IRAN
Talk, Talk, Talk, Talk To Iran
Despite growing international pressure, including three Chapter 7 U.N. Security Council resolutions -- the last of which was adopted in April of this year -- Iran continues to move forward with its nuclear program. Iranian government officials have repeatedly said that they will not agree to suspend uranium enrichment, which they insist is their right. Though Tehran "maintains the program is exclusively for electricity-producing purposes," the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reported in May that Iran was "still withholding critical information that could determine whether it is trying to make nuclear weapons." The U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran last December concluded that Iran had "halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003," but the United States and its international partners continue to "accuse Iran of using its nuclear program as a cover for weapons development."
THE DIPLOMACY: The latest package of incentives was presented to Iran during a recent visit to Tehran by EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and "gives Tehran the opportunity to develop alternate light water reactors, trade and other incentives, in return for dropping the enrichment." However, the countries represented "alongside Mr Solana were Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. Nobody from the US." There are also disincentives to match the incentives for Iran. On Monday, EU states agreed to impose new sanctions prohibiting Iran's largest bank from operating in Europe" and adding to the list of banned individuals and organizations. With the Iranian economy in tatters, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is politically weakened, and defiance on the nuclear issue represents a way for Ahmadinejad to maintain his political relevancy. Former diplomat Peter Galbraith wrote that, "from the inception of Iran’s nuclear program, prestige and the desire for recognition have been motivating factors," and he "has made uranium enrichment the centerpiece of his administration and the embodiment of Iranian nationalism." Ahmadinejad has thus far "successfully used the threat of war to suppress dissent and divert attention from domestic woes."
UNHELPFUL RHETORIC: The release of the NIE on Iran last December effectively removed the short-term prospect of military action against Iran. But the last few months have seen a renewed effort on the part of pro-war conservative extremists to lay the groundwork for what they see as an inevitable armed conflict. Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol recently suggested that President Bush might consider bombing Iran, depending on the outcome of the U.S. presidential election. Former U.S ambassador to the U .N. John Bolton also said a U.S. military strike against Iran "is really the most prudent thing to do." IAEA Director General Mohamed El-Baradei warned in an interview last week, "I don't believe that what I see in Iran today is a current, grave and urgent danger. If a military strike is carried out against Iran...it would make me unable to continue my work." In a recent panel discussion, former ambassador James Dobbins suggested that threats force against Iran were unproductive and that the United States should "get busy with the job of diplomacy."
RECOGNIZING NEED FOR DIRECT DIPLOMACY: In May, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates stated, "We need to figure out a way to develop some leverage...and then sit down and talk with them [Iran]." Recently retired CentCom chief, Admiral William Fallon, took "public positions favoring diplomacy over force in Iran," suggesting "a navy-to-navy relationship with Iran as a way to begin a sustained dialogue with the country." A new report from the United States Institute of Peace asserted that "Iran's goals appear to be largely defensive: to achieve strategic depth and safeguard its system against foreign intervention, to have a major say in regional decisions, and to prevent or minimize actions that might run counter to Iranian interests." The report also concluded that "it is hard to envision" any kind of lasting peace in the region "without a reduction in tensions between the United States and Iran." Citing recent polling evidence, National Security Network policy director Ilan Goldenberg wrote that "diplomatic engagement with Iran...is the consensus position" among Americans. In what could represent a significant policy shift that accords with this consensus, yesterday the Associated Press reported that the Bush administration is considering "opening a U.S. interests section in Tehran," the first U.S. diplomatic outpost in Iran in nearly thirty years.

SURVEILLANCE --
DODD AND FEINGOLD PLEDGE TELECOM
IMMUNITY
FILIBUSTER: Sens. Chris Dodd
(D-CT) and Russ Feingold
(D-WI) proposed an amendment yesterday to Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance
Act (FISA) reform legislation that would strip retroactive
immunity
provisions for telecommunication
companies. They declared their
intention to filibuster the bill, which passed the House 293-129
last week: We
will oppose
any efforts to end debate on
this bill as long as it
provides retroactive immunity." Speaking on the Senate floor last
night,
Dodd declared, "This is
about
illegal,
unwarranted, unchecked domestic
surveillance," adding, "I will not and cannot support this
legislation." Sens. Barbara
Boxer (D-CA) and Barack
Obama (D-IL) have also endorsed
efforts to
strip retroactive immunity from the bill, and Sen. Ron
Wyden
(D-OR) indicated he will support a filibuster.
Yesterday, Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) said that he would cosponsor
the
Dodd-Feingold Amendment but
would not stop the bill from coming to
a vote on
the floor. The Senate is expected to vote on cloture on the bill as
early as this morning.
AFGHANISTAN -- INSURGENT
ATTACKS, U.S. CASUALTIES INCREASING IN AFGHANISTAN:
According
to new U.S. military data, "insurgent
activity is increasing sharply
in Afghanistan and has spread into
once stable areas, with attacks up almost 40 [percent] in the eastern
provinces alone." The data covers "the first five months of the year in
an area of Afghanistan that senior Pentagon officials, including
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, have repeatedly cited as a success
story." The violence marks "the latest in a series of troubling
developments that have led to
markedly higher U.S. casualties."
Officials have cited a lack
of resources as a major contributor to the rising violence. A recent
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that "despite a
U.S. investment of more than
$10-billion since 2002, only two of 105 [Afghan National Army] units
are capable
of operating effectively." The
GAO said that "the ANA lacks equipment,
leaders, recruits, trainers and weapons" and that "[p]art of the
shortfall in trainers and weapons is tied to U.S. deployments in Iraq."
Citing the need for more troops, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm.
Michael G. Mullen acknowledged that Iraq is diverting crucial
resources for Afghanistan: "I am constrained on forces I can generate
quite frankly because
of Iraq."
ADMINISTRATION
-- WHITE
HOUSE REFUSED TO READ E-MAIL WITH EPA'S
GREENHOUSE GAS
CONCLUSIONS: The New
York Times reports
today that in December, the
White House "refused to accept the
Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) conclusion that greenhouse
gases are pollutants
that must be controlled, telling agency officials that an e-mail
message
containing the document would not be opened." The document thus sat
unreleased for six months. In the past five days,
"the White House successfully put pressure on the EPA to eliminate
large sections of the original analysis that supported regulation,"
resulting
in "a watered-down version of the original proposal that offers no
conclusion" that will be released this week. The original EPA analysis
"showed that the Clean
Air Act can work for certain sectors of the economy, to reduce
greenhouse gases." But according to a senior EPA official, "that's not
what the administration wants to show. They want to show that the Clean
Air Act can't work." The document is part of the EPA's
effort to
comply
with a 2007 Supreme
Court ruling requiring it to
"determine whether greenhouse gases
represent a danger to health or the environment."
|

David
Addington, Vice President Cheney's chief of staff and
architect of the administration's torture
program -- along with former
Justice Department official John Yoo
-- is scheduled to testify before the House Judiciary Committee
regarding
interrogation practices at Guantanamo Bay this Thursday, June 26.
Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike
Mullen left yesterday on a trip that
will take him to Israel, "just as the Israelis
are mounting a
full court press" to urge
the Bush administration to strike
Iran. "Israelis are uncertain about what would be the policies
of the next administration
vis-à-vis Iran," said CBS
consultant Michael Oren.
A bipartisan group of 200
former government officials,
retired generals, and religious leaders will
issue a statement today "calling for a presidential order
to outlaw some interrogation and detention practices used by the Bush
administration over the last six years." The group, which includes
former Reagan secretary of state George Schultz, seeks to ban secret
detentions and rendition to countries that torture.
Yesterday, in a surprise
victory, the House overwhelmingly
passed a bill "to prevent
a 10 percent cut in Medicare
payments to doctors that
was scheduled to take effect July 1."
Backers of the legislation warned that such a cut "would lead to many
physicians opting
out of treating Medicare patients."
The Senate confirmed five
new commissioners for the Federal
Election Commission last
night, "ending a six-month
partisan standoff between the White House and Senate Democrats and putting
the campaign watchdog back in business."
The fight began last year when Democrats refused to bring up the
nomination of controversial former Justice Department official Hans
von
Spakovsky.
And finally: Employees with
disabilities have been frustrated
by the cafeteria in the new Department of Transportation,
which has fixtures that are inaccessible to people in wheelchairs. As a
remedy, Assistant Secretary Linda Washington issued a memo on April 22
with guidance, including telling employees needing assistance to
"politely" ask a cashier: "Could I hold
your elbow for sighted guide assistance?"
"Could you assist me with
getting a salad or hot entree?" She also told
employees to "consider visiting the cafeteria with a co-worker."
Naturally, many employees found the memo patronizing, and Washington
was forced to apologize.
|
|
|

"The dream
of a restored Everglades, with
water flowing from Lake Okeechobee
to Florida Bay, moved a giant step closer to reality on Tuesday when
the nation’s largest sugarcane producer agreed to sell all of
its
assets to the state."

CALIFORNIA: "Two-thirds of California's unique plants, some 2,300 species that grow nowhere else in the world, could be wiped out" due to global warming.
HEALTH CARE: "Skeptical states are shoving aside millions of federal dollars for abstinence education."
EDUCATION: Many "states are rewarding high school students who study a foreign language outside of the classroom."

THINK
PROGRESS: Fox analyst: Iraqis
"owe us" 100-year leases on their
oil.
WONK
ROOM: Not Fort Leavenworth?
PRO
PUBLICA: U.S. government-funded
Arabic news channel Alhurra paid
former White House aides and Washington journalists to appear on it.
THE
BLOTTER: Bush White House pushed
grant for former staffer.

"We
believe that the long-term resilience of our economy is very strong."
-- White House Press Secretary Dana Perino, 6/24/08
VERSUS
"There are still very considerable structural problems remaining in the
financial system. They will remain for a while. It's going to be very
difficult. There are a lot of unexpected adverse events out in front of
us."
-- Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, 6/24/08
|
|