Showing posts with label Maureen Dowd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maureen Dowd. Show all posts

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Upcoming Inaugural transit kerfuffle; "watchdog" being sued; photo of Obama's new limo

Like me, I'm sure you, too, have been getting dizzy at all the news reports parroting the idea that the Obama Inaugural is REALLY going to be the killer gridlock No Man's Land that some have predicted, almost gleefully.
Well, I have a few more things for you to consider towards those "crush-level" crowds next week.

Last week came word that all the tickets for rides on MARC commuter trains between Baltimore and D.C. have already been sold out, with scalpers reportedly getting $50 or more for the $25 round-trip tickets.

(That is to say, the dopey MARC system I used to use all the time -for Oriole afternoon games- which, counter-intuitively, is actually cutting back on daily trains to and from Washington's Union Station to Baltimore's Penn Station.)

Now, via email, comes word from the ever-vigilant eyes at DC Watch that the geniuses at WMATA, the Washington Metro, and Mayor Adrian Fenty's office and others, have decided to CLOSE the main Metro transfer stations in downtown Washington, thus knee-capping local residents and tourists alike, actually adding to the difficulty of their mass transit trips for the Inaugural and parade.

I know lots of people who during past Fourth of July musical/fireworks displays on The Mall, actually walked a few miles home to Arlington at night because of how poorly-managed and over-crowded the Metro system was.
I was one of them.

There'd be outlier people who never use the system -and their kids- actually dangling their legs over the edge of the marble platform, without a care in the world, as daily users like me and my friends kept our distance from them, knowing exactly what could easily happen.

I saw that repeated over and over thru the years, when some friends and I walked from The Mall to across Key Bridge, hoping to get on at the Rosslyn Metro, yet once we got down those very long escalators to the west-bound Orange line platform, we encountered a crowd that looked like O'Hare Airport during a freak blizzard, stranding thousands -dazed parents, with kids everywhere crying, except here, with legs dangling over the ledge, with Metro Police and security nowhere to be found.

A mob of people in an area far too small, just waiting for a reason to freak-out.

And nobody in charge around, but a few folks downtown doubtless watching via CCTV, chuckling to themselves.

We stayed for 10-15 minutes but the crowd was SO DENSE and unruly that we got concerned about our collective safety, went back up the escalator and walked the last two miles home, completely exhausted, as if the D.C. summer heat wasn't enough.

That's the crystal ball past-as-prologue preview for next week, as people from towns all over America without subways and commuter trains converge on D.C., eager to test their luck with limbs dangling over Metro platforms, one slip from the real Third Rail (of Politics.)

"All the planning is going into making it as difficult as possible to bring a private car into close-in Northern Virginia for inauguration events."

Meanwhile, the Washington Post's Marc Fisher kills governement officials and planners with a thousand cuts.
Inauguration: The Million Things We Don't Know March

If I hear anything amusing or interesting from anyone I know about Vanity Fair's event in DC, I'll let you know.
No doubt, nothing quite as scary/amusing as Maureen Dowd's wrath at being turned away from VF's Inaugural shindig at The Corcoran in 1997.
As many of my friends and colleagues recall me telling them at the time, that Irish volcano rumbled for DAYS!

And yet in a sign of the changing times, Maureen penned the VF cover story last month on Tina Fey. See the story at http://www.vanityfair.com/magazine/2009/01/tina_fey200901 and a video at

(To celebrate Cate Blanchett's February VF cover, this weekend I'm going to re-watch Veronica Guerin, the first film of hers where I glimpsed her true acting greatness.

Speaking of La Dowd, on the slim chance you haven't already heard or read about it elsewhere, she's feting David Geffen this weekend in Washington, and needless to say, it's a safe bet to say it will be sans Clintonistas!
(FYI: The Florida Inaugural party is at The Corcoran next Monday night.)

Interesting piece in today's Miami Herald, Lennar sues 'watchdog' over fraud allegations

Up until now, though I've often taken the Miami Herald to task in this space for its all-too-frequent sloppiness, laziness and bad writing/editing, I've never actually mentioned the moment when I first witnessed the tangible sign that the Miami Herald had, fundamentally, changed for the worse, once I returned to the area.

I'd read the Herald 2-3 times a week in print and online the rest of the week while in Washington, and would now be in a position to read it in print every day.

That moment came in 2004, when I happened to notice a front page article and photo above the fold about giant developer Lennar -thru the widow of Lennar's founder, Leonard Miller, arguably, one of the most powerful businessmen in South Florida of the past forty years- giving $100 
million dollars to the University of Miami Medical School, where they'd name the school after him.  http://www6.miami.edu/ummedicine-magazine/winter2005/deansmessage.html
The Herald even thought to run a positive editorial about it that day.

Not mentioned anywhere in those two pieces, which might've been of interest to all the people who've flooded South Florida since Hurricane Andrew?

That Lennar had been one of the builders most at fault for the shoddy, sub-standard building practices in South Florida pre-Hurricane Andrew (i.e. Country Walk, the residential development in South Miami that started to disintegrate from winds even before Andrew hit.

Coincidentally, on page 3A of that day's Herald, in their god-awful 'Other news' column was 2-3 sentences about a huge planned development in suburban Maryland -south of DC- that had been mysteriously torched.

I knew for a fact that it was a Lennar project, something that was easily verifiable, as subsequent NY Times news accounts made clear.

See 100 Investigators Gather, Seeking Clues to Vast Arson in Maryland at
Maryland Indicts 5 in Fire That Swept 26 New Homes at

But the Herald, ever dependent on Lennar's big advertising dollars during flush times to encourage the South Florida real estate boom, didn't mention any of these pertinent facts that particular day, nor did it seem to ask any questions about the fire of the Lennar officials, before or after the ceremony -the most expensive case of residential arson in Maryland history.

Doesn't mention in the newspaper that one of South Florida's largest companies has suffered a big financial and marketing punch to the gut on a huge project.
That's when I knew the Herald I'd once known, for all of its many, many faults, was gone, replaced by a curious lack of curiosity, or desire to connect-the-dots.

And now, Lennar's suing folks who might just be telling the truth about them.
St. Pete Times columnist Robert Trigaux expertly connects those particular dots better than most here.

After that, check out some of the interesting facts and behind-the-scenes anecdotes the Miami SunPost revealed about Lennar just a few months ago:

---------------------------------
At DC Watch, http://www.dcwatch.com/ see Gary Imhoff's preface to the January 14th issue called
Inauguration Island and Dorothy Brizill's Security on Steroids.
They are like nothing you will read or see elsewhere. http://www.dcwatch.com/themail/2009/09-01-14.htm

-----------------------------
from Marc Ambinder's great blog at The Atlantic, http://marcambinder.theatlantic.com/ , which I also receive
via email, see the photo of the new limo of President 44, President Limo Porn

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Watch Out CIA Officers: You'll Learn to Hate Leon Panetta, Too!

If we were living in more normal times, which is to say, one where the MSM wasn't both rolling out the red carpet AND keeping their natural curiosity in suspended animation for a president-to-be that, for the better part of two years, they treated more like a college classmate who succeeded than an actual candidate, I'd say you ought to expect to see and hear a lot of anti-Panetta stories and anecdotes bubbling up from Washington and California from former staffers of his.

Perhaps even some from friends of mine from my days in D.C., since I know about 6-8 people who worked on Capitol Hill in some capacity for him, none, by the end, happily.

When we'd get together to do things on weekends, whether going to movies, 'road trips' or heading up to Oriole Park at Camden Yards for Oriole games -I had a 13-game mini-season
ticket plan, plus bought 6-7 additional sets of other individual game bleacher tickets for a total of 20 games a year- when there was a pause in the conversation, some of them often liked to bring up anecdotes about Panetta.

They especially liked those featuring Panetta screwing other Members of the House over left
and right, yet others getting the blame when the deal/project/bill eventually soured or withered on the line, largely because of his image as a reasonable guy.
They never ever suspected it was Panetta.

(Sometimes, I was told, so that he could end up being the 'voice of reason' and be the person who got to bring everyone back together again, the sort of thing that a David Gergen or David Broder would wax rhapsodic about, unaware that he was the one who "blew it up."
This is an old tactic, of course, and Panetta hardly had a patent on it.

The purpose of this tactic, depending on your assumed pecking order in the group to begin with, was to prove how invaluable you are. That you can compromise, "reach across the aisles," etc.
The result often being that the people who originally thought there was a done deal to begin with, would accord you a favor in the future, or, actually listen to some idea/bill proposal of yours in the future about some matter or another that they'd generally not be so interested in, but they owed you now, so...)

When these friends of mine worked for him, they thought this was a positive trait and often hysterically funny -not so much afterwards!

Panetta's carefully-crafted "image" as the reasonable guy was belied by the fact that he always had among the highest staff turnovers on the Hill -even for a Democrat from California.

It would've been one thing if he were in a tough competitive district, and constantly had to re-adjust his staff composition in order to accomplish something for the folks back home in the district, whatever that was, strategy-wise or fundraising-wise, but he wasn't.

Thanks to the dastardly genius gerrymandering of Congressman Phil Burton, which made the largest state in the country the least competitive for elections, see 
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_n6_v41/ai_7483113/pg_1 , Panetta was in a snug-as-a-bug-in-a-rug Democratic Congressional District (CD), while lots of other House Democrats I knew or dealt with regularly, who, in my opinion were smarter, more hard-working, more geared towards realistically confronting difficult issues -and a lot more pleasant to work with- had to actually worry about getting re-elected in their competitive districts, like two people I was very well-acquainted with.

Sam Gejdenson from Connecticut, who served on the House committee I closely followed
the entire time I was in Washington, where I knew the Members and was friends with many of the the staffers, the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

This was under both Chairman Dante Fascell and Lee Hamilton, both of whose CDs I lived in during the 1980's, which some of you reading this may've already thought of, if you've thought about what I've written here over the past two years and where I've lived: greater Miami and Bloomington.

Or former Bloomington mayor and congressman Frank McCloskey, whose southern Indiana, Evansville-based CD was one of the most bitterly fought congressional districts in the country, over and over for a decade. http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/fxmccloskey.htm

Frank McCloskey was mayor of Bloomington when I moved from Miami to Hoosierville in the Fall of 1979, and then as well as later when he was on Capitol Hill, when I'd swing by his friendly office every so often to say hi to him and some of his staffers, he was a personable and stand-up guy who continually stood up to bullies, no matter how powerful and no matter where they were.

He personally caused President Clinton and the White House lots of grief when he would not go quietly and follow the Dem leadership and abandon Bosnia to the nonsensical whims of Warren Christopher's State Dept, who were opposed to lifting the arms embargo, even as Serbian troops committed genocide.

McCloskey may've lost his congressional seat, but he never ever lost his dignity or willingness to fight the good fight for the underdog.

Leon Panetta? Um... not so much while he was in the Congress.   

Weeks, months or even years later, when I'd discreetly mention the Panetta anecdotes to others, in Washington-area places as varied as suburban Chevy Chase or at Joe Theisman's very popular restaurant in Old Town (Alexandria) opposite the Old Town Metro station, people would invariably say in response, "Oh Dave, you think THAT'S bad, do you know about the time Panetta..."

In fact, once on a date with my then-girlfriend up at Red Sea, the fabulous Ethiopian restaurant in Adams Morgan -a restaurant I fell in love with after one of my Arlington housemates, who was from Ethiopia, took me to- after I related an anecdote about Panetta that had been recently told to me by a friend and former staffer, a person seated at the next table to us turned around and said completely out of the blue, "Are you talking about Leon Panetta?"

I nodded, sort of unsure of what I'd let myself in for, having thought my voice had been low enough not to be overheard outside of our table.
This nattily-dressed stranger leaned towards us, cupped his hand and said: "Panetta is a real prick to work for and to be around.  Period!"

I just sorta laughed, relieved that it hadn't turned into an embarrassing social situation, and fortunately, my girlfriend laughed, too.

I suspect that someone as politically savvy as Dianne Feinstein, who has had to deal with Panetta for a LONG time, knows FAR BETTER than anyone else in D.C. how likely him at Langley will be an albatross around our nation's neck from an intelligence and security point-of-view.  I know that I certainly will see him as such if he somehow manages to gets confirmed as Director there.

Not that it's really been mentioned anywhere yet, but I'd love to see someone with resources really go over the list of corporate contributors to the Panetta Institute with a fine tooth comb.

No doubt, lots of well-heeled folks he met while he was on the Board of Directors at the New York Stock Exchange!

I guess he was qualified for that sort of position from having been OMB Director, huh?

In a related matter, I also wanted to share with you this excerpt of a New York Times dispatch 
from late Monday night, written by Mark Mazzetti and Carl Hulse:

Mr. Deutch, now a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said there would have been good reasons for Mr. Obama to select a C.I.A. veteran to lead the agency. But Mr. Deutch also cited the examples of John McCone in the Kennedy administration and George Bush in the Nixon administration as cases in which outsiders became "two of the agency's most successful directors."

While I wouldn't say that Carl and I were "friends" per se, he and I probably had a few hundred conversations over the 15 years I was in D.C., and he and I were on pretty good terms while he was in a management position -not a reporting role- at the Times' D.C. bureau at 1627 Eye Street, where as I've mentioned here before, I spent LOTS of time.

(Carl was also the first and only serious person to ever tell me he'd never go back to a MLB game after the '94 baseball strike wiped out the World Series. I thought he was joking at first since he knew how often I went up to Camden Yards, and knew how much I despised Peter Angelos, the Orioles majority owner, but Carl was serious in a way about refusing to shell out money for tickets in a way that dopey guys interviewed in sports bars by dim-witted local TV sports reporters, aren't. 
Carl kept his promise and didn't go to a ballgame again, even after the strike ended and play returned in the 1995 season, almost 14 years ago.
Don't know whether he's since gone to a Washington Nationals game, since they moved into town from Montreal after I left the Washington area.)

Since I subscribed to the New York Observer before they had an online operation and the Times didn't have a subscription at 1627, I used to make a copy of the funny and often snarky Media columns in the Observer, or an especially great piece by Ron Rosenbaum -now at popular website, pajamasmedia.com and http://pajamasmedia.com/ronrosenbaum/- of which there were so many, and then give them to Carl when I saw him, or slipped them under his office door when I'd stop by to see a friend who worked there in the building, or to pick up my issue of Daily Variety.

Because the area I worked at in D.C. was a few blocks outside their tiny next-day delivery zone in D.C., a friend at 1627 let me use them as a mailing address for the courier to drop them off in the morning at the concierge's desk, just a few hundred feet away from Jack Valenti's office down at the MPAA., 
That was the place where I always wanted to work, since it would've combined so many interests of mine in one job, plus, I know I'd have done a great job there

(If you never met him, Mr. Valenti was someone whom everyone along that street had a kind word for, as he was extremely friendly in the Texas way he'd been raised -like my older relatives
in Bandera I imagine- and would say hello to seemingly everyone he passed as he walked over
to the CVS on 17th Street, and people would do double-takes coming out of the Farragut West Metro station there as he passed by wearing those sharp suits and his trademark deep tan.
The regular folks he'd see day-after-day, month-after-month in the neighborhood, at the hot dog stand on Conn. & Eye St., or the folks waiting for their suburban commuter bus to Virginia, always waved at him, even from across the street, something folks in D.C. rarely ever did.  I must've seen that happen at least two hundred times, if I saw it happen once.)

Maureen Dowd and I both had subscriptions to the Gotham edition of Daily Variety that were delivered to the building first thing in the morning, so sometimes, if I didn't swing by there after getting off the Farragut West Metro before she got in, she'd pick up my copy by mistake if she didn't look carefully at the mailing labels, and I'd then have to take hers.

(This was back around the time when Mike Kinsley used to come by 1627 a lot more, and we'd sometimes talk about her enigmatic personality down in the lobby, while she kept him waiting!
I'm pretty sure that was more or less after Michael quit co-hosting the popular CNN public events show Crossfire.
Maureen could be so frustrating and confounding, seemingly treating people who genuinely cared about her, worse than strangers.
My sense of things, from seeing her up-close in person a few times a week for years at a time, and speaking to her every so often, even doing her a favor or two, was that she, like many successful women, really doesn't handle compliments well, in her case, ones that are in print. And I wasn't alone in that sentiment in that building.  At least pre-2003.)

I have a read hard time understanding why Carl and his colleague would choose to quote someone the likes of John Deutsch on national security and the CIA, since he is someone
who had his own top secret government clearance removed by George Tenet (when he
headed the CIA) because of Deutsch's disgraceful inability to follow common sense security
rules -and the rumors his son accessed porn sites on Deutsch's take-home laptopwell, let's just say that a very curious choice for an expert, given what we actually know about him.

It's a choice I wouldn't have made, given the choice of all the people in the world who would and could speak on the topic.
________________________________________
U.S. Probe Of Former CIA Chief Expands
By David A. Vise and Vernon Loeb
Washington Post Staff Writers September 16, 2000

John M. Deutch, who has admitted mishandling classified information while serving as
director of the CIA, is now under investigation for similar security violations when he
previously held high-level posts in the Defense Department, according to confidential
documents and officials familiar with the case.

Deutch allegedly used unsecured computers at home and his America Online account
to access classified defense information in the early to mid-1990s, the documents,
compiled as part of a Pentagon probe, show. The alleged violations occurred before
and after Deutch issued a February 1995 memo reminding Defense Department
employees that only "properly reviewed and cleared" information should be placed
on computer systems accessible to the public.

"We find his conduct in this regard particularly egregious in light of existing DOD policy
directives addressing the safeguarding of classified information," an internal Pentagon
memo said. "This situation was exacerbated because Dr. Deutch, while serving as the
[deputy secretary of defense], declined departmental requests that he allow security
systems to be installed in his residence.

"The evidence we obtained clearly establishes that Dr. Deutch failed to follow even the
most basic security precautions," the memo added.

Deutch's attorney, Terrence O'Donnell, did not return a telephone call for comment
yesterday.

Deutch served as defense undersecretary for acquisitions and technology from April 1993
to March 1994, when he became deputy defense secretary, a job he held until he was
appointed CIA director in 1995. He left the CIA in December of the following year.

Two days after Deutch retired from the CIA, agency computer personnel discovered
classified information stored on government computers at Deutch's home. After a
series of investigations, Deutch admitted the security breach, apologized for violating
CIA policy and was stripped of his security clearances.

Initially, the Justice Department decided not to prosecute Deutch. But earlier this year,
Attorney General Janet Reno decided to review the matter after criticism that Deutch
had received much more favorable treatment than former Los Alamos nuclear scientist
Wen Ho Lee.

Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), a member of the Judiciary Committee, confirmed
that the probe had been widened and challenged the Justice Department to take a
hard look at Deutch's alleged repeat violations.

"This is now a pattern," Grassley said. "Evidently, Mr. Deutch is a congenital downloader
of classified information. It will be interesting to see how the Justice Department deals
with this case, especially in light of the Wen Ho Lee case."

Paul E. Coffey, the retired prosecutor tapped by Reno earlier this year to review the
matter, has been briefed on Deutch's alleged use of computers at home, and has
expanded his investigation to include Deutch's years at the Pentagon.

Coffey has told Justice Department officials that he believes charges should be brought
against Deutch for improperly handling classified documents on unsecure computers
that were linked to the Internet, sources said.

Coffey's recommendation has not made its way from the Criminal Division to Reno,
who will make the decision on how to handle the case, sources said.

Generally, cases similar to Deutch's have not led to criminal charges but have been
handled through administrative sanctions. Reno recently declined to comment specifically
on Deutch's case.

There is no evidence that computer hackers or spies obtained classified information as a
result of Deutch's actions. It is not clear from the documents precisely what kinds of
information Deutch was working with. But among the computer files were Deutch's daily
journal, which included information on the range of military operations for which he was
responsible.

Some of the computers Deutch used were given away or sold by the Defense Department
as surplus property and ended up in various places, including a scrap metal dealer in
Baltimore and a university in Florida.

Senior advisers to Reno have expressed concern about the appearance of a double standard
when the Deutch case is compared with Lee's. The former Los Alamos National Laboratory
scientist, accused of 59 felony counts of downloading nuclear secrets to unsecured computers
and portable tapes, was released from jail earlier this week after receiving an apology from
a federal judge, who said the Justice Department's handling of the case had "embarrassed
our entire nation."

Lee pleaded guilty to a single felony count of mishandling classified information and agreed
to cooperate with investigators by answering questions about what happened to the tapes.

Deutch developed regular work habits at the Defense Department and the CIA that led him
to use a variety of unsecured computers at home while carrying computer memory cards
and disks in his shirt pocket, government documents show.

One unanswered question is the whereabouts of some floppy disks he used to store classified
military and intelligence data until he determined he needed more memory space and
transferred the information to larger personal computer memory cards.

A probe by the CIA inspector general determined that Deutch had four of these cards
containing nearly 100,000 pages of information, including the daily journal he kept.

Deutch used numerous government-owned Macintosh computers at his home in Bethesda
while serving in the high-level Defense Department posts, and several of those recovered
by investigators contained a "significant amount" of military information, according to the
documents. "Several witnesses told us that none of the computers . . . were designated to
store classified data," an internal Defense Department memo said.

Deutch and his family members used government-owned computers at his home to access
his America Online account, according to government documents.

Deutch acknowledged to investigators that before becoming CIA director, he was aware of
the principle requiring physical separation of classified and unclassified computers. However,
Deutch said he believed that when he deleted a document, the information was no longer
recoverable and that his general practice was to copy documents onto floppy disks and delete
the initial file.

But computer experts told investigators that each time Deutch updated his journal, his
computer automatically created a temporary file that was stored on the hard drive of the
computer and would have been available to hackers when he accessed the Internet via
America Online.