THE BUSH COCOON

This cocky, sequestered president simply didn’t know what was going on as Katrina hit:

When Hurricane Katrina struck, it appears there was no one to tell President Bush the plain truth: that the state and local governments had been overwhelmed, that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was not up to the job and that the military, the only institution with the resources to cope, couldn’t act without a declaration from the president overriding all other authority.

His own command-structure of craven loyalty and cronies insulated him from the facts. Rumsfeld – surprise! – opposed sending troops to stop the looting. At least he’s consistent. Newsweek elaborates:

There are a number of steps Bush could have taken, short of a full-scale federal takeover, like ordering the military to take over the pitiful and (by now) largely broken emergency communications system throughout the region. But the president, who was in San Diego preparing to give a speech the next day on the war in Iraq, went to bed.

His staff was terrified of having to tell him to cut his vacation short. On Wednesday, Blanco was not permitted to get through to the president for hours. She asked for 40,000 troops. She didn’t get them. In the end, it was Nagin who laid down the law:

According to Sen. David Vitter, a Republican ally of Bush’s, the meeting came to a head when Mayor Nagin blew up during a fraught discussion of “who’s in charge?” Nagin slammed his hand down on the table and told Bush, “We just need to cut through this and do what it takes to have a more-controlled command structure. If that means federalizing it, let’s do it.”

It took a city mayor to tell the president to do his job. But Blanco balked. And Bush dithered, while more lives were lost. When you get a senior Bush aide describing the White House bunker as “strangely surreal and almost detached,” you know we have a problem. Now if only we had an Iraqi version of Nagin: someone who can tell this president a truth he doesn’t want to hear.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“There’s nothing good about big-government conservatism. It’s an iron triangle of politicians, lobbyists and industry wallowing in the spoils of government contracting and favoritism linked to campaign contributions. The recipient of big-government liberalism is likely to be a 90-year-old who can’t get out of bed, or a pregnant teen in need of pre-natal care. The recipient of big-government conservatism is a Halliburton executive or someone who lobbies on Halliburton’s behalf. The owners of Lenco Industries certainly did well when the $180,000 Lenco BearCat assault vehicle landed in La Crosse.” – a local columnist discovers what the Bush era is about.

FIGHTING SHARIA

Canada voids Islamic religious “justice.”

GOOD NEWS IN MOSUL: A soldier looks on the bright side. There has been some success at Tal Afar as well. But this is the underlying reality:

But as with previous battles, like those in Falluja and Qaim, a western city near Syria, a large number of insurgents also escaped the fight. That makes the battle, at least in some measure, the latest example of one of the most nettlesome problems faced in the war, what one marine in Anbar Province recently described as “punching a balloon”: American forces attack with overwhelming firepower only to have some insurgents leave and then return, or move on to fight elsewhere.

One year ago, Tal Afar was the scene of a major offensive to oust entrenched insurgents. After the battle, American commanders said the city was safe. But the military, stretched thin by demand for troops elsewhere, left fewer than 500 soldiers in Tal Afar and a surrounding area twice the size of Connecticut. Predictably, American officers said, the insurgents returned in force and were largely undisturbed until May, when Colonel McMaster’s unit, the Third Armored Cavalry Regiment, was reassigned from south of Baghdad to take back the region from insurgents.

As long as Rumsfeld refuses to provide enough troops to do the job, or dramatically alters strategy, we will fail in Iraq.

THE PALESTINIAN REALITY: From anti-Christian pogroms on the West Bank to the torching of synagogues in Gaza, you get a glimpse of what basis there is for a tolerant, pluralist Palestinian state.

THE AMENDMENT IS COLLAPSING

The proposed constitutional amendment in Massachusetts – to take back marriage rights and replace them with identical but re-named “civil unions” – looks like it will never make it to the voters. More “judicial tyranny”? Nope. A legislature, answerable to voters, has decided to punt on it, it seems. The voters don’t want it; every incumbent who opposed the amendment last year was re-elected; some of those who supported the amendment lost their seats. But what’s interesting is that a second amendment is emerging that will try again. But this time, it will be an honest reflection of the base of the anti-gay marriage position. Their view is that gay couples deserve no rights whatever. So their amendment will strip gay couples of marriage, civil unions, domestic partnerships and any legal protections (just as the federal one would). The vote would not take place until 2008. Public support for removing all protections from gay couples in Massachusetts is not a majority now, and public opinion in Massachusetts has moved toward favoring gay marriage over the year it has been in force. And so the theo-conservative right hits a democratic wall. As it happens, I went to another wedding this past Saturday. I can’t report much of it since I was bawling through most of it. I’m a terrible softy at straight weddings. But to see two friends marry after eight years of sharing each other’s life and after two millennia of cruelty, oppression and stigma was a little much. And with each such moment, the movement for a wider human family builds.

A PERFECT MORNING

Four years later, another beautiful fall morning. All the more reason to remember.

THE THREE ‘C’S: What Katrina revealed about the Bush administration’s competence, cronyism and “conservatism.” My take in the Sunday Times of London.

TEN BIOS: Here are the resumes of the ten regional FEMA directors. You have now been warned.

EURO ANTI-SEMITISM WATCH: Tony Blair is being pressured to scrap the Holocaust Memorial Day. It’s offensive to Muslims.

STILL IN THE DARK

Among point-scoring against “the press,” I still don’t know if Glenn Reynolds favors or does not favor showing the bodies killed by Katrina and governmental negligence. I presume he’s happy the government is no longer trying to impede photographers. He’s right about double standards at CNN (so is Ed Driscoll), but I still don’t have a clue what he thinks. As long as some effort is made to protect individual dignity and privacy, I think we should see reality as it is. That’s why I believe we should have seen the Islamo-fascists behead their victims; why we should be shown the full extent of the barbarism of four years ago in New York City; and why the remaining Abu Ghraib photos – the ones that show what really went on – should be released to the public. We have a right to know the truth about our enemies and we have a right to know what is being done – or not being done – in our name.

THE FOREIGN POLICY COST

Like that of central banks, the power of militaries is often more effective when it has acquired a fearsome reputation of being effective and powerful. Sometimes, as Machiavelli noted, the reputation for ferocity is more important than the capacity to deliver it – and makes actual exercise of it superfluous. What the response to Katrina has done is make the U.S. super-power look a lot less credible, a lot less fearsome, a lot less capable. Ditto, of course, with regard to the inept conduct of the war in Iraq. Just as this administration has squandered America’s fiscal reputation, it has also put a dent in perception of its military effectiveness. That only emboldens enemies, makes deterrence harder and makes more conflict likelier. Dan Drezner elaborates.