Shorter David Broder:
- The Establishment is ready to declare that Iraq is the New Vietnam. And Bush looks like a deer caught in the headlights.
Shorter David Broder:
I wonder if there is any connection between this story — Bush to Furnish All Prewar Iraq Data, Senator Says — and this story: Democrats open second front against Bush in war over Iraqi secrets.
The AP says that the White House has caved, and will turn over all the pre 9/11 documents the Intel committee was asking for. Meanwhile, the Telegraph reports that the Intel Committee Democrats will invoke an unknown-to-me rule and run their own official inquiry. Which given the history of bipartisanship on the Intel Committee is pretty amazing if true.
I see three possibilities: (1) The Telegraph is wrong — wouldn't be the first time they blew some Senator's remark out of proportion; (2) The Democrat's threat to run “a second, 'independent' investigation into the role of the White House and the Pentagon in processing pre-war intelligence on Iraq” was a bargaining chip, and it pried loose the documents; (3) It's a coincidence, and the Democrats are going ahead with their independent inquiry.
Here's the really intriguing part of the Telegraph story,
[quoting Sen. Richard Durbin] “If the Republican leadership of the Senate Intelligence Committee is determined to protect the administration at any cost, we'll do the investigative job on our own.”
The inquiry, under a rule never evoked before, would have legal powers to demand documents and summon witnesses from within the administration, potentially leading to high-ranking confrontations with top Bush officials.
I never heard of such a rule. If it really exists, can the committee rescind it to block the Democrats if they want to go it alone?
How do you define the criteria for selecting who should run a law school newspaper? Although it has potential for both fun and service, editing the monthly, or maybe tri-weekly, paper for the school doesn't seem to be a dream job for the average law student, perhaps because does less for the resume than does a genuinely legal job. It's a fair amount of work, and what there is in the way of financial compensation isn't much for anyone except maybe the editor in chief, who gets a partial tuition waiver.
I have to write some up some criteria we can select a new staff for the law school newspaper. Why me? Because intelligent academic administrators have a way of dealing with faculty who complain about something: they make them fix it.