Monday, December 11, 2006

Those who ignore history are doomed...




CNN has this fun little teaser about incoming House Speaker, Silvestre Reyes, failing miserably when asked seemingly simple questions about the Arab world by Jeff Stein, the CQ National Security Editor.

Q. Al Qaeda is what, Sunni or Shia?

A. “Al Qaeda, they have both. Predominantly — probably Shiite.”


That's wrong. Al Qaeda was founded by Osama bin Laden as a Sunni organization and views Shiites as heretics.

Q. And Hezbollah? What are they?

A. “Hezbollah. Uh, Hezbollah...”


Embarrassing? Of course. But CNN doesn’t do this story justice by its brief slam of Rep. Reyes. You need to read Jeff Stein’s entire article to get an idea of how disturbing this whole issue is.


Stein writes:


"Like a number of his colleagues and top counterterrorism officials that I’ve interviewed over the past several months, Reyes can’t answer some fundamental questions about the powerful forces arrayed against us in the Middle East.

It begs the question, of course: How can the Intelligence Committee do effective oversight of U.S. spy agencies when its leaders don’t know basics about the battlefield?

To his credit, Reyes, a kindly, thoughtful man who also sits on the Armed Service Committee, does see the undertows drawing the region into chaos.

For example, he knows that the 1,400- year-old split in Islam between Sunnis and Shiites not only fuels the militias and death squads in Iraq, it drives the competition for supremacy across the Middle East between Shiite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia.

That’s more than two key Republicans on the Intelligence Committee knew when I interviewed them last summer. Rep. Jo Ann Davis, R-Va., and Terry Everett, R-Ala., both back for another term, were flummoxed by such basic questions, as were several top counterterrorism officials at the FBI.

Reyes stumbled when I asked him a simple question about al Qaeda at the end of a 40-minute interview in his office last week. Members of the Intelligence Committee, mind you, are paid $165,200 a year to know more than basic facts about our foes in the Middle East."

It’s been five years since these Muslim extremists flew hijacked airliners into the World Trade Center.

Is it too much to ask that our intelligence overseers know who they are?



Stein goes on to write:

The best argument for needing to understand who’s what in the Middle East is probably the mistaken invasion itself, despite the preponderance of expert opinion that it was a terrible idea — including that of Bush’s father and his advisers. On the day in 2003 when Iraqi mobs toppled the statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, Bush was said to be unaware of the possibility that a Sunni-Shia civil war could fill the power vacuum, according to a reliable source with good White House connections.

If President Bush and some of his closest associates, not to mention top counterterrorism officials, have demonstrated their own ignorance about who the players are in the Middle East, why should we expect the leaders of the House Intelligence Committee to get it right?

The administration’s disinterest in the Arab world has rattled down the chain of command.

Only six people in the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad are fluent in Arabic, according to last week’s report of the Iraq Study Group. Only about two dozen of the embassy’s thousand employees have some familiarity with the language, the report said.

The Iraq Study Group was amazed to find that, despite spending $2 billion on Iraq in 2006, more wasn’t being done to try “to understand the people who fabricate, plant and explode roadside bombs.”

Rare is the military unit with an American soldier who can read a captured document or interrogate a prisoner, my own sources tell me.


It was that way in Vietnam, too, Reyes says, which “haunts us....”



It haunts you? Apparently not enough...


Read on...

10 comments:

Ginsberg said...

The crazy thing about those six people in the U.S. Embassay in Baghdad who are fluent in Arabic is that they don't speak English. And they work as janitors!

I'm kidding. I don't know any more about them than George W. Bush. I'd like to know more. Maybe I'll call my Senator and see what she knows.

Kansas said...

It would be interesting to know in what capacity they work at the Embassy, wouldn't it?

And with the way this war is being run, I wouldn't be a bit surprised if they werejanitors!

Let us know if you find out who they are.

Anonymous said...

Pelosi is the incoming Speaker of the House. Silvestre Reyes is the incoming seat on the House Intelligence commitee replacing Jane Harmon (D-CA).

Which makes this even more ironic.

Anonymous said...

In this case, "being good at stupid doesn't count".

Anonymous said...

For Reyes.

Kansas said...

House Intelligence commitee...ironic indeed.

Karen said...

I'm not defending the idiots in Congress. They're...well...idiots, mostly. But to put this in some perspective, how many of you can tell me the doctrinal differences between, say, the Roman Catholic Church and the Episcopal Church. Both are Christian. Or say, the Lutheran Church and the Methodist Church. Both are Christian and Protestant. Now, this is a Christian country, but I'm willing to bet that most of you (or anyone else in the country) couldn't name over 1 or 2 differences between any protestant religion. So, why would it be a surprise that we don't know jacksquat about Islam? Do think the average Muslim, even the leaders in Muslim countries, knows very much about Christianity?

Anonymous said...

You'd think that as an elected federal official making policy on international matters, they would at least go to the effort of getting a passport (even if they don't use it), but the majority of Congress don't have passport.

So it's official, the US is the center of the universe.

As far as this being a christian nation, they used to burn "witches" at the stake a long time ago. And there were the Crusades. Some people learn. Some people never do.

Btw, I ordered an Asian spaghetti dish today. Can anyone tell me why they gave me chopsticks instead of normal dinnerware. (snicker). ;)

Kansas said...

Cait, I believe the issue is, if you’re going to go to war with people, you should at least know something about them. How can you fight an enemy that you know nothing about? We should at least know the difference between the good guys and the bad.

Plus, it would just be respectful to know who you’re blowing the schnit out of.

Anonymous said...

Good point, Cait.
Now we all know that if we only would post the ten commandments everywhere.... including public lavatories, crime, adultry, sickness, and stupidity would just poof, disappear. I would be for such a law if it cured just one malady....stupidity. All you have to do is ask any of those family value people to recite the Ten commandments. They all begin with Gusto.....1. Thou shalt not kill 2.uh, uh, thou shalt uh, uh (stupid grin.)