Author Topic: Elliot Abrams  (Read 1048 times)

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Lanya

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Elliot Abrams
« on: April 11, 2007, 05:31:53 PM »
POLITICS:
Elliott Abrams and Déjà Vu All Over Again
Analysis by Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON, Apr 9 (IPS) - It has an all too familiar ring to it.

A crisis area -- in this case, the Middle East -- finds itself in desperate need of a peace process capable of tamping down the forces of violence and destabilisation which the United States itself has played a central role in unleashing.

Regional efforts at diplomacy -- in this case, led by Saudi Arabia -- gain some momentum but are frustrated by die-hard hawks in a U.S. administration. While increasingly on the defensive both at home and abroad, they are determined to carry through their strategy of isolating and destabilising a hostile target -- in this case, Syria -- despite its oft-repeated eagerness to engage Washington and its regional allies.

Sensing an increasingly dangerous impasse, the Democratic Speaker of the House of Representatives -- in this case, Nancy Pelosi, backed by a growing bipartisan consensus that the administration's intransigeance will further reduce already-waning U.S. influence in the region -- tries to encourage regional peace efforts by engaging the target directly.

But, worried that her quest might actually gain momentum, administration hawks -- in this case, led by Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott Abrams and Vice President Dick Cheney -- accuse the speaker of undermining the president and, working through obliging editorial writers at the Washington Post, among other sympathetic media, including, of course, the Wall Street Journal, attack her for "substitut(ing) her own foreign policy for that of a sitting Republican president."

If that scenario sounds familiar, your foreign policy memory dates back at least to 1987, when, despite intensified regional peace-making efforts for which Costa Rican President Oscar Arias won that year's Nobel Peace Prize, the Ronald Reagan administration was persisting in its efforts to isolate and overthrow the Sandinista government in Nicaragua.

It was then-House Speaker Jim Wright who, with the quiet encouragement of Republican realists, notably Reagan's White House chief of staff, Howard Baker, Secretary of State George Shultz and his special Central America envoy, Philip Habib, sought to promote Arias' plan.

Like today's Republican realists on the Iraq Study Group (ISG), who have urged the Bush administration to engage rather than continue to isolate Syria, they understood that popular and Congressional support for a "regime change" policy in Nicaragua was not sustainable and Washington should seek a regional settlement on the most favourable terms available.

But Abrams, then assistant secretary of state for Inter-American Affairs, worked assiduously with fellow hard-liners in the White House and the Pentagon -- just as he works today with Cheney's office -- to torpedo both the Arias plan and Wright's efforts to advance it throughout the latter half of 1987.

As Abrams' assistant at the time, the future neo-conservative heavy thinker, Robert Kagan, put it later, "Arias, more than any other Latin leader single-handedly undid U.S. policy in Nicaragua." And when he won the Nobel Prize, "all us of who thought it was important to get aid for the contras reacted with disgust, unbridled disgust."

As part of their strategy, hard-liners led by Abrams rejected appeals by Nicaragua for high-level talks, thus forcing Habib to resign by late summer and insisting -- as they now do with Syria -- that direct negotiations would serve only to legitimate Sandinistas and demoralise the contras.

In November 1987, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega came to Washington with a proposal for a ceasefire with the contras. After the administration refused to receive him, Wright, seeing an opportunity to jump-start a stalled peace process, attended a meeting at the Vatican Embassy here at which Ortega asked his main domestic foe, Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, to mediate between the Sandinista government and the contras.

Wright's participation in the talks was seized by Abrams as the launching pad for a public -- if barely concealed -- attack on the speaker. Interviewed by the Post under the guise of an unnamed "senior administration official," Abrams charged Wright with engaging in "guerrilla theater" and "an unbelievable melodrama" that had dealt a "serious setback" to the administration's policy.

"This was not forward movement; this was screwing up the process," the "senior official" complained to the Post which, as in its criticism Friday of Pelosi's meeting with Assad, obligingly followed up with its own editorial, entitled "What is Jim Wright Doing?", charging the speaker with having acted "as though the actual conduct of diplomacy in this delicate passage were his responsibility."

The Journal's neo-conservative editorial writers swiftly joined in, accusing Wright of a "compulsion for running off-the-shelf foreign-policy operations," just as last week they charged Pelosi and Democrats of seeking "to conduct their own independent diplomacy".

Within just a few months of his meeting with Ortega, however, the Democratic-led Congress rejected Reagan's request to fund the contras, a step which Abrams incorrectly predicted at the time would result in "the dissolution of Central America".

According to Roy Gutman's aptly named 1988 book about Reagan's Central America policy, "Banana Diplomacy", Washington soon found itself "at the margins of the region's diplomacy".

Unlike his high-public profile as assistant secretary 20 years ago, Abrams, who now presides over Middle East policy at the National Security Council, is today far more discreet, no doubt in part because his conviction in 1991 for lying to Congress about his role in the Iran-contra scandal has made him an easy target for Democrats.

"He's very careful about not leaving fingerprints," one State Department official told IPS earlier this year.


But there is little doubt among Middle East analysts here that Abrams is playing a lead role in White House efforts to discredit Pelosi for meeting with Assad, just as he did with Wright for meeting Ortega in 1987.

And just as he worked with Reagan hard-liners to undermine the Arias Plan 20 years ago, so he appears to be doing what he can to undermine recent efforts by Saudi King Abdullah to initiate an Arab-Israeli peace process and, for that matter, by Republican realists, and even Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, to push it forward. (END/2007)
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37281
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Lanya

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Re: Elliot Abrams
« Reply #1 on: April 11, 2007, 06:27:41 PM »
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1176152772798&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull

In Washington: Gutsy new House Speaker
By MJ ROSENBERG [Recent columns]


You know what they say: no good deed goes unpunished. That is certainly the case with Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and her visit to Syria.

At a time (the Easter-Passover recess) when dozens of House members and Senators are visiting foreign capitals and discussing policy with foreign leaders, Pelosi is being skewered for, in the words of the Washington Post's editors, "substituting her own foreign policy for that of a sitting Republican President."

The Post accuses Pelosi of "try[ing] to introduce a new US diplomatic initiative in the Middle East." Heaven forefend! Things are going so swimmingly in the Middle East that the last thing anyone needs is for the 3rd highest official in the United States trying to resuscitate diplomacy.

The specific objection is to her meeting with the Syrian leader, Bashar Assad. Of course, few could object to what she told Assad - that he should stop trouble making in Iraq and Lebanon, that the Israeli government is ready for negotiations, that Israel has no bellicose intentions toward Syria and that Syria should use its influence to free Israeli prisoners.

In fact, David Hobson, a Republican from Ohio who accompanied Pelosi, said that the Speaker did not stray very far from Bush administration policy.

Hobson said Pelosi "did not engage in any Bush bashing she did not...bash [Bush] policies as they relate to Syria." Instead, Hobson said, Pelosi urged Assad to curb the number of suicide bombers who cross the Syrian border into Iraq to "murder our troops and the Iraqi people."

Republican House leader, John Boehner, admitted that there was nothing wrong with legislators in general visiting Syria. "It's one thing for other members to go," Boehner said, "but you have to ask yourself, 'Why is Pelosi going?"

The answer isn't that hard. She went for the same reasons as Tom Lantos (D-CA), Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, as Henry Waxman (D-CA), the most senior Jewish member of the House, as Keith Ellison (D-MN), the first Muslim-American in Congress, as Louise M. Slaughter (D-NY), Rules Committee Chair, as Nick J. Rahall II (D-WV), the senior Arab-American in Congress, and Senior Defense Appropriator David Hobson (R-OH).

She went to advance US interests in the Middle East, believing that we can perhaps get more out of Syria by engaging it than by shunning it.

THE CRITICS are feigning outrage because they don't like Pelosi and because, by visiting Syria, Pelosi has revived one of the Baker-Hamilton Report's prescriptions for ending the Iraq war: engaging Iran and Syria. Baker-Hamilton recognizes that Syria and Iran can do more to impede the extrication of our soldiers and marines from Iraq than any other countries on the planet (with the exception of Iraq itself).

On the other hand, if they choose to, they can ease our way out of Iraq and help prevent that country's further descent into chaos and civil war.

The Israeli government added to the Pelosi controversy by saying that Pelosi did not carry any private messages from Jerusalem to Damascus. But the Israelis have been using intermediaries to convey information to the Syrians for a long time. It is inconceivable that the highest ranking American in memory to visit Damascus would visit Israel, en route to Syria, and not be asked to convey a message to Assad from Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

One can only hope that she was carrying messages from Israel. Why wouldn't the Israelis seize that opportunity? Pelosi's visit strengthened America's position in the region, and likely helped Israel on prisoners, on Hizbullah, and in its effort to avoid another war like last summer's.
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Lanya

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Re: Elliot Abrams
« Reply #2 on: April 11, 2007, 06:42:30 PM »
Memo To Winger Media: Pelosi Isn't Going To Iran
April 11, 2007 -- 03:18 PM EST // View Comments (17) // Post a Comment

A lot of winger bloggers and commentators are raising a big fuss over the fact that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appeared to suggest at a press conference yesterday that she might be planning a trip to Iran with Dem Rep. Tom Lantos.

In our view, her remarks were inconclusive -- while one could reasonably conclude from them that she might be open to going, she also didn't say outright that she was going, or even that she was planning on going. It seemed like further inquiry was in order.

So we tried something novel: We called Pelosi's office and asked for clarification. Her spokesman, Brendan Daly, emailed us the following:

    “The Speaker has no intention of going to Iran.

    “She has great respect for Mr. Lantos, who is the only Holocaust survivor in the Congress and a staunch supporter of Israel, and who would like to go to begin a dialogue there, as the bipartisan Iraq Study Group recommended.”

This is going to prove terribly disappointing to winger bloggers and commentators, many of whom are still stoking outrage about her trip to Syria as part of an absurdly transparent effort to weaken her in her capacity as the front-woman for Dem efforts to end the Iraq war.

Indeed, the "controversy" over Pelosi's alleged desire to go to Iran followed a remarkably similar trajectory to the one about Syria, only in this case no such trip was in the process of happening or even in the process of being planned. The controversy began yesterday after Pelosi held a joint press conference with Dem Rep. Tom Lantos, a Holocaust survivor. Lantos said that "speaking for myself," he wanted to go, and suggested that she might want to join him. Pelosi didn't disagree with this, but nor did she say she wanted to go, either. That nonetheless was written up in the San Francisco Chronicle with this headline:

    Pelosi, Lantos may be interested in diplomatic trip to Iran

That was quickly linked to by Matt Drudge under the hed "Pelosi may go to Iran." That of course led to a series of minor explosions around the right-wing blogosphere and on cable TV. Over at Michelle Malkin's Hot Air, "Allapundit" actually admitted he wanted to see her go because it would weaken her politically, writing: "This is the one case of fascist outreach I’m keen to see them pursue, so luscious would the blowback be." (And here you thought that these good people didn't want her to meet with the enemy because it would be bad for America!) Over at National Review's The Corner, Kathryn Jean Lopez wrote: "Maybe Speaker Pelosi Should Pass a Law Eliminating the Exec Branch." (That was sarcasm, in case you couldn't tell.) It bounced around the winger blogosphere a bunch and was even was discussed on Fox News, where it was heavily criticized.

Of course, no one even knew whether she had any intention of actually going to Iran or not. As best as I can determine, no one -- not the San Francisco Chronicle writer, no reporters at Fox News, no one else peddling this tale -- took the elementary step of contacting Pelosi's office to ask for clarification of her remarks. Of course, if they had, they might have discovered that they didn't have anything to get "outraged" about anymore.

http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/horsesmouth/2007/04/sorry_wingnuts.php
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Plane

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Re: Elliot Abrams
« Reply #3 on: April 11, 2007, 09:30:52 PM »
I hpe it is not forgotton what sort of regime Assad heads .


The_Professor

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Re: Elliot Abrams
« Reply #4 on: April 11, 2007, 10:10:27 PM »
Yep, pretty brutal.