Editors’ Blog
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08.24.07 | 5:48 pm
Representing Iraq

So which DC lobbying firms have been hired by what different Iraqi militia and factions? Here’s the scoop.

08.24.07 | 5:27 pm
Summer Lovin’

White House to Warner: Give us Some Love.

Warner to White House: No Love.

08.24.07 | 5:23 pm
Could the CW Be Completely Wrong? Perish the Thought.

Take a look at this: Are the modest security gains in Iraq due to perceived inevitability of US withdrawal?

08.24.07 | 4:39 pm
BGR Gets Results!

Boss Allawi to appear this weekend on CNN’s Late Edition.

I’m actually curious, when you’re considering fomenting a coup to overthrow the government in Iraq, do you need to form an exploratory committee?

Late Update: Did the lobbying work on Wolf? Take a look …

08.24.07 | 3:59 pm
Ghost of Abramoffs Past

Longtime backer and GOP bigwig withdraws support from Rep. Doolittle (R-CA).

08.24.07 | 2:58 pm
Special TPM Bonus Muck

It’s appropriate in a way that BGR (see post below) should be representing Iyad Allawi in his quest to retake the mantle of power in Iraq as BGR early set itself up as a go-to DC lobby shop for finding love and riches in Iraq.

It was BGR, you’ll no doubt remember, which set up former Bush FEMA Director Joe Allbaugh with his own Iraq rainmaking outfit, New Bridge Strategies (“your bridge to success in Iraq”).

Perhaps not surprisingly the New Bridge Strategies website seems to have shaken off this mortal coil like so many other Iraqi ventures and people since we last checked in with them back in 2004.

But other profit centers have opened up. So I’m sure they’re on to other promising leads.

08.24.07 | 2:30 pm
Allawi’s Inside Track?

At TPMmuckraker today we’ve been explaining the ‘boomlet’, if that’s the word for a manufactured boomlet, to return longtime CIA asset Iyad Allawi to power in Iraq as the successor to Prime Minister Maliki. He’s signed on a big ticket GOP lobbying firm to make his case, Barbour Griffith & Rogers. And his account at BGR is being handled by Robert Blackwill, who until recently was the Iraq coordinator at the White House. So he probably gets his calls returned.

But here’s something else that’ll probably come in handy. The Iraqi National Intelligence Service turns out not to be funded by the Iraqi national government but rather by the Central Intelligence Agency. Go figure.

And the INIS, in turn, is run by Allawi’s longtime pal Hazem Shaalan.

I confess that I have a much greater tolerance for these sorts of creative approaches to national sovereignty and democratic change when I have any confidence the puppeteers have a clue what they’re doing. But, that said, it would seem Mr. Allawi may be the coming man to continue Iraq’s democratic revolution.

08.24.07 | 1:15 pm
Interesting

Dennis Ross advising Obama on Middle East policy.

(ed.note: The site I linked to, JTA.org, appears to be temporarily unavailable.)

08.24.07 | 12:53 pm
George’s Amazing Technicolor Surgecoat

It is uncanny how, even now, a few iffy columns and questionable news stories can completely upend the conventional wisdom in Washington, even in the face of vast amounts of contradictory evidence. What’s even more amazing is how many Democrats actually start to believe it. I don’t think it is too much to say that the conventional wisdom is now that unexpected success from the surge may possibly leave the Democrats off balance in September rather than the Republicans. Sure, political progress is still non-existent, the thinking goes, but no one can deny the success of the surge in purely military terms. I think I must have seen at least a half a dozen major news stories in the last week or so following this story line.

But is any of this true? Setting aside strategic progress are we even making tactical progress? Are we even reducing the rates of violence which the theory at least said should open the door to political progress?

Kevin Drum broke down the numbers from the Brookings Iraq Index and the answer seems to be pretty clearly, No. One key decision Kevin made was to make a seasonal comparison — not how were June and July compared to March and April but how does June/July 2007 stack up against June/July 2006. The answer? Not well. As Al Gore once put it about a different topic, all the numbers that you want to be up are down and vice versa. Or just about all of them.

08.24.07 | 12:42 pm
Bold Leader

Max Boot: Ditching consensus view of Vietnam as a policy failure is “bold .. skillful bit of political jujitsu” from President Bush.