PUTIN’S FORTRESS

New restrictions on immigration would bar foreign visitors who don’t share “Russian values.” I hope he doesn’t give Karl Rove any ideas. Russia will also bar people with HIV from entering the country. Why is it that the first instinct of a country with a domestic HIV explosion is to ban foreigners with it?

“SANTORUM” WON: But the press would never pick it as the newly coined word of the year. So it got consigned to second place. Slate explains it all.

WHY DOES IT MATTER? Many of you have emailed me to ask why it matters one drop what Lincoln’s sexual orientation was. Well, the relationship between his conflicted sexual orientation and his political life hasn’t been fully or even partly explored and Tripp ventures nothing but a few musings. Future scholars may now try. I certainly don’t believe that someone’s being gay makes them somehow a better person. Jeffrey Dahmer and Ernst Roehm were gay, along with Proust, Auden, Michelangelo and Whitman. But I do think that any historian trying to understand Lincoln should be interested in his emotional life and development. To me, it merely reveals more layers of Lincoln’s greatness. Here’s what I wrote to a friend yesterday:

Understanding Lincoln’s personality – his deep depressions, his terrible marriage, his strange and distant religious faith, his empathy for outsiders – all make more sense when you consider the kind of toll his sexual orientation must have taken. Imagine a Jew forced to conceal his identity all his life for political reasons. Do you really think this is irrelevant to understanding someone’s life? I don’t think many straights understand the enormous psychological damage homophobia does to people who lived in societies where they could never express love or have meaningful relationships. It’s crippling at the deepest level of the human soul and heart. Lincoln triumphed over this to do truly great things, although he also succumbed at times to profound despair. He overcame the prejudice of his time and managed to find love and solace in a few moments of intimacy. He did so without ever lying or even concealing his loves. Why denigrate or minimize that personal triumph? Especially when so many of Lincoln’s Republican successors are intent on reimposing the agony and misery of the closet today?

That’s why it matters. We owe the past our respect. And we owe Lincoln of all people a modicum of honesty.

ATHEISTS NEED NOT APPLY

What was Bush thinking with this statement: “President Bush said yesterday that he doesn’t ‘see how you can be president without a relationship with the Lord,’ but that he is always mindful to protect the right of others to worship or not worship.” So, out of his beneficence, he won’t trample on others’ religious freedom. But the White House? That’s for Christians only. No Jews? Or atheists? Notice also the evangelical notion of a personal “relationship” with the Lord. That also indicates suspicion of those Christians with different approaches to the divine. I must say this is a new level of religio-political fusion in this administration. To restrict the presidency to a particular religious faith is anathema to this country’s traditions and to the task of toleration. The president surely needs to retract the statement.

PHILIP NOBILE BUSTS HIMSELF

The hatchet-job performed by Philip Nobile in the Weekly Standard on C.A. Tripp’s “The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln” might be perceived as an attack on the whole idea of Honest Abe’s at least complicated sexual orientation. Readers who are interested in the intellectual honesty of Mr Nobile should read this essay of his from 2001, when he is full of spleen against what he regards as the “homophobia” of established Lincoln scholars in denying the same-sex loves in Lincoln’s life. He says in correspondence in the 2001 essay that he was writing his own book on the subject entitled, “A Harp of a Thousand Strings: The Queer Lincoln Theory.” That vital fact – a blaring conflict of interest – was never disclosed in the Standard. In the 2001 essay, moreover, Nobile states his own view quite clearly:

Incidentally, I do not argue that Lincoln was bisexual, but rather that bi-sexuality is a better explanation than the standard all-heterosexual one.

Later in the same piece, he writes:

I am neither gay nor an advocate of Lincoln’s homosexuality. But I do believe that bisexuality (he was bisexual by definition) is the best explanation for Lincoln’s sex life.

So the Weekly Standard’s reviewer was a strong proponent of the view that Lincoln was bisexual. He had his own book in the works on the subject. Tripp beat him to the punch – and is now dead so cannot challenge Nobile’s account of the editorial process. Isn’t this a conflict of interest that the Standard should have disclosed? Isn’t it relevant background for understanding Nobile’s own motives for trashing a book by a scholar whose exhaustive research on the subject may have made Nobile’s own book largely redundant?

A HOAX AND A FRAUD: Weirder still are the inconsistencies between Nobile’s Standard piece and his previous essay. In the Standard, he argues that “the Gay Lincoln Theory fails any historical test.” His previous book title was “A Harp of a Thousand Strings: The Queer Lincoln Theory.” In the Standard, Nobile trashes Tripp in part because he allegedly “papered over holes in his story with inventions (Lincoln’s law partner and biographer William Herndon never noticed the homosexuality because he was an extreme heterosexual and thus afflicted with ‘heterosexual bias’).” In his previous piece, when he was peddling his own book, he complains that Lincoln scholar Gabor Boritt “seems to be following the het line of all Lincoln scholars, with the exception of Thomas Lowry, who refuse to examine Lincoln’s passionate preference for male company (though Sandburg referred to Lincoln’s “streak of lavender and spots soft as May violets” in connection with Joshua Speed).” The “het line”? That’s more accusatory of Lincoln scholars than anything Tripp wrote. In the Standard, Nobile writes, against Tripp, that

Tripp was cavalier about the negative reaction from historians–ascribing their rejection of the theory to their unwillingness to admit homosexuality in their hero. He said that Donald told him that he would not believe Lincoln was gay even if Lincoln said so. Tripp was even convinced that another doubtful biographer was timid because he was a nervous closet case–until the man introduced him to his fiancée.

Yet his 2001 essay was titled “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, Don’t Publish: Homophobia in Lincoln Studies?” So he trashes Tripp for the exact same thing he argued only a few years ago.

THERE’S MORE: In the Standard, Nobile argues

One of the biggest roadblocks to the Gay Lincoln Theory is the fact that neither friends nor enemies ever connected the man to homosexual thoughts, words, or deeds. Would not a secret of that magnitude have leaked out somehow, sometime? Tripp had Lincoln boinking four bosom buddies during his prairie years, but there was not a whiff of this supposed hanky-panky anywhere in the record, not even in Herndon’s exhaustive history of Lincoln’s frontier contemporaries.

Yet in his previous essay, Nobile makes exactly the opposite point. In a letter to Borritt, Nobile specifically disowns the idea that the views of Lincoln’s contemporaries or even Lincoln himself are salient:

[R]eferring to Lincoln’s subjective state of mind regarding the possible homosexual nature of the overnights with Derickson, you wrote: ‘There is no evidence that [the homosexual dimension occurred] to Lincoln.’ This observation is true, but beside the point. At issue is not whether Lincoln perceived his feelings as homosexual, but whether he had such feelings and may have acted on them. The midnight rendezvous with Derickson are the best evidence that he did.

He also writes:

Of course, it is impossible to know what “most people” in Lincoln’s day might have thought about this matter. In any case, popular perception is irrelevant to historical truth, whatever it turns out to be. Fortunately, we know exactly how one Lincoln insider reacted when she heard the Derickson rumor. “What stuff!,” exclaimed Elizabeth Woodbury Fox, wife of Lincoln’s naval aide, in her diary of November 16, 1862.

In the Standard, Nobile argues that Lincoln’s early doggerel poem about boy-boy marriage suggests nothing:

In his mid-1990s draft, Tripp regarded the verse as another smoking gun: “viewed through the prism of sex research, the poem is an open and shut case, a virtual certification of Lincoln’s own engagement in homosexuality,” he wrote at the time. David Donald criticized Tripp’s forced interpretation in his 1996 letter: “The person who tells a joke about ‘fags’ or ‘gays’ or ‘butch’ women may reveal a lack of taste but that does not necessarily indicate homosexual leanings.” Under pressure from Donald and me, the simple equation of the poem and homosexuality was dropped.

In an email to Oxford University Press, however, Nobile made a strong case for his own book, insisting on the importance of the Derickson affair as evidence of Lincoln’s bisexuality. Then he adds, to bolster his case: “Incidentally, did you know that Lincoln wrote a boy-sex poem when he was 20?”

WILL THE STANDARD CORRECT? Is there a resolution to these contradictions? The best gloss is that Tripp believed that Lincoln was a 5 on the Kinsey scale and Nobile apparently thought he was more of a 3 or 4. Both believed Lincoln was bisexual to varying degrees. Even in the Standard, in a paragraph buried near the end of a piece calling the gay Lincoln theory a “fraud” and a “hoax,” Nobile concludes:

The Gay Lincoln Theory, for all its jagged edges, may be a more satisfying explanation for the president’s weird inner life than the Utterly Straight Lincoln Theory. “I have heard [Lincoln] say over and over again about sexual contact: ‘It is a harp of a thousand strings,'” Henry Whitney told William Herndon in 1865. Leaving aside Tripp’s bad faith, it is not utterly beyond imagining that Lincoln may have played a few extra strings on that harp.

Are we really to believe that the vituperation in Nobile’s piece is compatible with a simple difference of opinion over a nuance? Given the evidence in front of us, I’d say that the real bad faith in this instance is Nobile’s, not Tripp’s. The Standard piece is a work of character assassination against a rigorous scholar who cannot defend himself, in the service of a political agenda that is indeed homophobic. Maybe the Standard’s editors were unaware of Nobile’s rival book and past attacks on the “het-line” of homophobic Lincoln scholarship. Well, they are aware now. They need to apologize for this lacuna and correct the record.

‘BLOGGER NATION’

Are we now the establishment? Fineman says we are. His admission that the mainstream media have acted as a de facto political party for three decades strikes me as a big deal – the first crack of self-awareness in the MSM. But I truly hope the blogosphere doesn’t become its replacement. Blogs are strongest when they are politically diverse, when they are committed to insurgency rather than power, when they belong to no party. I’m particularly worried that the blogosphere has become far more knee-jerk, shrill and partisan since the days when I first started blogging. Some of that’s healthy and inevitable; but too much is damaging. In challenging the MSM, we should resist the temptation to become like them.

MAC DONALD, TORTURE, THE CIA AND BUSH

One distinction somewhat blurred in Heather Mac Donald’s limited defense of torture in City Journal is the distinction between what might be allowed for the CIA in “black box” interrogations of high-level Qaeda detainees, and the military’s general strict prohibition of inhumane treatment of detainees. This is an important distinction; but it was blurred almost immediately by the Bush administration itself. Marty Lederman has a must-read on all this. Here’s one important point:

I agree with MacDonald that the 2002 OLC Memo likely was not intended to affect interrogation policies in the military. But she is wrong to insinuate that the Pentagon was unaware of the OLC Memo, and to argue that the Memo had no effect on Pentagon policies and practices. Although I assume the Memo was originally intended for use by the CIA, the White House soon forwarded it to the Department of Defense, where huge portions of it were incorporated virtually verbatim in the DoD Working Group Report on Guantanamo interrogation techniques in early 2003 (even though the statute discussed in the OLC Memo did not even apply at Guantanamo during the period in question). Most notably, the Pentagon adopted wholesale the most indefensible and most dangerous portions of the OLC Memo-where OLC concocted unlikely criminal defenses of ‘necessity,’ ‘defense of nation,’ and ‘presidential authority,’ and where OLC argued that criminal laws restricting methods of interrogation are unconstitutional to the extent they impinge upon the President’s decisions of “what methods to use to best prevail against the enemy.’

Armed with these OLC assurances of virtually no legal exposure, the DoD Working Group itself concluded that these techniques were among those that are lawful under the restrictive laws governing military interrogations: placing a hood over detainees during questioning; 20-hour interrogations; four days of sleep deprivation; forced nudity to create a ‘feeling of helplessness and dependence’; increasing ‘anxiety’ through the use of dogs; quick, glancing slaps to the face or stomach; and the threat of transfer to another nation that might subject the detainee to torture or death.

These relaxed strictures can also swiftly evolve in chaotic or badly organized wars into something much worse. Which is what happened. When regular soldiers see prisoners dehumanized in this way as a legitimate policy, it is unsurprising that further improvisation occurs. Moreover, all of this is almost certainly illegal for the regular military. I’m sorry but there is a clear link between decisions made by Bush and what happened at Abu Ghraib. I don’t fully understand why Mac Donald ignores this, because, in some ways, what the administration did makes even the selective use of a few, strict coercive techniques in a handful of cases much less likely, as we go through what I hope is a backlash against this cruelty and chaos.

THE MIGRATION OF TORTURE: Moreover, whatever the intent of the White House, the Fay/Jones and Schlesinger reports specifically argue that the relaxed rules for the CIA “migrated” to Iraq, where the Geneva Conventions indubitably apply. Money Lederman quote on this latter point:

The reports explain in detail that the interrogators at Guantanamo, and the conflicting and confusing set of directives from the Pentagon for GTMO, ‘circulated’ freely to Afghanistan and then to Iraq (Schlesinger 9). Lieutenant General Sanchez, the commander of the Combined Joint Task Force in Iraq, approved techniques going beyond those approved for GTMO, ‘using reasoning’ from the President’s February 7, 2002 directive on unlawful combatants (id. at 10). The ‘existence of confusing and inconsistent interrogation technique policies,’ including a ‘proliferation of guidance and information from other theatres of operation,’ and the fact that personnel involved in interrogation in GTMO and Afghanistan ‘were called upon to establish and conduct interrogation operations in Abu Ghraib,’ all contributed ‘to the belief that additional interrogation techniques were condoned in order to gain intelligence’ (Jones 15-16; Fay 8, 10, 22). ‘The lines of authority and the prior legal opinions blurred’ (Fay 10), and ‘DoD’s development of multiple policies on interrogation operations for use in different theatres or operations confused Army and civilian Interrogators at Abu Ghraib’ (Fay Finding No. 7).

There is, then, a direct link between the memos approved by Bybee, Gonzales, Bush, Rumsfeld and others and what eventually took place (and is still taking place, so far as we know) in the war in Iraq. We don’t know the intent or motives of the original decisions. But we do know the consequences.

THE POST-WAR MESS

Here’s another must-read. It’s by Michael O’Hanlon in Policy Review, about the non-planning for the situation after the fall of Baghdad. We can and should have debates about whether we ever had enough troops to do what we needed to do after initial victory. I’d say it’s obvious that Shinseki was correct. Should we have gone to war under the circumstances then prevailing? Probably not. Given the lack of urgency with regard to Saddam’s WMDs (yes, this is hindsight, but so is all of this), we obviously should have waited. But even if we were concerned about WMDs and terrorists, it behooves any administration to plan very carefully for an occupation and to ensure that we have enough troops to keep order. Chaos breeds chaos. In any case, the administration doesn’t get the benefit of the doubt about this for one simple reason: they had no plan for occupying Iraq. Money quote from O’Hanlon:

Lest there be any doubt about the absence of a plan, one need only consult the Third Infantry Division’s after-action report, which reads: “Higher headquarters did not provide the Third Infantry Division (Mechanized) with a plan for Phase IV. As a result, Third Infantry Division transitioned into Phase IV in the absence of guidance.”

The rest is pro-Bush spin. David Adesnik has an excellent post about all this. I recommend it highly as an adjunct to the O’Hanlon essay.

MORE IMAGES: The NASA site is indeed a great one. Here’s a close-up of tsunami damage. I don’t mean to sound like Al Gore but this one is way cool as well.

EMAIL OF THE DAY

“Please, Andrew, depair about something worth despairing over; but Glenn Reynolds’ use of wing-wang is no more proof of what he believes about gays than your link to Engrish says anything substantial about your beliefs concerning the Japanese. Glenn made his point. It just does not matter to him whether Lincoln was gay or not. If that’s the worst that straights can think about gays, then I say bring on the worst. And keep laughing.” Yeah, maybe I lost my sense of humor. Glenn is, as I said, on the side of the angels and I have long appreciated his matter-of-fact support for gay equality. More feedback on the Letters Page.

THE FACE OF REPRESSION

Here’s a photo of an Iranian blogger, one of more than 20 detained by the theo-fascists for freedom of expression. Money quote: “My interrogator punched me in the head and stomach and kicked me in the back many times to force me confess to having illegal sex and endangered national security through my writings, Mazrouei said.” He was blindfolded for 66 days in solitary confinement. And yes, it pains me that now every defender of the Islamists can say that U.S. custody is just as bad as the Iranians – and, in many cases, far worse. We have squandered a part of the critical moral difference that justifies our fight.