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Monday, August 14, 2006

More on why the Bush Administration WANTS more terrorism
Posted by Jill | 6:51 AM
The surest way to reduce the threat of terrorism is to elect people who will regard terrorism as a problem to be solved, not an opportunity to be exploited.

Krugman:

We now know that from the very beginning, the Bush administration and its allies in Congress saw the terrorist threat not as a problem to be solved, but as a political opportunity to be exploited. The story of the latest terror plot makes the administration’s fecklessness and cynicism on terrorism clearer than ever.

Fecklessness: the administration has always pinched pennies when it comes to actually defending America against terrorist attacks. Now we learn that terrorism experts have known about the threat of liquid explosives for years, but that the Bush administration did nothing about that threat until now, and tried to divert funds from programs that might have helped protect us. “As the British terror plot was unfolding,” reports The Associated Press, “the Bush administration quietly tried to take away $6 million that was supposed to be spent this year developing new explosives detection technology.”

Cynicism: Republicans have consistently portrayed their opponents as weak on terrorism, if not actually in sympathy with the terrorists. Remember the 2002 TV ad in which Senator Max Cleland of Georgia was pictured with Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein? Now we have Dick Cheney suggesting that voters in the Democratic primary in Connecticut were lending aid and comfort to “Al Qaeda types.” There they go again.

More fecklessness, and maybe more cynicism, too: NBC reports that there was a dispute between the British and the Americans over when to make arrests in the latest plot. Since the alleged plotters weren’t ready to go — they hadn’t purchased airline tickets, and some didn’t even have passports yet — British officials wanted to watch and wait, hoping to gather more evidence. But according to NBC, the Americans insisted on early arrests.

Suspicions that the Bush administration might have had political motives in wanting the arrests made prematurely are fed by memories of events two years ago: the Department of Homeland Security declared a terror alert just after the Democratic National Convention, shifting the spotlight away from John Kerry — and, according to Pakistani intelligence officials, blowing the cover of a mole inside Al Qaeda.

But whether or not there was something fishy about the timing of the latest terror announcement, there’s the question of whether the administration’s scare tactics will work. If current polls are any indication, Republicans are on the verge of losing control of at least one house of Congress. And “on every issue other than terrorism and homeland security,” says Newsweek about its latest poll, “the Dems win.” Can a last-minute effort to make a big splash on terror stave off electoral disaster?


How anyone can think that a Republican Administration which uses fear as a weapon against its own people, one who brands voters who choose a candidate it doesn't like as "emboldening Al-Qaeda types", as Dick Cheney did last Wednesday after Ned Lamont won the Connecticut Primary, has ANY interest in reducing the threat of terrorism is beyond me. Why should they, when exploiting people's fears has worked so well for them up until now?

Fortunately, Ned Lamont is no John Kerry and is not assuming that "the American people are too smart" to believe this kind of crap:

"It surprised me...It seemed almost orchestrated. It's sort of demeaning to the people of Connecticut. ... I thought the senator and the vice president were both wrong to use that attack (strategy) on the voters of Connecticut."


Why Lamont was surprised, given the track record of this Administration, is another story, but he's still new at this game.

If the American people fall for this again, they deserve to live in an inept dictatorship, led by greedy men who want to exploit their fears to increase their own power and wealth. I just wish they weren't going to drag the rest of us along with them.
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