Fifth Column |
Huffington Post readers, classy as ever |
2008-07-13 |
Greg Pollowitz, "Media Blog" @ National Review Memo to Arianna: Here's what you say about moderating your comment boards: Huffington Post pre-moderates comments on our blog posts and post-moderates comments on news stories. We never censor comments based on political or ideological point of view. We only delete those comments that include the following transgressions: Sleeping late today Arianna? The comments from your loyal readers on the death of Tony Snow are pretty horrendous. Get to work with your delete key. |
Link |
-Obits- |
Cancer claims ex-Bush press secretary Tony Snow |
2008-07-12 |
Tony Snow, a conservative writer and commentator who cheerfully sparred with reporters in the White House briefing room during a stint as President Bush's press secretary, died Saturday of colon cancer. He was 53. "America has lost a devoted public servant and a man of character," President Bush said in a statement from Camp David, where he was spending the weekend. "It was a joy to watch Tony at the podium each day. He brought wit, grace, and a great love of country to his work." Snow died at 2 a.m. at Georgetown University Hospital, according to former employer Fox News. More at link. HT Town Hall |
Link |
Home Front: Culture Wars |
Tony Snow cancels speeches at EWU |
2008-04-23 |
SPOKANE -- Former White House Press Secretary Tony Snow has canceled a series of speaking engagements at Eastern Washington University because of illness. Snow was supposed to make a series of appearances Tuesday at EWU. However, he was taken to the hospital to be treated for exhaustion, in consultation with his doctor, according to a source at the University. The source said he checked into the hospital at 9:30 a.m. Snow was diagnosed with colon cancer several years ago, and he left his position as press secretary for President Bush in September to deal with the disease. He has said the cancer is in remission. This week, Snow was hired by CNN to be a conservative commentator. Before being named Press Secretary, he spent several years working at CNN rival Fox News. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix | |
Snow to CNN | |
2008-04-22 | |
![]() Mr. Snow has a sterling record: He was the convivial press secretary for President Bush from April 2006 to September 2007 and spent a decade in front of Fox News cameras. "In the White House, Tony brought a remarkably human touch to the discussion of public policy," Mr. Klein said. "He will contribute a unique breadth of political and journalistic expertise." The suave and civil Mr. Snow is ready to roll, calling this "the most exciting and unpredictable political year in memory. "The big challenge in 2008 is to develop deep, creative and aggressive analysis of both political parties, their candidates and campaigns," Mr. Snow continued. "I'm eager to get started, since this race is sure to shape American politics for years to come."
| |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
President Bush Meets with N.Z., Milbloggers |
2007-09-14 |
You might wonder whether the President of the United States pays any attention to blogs supporting the war effort. Is he aware of the contribution that milblogs and new media more generally are making to the effort to educate the American public on the war and convince them of the necessity of victory? You can stop wondering. I am here today to happily report that he is indeed aware, and does indeed appreciate the work bloggers are doing. This morning, I had the privledge of being among a small group of eight bloggers invited to the White House for a personal meeting with the President. We spent a full hour in the Roosevelt Room with President Bush and a few senior staff, including both outgoing press secretary Tony Snow and incoming press secretary Dana Perino. In addition to the folks in the room, we had two embedded bloggers videoconferenced in from Baghdad. After the discussion, the President showed us into the Oval Office, did some quick photos which each of us, and then led us out to the patio where he continued out to Marine One and we watched him take off while the assembled press watched us, clearly wondering "who the heck are those people?". Not surprisingly, the President did not break any news with us, but he did have a few great comments and was overall just as engaging in person as I had expected him to be. The biggest impression I came away with is best expressed in a thought that occured to me during the session, which was that anyone who sat through an hour with this man as I did and came away unconvinced that he sincerely believes in the message of freedom and the necessity of this fight would have to be crazy. More juicy details at the Victory Caucus blog. Just click on the headline above to go straight there. Enjoy! |
Link |
Home Front: Politix | |
Bush's war support rising? | |
2007-09-01 | |
By Jon Ward, Washington Times The White House believes it has made significant progress over the past month in swaying public and political opinion toward supporting a continued U.S. military effort in Iraq, one of President Bush's closest advisers said in an interview. "The end of the August feels a lot better than the beginning of August when it comes to where we are relative to perceptions of our Iraq policy and what is working," said Ed Gillespie, counselor to the president. Congress returns Tuesday from a monthlong recess that did not go according to plan for Democratic leaders and the antiwar movement, who were looking to September as a time to force Mr. Bush into changing course in Iraq. That moment may still come. But August brought numerous reports from regional specialists and even Democratic members of Congress that the president's surge of 30,000 troops is producing positive results. "It is clear that the surge is producing significant results. And that does not seem to be an object of controversy really, significant controversy, anymore," said White House spokesman Tony Snow. Political reconciliation among Iraqi Shi'ites, Sunnis and Kurds remains problematic, but even there, all three factions reached a still-nebulous power-sharing agreement last weekend, which Mr. Gillespie cited as an improvement. "Even [the lack of political reconciliation] has changed since last week. We are seeing progress now," Mr. Gillespie said. "I do think there is a general view that the surge is having its desired effect." The latest poll by United Press International/Zogby Interactive showed that 54 percent think the war is not lost, with respondents splitting sharply along party lines on that question. But a report from the congressionally controlled Government Accountability Office, to be delivered next week, will say that there is little progress on both military and political fronts, the Associated Press reported yesterday. Democratic leaders yesterday seized on the GAO report and also criticized Mr. Bush for his plans to request $50 billion in Iraq spending, in addition to a roughly $460 billion fiscal 2008 defense budget. "The president is demanding tens of billions more dollars for the war in Iraq despite nonpartisan conclusions, such as the draft GAO report and the recent National Intelligence Estimate, that the Iraqi government has failed to achieve required reforms," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat. Mr. Snow acknowledged that "many" benchmarks have not been met but maintained that "what is significant is that there is progress toward a great number of them." The main White House response to the GAO findings and other reports has been to point to a progress report that they will issue next month in conjunction with testimony from Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker. Gen. Petraeus and Mr. Crocker will testify before Congress on Sept. 11 and Sept. 12. Mr. Snow said these two men are "the folks who have a real grasp of ground truth," but that "on the other hand, you're going to take a look at all the input." Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, again indicated that the report from Gen. Petraeus and Mr. Crocker will do little to persuade him that he was wrong when he said in April, "This war is lost and ... the surge is not accomplishing anything." "Democrats will continue to push for a new strategy to protect our troops and make America secure," Mr. Reid said, pointing to the GAO report and voicing concerns that the Pentagon was pressuring the GAO to soften their critical findings.
White House and Pentagon officials argued that the GAO report graded progress in Iraq on a more rigid scale that allowed no room for partially completed objectives. A White House report in July found that eight out of 18 benchmarks set up by Congress had been reached, and that partial progress had been made toward two other benchmarks. The GAO report found that only three out of 18 benchmarks had been met, and that two had been partially met. "The standard that GAO has set is far more stringent some might argue it's impossible to meet," Mr. Morrell said. | |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
White House Press Secretary Snow Resigns |
2007-09-01 |
![]() Snow, ailing with cancer, had said recently he would leave before the end of Bush's presidency. The father of three children, Snow said he needs to make more than his White House salary of $168,000. He could earn far more money on the speechmaking circuit. The 52-year-old Snow was a conservative pundit and syndicated talk- show host on Fox News Radio before he was named press secretary on April 26, 2006. Snow earned his stripes within the White House for his striking popularity around the country, relentlessly good-natured and bright tone, and smooth, snappy repartee with the media during briefings. In 2005, Snow had his colon removed and underwent six months of chemotherapy after being diagnosed with cancer. This March, he underwent surgery to remove a growth in his abdominal area, near the site of the original colon cancer. Doctors determined it was a recurrence of his cancer. He was out of work for five weeks, then returned and underwent chemotherapy, treatments that only recently concluded and have left him thinner, grayer and with less hair. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Barack Obama taken to task for Pakistan threat |
2007-08-03 |
![]()
|
Link |
India-Pakistan |
US insists on tougher action against Qaeda |
2007-07-19 |
The Bush administration said on Wednesday it will insist on a tougher approach to fighting Al Qaeda in Pakistan, acknowledging that a strategy pushed by Musharraf had not worked. Theres no doubt that more aggressive steps need to be taken, White House spokesman Tony Snow said. President Musharraf attempted to engage in...carrot diplomacy with tribal leaders in the tribal areas and it didnt work, Snow said. So what you have to do when something doesnt work is you have to fix it, and thats whats going on now. The strategy had created an opportunity for Qaeda to find safe haven, he said. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Bush Surprises Senate Aides With Unexpected Interruption of White House Meeting |
2007-07-17 |
President Bush shocked Capitol Hill staffers and Republican leaders Monday when he crashed a meeting at the White House to deliver a blunt message that he wasn't backing down on Iraq and Republicans need to understand that. "It was stunning," said one GOP aide who attended the meeting. "We couldn't believe he came in." "We kept looking at each other, amazed he came in," said another Republican aide. Bush was described as folksy, adamant and mildly profane as he interrupted the meeting between senior White House communications staffers Tony Snow and Ed Gillespie and GOP leaders. His message: the policy on Iraq isn't changing. He is not backing down and no one on Capitol Hill should be confused into thinking he is letting up. The interruption precedes what is expected to be an all-nighter in the Senate on Tuesday, ordered by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid as a way to protest GOP blocking tactics on moves to compel U.S. troop withdrawals from Iraq. Speaking on the Senate floor, Reid said Iraq is the most important issue facing the United States and attempts to block legislation calling for troops to be withdrawn from Iraq will be met with a hardball response. "We're going to work on this amendment until we get an up or down vote on it," he said. Senate Republican leaders, alerted to Reid's plans on Monday, said they have the votes to keep the president's surge policy in place, at least for now, and called Reid's up-all-night gambit a stunt that wouldn't change any minds. Senior Democratic leadership aides acknowledged that Reid's all-nighter complete with roll-away beds is meant to draw public attention to GOP demands that any changes to Iraq policy carry a 60-vote majority. "Is this a publicity stunt? Yes," a senior Democratic aide told FOX News. "This is the only way we know to highlight their complete ignorance of the will of the people!" Republicans said they've applied that standard for months on Iraq policy changes and aren't about to change now, especially when recent GOP defections have given Democrats bipartisan majorities on troop drawdowns and other policy changes. Reid will seek a test vote Wednesday on an amendment by Sens. Carl Levin of Michigan and Jack Reed of Rhode Island to begin troop withdrawals late this year and have most combat forces out of Iraq by spring 2008. Republicans predict that amendment will fall well short of the 60 votes required and probably attract no more than 55 votes, possibly fewer. Other non-binding policy changes are expected as well, but nothing is expected to garner the required 60 votes. "The much-discussed Republican revolt has yet to materialize," a senior GOP aide said. |
Link |
Iraq |
Iraqi Leaders Impress Bush with Seriousness |
2007-06-19 |
President Bush had a nearly hour-long secure video teleconference with Iraqi leaders on Monday and came away "It's clear that you've got an environment now where the key leaders are working together on these issues," during the 52-minute teleconference the president had with Iraq's prime minister, president and two vice presidents, White House press secretary Tony Snow said. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas appears close to taking over entire Gaza Strip |
2007-06-14 |
Hamas fighters launched a fierce offensive on Gaza City on Wednesday, attacking the main security bases and the Palestinian Authority chairman's compound with mortars and rockets and sending some of the rival Fatah forces fleeing in disarray as the Islamic group appeared close to taking over the entire Gaza Strip. With the fighting raging on rooftops and streets in nearly all corners of Gaza, residents huddled in fear in their homes, hoping to keep their families safe from stray bullets and shrapnel. Fayez Abu Taha, 45, a businessman in the southern town of Rafah, said he was trapped in his apartment building with his family after Hamas fighters took over a nearby rooftop and Fatah responded by taking over the roof of his building. "I don't know what they are battling for now," he said. "I can see the bullets flying from my windows. Coming and going." PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah called the fighting "madness" and pleaded with Hamas's exiled leader for a halt to the violence. Abbas's forces - desperately trying to cling to their besieged bases in Gaza - lashed out at the president, saying he left them with no directions and no support in the fight. Abbas and PA Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas issued a joint statement after nightfall, calling on all sides "to halt fighting, and to return to language of dialogue and respect of agreements," according to a statement from Abbas's office. The call was broadcast on Palestinian TV. The two have made numerous calls for an end to the fighting in the past, to no avail. No one was listening to the elected leaders as the focus of power passed to street militias. Hamas gunmen neutralized recognized security forces linked to Fatah in frontal assaults on their strong points, ruling the streets and taking control of large parts Gaza in the process. The rout of the security forces was so bad that 40 Palestinian security officers broke through the border fence in Rafah and fled into Egypt seeking safety, Egyptian police said. "What I can I say? This is a fall, a collapse," said Col. Nasser Khaldi, a senior police official in Rafah. In Washington, US officials condemned the fighting. "Violence certainly does not serve the interest of the Palestinian people, and it's not going to bring the peace and prosperity that they deserve," White House spokesman Tony Snow said. At least 15 people were killed in fighting Wednesday, bringing the total in the four-day campaign to nearly 60. Among those killed Wednesday was a man shot when Hamas gunmen fired at a peaceful protest against the violence, witnesses said. In one dramatic battle, hundreds of members of the Fatah-allied Bakr clan, which had fought fiercely for two days, surrendered to masked Hamas gunmen and were led, arms raised in the air, to a nearby mosque. Footage broadcast on Hamas' Al Aqsa TV showed some of the Bakr women trying to enter the mosque. Hamas gunmen later drove off with some of the Bakr fighters, witnesses said. Two women from the clan tried to leave the area to take a sick girl to a hospital and were shot and killed by jittery Hamas gunmen, a clan member said. After nightfall, Hamas militants blew up the house of one of the Bakr clan's leaders, witnesses said. Hamas, already in control of much of northern Gaza, seized the southern town of Khan Younis on Wednesday and began a coordinated assault on the town of Rafah, security officials said. On Wednesday afternoon, they launched attacks on the three main compounds of the Fatah-allied forces in Gaza City - the headquarters of the Preventive Security, the Intelligence Service and the National Forces - in what could usher in the final phase of the battle. |
Link |