Narrative Fail

by Chris Bodenner

While the Cheneys are busy making scary YouTube videos, Obama continues to execute the war on terrorism:

The Pakistani Taliban confirmed Tuesday that a senior commander wanted in the deadly 2006 bombing of the U.S. consulate in Karachi was killed in a suspected American missile strike in northwestern Pakistan.

DiA:

Guess someone at the CIA or Pentagon didn't get [Cheney's memo that the president is "trying to pretend we're not at war".] There has been a grievous failure to "connect the dots" here: despite overwhelming evidence from Fox News, Mr Cheney, Liz Cheney, Scott Brown and furious other torture supporters, the president, the military and the intelligence services seem not to have understood that they're supposed to think we're not at war. We risk a major attack on cherished narratives if this kind of complacency keeps up.

The Leverett Debate

by Patrick Appel

Larison misunderstands me here:

Advocates of engagement have recognized the crimes of the Iranian regime, but some of us still believe engagement is the most realistic and correct course despite these crimes. If advocates of engagement do not devote a large amount of space to denouncing regime crimes, which everyone finds atrocious and wrong, perhaps it is because we realize that our outrage will do nothing for the regime’s victims. Perhaps it is because we have seen how stoking moral outrage against another government has been used many times in the past to justify destructive policies that will intensify the suffering and difficulties of the people.

How many thousands of Americans and tens of thousands of Iraqis would still be alive and how many millions of Iraqis would never have been displaced had we been more concerned with getting our policy towards Iraq right and less concerned with denouncing Hussein’s atrocities (and using them as fodder for war propaganda)? Appel may not agree with this approach, but he should bear it in mind before he concludes that advocates of engagement such as the Leveretts have not recognized and acknowledged regime crimes.

Kevin Sullivan also boxes in my complaint about the Leveretts' ham-handed writing. As I wrote before, one must address the emotional core of opposing foreign policy viewpoints. Larison is a more than able debater, which is why I'm somewhat surprised that he has not recognized the weak points of the Leveretts' writing. My critique is not against their policies, which I am more than willing to entertain, it is against the manner in which they have framed their analysis. The merits of arguments may be all important but let's not pretend that tone and framing have no bearing.

Read the Leveretts June 15th article: Ahmadinejad won. Get over it. The article makes no mention of the protests that had occurred. Read the Dish coverage the week of the op-ed and the week before. Given the chaos after the election, shouldn't someone arguing that Ahmadinejad won explain why hundreds of thousands of protesters took to the streets?

Many pro-green movement writers have been overconfident, but that does not give the Leveretts a free pass to commit the same sin. When writing against a consensus one needs to be more careful, not less. I've re-read the WPO report Larison uses to buoy the Leveretts' claims about Ahmadinejad winning the election. The report does not explain how strongholds of other politicians went overwhelmingly for Ahmadinejad, it recognizes that Iranians might be afraid to admit they voted for Mousavi after the government crackdown, and it admits that some fraud may have occurred. In short, the WPO report is more nuanced than the Leveretts analysis. That Ahmadinejad "artfully quoted Azeri and Turkish poetry " to impress ethnic voting blocks, as the Leveretts wrote in June 15th article, is not sufficient reason to dismiss irregularities of this magnitude. Larison asks:

What is this “strongest evidence” that the Leveretts have ignored?

The strongest argument against engagement with Iran is not that any individual political actor in Iran is irrational, but that the country's leadership is divided against itself and that the warring political fractions are incapable of committing to any sort of international agreement. The green movement added to this disunity. From Larison's response to my last post:

[It] doesn’t make much sense why regime crimes would actually have much bearing on the available policy options. Washington has made strategically valuable bargains with authoritarian states several times in the past, and our government has done this with regimes that were vastly more repressive, violent and cruel. The opening to China has served both U.S. and Chinese interests reasonably well, and the Chinese people have benefited some from this as well, and none of this would have happened had our government been swayed by the objection that the Chinese government at that time had been killing hundreds of thousands of its own people for years. Out of necessity or interest, we have forged alliances with some genuinely awful Arab and Central Asian regimes as well. Where then does the horrified reaction to negotiating with Iran come from?

This is all the more frustrating because making a comprehensive settlement with Iran is the best and the most realistic option there is. Trying to build up Iran’s opposition or wait for its eventual success is a waste of effort and time that we cannot really afford.

He's right that the national interest has demanded that we deal with much more murderous regimes. My sensitivity to human rights abuses in Iran was heightened by spending the month after the election steeped in Iranian news, tweets, images, and videos. A reader's description of the feeling at the time:

Twitter revolution in a nutshell: Anne Frank's diary. Live. Multiplied by millions.

Perhaps this warped by perspective. When you see an Iranian citizen die for want of a freer society there is a natural impulse to fit that event into the larger order. Watching it over, and over, and over again compels one to find a larger purpose. To explain the human suffering as purchasing some unseen greater good.

If the people of Iran had overthrown their government, all of those deaths, tortures, and arrests would have been given meaning. If the green movement eventually leads to a reformed and freer Iran then those sacrifices will likewise have been worth it. This was the emotional core of the Iran debate at the time of the Leveretts' writing. Is it much of a surprise that their analysis, which gave no quarter to the protesters, was so widely panned? Is it so much to ask that a foreign policy analyst writing in this context in some way address the local and international consequences of such protests?

The Daily Wrap

Today on the Dish we continued to cover a slow news week with our bevy of guest-bloggers. Jonathan Bernstein explained why he's confident healthcare reform is a done deal, wondered how the bill will affect the midterm elections, theorized over what makes an effective president, and mused over 2012 contenders.

Alex Massie floated the idea that a defeat would be a good thing for either party in the upcoming British election, discussed the repercussions of US-style debates, mulled over the immigration factor, cast a critical eye at Clinton's Falkland comments, and knocked Roger Ailes for his hysteria over Iran.

Graeme Wood illustrated Iran's vulnerability to earthquakes, highlighted blasphemy laws in Pakistan, and suggested China as a new partner against the Taliban. Patrick continued his Leveretts debate with Larison.

In other Dish coverage, Liz Cheney cranked up her crusade against the rule of law, Catholic Charities discontinued all of its spousal benefits, Uganda villain Martin Ssempa started blogging, Nathaniel Frank insisted we not delay in ending DADT, Peter Beinart prodded Obama to push out Rangel, Packer exposed a big weakness for Mitch Daniels in '12, and Michael Singh disagreed with our use sanctions.

In Olympics blogging, we linked to a stunning series of photos, provided a visual history of branding, and pointed out a bunch of poor sports. In random viral goodness, check out this music video out of India, this pwnage of Politico, this lampooning of Obama's prompter, and this dose of movie hathos.

— C.B.

Politics and Presidents

by Jonathan Bernstein

Everyone, I guess, is talking about the latest WaPo exercise in Kremlinology*: Is Rahm in trouble?  Who is feuding with who?  Or, even…whom?

I'll pass on all of that, but I'm interested in Ezra Klein's reaction.  I agree with everything he says about health care reform and the other substantive issues, but then he concludes:

[O]n the areas that I know well, the defense of Rahm favored by some Washington Democrats is evidence of everything that is wrong with Washington: It prizes politics rather than policy, and seems interested in the problems Americans are facing only insofar as those problems show up in the president's poll numbers. In this telling, the measure of Obama's success is not how much good he does for the country but how much good he does for congressional reelection campaigns. No wonder people hate this city.

I mostly disagree with that.  Not completely — I think if Obama construed politics narrowly, as Klein does here, to include only the midterm elections, then Obama would be wrong to focus on politics over policy.  But overall, I think this is the wrong way to think about the presidency, and about elected officials in general.  For them, it is precisely good politics that makes for good policy. 

I'll have to explain that.  There are two ways at getting to the same place…I'll start with what I find to be the more intuitive, which is just that a really good test of good policy is, well, if voters like it.  George W. Bush didn't wind up really unpopular because of the wrong emphasis on politics over policy; if anything, the problem in Iraq is that Bush plunged ahead, in 2004, 2005, and 2006, with policies that were almost certain to draw the wrath of the American electorate.  Because they were bad policies! 

The other way of getting to this is through Richard Neustadt's classic, Presidential Power.  For Neustadt, the quest for presidential power has the happy side effect of making government work well: "an expert search [by the president] for presidential influence contributes to the energy of the government and the viability of public policy" (154).  That is because, for Neustadt, no one can actually know what will actually constitute good policy.  What makes a policy work, anyway?  For Neustadt, it must be:

an operation that proves manageable to those who must administer it, acceptable to those who must support it, tolerable to those who must put up with it, in Washington and out.

How can Obama know whether health care reform (or Afghanistan policy, or a plan to fight H1N1, or changes in the structure of the American nuclear arsenal, or a climate/energy proposal, or financial sector reform) will work?  Obama certainly appears to be smart and well-read, but no president can actually be a true expert on even a small number of the issues that he or she must deal with, so just knowing what's what isn't going to do it.  I think a lot of people would just say to get the experts, and have them tell you what would work and what wouldn't.  But experts invariably disagree: which experts do you listen to?  How do you know?  

What Neustadt suggests is that presidents can find what he calls "clues."  If the Senator from Florida complains about how his constituents would object to changes in a Medicare program, that's a clue.  If a group of credentialed experts sign on to a letter saying that Congress should be pass the bill before it, that's a clue.  If the governors complain about Medicaid provisions, another clue.  If some liberals revolt at the prospect of a bill passing without a public option, that's another clue.  Each of five committees, in the case of health care, reported different bills: more clues, because each provision reflected something that someone in that committee cared about for some reason.

Neustadt's claim is that the same things that made presidents successful politically — that is, in his terms, increase presidential power — are the things that make presidents good at reading those clues.  That is, presidents, in order to convince others to do the things that the president wants them to do, must figure out what the people who will administer a program can actually do (which, of course, differs from what they might say they can do — reading clues is hard).  Presidents must figure out who really needs to support something so that it will pass, and know what they will accept (think public option. Who can you afford to lose — Ben Nelson or Jane Hamsher?  And will the inclusion or not of a public option really make one of them walk?  What about Howard Dean and Blanche Lincoln, same questions?  The answers are not obvious, nor were they at the time).  But for Neustadt:

The things a President must think about if he would build his influence are not unlike those bearing on the viability of public policy.  The correspondence may be inexact, but it is close.  The man who thinks about the one can hardly help contributing to the other.  A President who senses what his influence is made of and who means to guard his future will approach his present actions with an eye to the reactions of constituents in Washington and out.  The very breadth and sweep of his constituencies and of their calls upon him, along with the uncertainty of their response, will make him keen to see and weigh what Arthur Schlesinger has called "the balance of administrative power."  This is a balance of political, managerial, psychological, and personal feasibilities.  And because the President's own frame of reference is at once so all-encompassing and so political, what he sees as a balance for himself is likely to be close to what is viable in terms of public policy.

Let me take that apart a bit…it's a big nation.  A really big nation.  And within it, people mostly care about themselves.  Members of Congress care about reelection.  Bureaucrats care about getting bigger budgets and easier work to do.  Interest groups care about a whole host of things.  Experts may think they are neutral, but they're also apt to be committed to a particular methodology, or their own pet solution, or they may not care about transition costs or local harm in service to a national goal.  The only person, Neustadt argues, who has an incentive to care about the entire nation, to balance all the particular interests and the national interest, to know when a Senator really is indicating that a bill will cause unacceptable harm to her constituents and when she's just bluffing, is the president.  And he will do so, paradoxically enough, not if he asks "what is good for the country?" but if he asks, instead, "what is good for me politically?"  "What will make me a powerful (read: influential) president?"

Just to be clear…what's good for the president politically, in this way of thinking about things, is not the same thing as whatever will maximize short-term approval ratings, or even what will maximize midterm results or even reelection.  Those are elements of it, but there are also usually trade-offs involved, and Neustadt's presidents will need to figure out how to balance those sorts of things — which are valuable, because they become resources to help the president in the next round of bargaining — with other goals. 

*Paging 1985: the composer I'm using does not recognize the words Barack, Obama, Rahm, or WaPo, but it's all over Kremlinology.   

Hillary and the Falklands, Part 2

by Alex Massie

Justin Keating thinks I'm probably reading too much into Hillary's remarks about the Falkland Islands today. A good number of readers think so too. And it's true that this is an issue that's guaranteed to annoy Britons. Perhaps we are, as one reader put it, "hypersensitive".

But the point is this: whether Hillary Clinton thought she was humoring her Argentine hosts or simply being polite, she actually ended up doing rather more than that. A reminder of what she said:

[W]e want very much to encourage both countries to sit down. Now, we cannot make either one do so, but we think it is the right way to proceed. So we will be saying this publicly, as I have been, and we will continue to encourage exactly the kind of discussion across the table that needs to take place.

That may seem innocuous or a simple piece of diplomatic boilerplate. But it isn't. Hillary could, perhaps at the risk of disappointing her hosts, have said that this is an issue upon which the United States has no view. But she didn't. "Needs", for instance, is a pretty strong word.

The British position, right or not, is that there really isn't very much to talk about at all. Consequently, any American endorsement of talks is an endorsement of the Argentine position and not, however innocuous it might seem, a neutral view.

It's also possible that it might make "sense" for sovereignty to be transferred to Buenos Aires and the islands then leased back to Britain for the next, I don't know 99 years. (With an option to renew!) But that isn't going to happen either since the British view, in light of the islanders' own preferences, is that sovereignty is non-negotiable. And since that's what Argentina wants to talk about, endorsing the idea of talks can only be seen as supporting, in principle at least, Argentina's claims.

Is the British public mildly irrational about the Falklands? Perhaps. But the war wasn't that long ago and helps explain why Britain doesn't consider there to even be an issue over the islands' status. If the Islanders wanted to be Argentinian then things would be different. But they don't so they aren't.

Granted, as I pointed out here and here, the State Department's position has not changed much since 1982 but, Monroe Doctrine or not, this is a subject upon which the United Kingdom would very much prefer it if the State Department said nothing at all, far less give the impression that it agrees with Buenos Aires.

Daniel Larison has more to say on this too.

Face Of The Day

AfghanistanMajidSaeediGettyImages
A mental patient poses for a photograph in a sanitarium March 1, 2010 in Harbe, Afghanistan. Not only does Afghanistan hold the position of one of the worst health care situations in the world according to the World Health Organization (WHO) but it is also plagued with a hidden medical crisis of severe mental suffering resulting from decades of conflict and repression. It was reported by WHO that roughly five million Afghans suffer from various types of mental illness. By Majid Saeedi/Getty Images.

No Spousal Benefits For Anyone

by Patrick Appel

BTB sums up the news:

Catholic Charities President and CEO Edward Orzechowski sent a memo out to employees yesterday informing them that spouses’ who have already been enrolled in the health plan would continue to receive care under a grandfather clause, but that new employees or newly married employees would no longer be eligible to obtain coverage for their spouses through Catholic Charities.

The change goes into effect today. The District of Columbia will begin granting marriage licenses to same-sex couples beginning on March 4.

Just Do It Already

by Chris Bodenner

Nathaniel Frank warns against having yet another round of inquiry on DADT:

While taking time to study the transition may seem reasonable at first blush, the reality is that the government, the military, and independent researchers have been studying this issue for decades. And all of their findings point to the same truth: Openly gay service does not impair military effectiveness. What's more, existing research already shows what steps should be taken to repeal DADT. It’s far from clear what good will come from another year of study–but it's easy to see obstructionists using the window to sow fear and doubt as a tactic to kill the plan for a repeal.

Indeed, the script emerging from this month’s opening salvo at the DADT hearings is eerily similar to the one that played out in 1993, when President Bill Clinton’s effort to lift the gay ban was derailed during a six-month study period. During that window, opponents of reform, led by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, rallied to defend the status quo, forming a wall of military resistance that some said amounted to insubordination. They were joined by skeptical members of Congress. Ultimately, Clinton yielded to the pressure and backed away from his promise.

The latest example of that script came from McCain on "Meet the Press":

"Just this week the commandant of the Marine Corps said that he did not want DADT repealed. There are many in the military who do not want to. We are going to go through, hopefully, a year-long study that will, hopefully, also, have the feelings of the men and women who are serving."

If the Navy’s Crittenden Report ('57), the Pentagon's PERSEREC studies ('88, '89), and the RAND study ('93) weren't enough for McCain, perhaps he should read the Palm Center's new report (pdf) – what Frank calls "the largest study in history assessing the experiences of other countries with openly gay service."

Speaking of Pointless Political Junkie Speculation…

by Jonathan Bernstein

…how about a round of 2012 talk? 

OK, full disclosure: I was trying to figure out a reasonable way to fit in a plug for the excellent reporter and brother David S. Bernstein, when suddenly Jonathan Chait linked to a published list of odds for winning the presidency in 2012.  David, who reports and blogs for the Boston Phoenix, just released his regularly scheduled prognostication on the GOP field…he thinks Tim Pawlenty is in the lead.  Why should you listen to him?  Well, in the dark depths of John McCain 's campaign collapse in 2007, he called the nomination for McCain.  Not bad!

Anyway, the lists are fun to look at (I agree with Chait, though…what are John Edwards and Arnold Schwarzenegger doing at less than a million to one?).  My contribution here is just to say that no one has ever lost money betting against Members of the House or Mayors of New York winning presidential nominations, so I would seriously downgrade people from both of those categories when they occur on either list (Mike Pence?  Really?).   Oh, and if anyone tries to sell you on the idea that a pro-choice candidate can win the Republican nomination, just laugh her.  It's not going to happen.  As we get closer, it will be interesting to see if a vote for TARP is going to be a big problem for those who were in Congress in fall 2008 and supported their party and President Bush, who as you may recall was a Republican.  We'll see.  I can say that the current GOP Members of Congress are trying pretty hard to avoid casting any vote that could ever come close to hurting them in a Republican primary for anything.

Also, I liked this:

East Coast urban sophisticates saw Pawlenty’s CPAC speech as uninspiring. I saw it as perfect for Iowa. Hey, you know who else was no good at delivering a slick, rousing, barn-burner of a stump speech? Every Republican Presidential nominee of the last quarter-century, that’s who.