Sunday, May 17, 2009

Obama Displeases the Left

Frank Rich is displeased. The ACLU is calling Obama's reversal on releasing the photos a win for al Quaeda. Get real. 
The only people who care about dragging out the torture issue are those on the left and those on the right.
The rest of Americans could care less or want to see Obama move on. We want things like education reform and healthcare reform.
Obama made it clear, going forward torture will not be tolerated. I'm happy to see that Obama has the kind of focus that he can ignore both sides and make decisions--not based on ideology--but on the evidence at hand.
But there are so many ideologues invested in revenge against Bush. This torture issue has been consumed by politics:
TO paraphrase Al Pacino in “Godfather III,” just when we thought we were out, the Bush mob keeps pulling us back in. And will keep doing so. No matter how hard President Obama tries to turn the page on the previous administration, he can’t. Until there is true transparency and true accountability, revelations of that unresolved eight-year nightmare will keep raining down drip by drip, disrupting the new administration’s high ambitions.

That’s why the president’s flip-flop on the release of detainee abuse photos — whatever his motivation — is a fool’s errand. The pictures will eventually emerge anyway, either because of leaks (if they haven’t started already) or because the federal appeals court decision upholding their release remains in force. And here’s a bet: These images will not prove the most shocking evidence of Bush administration sins still to come.

There are many dots yet to be connected, and not just on torture. This Sunday, GQ magazine is posting on its Web site an article adding new details to the ample dossier on how Donald Rumsfeld’s corrupt and incompetent Defense Department cost American lives and compromised national security. The piece is not the work of a partisan but the Texan journalist Robert Draper, author of “Dead Certain,” the 2007 Bush biography that had the blessing (and cooperation) of the former president and his top brass. It draws on interviews with more than a dozen high-level Bush loyalists. NYT