London Mayor Admits Olympic Mistake

Following in the footsteps of San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom’s hard stance against the Olympic torch relay going through Tibet – a welcome move that was akin to closing the barn door after the horses had escaped – London Mayor Ken Livingstone now says that he made a mistake by allowing Chinese armed security forces to roam the streets of London guarding the Olympic torch.

London’s mayor Ken Livingstone said on Tuesday it was a mistake to allow Chinese secret police officers to guard the Olympic torch when it was paraded through London earlier this month.

“It was wrong and should not have happened,” Livingstone told a BBC Radio London debate.

Livingstone was asked if he knew in advance that the Olympic torch guards were members of China’s military secret police and he said he did not.

“Had I known, I would have said it was unacceptable,” he said.

But Livingstone apparently didn’t know and thus an unacceptable act took place on the streets of London. Once again, the powers that be in the Western cities that hosted China’s torchwashing of Tibet are realizing too late that they should have handled things differently.

The Zellification of Joe Lieberman

Joe Lieberman is about to go fully Zell Miller on the Democratic Party. Though in fairness to Zell, he just retired and Joe is embracing the GOP while serving in the US Senate as a self-proclaimed independent-Democrat.

Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), the Democratic Party’s 2000 vice presidential nominee, is leaving open the possibility of giving a keynote address on behalf of Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) at the Republican National Convention in September.

Republicans close to the McCain campaign say Lieberman’s appearance at the convention, possibly before a national primetime audience, could help make the case that the presumptive GOP nominee has a record of crossing the aisle. That could appeal to much-needed independent voters.

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McCain has yet to ask Lieberman to speak, either in primetime or elsewhere, at the convention. But if McCain thinks it will help make his case for the White House, as some of his allies suspect, Lieberman would be willing to speak on his behalf.

“If Sen. McCain, who I support so strongly, asked me to do it, if he thinks it will help him, I will,” Lieberman said in a brief interview.

Steve M. at No More Mister Nice Blog frames the situation and needed response well:

This is bad because the speech won’t be Zell Miller, it will be Zell Miller plus. The plus is the fact that the press — still — treats Lieberman as the cuddly, adorable, highly appealing independent (I almost typed “maverick”) who’ll make swing voters sit up and take notice…

Endless repetition of the notion that support from Lieberman equals support from a Democrat makes it seem true.

That’s why, well before this speech happens, the Obama campaign needs to neutralize Lieberman. Obama needs to make sure that everyone in American realizes that that elfin, soft-spoken, apparently nice guy is possibly the biggest apologist in America for a war the vast majority of the country hates. Obama needs to portray him as a dishonest faux-naif who acts shocked, shocked, when anyone dares to suggest that he’s exactly what he is, a Republican apparatchik still pretending not to be one.

Will that happen? I doubt it. But if it doesn’t, this speech will do real damage.

I think this is a spot-on assessment and I just don’t see Democrats doing what is needed to inoculate themselves from Lieberman.

Lieberman has been actively campaigning for John McCain since December 2007. He is willing to support Republican incumbent Chris Shays in the CT-04 against Democratic challenger Jim Himes. He has not, to my knowledge, endorsed a single Democrat this cycle. And now he sits on the verge of being a key speaker at the Republican National Convention.
The real question at hand is, what does it take to get someone kicked out of the Democratic caucus?

Paranoia Will Destroy Ya

The Chinese government’s paranoia is really reaching comic levels.

Just two days before the Olympic torch relay here, a paranoid Chinese delegation told the Indian authorities that it fears guerrilla-style assaults by militant Tibetans and sought foolproof security for the event.

A high-level Chinese team led by former ambassador Sun Yuxi, who has been specially sent to India by a nervous Beijing, met Delhi government officials on Tuesday to discuss security for Thursday’s torch relay ceremony.

“They are so fear stricken that all types of baseless apprehensions are doing the rounds in their minds. They fear that Tibetans may attack the torch relay from hot air balloons. They asked if Tibetans can open fire from rooftops too,” a senior government official told IANS.

“We assured the delegation that nothing untoward is going to happen Thursday and the entire ceremony will conclude smoothly. Elaborate security arrangements have been made,” said the official who did wish to be identified.

We told them that since India is a democracy, demonstrations are a routine affair,” the official said. “Nothing, however, is allowed beyond Jantar Mantar,” in the heart of the capital. [Emphasis added]

China threw a party in Athens, London, Paris, San Francisco, and Buenos Aires and no one liked it. Now they’re scared their party in India is going to be the worst thing imaginable. Hot air balloons?

Bloggingheads TV on Tibet

Jane Hamsher of FireDogLake and Erick Erickson of RedState have a very interesting discussion of what’s going on in Tibet and China on Bloggingheads TV. Erickson argues that Bush should boycott the Olympics, while Jane pushes for action ahead of that, including efforts to ensure that China does not violently crack down in Tibet in connection to the torch relay. It’s an interesting discussion that moves on to America’s moral standing in the world.

Show Trials?

The Atlantic’s Megan McArdle thinks the Nuremberg Trials were “show trials.”

Mmmm . . . I am in no way unhappy with the outcome of Nuremberg, but my understanding is that most international lawyers regard them basically as show trials. I’m not sure they’re a great example to use.

There is an almost unfathomable level of ignorance on display here. Steven D at Booman Tribune smacks McArdle down pretty hard, but my past work for and deep respect of Senator Chris Dodd demands I say more.

The Nuremberg Trials are mostly regarded as the highest point in Western respect for the rule of law. They are the antithesis of show trials, which is incidentally what Churchill and Stalin wanted. American leadership ensured that our respect of the rule of law was what defined us, not our desire to punish an enemy who we had just defeated.

Senator Dodd’s father, Tom Dodd, was a lead prosecutor at Nuremberg. Dodd recently published his father’s living history of his experience at the trials in a living history titled Letters From Nuremberg. On the campaign trail, Senator Dodd would frequently reference Nuremberg when talking about the necessity to defend the rule of law here in America. His favorite quote, something that I have since committed to memory, was from chief American prosecutor at Nuremberg, Justice Robert Jackson:

“That four great nations, flushed with victory and stung with injury stay the hand of vengeance and voluntarily submit their captive enemies to the judgment of the law is one of the most significant tributes that Power has ever paid to Reason.”

This is the essence of the rule of law and the importance of the Nuremberg Trials. It may well be the most significant action taken by the American government in the 20th to establish ourselves as defenders of the rule of law. The Bush administration has done immeasurable damage to our standing in the world by approving policies of torture, extraordinary rendition, and secret prisons – among many, many other things. McArdle’s glib dismissal of history and law is only shocking to the extent that she purports to be a libertarian. Otherwise such a passive acceptance of the abandonment of the rule of law in America is fairly indicative of what we have seen from the American press, a fact that goes a long way to explaining why the Bush administration has not been held accountable for their lawlessness.

Congress on Congress on FISA

Today I received a joint email from Patrick Leahy and John Conyers asking their supporters to contact the local newspapers and ask them to write in support of the House version of FISA reform legislation and against retroactive immunity for big telecom companies that helped the Bush administration spy on Americans without warrant. I always love it when I see incumbent Democrats use their email lists not for fund raising, but for activism on pressing issues in Congress. I think the Dodd campaign really helped define the extent to which this sort of activism is both possible and effective – and I’m glad to see other good Democrats take these lessons and apply them today.

Fear & Courage in Tibet

Glenn Hurowitz, author of Fear and Courage in the Democratic Party, has a forceful op-ed in Politico today on Tibet, China, and the imperative for the US to “bring China to its knees” a la Congressman Charlie Wilson’s work to stop the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Hurowitz challenges Tibetans to take a stronger stance than the Dalai Lama’s Middle Way in response to Chinese brutality.

Mahatma Gandhi was never as restrained as the Dalai Lama. Whereas the Dalai Lama renounced the goal of independence and even defends China’s right to hold the Beijing Olympics (and said he would like to attend the opening ceremonies), Gandhi moved in the opposite direction during his career. He first advocated for mere autonomy, but then, horrified by the British army’s massacre of hundreds of peaceful Indian protesters at Amritsar, embraced the cause of independence and never backed away until India achieved it. What’s more, he actively sought out confrontation with the British army: His march to the sea, his boycott of imported fabric and his general strikes were in large part intended to provoke a British reaction — and lay bare to the world the cruelty and immorality of the British occupation of India.

I agree with Hurowitz that the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in Exile need to reevaluate the benefits of continuing to seek autonomy at a time when an uprising in Tibet extending more than a month demands freedom. Autonomy has not even produced negotiations – only mere “dialogues” – despite 30 plus years of nonviolence. The brutality the Chinese government has displayed in quashing Tibetan protests, coupled with the international smear campaign the Chinese government has waged against the Dalai Lama and nonviolent Tibetan support groups, should compel the Dalai Lama and the TGIE to demand more, not less, for Tibet.

Hurowitz concludes his piece:

Given the kind of government we’re dealing with, it would be wise to look to Gandhi’s acknowledgments that not every government had the same humanitarian side as the British. Although Gandhi taught that nonviolence was “infinitely superior to violence,” and even suggested that nonviolence could have stopped Nazi atrocities, at other times he admitted that violent resistance to foreign invasion can be appropriate in situations in which peaceful behavior would equal defeat.

“I would risk violence a thousand times rather than risk the emasculation of a whole race,” he wrote. “My method of nonviolence can never lead to loss of strength, but it alone will make it possible, if the nation wills it, to offer disciplined and concerted violence in time of danger.”

To save Tibet from China’s crackdown, the Tibetans will need more than just rhetoric and cheek-turning in the face of a brutal, unfeeling crackdown and ongoing ethnic cleansing — they’ll need real support, real confrontation and a real Charlie Wilson to be their hero. And when that happens, we might just see not only the end of Chinese repression in Tibet but also the end of China’s cruel regime.

I think Hurowitz understates the degree to which the actions by Tibetans inside Tibet in the last month – almost exclusively nonviolent, but in a few instances violent – are in fact an exercise in profound strength of the Tibetan people in the face of Chinese repression. The acts of nonviolent protest, from the display of the Chinese flag to the hoisting of pictures of the Dalai Lama to publicly assembling and singing the national anthem or chanting “Free Tibet” is a quite real confrontation with China’s repressive power. It has lead to thousands of detentions, hundreds of deaths, and an untold number of disappearances. Tibetans are publicly and fearlessly committing acts that they know may be death sentences.

What is missing, as Hurowitz points out, is international leadership to support them in both words and actions. In that regard, Hurowitz is 100% correct. Speaker Nancy Pelosi and a handful of US Congressmen have been supportive of Tibet, but I don’t think this is what Hurowitz seeks. Leaving aside the power of outside support for armed resistance in Tibet, unequivocal international condemnation from governments and corporations around the world would strike a massive blow to the Chinese regime. That this has been substituted by a series of press releases and weak-worded requests for China to let international observers into Tibet shows how generally unwilling the international community is to take meaningful action on behalf of the Tibetan people. There is a real leadership gap between the needs of Tibet and what they are receiving in response; this must change if the international community is going to play a positive role in the resolution of China’s occupation of Tibet.

Jackie Chan’s Olympic Laugher

Hollywood star Jackie Chan:

Chan insists anyone trying to protest on his watch can expect short shrift, warning: ‘Demonstrators better not get anywhere near me.’

And the 54-year-old, speaking at the launch of latest movie Forbidden Kingdom, claimed many of the protestors are simply publicity seekers.

‘They are doing it for no reason. They just want to show off on the TV,’ he said. ‘They know, “if I can get the torch, I can go on the TV for the world news”.’

I think you’re engaging in what psychologists call projection, Jackie. A movie star complaining about political protesters doing it to get on TV is just too rich. Apparently the irony of him doing it at a big budget movie premier was lost on Jackie. Well,  I guess I don’t have spend $10 going to see Forbidden Kingdom. 

Jim Himes’ Great Quarter

Jim Himes had a phenomenal fund raising quarter in the CT-04, my home district. He’s campaigning to defeat Chris Shays, the last Republican in Congress from New England. According to My Left Nutmeg, Himes has over $1 million cash on hand and is poised to be the best funded challenger Shays has faced yet. Himes is a strong candidate, a good Democrat, and he’s lucky to have a really good team working for him that includes a number of veterans of the Lamont campaign and the Connecticut blogosphere. I expect Himes to continue to show a strong grassroots donor base as the cycle evolves, giving him the resources he needs to defeat Shays in an expensive media market.