26 June 2008

McCain’s Intelligence Intelligence

Philip Giraldi, the ex-CIA man who writes The American Conservative’s invaluable gossip column, Deep Background, notes in the June 16th issue:

Intelligence analysts who have briefed Sen. John McCain on international issues generally report that he is not very knowledgeable about most parts of the world, despite his years of experience in government and his campaign’s insistence that one of his principal strengths is foreign-policy expertise. When speaking with an area specialist or expert, McCain is primarily interested in stating his own perceptions and is not generally regarded as an attentive listener. Analysts do not like briefing him because he becomes angry and sometimes personally offensive when someone contradicts his view.

It’s really not very hard at all for an important personage wrapped in the glamor of power to persuade lower ranking outsiders that he’s a deep thinker. Obama is the master of it–all you do is tell the person how much you value all the time they’ve put into developing their expertise (implying that you are very busy yourself on so many other important issues), nod attentively as they drone on, then bring up one or two semi-sophisticated questions you had your staff dream up for you ahead of time, and then finally summarize back for them what they just said with an appreciative hint of wonder in your voice implying that the scales are falling from your eyes. The flunkies will go away and tell everybody that you are the new Pericles. But Yosemite John can’t bring himself to do even that.

One analyst stated that McCain’s alleged expertise on international issues is essentially bogus. He speaks no foreign language, and his international experience [prior to Congress] derives from brief postings at military bases, junkets while serving as Navy liaison to the Senate, and the misfortune of his rather more extensive stay in the Hanoi Hilton.

As a Congressman, McCain served on committees dealing with Department of Interior issues, Indian affairs, and the problems of aging–all areas of particular interest to his Arizona constituents. As a senator, he has served on the three committees dealing with the armed services, Indian affairs, and commerce. …

According to the analysts who have interacted with McCain, his recent misstatements about various Muslim groups and other foreign-policy issues are not slips. They reflect a real lack of interest in other countries that makes it impossible for him to empathize with their problems…

McCain, whose foreign-policy advisers are exclusively neocons, receives regular briefings from the distinguished scholars at the American Enterprise Institute, which are presumably more to his taste than the less colorful information provided by the $42 billion per year intelligence community.

Turco-Germans Say Blood Is Thicker Than Lowenbrau As Far As Soccer Loyalties Go

Here’s a report from Bloomberg News about the multi-generation “assimilated” Turkish population of Germany, and the World Cup. It seems that they don’t think of the German soccer team as “their” team, but support the Turks:

`Blood’ Sways German Turks as Soccer Strains National Loyalties

By Andreas Cremer

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Kayhan Abay attended a German school, drives a German car, and runs a business in the German capital of Berlin, where he has lived all his life. When it comes to soccer, he roots for Turkey.

“It’s all about heart, blood and passion,” Abay, 28, said over a glass of tea in the Internet cafe he co-owns in Kreuzberg, a predominantly Turkish neighborhood. “I’m preparing myself for defeat though, which is kind of symbolic of Turkish life over here.”

Germany plays Turkey today in the first semifinal of the European Championships, the continent’s most prestigious soccer tournament. With as many as 3 million ethnic Turks living in Germany, or about 4 percent of the population, fans’ divided loyalties are deepening the divisions in German society.[More]

This reminds of me of the infamous 1998 Mexico-U.S soccer game, held in Los Angeles, where Mexican fans, the majority of the crowd, threw beer, fruit and other liquids at the American team, American fans, and the U. S. Marine Band.

Samuel Huntington mentions this in his book Who Are We as an example of the problems caused by mass immigration from Mexico.

Obviously, there’s a difference between the two cases–Germans take soccer very seriously, whereas Americans only notice it when the American team wins, or when something unusual happens. But the underlying problem is similar: the Prime Ministerof Turkey, channelling Vicente Fox, told a Turco-German audience in February that assimilation  was “a crime against humanity.”

The World Unites! (In Opposing Immigration)

Sorry about this miniature graph, but if you click on it, it will be legibly large.

Anyway, it’s from a Pew Center polling of people in 47 countries on whether “We should further restrict and control immigration.” (See p. 29 of the PDF.) Those favoring more restrictions on immigration are the salmon colored bars, those disagreeing are the blue bars. The restrictionists win in 44 of 47 countries, only losing two East Asian countries that haven’t really tried immigration yet, Japan and South Korea, and in the Palestinian Territories (I don’t know exactly how the Palestinians interpreted that question–perhaps they read it as restricting their right to immigrate into Israel and reclaim grandpa’s house in Haifa.)