victory in Iraq in convincing the North Koreans to change their tune (I don't believe it for a moment), what proof does the Times have that the pressure from China wasn't also the product of our victory? Posted at 09:27 AM WHAT'S ARABIC FOR "DUH"? [John Derbyshire] From a piece in the Jerusalem Post: "A Palestinian journalist in Nablus says that the attitude toward Saddam began shifting when Palestinians saw on the Arab TV stations all the palaces the Iraqi president had built for himself and his cronies while his people were starving. ... "The people are very angry with Saddam because they weren't aware that he was such a big dictator," the journalist explains. "I myself feel like taking a shoe and hitting all the Arab leaders on their heads." Posted at 09:26 AM WMD, ALTERMAN & CO. [Jonah Goldberg] It's true: If we can't find Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq it will be a political disaster, if not domestically than certainly internationally. I'm still confident we'll find them. I don't think it would be a moral problem -- Milosovic didn't have WMD and he was worth toppling, right? But it's a no-brainer that if the what-if scenario came true, we'd have a lot of 'splaining to do. Fair enough. But so would the anti-war crowd too. Just as the Alterman's of the world have done another zig-zag and claimed they knew this would be a short war all along, they are now playing coy about the existence of WMD in Iraq. Alterman begins his blog today with a smirking jab: Welcome to Day ?? of the Iraq War of Still No Weapons of Mass Destruction. Let’s see: No significant Al-Qaeda ties, no nukes, no WMD. We had to go to war in Iraq again, why? Oh yeah, never mind. We won. Well, just to be clear Alterman and indeed almost all of the antiwar crowd were on record saying they had no doubt that Saddam had WMD. The debate was about what to do about it. If now they want to pretend like this was always a question mark, I hope they won't be cavalier when it's eventually discovered. And, heaven forbid, if it isn't discovered they are not completely off the hook either -- because they agreed with the hawks about the nature of the problem, just not the proposed solution. If you say we should starve the rattle snake and I say we should just blast a shotgun into the hole, you don't get unlimited rights to crow if the serpent turns out to be non-poisonous. Posted at 09:19 AM THE WAY WE LIVE NOW [John Derbyshire] Rick: One of his best. When the story of Robert Maxwell's death came out, I at once thought of Melmott.... Posted at 08:49 AM TIM PAT COOGAN--IT'S NOT JUST DERB [John Derbyshire] Some readers of the Hibernian persuasion took issue with my somewhat-less-than-friendly review of Tim Pat Coogan's book 1916 in NRODT a few weeks ago Well, it's not just me. Kevin Myers, one of the best opinion journalists on the other side of the pond (he appears frequently in the London Daily Telegraph as well as doing a regular column titled "An Irishman's Diary" for the Irish Times) recently tackled Tim Pat's previous book, Wherever Green Is Worn. That book has just been re-issued in paperback, and Kevin used this as the occassion to take a hurley stick to our Tim Pat. The Irish Times website demands that you--gasp!--pay to read it, so for non-subscribers here are some choice quotes from Kevin: "Without exception, it [i.e. Wherever Green Is Worn] is the worst book about Ireland that I have ever read, an execrably written and rambling farrago of errors in which just about the only things that are crystal clear are an obsession with national victimhood and the indefatiguably buffoonish egotism of the author..." "The author's apparent ignorance of history is at times morbidly compelling, rather like watching a drunken ice-skater repeatedly fall on his bottom..." "Calling Henry II, son of Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou and Maine, and Duke of Normandy, 'British' when 'Britishness' was not to be invented for another half a millennium is the sort of witless gibberish Christian Brothers used to rant a couple of generations ago..." "There are over 700 pages of such ill-informed vapouring. And what's more unendurable than his wearying conceit is the national self-pity that he peddles. Taking the index as a guide, it is surely telling that there are four pages which refer to the injustices done to the Birmingham Six and 28 to the Prevention of Terrorism Act. However, only three pages are given over to the Birmingham bombings themselves, and though this atrocity (his word) took the lives of, he admits, '21 innocent civilians' - are there any other kind? - the account here deals almost entirely with subsequent Irish victimhood..." "Wherever Green is Worn. Dreary rubbish about the Irish diaspora. Available now in paperback..." Posted at 07:48 AM MORE SADDAM TERROR TIES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Links to a Ugandan terror group. Posted at 06:36 AM THE FACE OF RECENT IRAQI HISTORY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A mass grave found outside Kirkuk. Posted at 05:38 AM SYRIA [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Powell plans on heading there. Posted at 05:04 AM NO DISTRACTIONS FROM JUSTICE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Bush considering sanctions against Cuba. Posted at 04:48 AM RE: RE: WOW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Another thing I did yesterday, instead of posting: A quick stop--passed the "Naked Cowboy" in Times Square and thousands of onlookers (don't you wish you were here?!)--for what may be the worst birthday gift ever given: the "Plastic Ono Band" CD, which was on a loved one's "wish list" as a joke; I didn't get the joke. The CD includes the song: "Woman is the Nigger of the World." I'll be getting it again and again. Posted at 12:07 AM VANISHING POINT [Andrew Stuttaford] So that’s where the Republican Guard went. Posted at 12:03 AM Wednesday, April 16, 2003 RE: WOW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Also crashing on editing for holiday site. Decompression and holidaying still a future prospect. Posted at 11:59 PM JACQUES THE 'STATESMAN' [Andrew Stuttaford] Doubts over Chirac’s ‘diplomacy’ seem to be mounting in France. On the right there are signs of discontent from the formidable interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, as well as the defense minister. On the left, Bernard Kouchner (a former Socialist health minister and a co-founder of Medecins Sans Frontieres) has attacked Chirac for effectively “pushing” America into war. Chirac’s response? To send the presumptious, preening and incompetent 'de' Villepin to prance his way through the Middle East. Posted at 11:57 PM MELBOURNE [Andrew Stuttaford] Well, John, I'll plead the Fifth on that one, but one of the other great comments from the old country on this topic came from the 19th Century Prime Minister Lord Melbourne. Annoyed by a particularly intense evangelical sermon, he was heard to remark that "things have come to a pretty pass when religion is allowed to invade the sphere of private life", a comment that, has probably annoyed a good number of clerics over the years. Melbourne himself also managed the quite remarkable dual historical achievement of being cuckolded by Byron and, in later life, having a crush on the young Queen Victoria. Posted at 11:55 PM RE: THE OBSERVER [Rick Brookhiser] As the only NR-ite and Corner visitor to write for the New York Observer, let me put in a word for the pink paper. The Observer debuted in 1987. I thought they might like a conservative columnist, so I called up the owner and publisher, Arthur Carter. At that time all I knew of him was that he also published The Nation. When I arrived in his office, I began with my spiel of who I was and what I had done, but he cut me off. "Of course I'm familiar with your work from National Review," he said, then added: "I gave National Review $1000 once." "Why did you do that?" I asked. "Because I think National Review does a good job, and magazines that do a good job should be encouraged." His ideal, I realized, would be to publish all the journals of opinion. Since he can't do that, he does the next best thing, which is to publish the truly heterogeneous New York Observer. (Note to Jonah, Kathryn: Let's not ask him for $1000 for NRO until some time has passed, shall we?) Posted at 11:46 PM THE PIZZA GUY [Rod Dreher] Writing in the Wanderer, the conservative Catholic paper, Brooklyn's Fr. Joe Wilson pays wonderful tribute to Steve Brady, a small-town pizza parlor owner, who is also a fearless and prophetic Christian to whom the Catholic Church in America owes a great debt. Posted at 11:42 PM MORE ANGLICANS [Rick Brookhiser] If a non-Anglican may contribute to this thread, I am reading The Way We Live Now for the first time (not top drawer Trollope--too much whinging about swindling rich men, as if Lewis Lapham had written a novel). Roger Carbury, the umpteenth occupant of Carbury Manor, had befriended an R.C. priest (he converted, or "perverted," as the book's Anglicans say, when he was at Oxford, so he is a gentleman). But his Catholic friend lays on the apologetics a bit thick, and Roger grows tired of it. Trollope comments: "Perhaps also Roger felt that were he to take up the cudgels for an argument he might be worsted in the combat, as in such combats success is won by practised skill rather than by truth." Posted at 11:41 PM DERB'S NEW BOOK [John Derbyshire] A cheeky reader wants to know, for browsing purposes, where the dirty bits are in PRIME OBSESSION. Well, it's a matter of taste, but the part I personally find most arousing is when I invert the integral of the J function in Chapter 21. Posted at 11:40 PM WOW [Jonah Goldberg] Last post at 3:50. My apologies people. I guess war decompression and the holidays have won the day. Posted at 09:27 PM ANGLICANS [John Derbyshire] Andrew--How about George Orwell: "I like the Church of England better than Our Lord." ? Posted at 03:50 PM C OF E (2) [Andrew Stuttaford] When it comes to the C of E, I always preferred Churchill's view. He was not, he said, "a pillar of the Church but a buttress - [he] supported it from the outside." Posted at 03:39 PM THE C OF E [Andrew Stuttaford] Well, John, that's true about the martyred Latimer and Ridley, of course, but I'm a bit worried about the overall tone of that article. Rowan Williams as the saviour of the C of E? Hardly. Not only is he is a left-wing nutter, but he is far too prone to wanton displays of 'erudition' and theological obsession - neither of which have any part to play in the true traditions of C of E - nice cups of tea, country parsons, good-hearted social work, the best hymns in the world, the King James Bible, a fairly benign patriotism and a vague injunction to 'play nice'. Posted at 03:38 PM MORE SHYSTER [Jonah Goldberg] From a reader: "Shyster" is apparently as anti-Semitic as "niggardly" is anti-black. Its apparent etymology (as I'm sure you found) traces back to a German word for defecation. But it's not news that shyster was meant to be used derogatorily about lawyers in general. Posted at 03:10 PM ON KICKING A-- [Mackubin Thomas Owens] I apologize for my tardiness in responding to a question Ramesh asked on the Corner a few days ago. If Clinton was so bad for defense, he asked, why did our military do so well in Iraq? Nancy Pelosi made the same point recently, as did others a year ago after the US success in Afghanistan, and it is a fair question. The first point to make is that in defense matters, as in economic ones, there is often a lag between cause and effect. The Clinton economic "boom" was really a consequence of changed fundamental attributable to the Reagan economic revolution. The situation is similar with regard to defense. During the Clinton years, the military could live off of the capital created by the modernization that took place in the 1980s thanks to the Reagan defense buildup. But something else happened in both arenas that sustained existing trends beyond what analysts predicted at the time: the information revolution. Hi tech fueled the Clinton boom. It also helped to transform the military before "transformation" became a Pentagon buzz word. Although his acolytes have tried, Clinton cannot take credit for these exogenous changes in the environment. Finally, we forget that it was the Congress elected in 1994 that insisted on increases in defense funding. Here's what Michael O'Hanlon said in a piece PRAISING Clinton. the Clinton administration misused military power during its first year in office in Somalia and then in Haiti....Morale was low, and recruitment and retention posed problems. Cuts in defense spending to help balance the federal budget went too far in some cases — until the Republican Congress stepped in an insisted on adding money for the Pentagon.Thus the real Clinton legacy was low morale, recruitment and retention problems, and cuts in defense spending while increasing the demands on the force. But the U.S. military is a resourceful and innovative organization. Throughout history, soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines have learned to cope with problems created by politicians who want defense on the cheap. I would argue that the military has done as well as it has recently in spite of Clinton rather than because of him. Posted at 03:09 PM FYI [Jonah Goldberg] That was in reference to today's Goldberg File which you should read at least once, but click on 8 billion times. Posted at 03:05 PM MORE ON SHYSTERS [Jonah Goldberg] Even the Observer's etymological argument is a mess. Posted at 03:04 PM ANGLICANS ASCENDANT [John Derbyshire] Latimer & Ridley did not die in vain. Posted at 02:16 PM NK [Kathryn Jean Lopez] North Korea has agreed to a trilateral meeting with China and the U.S. Not to be preemature: but score another for President Bush? Posted at 02:15 PM VICTORY TOUR [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Tommy Franks went to Baghdad today and called the president and Rumsfeld from Saddam Hussein's main palace there. He is said to have commented (according to FNC): "This looks like the oil-for-palaces program Saddam had going." In Uday's case, it was oil for porn. Posted at 02:10 PM GET NR’S ACCLAIMED BOOK OF CLASSIC KID’S STORIES! [NRO Staff] GET NR’S ACCLAIMED BOOK OF CLASSIC KID’S STORIES! This big, beautifully illustrated book of over 40 children's tales--personally selected by Bill Buckley--is a must for every family. Includes stories by literary giants Mark Twain, Lewis Carroll, Jack London, L. Frank Baum, Louisa May Alcott, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Rudyard Kipling, Bret Harte, Thornton Burgess, Howard Pyle, and many more. Makes a great birthday gift (and a perfect reward for that excellent report card!). Over 10,000 already sold! Only $29.95 (free shipping and handling!), and just $24.95 for additional copies.Click here for details. Posted at 02:06 PM "IRAQ MUST BE DEMOCRATIC" [Kathryn Jean Lopez] I'm doing a few dozen things at once right now, but am paying enough attention to know that is another W. classic speech in St. Louis. I am reminded to point out this White House interactive thingy tonight on the White House website. If you're online at 6 (EST) and want to ask Andy Card a question, go to town. Posted at 01:49 PM RON JR. [Jonah Goldberg] Email pouring in. Jokes about Ronny hosting the dog show, opposing his Dad when he was President, etc. All good points. Indeed, this was my point. Ron Jr. is not qualified to determine who is or who is not fulfilling Reagan's legacy. He is only qualified to do jester-work for liberals who want to hear him either bad mouth his dad or bad mouth other Republicans. Yawn. Posted at 01:41 PM TRINITARIAN KURTZ [Jonah Goldberg] From a reader: I emailed last week, and I think Stanley Kurtz's postings in the Corner are destined to come in 3's. Since I've said it, he hasn't let me down. Posted at 01:37 PM DERB, DUDES! [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Check out the Popular Science "Book of the Month"! Get Derbyshire's latest here. Posted at 01:36 PM ILLUSIONS' LONG LIVES [Andrew Stuttaford] Also via Harry, it turns out that Castro's latest murders have even been enough to turn the stomach of the ghastly Jose Saramago, the Communist hack and Nobel prizewinner featured in the Corner a few weeks ago. According to Saramago "Cuba has [now]...lost my confidence, damaged my hopes, robbed me of illusions". Illusions? After forty years of Castro's thuggery, slaughter, oppression and economic failure, Saramago still had "illusions"? Incredible. Posted at 01:32 PM SOME CUBAN FACTS [Andrew Stuttaford] Here's a list to remember next time you hear someone in Hollywood telling you that his or her conversation with Castro was the most important (or some other equally absurd adjective) "eight hours of their life". Via blogger Harry of Harry's Place Posted at 01:30 PM GOOD SIGN SALON IS DOOMED [Jonah Goldberg] Salon is smashing the toothpaste tube with a sledgehammer in order to get the last molecules of controversy or even interest out of poor Ron Reagan Jr. In what Salon describes as "a flame-throwing conversation about the war and the Bush administration's efforts to lay claim to the Reagan legacy," Ron Jr. says nasty things about the current president Bush (or at least seems to from the teaser). Interviewing Ron Jr. just stinks of desperation for buzz. Posted at 01:24 PM ABOUT SAID [Stanley Kurtz ] Here’s an anniversary not to celebrate. It’s twenty-five years since the publication of Edward Said’s Orientalism. Columbia University is whooping it up with a parade of Said acolytes, all of thm lavishing praise on their political-intellectual hero. You can read about the festivities at Martin Kramer’s blog, Sandstorm. and in Jonathan Harris’s NRO piece from yesterday .But if you want to mark this anniversary the right way, scroll down to where Kramer has made web accessible for the first time his powerful critique of Edward Said’s Orientalism (chapter two of Kramer’s important book, Ivory Towers On Sand). And for my own skewering of Said, look here. Posted at 12:52 PM CALIFORNIA FACTS [Stanley Kurtz ] I leaned something very interesting from Eric Hogue. It seems that the latest Field Poll shows president Bush leading any Democratic contender by 45 to 40 percent. Remember, this is California. Of course, it can’t last. Still, it’s pretty amazing news. In fact, when they heard it, Californians had a cow. Posted at 12:13 PM COWS (REALLY) [Stanley Kurtz ] Jonah, this is really weird. A little while ago, for no particular reason, you said, “Look! Cows!” A little bit later, I appeared on the Eric Hogue radio show in Sacramento, California (5-9AM, 1380 KTKZ) to talk about North Korea. While I was waiting to go on, the news broadcast was all about a cow stuck in the middle of a highway. It must be some sort of ESP. Posted at 12:11 PM HELP--NAPA VALLEY [Rich Lowry] This is a slightly bizarre one, but I've got to stop writing my columns about Iraq. The Washington Post ran a story last month about the enviros waging war on Napa Valley wine-growers: "The winemakers are under assault from environmentalists, who have begun to disparage their trellised fields as sterile `alcohol farms' and accuse the growers of `graping the land.' A few radicals have even compared the vinters to `merchants of death,' as if a tasty ripe Syrah with blackberry notes and flavors of sweet toast were akin to a pack of Camels or a Mac-10 pistol." This strikes me as a possibility fun topic. If you know soemthing about it, I'd love to hear from you... Posted at 11:41 AM RE: MY NEW JOB [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Al Jazeera reporters set the global news agenda?! At least it is official: Strong world affairs and political knowledge required, excellent writing and analytical skills in English, as well as the ability to find and set the global news agenda. Posted at 11:14 AM THE WRECK OF FITZGERALD [Ramesh Ponnuru] I disagree with your assessment, John, in one respect. Fitzgerald often gave the Republican leadership headaches, but on most of the big issues he was a solid conservative vote. I think it unlikely that he will be succeeded by a senator as reliably pro-life, pro-free trade, and anti-tax as he has been. Posted at 11:06 AM BEINART & KELLY [Jonah Goldberg] As I mentioned yesterday, I really liked Peter Beinart's tribute to Michael Kelly. (Reg required). I also said I have some quibbles. Here you go: Well, first of all, I was delighted to hear that Kelly was a believer in "Hidden Law" -- a Burkean/Hayekian view of conservatism championed by Jonathan Rauch among others. I've written about Hidden Law a lot of times and I am a big believer and fan of the formulation. Here's how Peter neatly describes Kelly's views: Mike's traditionalism made him a conservative, but not of the contemporary Washington variety. Many of today's "conservatives" are in love with theory, with efficiency, with remaking the world according to the abstractions in their minds. Mike was a conservative in the older, cultural sense. He wanted to preserve the unwritten rules, built up imperceptibly over time, that define morality in most people's lives. He revered the old-fashioned Capitol Hill neighborhood in which he grew up, and he believed that such communities developed organic standards of conduct far more subtle and dignified than outsiders understood, standards that needed to be protected from the sledgehammer of ideology and law. In Mike's view, the primary threat to those standards came from self-righteous liberalism—with its intrusive mandates about smoking, gender relations, and shoveling the snow from your sidewalk. But conservatives could threaten them as well. Some on the contemporary right might have fired those old ladies at the White House in the name of efficiency; others might have done so for the greater good of the conservative movement. Mike would have loathed that, too. Good stuff. As Tommy Boy says: Me likey. But I guess my problem is this: it is precisely this sort of traditionalist conservative that Peter and the New Republic dislike the most. Oh they have bad things to say about the free-market ideologues too. It is a liberal magazine after all. But the New Republic likes conservative ideologues largely because they don't have the "taint" of old school conservatism. It's been reaching out to the Weekly Standard as kindred spirits for the last couple years. AEI scholars are welcome in the pages of TNR. Its positions on free trade, racial quotas, even the wars on terror and Iraq are in sync with the ideological and ultra-rational branch of conservatism, not the branch whose roots go back to traditional arrangements and so forth. I don't have time to go find examples, but I could swear that the conservatives who invoke tradition and ritual are the ones most likely to be called racists, homophobes and sexists by various New Republic editors. Now, obviously, Peter has no such thing in mind when he calls Kelly a traditionalist, nor should he. Kelly was by all accounts a generous, kind and decent man. And I guess that's my point. There are plenty of other traditionalists who don't deserve that treatment either. Oh, and the usual full-disclosure: I've happily become friends with Peter over the last year, largely because we're on CNN a lot together. Not sure if that matters to anyone. Posted at 11:00 AM CASUALTY COUNTS [Jonah Goldberg ] Josh Chafetz tries to get to the bottom of the tallies. And don't forget the piece by Iain Murray -- the Barry White of statistical policy analysis -- over at TCS.
Posted at 10:45 AM FRENCH MUSLIM VOTE [Andrew Stuttaford] Stanley, Those are indeed disturbing numbers, but it would be interesting to find out how many people actually voted. Without knowing, my guess is that this was a poll that was always going to be skewed towards the more fundamentalist-inclined. After all, the apathetic, the secular (and even, perhaps, those whose interest in their religion is less than all-consuming) are hardly likely to take the trouble to participate in a vote of this kind despite the fact that they will all be included in the total of five million 'Muslims' for the purposes of the French bureaucracy. Posted at 10:45 AM WE'RE AT YELLOW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The terror alert was just lowered. Though I am not a huge fan or the terror color-code system, it's a reminder that we're succeeding in the war on terror the world over. Posted at 10:25 AM LOOK! COWS! [Jonah Goldberg] Sorry, I just thought a non-sequitur might liven things up in here. Posted at 10:24 AM KEEPING THE HEAT ON UC [Stanley Kurtz] I know I blogged on this yesterday, but I’m still shaking my head about University of California president Richard Atkinson’s effort to gut the university’s code of academic freedom. Atkinson–-the same fellow who’s responsible for the gutting of the SAT-–is now determined to remove the provisions of the University of California’s code of academic freedom that protect students from professors who want to feed them a political line. The shamelessness of this simply takes my breath away. Fortunately, in contrast to the SAT fiasco, this time there is a way that NRO readers can actually help. If you haven’t already done so, read the following account, then consider scrolling down to the bottom and sending messages of protest to the e-mail addresses listed. To my mind, this whole misadventure has been set off by professors stung by the work of NoIndoctrination.org, the website I wrote about in “Students Fight Back.” That website prominently displays the very provisions of the U.C. code that University of California officials want to cut. Posted at 10:08 AM ASSIMILATION [Stanley Kurtz ] This story of Islamist success in elections to the new French Muslim council is important and disturbing. It ratifies the fear that French Muslims are not assimilating. That has a lot to do with the capture of European elites by multiculturalism, but it also says something about the difficulty of achieving Muslim assimilation. And of course, despite the fact that I think it’s worth a try, this election does not bode well for efforts to liberalize Iraq. If current population trends continue, Muslims could make up as much as half of France within decades. Even if that calculation is off, this kind of failure of assimilation raises very serious worries for the future of Europe. And of course, all of this explains a lot about the current French/American split on the Middle East. Posted at 09:58 AM ISLAMISTS IN FRANCE [Stanley Kurtz ] There’s a very sobering article by Elaine Sciolino in today’s New York Times. It seems that Islamic clerics held an election to select representatives to France’s first national council of Muslims. A number of mosques (presumably the more radical ones) declined to participate in the election, and it was assumed that moderates would dominate. Instead, a radical fundamentalist party that seeks to establish Islamic law took about a third of the seats, and the most moderate party, which had been expected to dominate the council, took only half as many seats as the Islamists. (Other groups, between the moderates and the radicals, took the balance of the seats.) Posted at 09:57 AM K-LO'S NEW JOB SPECIFICATIONS [Andrew Stuttaford] Hmmm, Kathryn, "Ability to...understand more than one culture". I guess that being able to deal with Jonah and the Derb counts as a good track record in that respect. Posted at 09:55 AM WHAT GOOD NEWS! [Stanley Kurtz] What an amazing moment this is. The North Koreans have stopped their mad provocations and have knuckled under to the administration’s insistence on multilateral talks. The Chinese may even do what needs to be done to get rid of Kim Jong Il (although we sure can’t count on that). The Democrats are in disarray. Deeply discredited by their waffling and opposition on the war, they are praying for an economic meltdown. The media is embarrassed and discredited in the eyes of many for its anti-war bias. Fox News has surged massively, while all the others are playing catchup. Chirac is backtracking, the axis of weasels is in danger of breaking apart, and French businesses, especially wine makers, are feeling the heat of American displeasure. The president’s popularity is high. Yes, I know Bush #1 lost after his Gulf War success. And Republicans are having a tough go of it in a closely divided Senate. All things considered, though, it’s time to stop, take a look around, and smell the roses (or newsprint, as the case may be). This is a very happy moment. Posted at 09:41 AM PATHETIC [Stanley Kurtz] Wow. You know the antiwar Left is in trouble when they’re reduced to this. Posted at 09:36 AM THE FUTURE OF FREEDOM [Stanley Kurtz] Fareed Zakaria has a plan for democratizing Iraq, and I like it. As far as I’m concerned, Zakaria’s views on post-war government in Iraq are entirely compatible with the argument I set out in my new piece, “Democratic Imperialism: A Blueprint.” I’ve been reading Zakaria’s new book, The Future of Freedom, and I think his views on democratizing non-Western societies are right on target. I hope to write more about Zakaria’s book in the next few weeks. But I can certainly say now that I recommend The Future of Freedom highly. Posted at 09:27 AM BYE. I QUIT. [Kathryn Jean Lopez] I've got another job opportunity. See ya. Posted at 09:20 AM MORE CLINTON [Kathryn Jean Lopez] He praised Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld for their handling of the war, but said Bush should have waited longer before attacking for the "chance that either [Saddam Hussein] would have disarmed or ... we would have had far more members of the Security Council with us."Oh yeah, it would be great if the Iraqi people were still living under a murderous tyrant. As long as the U.N. was at work. Posted at 09:11 AM YOU WON'T REGRET IT [NRO Staff] GET 4 FREE ISSUES OF NATIONAL REVIEW! That's right: We'll send you 4 FREE issues of National Review at absolutely no risk to you. If you're impressed by National Review's superior writing style, analysis, and wit, we'll send you the next 12 issues for a total of 16 in all! for only $19.95. Click here for details. Posted at 09:02 AM TEXAS: IT AIN'T NYC [Rod Dreher] Further adventures in anthropology. I have complained endlessly that I've got something like six TV preacher channels on my cable system here in Dallas, but no Fox News. Well, just now I was trying to find a news channel, and surfed past several TV preachers along the way. I stopped on one for a moment because the preacher was so striking. He was a late middle-aged man, a little puffy, with a pock-marked face and wearing a cheap suit. He was standing in front of billowy blue curtains, on a small stage. His voice was the eeriest thing. It was an insistent, monotonous, coarse growl. He spoke in a tense, angry monotone, as if he were reciting an incantation. His accent was so backwoods I thought at first he was praying in tongues. Then I understood he was praying. He was repeating, over and over, "Lord, bind those who oppose this Iraqi war. Bind those who oppose this Iraqi war." I swear, it was straight out of a Flannery O'Connor story. Posted at 08:53 AM FITZGERALD OUT [John J. Miller] The decision by Republican senator Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois not to seek re-election next year is probably a good one for the GOP. He was perhaps the most vulnerable incumbent of either party; there was a better than 50-50 chance he wouldn't win a second term. One Democrat was already polling ahead of him. This gives Republicans a chance to put up a fresh face and hold the seat. It's also worth noting that Fitzgerald has been a disappointment to conservatives. He came to Washington as one, but as the Post reports today, he pursued an "often independent course." You know what that means. And guys like this never improve--they only get worse over time. Posted at 08:09 AM HE'S GOT IT ALL [Andrew Stuttaford] It seems fair to say that Stephen Pollard approves of Donald Rumsfeld. Posted at 07:58 AM IT DIDN'T TAKE LONG [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Bill Clinton's back: Our paradigm now seems to be: something terrible happened to us on September 11, and that gives us the right to interpret all future events in a way that everyone else in the world must agree with us," said Clinton, who spoke at a seminar of governance organized by Conference Board. "And if they don't, they can go straight to hell." Posted at 07:33 AM RE: LIFE IMITATES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Denis Boyles notes that: "The French are claiming this as a major military victory." Posted at 07:17 AM BURIED PRISONERS FOUND ALIVE? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] This seems huge if true. Posted at 06:47 AM NOT QUITE CHANGING THEIR WAYS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Palestinian Authority sides with terror: demands the immediate release of Abu Abbas. Seems like a with-us or against-us moment. Posted at 05:35 AM AL-SAHAF DEAD? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Iranian reports he killed himself. Posted at 05:30 AM LIFE IMITATES BEAVIS AND BUTT-HEAD [Rod Dreher] A north Texas teenager joined his friends in the middle of the night to shoot frogs out of a potato gun. Yee-ha! The gun failed to go off. The kid looked down the barrel, whereupon the thing fired. The ballistic frog hit the kid in the face, breaking bones in his skull and permanently blinding him. Posted at 02:28 AM COULD IT HAPPEN HERE? [Rod Dreher] NPR commentator Kurt Campbell of the Center for Strategic and International Studies just returned from a trip to Asia. He says SARS is changing society there in ways that we in the West scarcely appreciate. Here's the audio file of his startling commentary. Highly recommended. Posted at 02:20 AM Tuesday, April 15, 2003 THE WEST WANTS THE DISINFORMATION MINISTER BACK [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Yet another site dedicated to him. Posted at 07:04 PM SYRIA AND THE NAZIS [Rod Dreher] Syria was also the final destination of Hajj Amin al-Husseini, the former Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, who was trained in propaganda by the Nazis, and who led anti-Jewish terror during his reign as the chief Islamic authority in that city. The Mufti died peacefully in Syria, among friends, in 1974. Posted at 06:34 PM CUT SPENDING [Ramesh Ponnuru] A modest proposal from Brian Riedl of the Heritage Foundation, and not in the Swiftian sense. Posted at 05:59 PM TAKING CARE OF ALL THE TERRORISTS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Abu Abbas, wanted for 1985 Achille Lauro hijack, captured by U.S. forces in Iraq, CNN says./REUTERS Posted at 05:45 PM YOU KNOW THE WAR IS OVER [Kathryn Jean Lopez] When The Corner gets so sleepy. Posted at 05:43 PM FITZGERALD BOWS OUT [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Illinois Republican senator Peter Fitzgerald is not running for reelection, news to fellow GOPers in state. Posted at 05:15 PM BLAME THE LEVIATHAN STATE [Jonah Goldberg] For my Corner absence. Been working on taxes. They suck. The rest is commentary. Posted at 04:25 PM SYRIA'S GUESTS [Andrew Stuttaford] One of the complaints about Syria is that it is playing host to various nasties from Saddam's regime. This, alas, is all too justified. Syria, after all, was the final destination of the notorious Alois Brunner, an SS-Hauptsturmfuhrer who played no small part in Nazi genocide and, in the post-war years, ended up as an adviser to the Syrian government. He is thought to have lived on in Syria at least until the 1990s. If he is still alive (Brunner was born in 1912) he may still be in Damascus today, and, would, doubtless, be good company for Saddam's former cronies. Posted at 02:53 PM JASPER BECKER ON NORTH KOREA [John Derbyshire] Ah, the BSD factor! Posted at 02:52 PM SYRIA [Andrew Stuttaford] The current war talk about Syria is, I hope, just talk - Syria is not, to say the very least, a nice place (Stephen Pollard has more details in this disturbing piece from the Telegraph), but there are - a few - signs that the younger Assad might be attempting to move things in a somewhat less malevolent direction. The example of Iraq should speak for itself, and provide, shall we say, a little encouragement for somewhat better behavior on the part of the Syrian regime. Circumstances may change, but choosing this moment to push Assad deeper into his own Baathist laager won't help, nor will it resonate well elsewhere in the Islamic world. I'm not the only person today to recall that Teddy Roosevelt believed in both the big stick and soft talk. It's time for a little of the latter - certainly for now. Least helpful of all are today's comments from Ariel Sharon on this topic - Israel has many legitimate grievances against Syria, but any suggestion that the man who the Arab world most likes to demonize has (to quote the London Times) 'a list of demands for Washington to present to Damascus' is likely to be highly counterproductive to US efforts, to put it mildly. Posted at 02:40 PM WEARING OUT HIS WELCOME [Andrew Stuttaford] Not as good as NRO fashion--but a good second best. Posted at 02:18 PM CLARIFICATION [Robert A. George] Just to make my earlier Corner note totally clear: "Rummy" was in reference to Donald Rumsfeld, not the "demon rum" to which Jonah referred as the root cause of Rodney King's driving problems. Of course, some on the Left call our esteemed secretary of defense "Demon" Rum anyway... Posted at 02:05 PM RODNEY KING [Robert A. George] So, just days after Rummy said these words -- "While no one condones looting, on the other hand, one can understand the pent-up feelings that may result from decades of repression. -- Rodney King resurfaces!! Coincidence? I think not!!! Posted at 01:51 PM LIKE POLITICAL CREME BRULÉ... [Jonah Goldberg] This is so delicious. Here's the beginning of the article from the Independent: There is no French equivalent for "cheese-eating surrender monkeys". The puerile insult that has crossed the Atlantic after years of trying has no resonance there. France does not regard its hostility to Anglo-US unilateralism as cowardice. But, last Thursday, the French media did, briefly, perceive a need for attitude-adjustment. Posted at 01:45 PM LOOK WHO WANTS TO BE ON THE WINNING SIDE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Chirac talks to Bush--and issues a press release. Posted at 01:24 PM THAT EXPLAINS IT [Jonah Goldberg] From a reader: The explanation of Mr. King's accident is that he was distracted by the lush green grass in front of the house he hit. Mr. King was quoted as he was pulled from the car, "Can't we just all get a lawn?" Posted at 01:15 PM POSTER BOY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Denis Boyles (who can be read on NRO today here) tells the incredible story of the European media's exploitation of a boy who is not only a casualty of war, but a victim of the media war on the war. Of course, one victimization was a mistake. The other wasn't at all. Posted at 12:51 PM VINDICATING PREEMPTION [Stanley Kurtz ] If the Chinese really do get rid of Kim Jong Il, it will be a dramatic vindication of the Bush administration’s policy of selectively preventing proliferation through preemption. We are already seeing a cascading effect from Iraq that might get us real traction against proliferation worldwide. The negotiate-at-any-price policy of the Democrats is bankrupt. It cannot succeed against the deadly combination of terror and weapons of mass destruction. The Bush administration’s policy of selective preemption is the only way to go. And right now, it’s working. Posted at 12:42 PM BREAKTHROUGH [Stanley Kurtz] As Rich Lowry pointed out yesterday on The Corner, nearly every prominent Democratic critic of the administration was wrong to insist that we negotiate bilaterally with the North Koreans. The Bush administration has been right to push for a multilateral approach, and the war in Iraq is what’s caused the recent breakthrough toward multilateral negotiations on the Korean crisis. But the truth is, because of the verification issue, even multilateral negotiations won’t work--unless they turn in to a vehicle for Chinese imposed regime change in North Korea. You can read more about the possibility of Chinese imposed regime change by reading Jasper Becker’s piece at TNR’s website. (subscribers only) Posted at 12:41 PM REGIME CHANGE IN NORTH KOREA [Stanley Kurtz ] I can’t see any conceivable solution to the North Korean crisis short of regime change. The reason for that is the near impossibility of verifying any agreement that puts a halt to North Korea’s nuclear program. I discussed this recently in, “An Ominous Cloud.” But it is just possible that we might be able to rid North Korea of its nuclear weapons, without a war. The solution would be for China, not simply to pressure North Korea, but literally to bring about (peaceful) regime change. Thanks to the success of the war in Iraq, that solution is now conceivable. Posted at 12:40 PM TAXING IMAGE OF THE DAY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] That Family Research Council ad on the homepage on tax policy is just perfect today. Posted at 12:35 PM ANDREW SULLIVAN [Jonah Goldberg] Lighten up folks. I wasn't trying to say anything profound about Andrew Sullivan (and no I won't switch teams just to pick up more of his market share). Opinions differ on the guy, but I'm a fan and a friend. Posted at 11:53 AM FYI - THE SURE THING [Jonah Goldberg] Yes, yes, I know my post late yesterday about "talking to you wireless" was a misquote from the Sure Thing. The actual line was "I'm talking to you cordless." I realized the goof on the plane. For the record, John Podhoretz was the first to call me out on this. Still I do know one thing, Lance sure does drink a lot of beer. Posted at 11:49 AM RE: REALITY TV [Jonah Goldberg] We would have to have a Cosmo-cam. Posted at 11:44 AM MARRIED BY THE CORNER [John J. Miller] K Lo, This marriage proposal on The Corner makes me think we should branch into reality TV. Do you think Fox would give us a show? Posted at 11:19 AM INTERNAL DIVISION [Stanley Kurtz] I remain internally divided on question of whether to make a systematic and long term effort to transform Middle Eastern culture. In ordinary circumstances, I would stand with Theodore Dalrymple’s pessimism, and dismiss such a challenge as quixotic and implausible. Yet, given a world in which nuclear terror is a real and lasting threat, I am moved by the argument that the effort to bring liberal democracy to the Middle East must now be made. In any case, for the ultimate in pessimism, have a look at Dalrymple’s wonderful essay. Posted at 10:32 AM IMPERIAL FAILURE [Stanley Kurtz ] Despite its pessimism, Theodore Dalrymple’s great new article on the failure of even the most well motivated and plausible imperial plans for social reform is well worth a read. I think Dalrymple hits on the central issue--the real block to modernizing reform in the non-Western world. Dalrymple’s account of the networks of extended family obligation in non-Western nations tells us much of what we need to know about why countries like Iraq can accommodate modern education and professionalism, yet still produce a monster like Saddam Hussein. I’ve treated these issues myself in my extended review of Bernard Lewis’s, What Went Wrong? and in an earlier piece for NRO, “With Eyes Wide Open.” Posted at 10:32 AM MR. PESSIMISM [Stanley Kurtz ] Theodore Dalrymple has a superb article in the latest City Journal on the experience of empire. Dalrymple is, I think, too pessimistic about the possibility of drawing hopeful and practical lessons for our current challenge in the Middle East from the British imperial experience. Nonetheless, Dalrymple’s article is a useful corrective to my new piece on “Democratic Imperialism.” Of course, my own piece is a corrective to the excessive optimism of democratizing enthusiasts. So Dalrymple is about as pessimistic as you can conceivably get. Posted at 10:30 AM RE: MARKET SHARE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] We could just take a vacation, too. Sounding very tempting. Posted at 10:27 AM MARKET SHARE [Jonah Goldberg] I see that Andrew Sullivan has gone on vacation for the week. In an effort to steal his market share, er, I mean as a service to his customers, I think the Corner should make special efforts to denounce the New York Times, respond to articles in Slate, scrutinize the BBC and annoy the gay left. Any volunteers? Posted at 10:20 AM INSIDE THE CLASSROOM [Stanley Kurtz] Young people who see themselves as gay have a right to expect safety, tolerance, and fair play at school. Yet legitimate demands for tolerance have too often shaded over into the promotion of a radical cultural agenda in our schools--an agenda most parents would reject. In “Queering the Schools,” Marjorie King offers a disturbing account of the movement to bring the spirit of “queer theory” to K-12 education. This movement is already well advanced. With gay marriage, it will be unstoppable. Posted at 10:00 AM THE TREND [Jonah Goldberg] From a reader: Mr. Goldberg, Your trend is stronger than you think. I, a Cornerite, had convinced my 38 week pregnant wife to accompany to your Williams College speech. After a way too expensive dinner in Williamsburg, MA, I asked the waiter how to get to the college. After checking around with the restaurant staff, he informed us that there was a Williams College in Williamstown, only an hour and a half away. We only caught the last two questions of your Q&A. Cornerites support their own. Posted at 09:47 AM I LOVE YOU GUYS [Jonah Goldberg] Thanks again to all the wonderful Cornerites and NROniks who showed up for my Denver talk. Some feedback from our customers: Everyone is looking forward to meeting the Derb when he heads out to Colorado. People seemed to like my beard. Yes, I have a beard -- or beard-in-progress. I don't think I'm going to keep it, it's just that I started to believe that Iraqi Minister of Information guy and thought the invading Arab army heading my way would respect me more if I had a beard. Actually, I did grow it because of the war. I've gotten in the habit of only shaving to go on TV, and with the war preempting everything I normally do on the tube, I just stopped shaving. Anyway, enough about that. More feedback: several ladies asked that we recognize the fact we do in fact have a "massive female readership." I asked them to clarify that we're talking numerically massive here, and they said yes. But "enough talk about 'guys' without talk of the 'gals' too." And, last, I have to give a special shout out to an NR subscriber. He brought me a copy of his print NR to examine. Why? Because the adressee on the subscriber label reads "Give A Bigfatraisetojona" I love that stuff. Posted at 09:32 AM MICHAEL KELLY & THE PALESTINIANS [Jonah Goldberg] Peter Beinart has the best obituary for Michael Kelly so far. Alas, it's not on the web yet. When it is I'll link and quibble a bit. But if you have the DT-TNR around, you should read it. Also the current issue of The New Republic has an outstanding -- astoundlingly long -- piece by Benny Morris on the history of the Palestinians. It's a gloomy piece, but a great primer. Also, not available in ones-and-zeros format. Posted at 09:16 AM A SMOKING GUN [Stanley Kurtz ] It was U.C. president Richard Atkinson, by the way, whose threat to drop the SAT led to the recent gutting of that test. Now that he has undermined merit-based testing in an attempt to circumvent the elimination of affirmative action by California’s voters, Atkinson is out to make our universities safe for political propaganda. This is a smoking gun admission that modern higher education has become a tool of political indoctrination. Fortunately, there is something you can do about it. Scroll down to the bottom of this post and you will find three e-mail addresses where you can register a protest. I hope the story of this outrage rings throughout the blogosphere. Posted at 09:13 AM NO PREACHING [Stanley Kurtz] Why has University of California president Richard Atkinson moved to eliminate the prohibitions on political preaching from the University of California’s statement on academic freedom? He has almost surely done so because of the new website, NoIndoctrination.org, http://www.noindoctrination.org/index.shtml which has prominently posted the university’s statement on academic freedom, and used it to hold professors throughout the country to account for imposing their politics on their students. You can read more about NoIndoctrination.org in my NRO piece, “Students Fight Back.” Posted at 09:12 AM ACADEMIC FREEDOM ON THE EXIT RAMP [Stanley Kurtz ] In a damning and dramatic move that would formally ratify the corruption of the ideals of liberal education by today’s campus radicals, University of California president Richard Atkinson and U.C. Berkeley Law School professor Robert Post are proposing to gut the University of California’s statement on academic freedom. The current U.C. statement on academic freedom contains several strong provisions which prevent professors from preaching a political viewpoint, or otherwise imposing political views on their students. Atkinson and Post now propose to eliminate these essential protections of every student’s academic freedom. You can read about the proposal here. Posted at 09:11 AM DAMN THAT RACISM! [Jonah Goldberg ] It made Rodney King drive 100 MPH, weave in and out of traffic, and hit a house. Actually, I'm just assuming it was the racism and not that ol' demon rum. Posted at 09:10 AM SNUBBING FRANCE [John J. Miller] Consul General Jean-Luc Sibiude of France recently requested a meeting with Colorado Gov. Bill Owens. Here is a portion of Owens' reply, from a letter dated April 10: "I am sorry I will be unable to meet with you during your visit to Colorado. I feel it would be inappropriate to do so at this time. I have been active for many years in the international arena ... I am also proud of my uncle who was killed in action in France on his eighteenth birthday. I give you this background as a preface to my feeling that France's actions over the past few months will have serious and long-term consequences on relations between our countries. I believe your government opposed our efforts in Iraq in order to advance the government's popularity at home and to further French ambitions abroad..." That's the gist of it, and it's one more reason why Bill Owens is America's best governor. Posted at 09:02 AM THE PROPOSAL [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A Corner couple is getting married. Lorian Maclean Kiesel writes: "He is a big dork, and I said yes." Our official congratulations! Posted at 08:55 AM MOVE OVER, JESSE VENTURA [Kathryn Jean Lopez] "The Great Sasuke," a masked professional wrestler, wins an assembly seat in Japan. HE's a man of principle: To take off the mask, he says, would be "breaking promises," since people voted for him with the mask. Posted at 07:48 AM "CREEPY AND CRUEL" [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Jonathan Foreman, from Baghdad, on the media's hysterical looting coverage: [T]he failure of so many reports to mention the fact that many of the looted stores, institutions and even hospitals were linked to the regime is more troubling. These institutions were dedicated to the exclusive use of Ba'ath Party members - the ordinary public could not make use of them - or were owned and operated by known supporters of the regime. Posted at 06:27 AM DUTY CALLS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] This war ain't even close to over until Syria and Iran are taken care of, our Michael Ledeen writes in the London Spectator: The battle for Iraq is drawing to a close, but the war against terrorism has only just begun. As President George W. Bush has said since the first days after 11 September, this will be a long war, involving many terrorist organisations and many countries that support the terrorists. Saddam Hussein’s Iraq was never the most threatening of those countries, even though Baghdad gave support to most of the world’s leading terrorist organisations, and despite Saddam’s programmes to develop weapons of mass destruction. That dubious honour belongs to Iran, three times the size of Iraq, flush with oil revenues, and the creator of modern Islamic terrorism in the form of Hezbollah, arguably the world’s most lethal terrorist organisation. And then there is Syria, which has worked hand-in-glove with Iran to support Hezbollah — both in its terrorist garb (Hezbollah trains in the Bekaa Valley in Syrian-occupied Lebanon) and its political and philanthropic costume, in which Hezbollah members sit in the Lebanese parliament. Posted at 06:15 AM SEX IN THE IRAQ CITY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Looting has been curbed by a Lysistrata-like rumor: that a cleric has instructed women to withhold sex from looter husbands. Who needs policing with such power at work? Posted at 06:10 AM Monday, April 14, 2003 '04 PROSPECTS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Larry Sabato's crystal ball: If 2004 were 1992, George W. Bush would quite possibly be on his way to a defeat in his bid for a second term. Yet 2004 is more like elections between 1948 and 1988, when the Red Threat and the specter of nuclear annihilation vied with the economy for dominance in elections. We may have seen a bit of this new/old paradigm in the 2002 midterm contests, when the bad economy didn't hurt the GOP, and the national security card helped President Bush increase his party's numbers in both houses of Congress. Posted at 11:10 PM A CORNER FIRST: [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From a reader: Lance Douglas Taylor would like to ask Lorian Maclean Kiesel if she will do him the honor of agreeing to change his tax status; in other words, Lorian Maclean Kiesel, will you marry Lance Douglas Taylor? Posted at 09:02 PM I'M BAAAAAAACK, SORT OF [Jonah Goldberg] Sitting at the Colorado Sports Bar at the Denver airport. Talking to you wireless (as he said in the "Sure Thing.") The speech went ok. I got to the campus and saw posters with my mug on 'em all over the place. It turns out I was there to give a speech on "Liberal Media Bias." This was news to me. But I think it went pretty good considering it was off the cuff. The more interesting development. My rule is three anecdotes equals a trend. And this is the third speech I've given in a month where Cornerites and flying monkeys made up a sizable percentage of the audience. If this trend continues I'll be delighted. It makes the audiences a lot less hostile. I don't want to bad-mouth anybody, but the sartorial differences between NRO readers and non-NRO readers was very obvious. Thanks to everyone who showed up. It's a great feeling to have friends I've never actually met everywhere I go. Posted at 07:02 PM FOR THE THIS-BETTER-NOT-BE-TRUE FILES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Russia helped Saddam escape? Posted at 05:12 PM SURPRISED [Kathryn Jean Lopez] That this hasn't happened already. Posted at 05:10 PM WELL, IT'S SOMETHING [Kathryn Jean Lopez] John Howard wants to boot France from the Security Council. Posted at 05:07 PM I JUST GOT MY FIRST E-MAIL [Kathryn Jean Lopez] from someone who agrees with John Lukacs (the majority of emails are very anti): John Lukacs is right. Presidents should not return salutes from uniformed military personnel by saluting. It does look silly, no matter who does it. Presidents once had a dignified way of returning salutes, which was to tip their hat and, when reviewing large formations on parade, placing their hat over their hearts (for example, there's a famous picture of FDR doing just that while sitting in a jeep and reviewing American troops at Casablanca). George W. Bush, having restored proper dress to the Presidency, should now go to the next step and start wearing hats and tipping his hat to men and women in uniform. Posted at 05:02 PM COOL STORY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Muslims save Jewish center. Posted at 05:00 PM THE JONAH REPORT [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A Coloradan reports: Just came from Jonah's speech here in Denver, and you'll be happy to know that the Editor-at-Large came up large. The questions were pretty pedestrian, although one student did try to convert the Q&A into a debate format, and one guy asked about Jacobins & Jacobites. "This isn't even inside baseball, this is inside Parcheesi," said your main man. Posted at 04:57 PM MORE DEM RECRIMINATIONS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] See Mark Levin Posted at 03:19 PM IMAGINE! [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A Democrat governor is caught in an ethics scandal and the AP does not mention his party! Posted at 03:16 PM IRAN WILL TRY IRAQI LEADERSHIP ESCAPEES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 03:07 PM IF THERE ARE ANY BAATHISTS LEFT, THIS WILL REALLY TICK THEM OFF [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Scroll down to Jeb. vs. Hillary. Posted at 03:04 PM 600 [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Volunteers from Kuwait are searching Iraq for missing from 1990-91. Posted at 02:51 PM I LIKE THE WAY SHE THINKS! [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A reader writes: Usually only a Corner addict from 8-5, I must subscribe to NRODT so my husband and I can discuss it over the weekend! Posted at 02:37 PM WHAT A QUAGMIRE! [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Major combat is essentially over (Pentagon). Posted at 02:25 PM I SHOULD MENTION… [Rich Lowry] …while reveling in all this wrongness, that I don’t have any great answers on North Korean policy myself, but I would always mumble when it came up, “Well, the world will look a lot different after Iraq."Boy, does it. Here, by the way, is the Wash Post story about the North Koreans backing down on their demand for bilateral talks over the weekend, in case you were wondering what all the recriminations were about. Posted at 02:20 PM RECRIMINATIONS—THE DEMS [Rich Lowry] TOM DASCHLE National Press Club, January 27, 2003 “But I clearly believe that the only way now for us to successfully deal with the North Koreans is to enter into direct talks, to make sure that we have people sitting across the table to address the concerns specifically enunciated by this administration -- and they can't do it too soon." SEN. CARL LEVIN March 5, 2003 Wednesday, "The administration says that we should move multilaterally, and of course that's always advisable. But the one thing that the -- all the nations, all our allies are in agreement on, the people with whom we would have the multilateral discussions and presumably multilateral strategy, they are all in agreement on one thing, and that is that the United States should have direct talks with North Korea. And despite the fact that we have that very direct advice from our allies, particularly explicitly from the new government of South Korea, this administration is refusing to do the one thing which all of our allies agree upon, which is that we should engage in direct talks with North Korea to try to make sure that they understand clearly what it is that is so troubling to us and our allies, to avoid miscalculation, and to get discussions back on track, to avoid a crisis from becoming an ever-deepening crisis on the peninsula." BILL RICHARDSON SHOW: CNN NEWSNIGHT AARON BROWN 22:00 February 6, 2003 Thursday Richardson: “I think the solution, Aaron, is for there to be face-to-face talks, not gotiations to set up subsequent negotiations. I think what will cool this rhetoric, what will decompress this very, very delicate North Korea situation is face-to-face talks. That's what the North Koreans want. They don't want termediaries, they don't want to go to the United Nations. They don't want China and South Korea to talk to them. They want to talk to the United States. And I think it's reached the point where these direct talks make sense.” HOWARD DEAN The Hotline March 10, 2003 Monday "HEADLINE: DEAN: GETS TOUGHEST QUESTIONING YET FROM RUSSERT Ex-Gov. Howard Dean (D-VT) appeared on "Meet the Press" to discuss his WH campaign, Iraq and North Korea. On if he would hold talks with North Korea: "Yes ... The North Koreans have asked for bilateral talks. I'm very happy to do that. My proposal would be that we will enter into bilateral talks, that they will agree to freeze their program now with verifiable inspection on the grounds. We will agree in writing not to attack them and then we will begin the negotiationprocess, both sides agreeing not to alter their status, the status of the non-aggression and the freezing of the nuclear program until bilateral negotiations have concluded." MADELEINE ALBRIGHT AP, March 5 "Madeleine Albright, who spent two days in North Korea as secretary of state in October 2000, said direct talks with that country are necessary "in order to deliver the kinds of messages that we need to about the unacceptability of( (Pyongyang's) nuclear program." "Talking is not appeasement, talking is the way you deliver the message that you need to have received by the other side," she said." TED KENNEDY March 4, 2003 Tuesday Sen. KENNEDY: “Well, I think the administration, Colin Powell should have direct conversations with the North Koreans. That is what is being urged by South Korea, Japan and our allies in the area. This is just a recommendation, not just of Democrats. Mr. Armitage has also, who's the deputy secretary of Defense, made that recommendation sometime ago. Ambassador Lilly made that recommendation. Brent Scowcroft has made that recommendation. And it's amazing that we're about to go to war with a country that does not have nuclear weapons, and we refuse to talk to a country that has already produced them." Posted at 02:17 PM NEXT ON THE LIST [Robert A. George] Quite the treasure trove in Uday Hussein's palace: Given the suspicious items found -- "liquor, electronics, pornography, Cuban cigars and...pictures of President Bush's twin daughters" -- we know the U.S. military's next target (after Syria): college dorm rooms across the country (particularly those indicating a high level of "chemical proliferation"). Posted at 02:09 PM RECRIMINATIONS—KRISTOF [Rich Lowry] His written about two good columns in the last two years, the rest is conventional clap-trap. Here is some from Feb. 28: "So the White House has hardened its position further, swatting away its old willingness to engage North Korea bilaterally within a multilateral setting. Now the administration has dropped the bilateral reference and is willing to talk to North Korea only in a multilateral framework that doesn't exist. The old approach had a snowball's chance in purgatory; now it's less than that." Posted at 02:07 PM RECRIMINATIONS—BEINART [Rich Lowry] Peter Beinart is generally smart and reasonable, but was caught out on this one. From his TRB on March 17: “The administration would like observers to interpret its calm as steely resolve. But it actually signifies a refusal to face reality. The Bush administration says it wants multilateral talks with Pyongyang and a series of other countries, including South Korea, Russia, China, and Japan. The theory behind this approach is that only a united front among North Korea's neighbors can exert the pressure necessary to convince Kim Jong Il to turn back. But the diplomatic reality is that there is no united front. North Korea adamantly rejects multilateral talks, and South Korea, Russia, and China adamantly refuse to turn the screws. The Bush administration is paying the price for having helped fuel the anti-Americanism that elected an ultra-soft-line president in Seoul last December. And it cannot pull out all the diplomatic stops with Moscow and Beijing since its highest priority is convincing those governments not to veto an Iraq resolution at the Security Council. The unhappy result is that the United States is basically facing this crisis alone. Recognizing this diplomatic reality means accepting unconditional, one-on-one talks with Pyongyang.” Posted at 02:05 PM ARE YOU READY? [Rich Lowry] Are you ready for some North Korea recriminations? Just can’t get enough from Iraq and want to move on to an entirely different foreign-policy crisis 4,000 miles away? Are you ready? Come on--I can’t hear you! OK, OK, here they come… Posted at 01:58 PM URGENT [NRO STAFF] GET 4 FREE ISSUES OF NATIONAL REVIEW! That's right: We'll send you 4 FREE issues of National Review at absolutely no risk to you. If you're impressed by National Review's superior writing style, analysis, and wit, we'll send you the next 12 issues for a total of 16 in all! for only $19.95. Click here for details. Posted at 01:56 PM FAB HUMILITY [Andrew Stuttaford] Some celebrities, at least, are modest enough to know what they don't know. Here (via the London Evening Standard) is Paul McCartney on the war in Iraq: "If Japan bombed Pearl Harbour, it's clear what you have to do - you have to be at war with Japan," he said. "But this is a very difficult situation. It's hard to know what anyone should do. I'm just like anyone else - I'm just watching it unfold...I'm not a politician." Posted at 01:19 PM DEBATING PRYOR [Jonathan H. Adler] Howard Bashman has the latest arguments over judicial nominee Bill Pryor, for and against. Posted at 01:17 PM IRAQI NUCLEAR SCIENTIST INTERVIEWED [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Surrendered to U.S. Posted at 01:09 PM SCHOOL SHOOTING [Kathryn Jean Lopez] at a New Orleans high school. One student dead. Posted at 01:04 PM MORE SYRIA [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Powell: U.S. is considering sanctions against Syria. (NYT) Posted at 01:00 PM SYRIA UPDATE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Rumsfeld: U.S. has seen chemical weapons tests in Syria over the last 12-15 months. (press conference with Kuwaiti Foreign Minister) Posted at 12:59 PM TIKRITI LIBERATION [Kathryn Jean Lopez] What was that about a last stand? Posted at 12:54 PM FROM CNN.COM [Kathryn Jean Lopez] U.S. Army: 11 mobile chemical and biological labs, documents found buried near Karbala. Posted at 12:44 PM OY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Memo: Skip this year's White House Correspondents Dinner. Posted at 12:25 PM DEBATE, DEBATE [Stanley Kurtz] Today, over at frontpagemag, Jonathan Last and I engage in a symposium/debate with two opponents of the war. The questions: Is this a war of liberation? (asked while the war was still in progress) and, What is the significance of the celebrations in Baghdad–especially for the anti-war Left? Posted at 12:22 PM PROWLER VS. GORTON [Dave Kopel] The American Prowler chastises retired Washington Sen. Slade Gorton for giving the wrong advice to Rep. Jennifer Dunn, who was being pressured by the White House to run against the vulnerable Patty Murray. Gorton said, "Go with your heart." So Dunn won't run, and George Nethercutt probably will. Gorton was right to give the advice, and Dunn to follow it. Our nation would be a lot better if American elected officials more often followed their hearts rather than the dictates of party machinery. Posted at 12:21 PM HATE MUSIC [Dave Kopel] Egyptian folk singer Shabaan Abdul Rahim is looking to follow up on his major international success, last year's hit "I hate Israel." http://www.israelnn.com/news.php3?id=41433 Rahim sang: "I hate the Jews, I hate them. I hate them because they are annoying. All people hate them." Working on a movie of the same name as the song, Rahim has been rejected by four actresses who were offered the role of leading lady. Despite the cinematic stall, Rahim has a new radio hit, "The Attack on Iraq." He offers a litany of American/Zionist oppression: "Chechnya! Afghanistan! Palestine! Southern Lebanon! The Golan Heights! And now Iraq, too? And now Iraq, too? It's too much for people. Shame on you! Enough, enough, enough" Posted at 12:06 PM MECCA MOVIES [Dave Kopel] In "solidarity" with (the defeated tyranny in) Iraq, Egyptian film artists are urging a boycott of American films, according to Al Bawaba. Cynics might imagine motives besides pan-Arabism: "the film 'Gangs of New York' brought in big profits in Egypt overshadowing local films, making it impossible for fair competition. The film made over five million Egyptian pounds in profit, a matter which forced owners of cinema houses to cancel a number of scheduled screening, since it caused a negative impact on Egyptian films." Posted at 12:05 PM SOMEONE AT HARVARD WHO GETS IT [Dave Kopel] Another important obstacle to peace between Israel and its neighbors is the United Nations, as Romen Mukamel shows in the Harvard Israel Review. The UN opposed the Camp David Peace Accords between Egypt and Israel. The UN aids resettlement for all refugees around the world, but refuses to assist the resettlement of Palestinian refugees. The UN would not convene a special session to address on-going genocide in Rwanda or former Yugoslavia; instead six of the ten special sessions have involved Israel, on issues as trivial (compared to genocide) as illegal Israeli construction in East Jerusalem. Posted at 12:04 PM SYRIA=IRAQ [Dave Kopel] Ha'aretz reports that the United States is recognizing Syria's plan to turn Iraq into the next Lebanon. A better outcome would be to turn Syria into the next Iraq. This would also end the illegal dictatorship in the occupied territories formerly known as Lebanon. The removal of the terrorist regime in Syria would also remove the last pro-terror regime able to ship supplies directly to Palestinian terrorists. With the Palestinian terrorists isolated, the prospect for a genuine peace between Israel and the Palestinians would become a possibility. Just as the best way to "give inspections time to work" was to remove the Saddam regime which was obstructing WMD inspections, the best way to genuine self-government for the Palestinians is to remove the regimes fomenting war in the West Bank and Gaza. Posted at 12:02 PM MOST STUDENTS ARE ANTI-PREFERENCE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Even in Canada. Posted at 11:59 AM ANOTHER IRAQI ASSASSINATION? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 11:52 AM YIKES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Kinda slow in here. Posted at 11:48 AM FREEDOM FOR THE MARSH ARABS [Jonathan H. Adler] The Washington Post is on the story of Hussein's repression of the Marsh Arabs. Of course, NRO readers learned about the MArsh Arabs' plight, and Hussein's other environmental crimes, here. Posted at 09:44 AM WHY ARE THERE IRAQI DIPLOMATS IN SPAIN? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Seven Iraqi diplomats in Spain have been told to leave Spainafter a weapons stash was discovered in the Iraqi embassy in Madrid. The embassy, however, will not close and other diplomats, including the one who informed Spanish authorities about the firearms and ammo, will remain. Seems like Spain should have ahad this embassy cosed for weeks already, and that it should remain closed until there is a new government in Iraq, to send new reps. Posted at 09:00 AM EMBEDDED IN THE IVORY TOWER [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The head of Mideast Studies at Columbia blasts U.S. destruction of Shiite holy sites. One wonders where he gets his news from. Martin Kramer's on top of it. Posted at 08:52 AM TROUBLE IN UTOPIA? [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The axis of weasels may be crumbling. Posted at 08:47 AM SOMEONE SHOULD SHARE "GRAPHIC TALES" WITH ANTIWAR PROTESTERS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 07:09 AM AYATOLLAH IN THE CLEAR [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The gang surrounding the Shiite Ayatollah Sistani's house in Najaf is gone. Posted at 06:49 AM AUSSIES & IRAQIS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] John Howard offers Australia as a model for Iraq. Posted at 06:44 AM NIXING THE SALUTE [Kathryn Jean Lopez ] John Lukacs is not fond of the presidential "salute": Soon after Ronald Reagan assumed his presidency, something new appeared with his image on the television screen. When given a salute by uniformed military personnel, Mr. Reagan would return it, shooting his right hand up to his bare head, his smile suggesting that this was something he liked to do. This unnecessary and unseemly habit was adopted by Mr. Reagan's successors, including Bill Clinton and especially George W. Bush, who steps off his plane and cocks a jaunty salute. Posted at 05:50 AM SYRIA'S NOT NEXT [Kathryn Jean Lopez] So says Jack Straw. Posted at 05:42 AM Sunday, April 13, 2003 THE CAPTIVITY [Kathryn Jean LopeZ] Peter Baker on the POW ordeal. Posted at 11:40 PM "THE FINAL FORTRESS CRUMBLES" [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 11:22 PM YEMEN GRANTS ASYLUM [Kathryn Jean Lopez] to Iraqi's ambassador to Egypt. Posted at 09:55 PM A FEDAYEEN DESERTER [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Being a suicide bomber was too much. Posted at 09:51 PM 60 MINUTES [Kathryn Jean Lopez] I only saw part of the 60 Minutes Clinton/Dole debate, but it was more than enough to feel the same way so many of us did when that was the presidential-race lineup:Why Dole? Posted at 08:03 PM SYRIA PRIMER [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Some excellent and useful stuff from the Middle East Quarterly: On Syrian WMD, a two-parter: Posted at 07:14 PM AL QAEDA REACTS TO THE FALL OF BAGHDAD [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 05:12 PM DONALD RUMSFELD'S SEX TIPS [John Derbyshire] Posted at 05:05 PM SCHALL ON THE WAR [Rod Dreher] James Schall, S.J., a reliable source of wisdom among clerical leaders, has written a fine analysis of the meaning of the Iraq war. Fr. Schall says we had better not let our optimistic liberal principles blind us to the true nature of the long-term threat: No one wants to see this situation as a clash of civilization or religion, which is fine, so long as this hesitation does not obscure precisely what it is. If the latter is true, that we are at the beginning of a clash of civilizations, then we must again begin seriously to treat the questions of the truth of the religions as such, just as we had to deal with the truth of ideology in the 20th Century. One of the effects of modern “toleration” theories has been the temptation to take nothing seriously, to suggest that all religion is fanaticism. The only conclusion would be to “eradicate it.” A better alternative, which the religions themselves have been reluctant to undertake, is a real effort to deal with the truth claims of the religions, not just what they have in common. We want to “respect” religions without understanding them. It would be much better, I suspect, if we would understand them before we decide what it is that we can and should respect. If it is true, as I think it is, that, in the case of Iraq, “to the defeated goes the spoils,” we must realize that this very principle or attitude has a religious origin. It would be useful for us to remember what that origin is. Posted at 04:48 PM WEDDINGS CAN NOW BE HELD WITHOUT GAS MASKS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The war alert is lowered in Israel. Posted at 12:40 PM NOT A COMMERCIAL PEPSI IS LIKELY TO USE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Kevin Cherry points out another detail from that Time piece: His choice of soft drink (remember the Coke boycott?). Neighbors say looters carried away bottles of Scotch and wine, but they left receipts from Uday's 1989 New Year's party, which seem to confirm he liked a tipple. The revelers downed 12 bottles of gin and 11 cases of beer, plus vodka, champagne and Pepsi. No word on Mecca Cola receipts. Posted at 12:16 PM BY THE WAY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Do you think Uday Hussein has been sufficiently spammed by now? From that Time piece: Posted at 12:12 PM POWS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Here's the latest Washington Post piece. Two Apache pilots downed on the 24th and 5 from the maintainence company. Posted at 10:56 AM THE WORLD'S SMALLEST VIOLIN [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Uday Hussein, 39, who in 1990 wrote to an uncle, "It is difficult being in the family of Hussein. People want to kill us."Enter the bizarre world of them butcher of Baghdad and family, from Time. Posted at 10:38 AM BTW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Jed Babbin checked in early on his page. Posted at 10:22 AM THE FORCE WAS TOO SMALL [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The Washington Post is sticking with that story. Also details of a terrifying moment: Perhaps the most chilling moment for the Marines came the next day, April 2. Posted at 10:09 AM JONAH'S MILITARY GUY SCOLDS ME [Kathryn Jean Lopez] ...you've got to be about the only person I know who would refer to liberated POWs as being 'in custody'!I blame too much CNN. Posted at 09:59 AM A SADDAM HALF-BROTHER WAS CAUGHT [Kathryn Jean Lopez] at the Syrian border. (FNC) Posted at 09:58 AM POLICING VS. WINNING HEARTS [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A thin line in Baghdad. Posted at 08:47 AM LETTERMAN TOP TEN [Jonah Goldberg] Top Ten Things Iraq's Information Minister Has To Say About The War 10. "We're pulling down the statues of Saddam to have them cleaned" 9. "Don't believe that stuff you see on CNN...or NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox or MSNBC" 8. "If you ask me who the winner is, it depends on what your definition of 'is' is" 7. "Iraqi television is off the air because we didn't want you to have to sit through 'Becker'" 6. "Do you know of any job openings for a lying weasel?" 5. "Wolf Blitzer and I are engaged" 4. "Iraqis are in the streets celebrating Cher's 40 fabulous years in show business" 3. "Incoming!" 2. "Saddam's not dead -- he's just out with a case of the shingles" 1. "War? What war?" Posted at 07:48 AM HERE'S THE WASHINGTON POST STORY [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Posted at 07:41 AM RE: WOW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Tommy Franks has said that there will be news in the next 12 hours (it was first reported as Franks saying that there will be news on 7). Sounds like they may have been listed as MIA, not POW. As of last night's numbers, we had 6 MIA and 7 POWs. Posted at 07:03 AM THERE'S A NEWSFLASH [Kathryn Jean Lopez] From Reuters: "Human Frailty Makes Mistakes in War Inevitable" Posted at 06:57 AM WOW [Kathryn Jean Lopez] CNN is reporting that six POWs have been found alive, now in Marine custody. Unfortunately, there are seven missing (and then Scott Speicher). Posted at 06:42 AM BACK IN NAJAF [Kathryn Jean Lopez] "Armed radicals" are telling the Shitte Ayatollah Sistani to leave Iraq or be attacked. From Reuters. Posted at 03:30 AM THERE IS SOMEONE LEFT GUARDING TIKRIT [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Sadler is still on. His convoy was just taking some hostile fire ("a hail of machine gun fire" and pistol fire), after he moved into the city. CNN is moving away now. One is reminded about how completely unwise this unilateral action is. Posted at 02:46 AM SO MUCH FOR A LAST STAND [Kathryn Jean Lopez] MSNBC meanwhile is citing CENTCOM officials saying that U.S. troops are in Tikrit, and it appears it will fall quickly. Posted at 01:25 AM LIBERATION?! [Kathryn Jean Lopez] The Al Jazeera view of Baghdad: “We haven’t tasted freedom yet,” insisted a resident in downtown Baghdad. "All that we have tasted so far is fear and uncertainty.” Posted at 01:17 AM PLEASE RESPOND. [NRO Staff] GET 4 FREE ISSUES OF NATIONAL REVIEW! That's right: We'll send you 4 FREE issues of National Review at absolutely no risk to you. If you're impressed by National Review's superior writing style, analysis, and wit, we'll send you the next 12 issues for a total of 16 in all! for only $19.95. Click here for details. Posted at 01:16 AM CHINESE EMBASSY LOOTED IN BAGHDAD [Kathryn Jean Lopez] China wants us to crack down. And, this all from a BBC news roundup, the man who shot a Marine dead outside a hospital today had a Syrian ID card. Posted at 01:15 AM MORE SADLER [Kathryn Jean Lopez] "I think Tikrit has fallen without a single shot being fired on the ground." Posted at 01:08 AM FIRST SIGN OF A DEFENSE [Kathryn Jean Lopez] Brent Sadler a few minutes ago saw "Down with the U.S." graffiti. Posted at 01:04 AM HERE'S SOMETHING YOU DON'T SEE A LOT OF [Kathryn Jean Lopez] A I>Scientific American piece on the likely infeasibility of human cloning. Posted at 01:02 AM CNN IN TIKRIT [Kathryn Jean Lopez] "Unilaterally," CNN's Brent Sadler is right outside of Tikrit, right now at an Iraqi military base that appears to be abandoned. "It looks like a ghosttown," it was just observed. Unless they are in the center of Tikrit, perhaps we've taken care of this supposed stronghold already. Posted at 12:45 AM HOW WE GOT HERE [Rod Dreher] France and Belgium, such class acts, says the Wall Street Journal (LRR, but it's worth it). Posted at 12:11 AM |
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