BERLIN – Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates rebuked some of America’s staunchest allies yesterday, saying that the United States has a “dwindling appetite” to serve as the heavyweight partner in the military order that has underpinned the US relationship with Europe since the end of World War II. In an unusually stinging speech, made on his final visit to Europe before he retires at the end of the month, Gates condemned European defense cuts and said the United States is tired of engaging in combat missions for those who “don’t want to share the risks and the costs.” “The blunt reality is that there will be dwindling appetite and patience in the US Congress, and in the American body politic…
Continue reading …How tone-deaf do you have to be to a) compare Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) to Martin Luther King, Jr. b) say the women who got Weiner's lewd photos were “hardly traumatized” and c) call on Weiner's wife Huma Abedin to call a press conference to belittle the media for attacking her hubby? You might want to ask Daily Beast contributor Lee Siegel , who did just that (emphases mine) in a June 10 post entitled “C'Mon, America, Nobody's Perfect”: With all the commotion over Anthony Weiner ’s gross and undignified online behavior, we have been too distracted to see that we have an even worse miscreant in our midst.
Continue reading …How tone-deaf do you have to be to a) compare Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) to Martin Luther King, Jr. b) say the women who got Weiner's lewd photos were “hardly traumatized” and c) call on Weiner's wife Huma Abedin to call a press conference to belittle the media for attacking her hubby? You might want to ask Daily Beast contributor Lee Siegel , who did just that (emphases mine) in a June 10 post entitled “C'Mon, America, Nobody's Perfect”: With all the commotion over Anthony Weiner ’s gross and undignified online behavior, we have been too distracted to see that we have an even worse miscreant in our midst.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media One of the incessant mantras we hear from right-wingers demanding we “secure the border” — particularly the Minuteman types and their media enablers — is that the need to do became incredibly important after 9/11, because Islamist terrorists were certain to be crossing into the United States through the desert. That’s certainly what we’ve been hearing constantly at Fox News and its many onscreen nativists, perhaps most notably Michelle Malkin. Remember how Glenn Beck tried to stir up a panic over the finding of a book on Iranian martyrs out in the desert — which just happened to be an English translation? It even inspired Rep. Trent Franks to proclaim: “If terrorists ever come across our border with nuclear weapons… they (could) hold an entire city hostage … This book is a grave reminder of the mindset and intent of the indescribably dangerous enemy we face.” And then there are the politicians who’ve used the claim to attack President Obama, such as wingnut Sheriff Paul Babeu of Pinal County : “”If the majority of regular illegal immigrants can sneak into America, what does this say about the ability of terrorist sleeper cells?” Well, as we’ve been saying about this supposed threat for some time now: They’re barking up the wrong tree : A turning political tide has renewed fears that raged after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks – that terrorists will sneak into the country across the U.S.-Mexico border. Nobody disputes that’s possible, but analysts and government officials say terrorists plotting to kill Americans are more likely to use other routes into the country, if they’re not here already. It’s much more common for people convicted in the U.S. of crimes connected to international terrorism to have been U.S. citizens or legal residents, or come into the country on visas. “There is no serious evidence that the U.S.-Mexico border is a significant threat from terrorism,” said Edward Alden, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, a nonpartisan think tank based in New York. Claims of terrorist threats on the Southwest border distract legislators and policymakers from addressing long-term solutions to drug smuggling and illegal immigration, said Tom Barry, senior analyst at the Center for International Policy in Washington. “It’s politically motivated,” Barry said, “playing on that sense of fear that certain people are susceptible to.” That’s pretty much what we said awhile back : Meanwhile, if terrorists really want to sneak into the country, they’ll likely do it the way they do traditionally: forge papers and come in through the front gate with visas. That’s how the 9/11 terrorists came in, and it’s fairly simple and easy for them — unlike, say, paying large sums to drug lords to sneak you over in a highly dangerous illegal crossing in the remote backcountry, which is how nativists like Malkin seem to imagine the terrorists are sneaking in. Moreover, if Malkin wants to worry about terrorists sneaking over our borders, she’d be better off keeping an eye on the Canadian border. After all, the only known case of a terrorist caught bringing materiel over the border — the 1999 Ahmed Ressam incident — happened in Washington state, on the ferryboat from Canada. A quantitative analysis of terrorist threats to the U.S. found that there was “no terrorist presence in Mexico and no terrorists who entered the U.S. from Mexico”; but there was in fact “a sizeable terrorist presence in Canada and a number of Canadian-based terrorists who have entered the U.S.” The idea that it’s possible to completely secure the border by physical means is a fantasy anyway. You defeat terrorism with intelligence — not stupidity.
Continue reading …WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department will temporarily withhold payments to the nation’s three largest mortgage companies for failing to comply with the Obama administration’s signature foreclosure-prevention effort, perhaps finally making good on a 19-month-old threat, officials announced Thursday. Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase, which collectively service about half of all home loans, abused homeowners and violated the rules of the Making Home Affordable (MHA) program, Treasury said. The initiative aims to lower monthly payments, reduce loan balances or enable distressed borrowers to sell their homes before they’re seized by awarding a series of incentive payments to banks, investors and homeowners when foreclosures are averted. Treasury is only withholding pay to the three banks. The three were found to need “substantial improvement,” the agency said in a statement. Cumulatively, they received $24 million in government incentive payments last month. Last quarter, the three financial behemoths collectively reported about $11.4 billion in net income. (Another firm came in for criticism, but it was spared the momentary financial penalty because its results were skewed due to an acquisition.) The remaining six of the 10 largest mortgage companies that were audited were found to need “moderate improvement.” None passed with flying colors. Bank of America, the worst performer, was found to have poor internal controls for identifying and contacting homeowners. Its error rates were also more than four times Treasury’s benchmark when calculating borrowers’ income. JPMorgan improperly calculated the incomes of nearly a third of borrowers when it was trying to determine their eligibility for the program — more than six times the limit. And Wells Fargo had poor processes for determining borrowers’ eligibility. Its income error rates were also more than five times Treasury’s max. Treasury first identified potential mass non-compliance in November 2009, warning the participating companies that those failing to meet their obligations to homeowners under their contracts with the federal government “will be subject to consequences which could include monetary penalties and sanctions.” The Obama administration spent the next year and a half defending itself against accusations levied by federal auditors, members of Congress and consumer groups that it was soft on the big banks’ abusive behavior due to its reluctance to follow through on that threat. But the punishment that has been so long in coming may prove to be short-lived: Treasury will return the money they’re withholding from the three banks once they make the needed improvements. “If they fix the problem, they will get the money,” said Tim Massad, Treasury’s acting assistant secretary for financial stability, during a conference call with reporters. He added that Treasury had conducted 400 compliance reviews. Massad declined to answer questions over why the administration waited 19 months to make good on its threat. News that Treasury would temporarily withhold payments to the three companies was first reported by the Washington Post. More homeowners have been kicked out of the program than are receiving assistance, Treasury data show. Nearly half of them either face foreclosure proceedings, are in foreclosure, or have lost their homes. The initiative will fail to keep President Barack Obama’s promise of helping 3 million to 4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure, auditors have concluded. Potentially “thousands” of troubled homeowners were denied opportunities to lower their monthly mortgage payments under the administration’s program due to servicer errors and inadequate oversight by Treasury, according to a June 2010 audit by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). “All this appears to be is that, after the servicers seemingly violated their agreements with Treasury with impunity, Treasury’s sole response is to give them a temporary time-out before paying them in full,” said Neil M. Barofsky, the former special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program. His critical reports on the bailout earned him plaudits in Congress for looking out for taxpayers, but enemies at Treasury, which administered the TARP. “It further reaffirms Treasury’s long-running toothless response to the servicers’ disregard of their contract with Treasury, and by extension, the American taxpayer,” added Barofsky, who now serves as a senior research scholar and fellow at New York University School of Law. In statements, Bank of America said it’s working to improve its results while JPMorgan said it disagrees with Treasury’s conclusions. Wells Fargo went a step further, and said it is “formally disputing” the government’s findings. Like other companies, Wells has been in constant communication with Treasury and its auditors. Massad said government watchdogs have long been inside the companies’ offices, keeping tabs on their activities. But Wells Fargo said Thursday’s report “contradicts previous written assessments shared with us by the Treasury.” The withholding of incentives “mean very little to this company,” said Teri A. Schrettenbrunner, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo’s mortgage unit in Des Moines, Iowa. “We’re really in this to get the housing market stabilized. It’s in the best interest of everyone.” Most experts in and out of government agree that the MHA program has been a dismal failure. Home prices today are lower than when the initiative was launched. Home repossessions continue at a near-record pace. And Americans’ equity in their homes is at a two-year low, Federal Reserve data show. A substantial portion of them blame the Obama administration — rather than the mortgage industry — for its failure to police the mortgage companies, structure a program that dealt with the biggest drivers of default like negative equity and commit enough money. Indeed, government auditors have long faulted Treasury for its lack of oversight. An October 2009 report by the Congressional Oversight Panel, another federal watchdog created to keep tabs on the bailout, recommended that the administration develop “strong, appropriate sanctions to ensure that all participants follow program guidelines.” In its last report before disbanding, the panel noted that Treasury had yet to take any action. “There’s no way to help those who have already been harmed by this program,” Barofsky said. “The damage has been done.” More than three of every four housing counselors surveyed by the GAO said borrowers had either a “negative” or “very negative” experience with the administration’s primary initiative, the Home Affordable Modification Program, better known as HAMP. Just 9 percent described borrowers’ overall experience as “positive” or “very positive,” according to the May report. The counselors’ most popular recommendation to improve HAMP was for Treasury to enforce sanctions on mortgage companies for noncompliance. “In many ways, Treasury’s shameful enablement of servicer misconduct has contributed to this program’s abysmal failure,” Barofsky said. ************************* Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email; bookmark his page; subscribe to his RSS feed; follow him on Twitter; friend him on Facebook; become a fan; and/or get email alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 917-267-2335.
Continue reading …Defense Secretary Robert Gates says America’s military alliance with Europe, which has been the cornerstone of US security policy for six decades, faces a “dim, if not dismal” future. (June 10)
Continue reading …*”Hillary Clinton wants the job,” source says *Timing of move would be 2012 when Zoellick’s term ends *Clinton would be first woman head of World Bank By Lesley Wroughton WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been in discussions with the White House about leaving her job next year to become head of the World Bank, sources familiar with the discussions said on Thursday. The former first lady and onetime political rival to President Barack Obama quickly became one of the most influential members of his cabinet after she began her tenure at State in early 2009. She has said publicly she did not plan to stay on at the State Department for more than four years. Associates say Clinton has expressed interest in having the World Bank job should the Bank’s current president, Robert Zoellick, leave at the end of his term, in the middle of 2012. “Hillary Clinton wants the job,” said one source who knows the secretary well. A second source also said Clinton wants the position. A third source said Obama has already expressed support for the change in her role. It is unclear whether Obama has formally agreed to nominate her for the post, which would require approval by the 187 member countries of the World Bank. The White House declined to comment. A spokesman for Clinton, Philippe Reines, denied she wanted the job or had conversations with the White House about it. Revelations of these discussions could hurt Clinton’s efforts as America’s top diplomat if she is seen as a lame duck in the job at a time of great foreign policy challenges for the Obama administration. However, the timing of the discussions is not unusual given that the United States is considering whether to support another European as head of the World Bank’s sister organization, the IMF. The head of the IMF has always been a European and the World Bank presidency has always been held by an American. That unwritten gentleman’s agreement between Europe and the United States, is now being aggressively challenged by fast-growing emerging market economies that have been shut out of the process. The United States has not publicly supported the European candidate for the IMF, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, although Washington’s support is expected. Neither institution has ever been headed by a woman. If Clinton were to leave State, John Kerry, a close Obama ally who is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is among those who could be considered as a possible replacement for her. Clinton’s star power and work ethic were seen by Obama as crucial qualities for her role as the nation’s top diplomat, even though she did not arrive in the job with an extensive foreign policy background. She has embraced the globe-trotting aspects of the job, logging many hours on plane trips to nurture alliances with countries like Japan and Great Britain and to visit hot spots like Afghanistan and countries in the Middle East. She has long been vocal on global development issues, especially the need for economic empowerment of women and girls in developing countries. She has made that part of her focus at State. Her husband, Bill Clinton, has also been involved in these issues through his philanthropic work at the Clinton Global Initiative. The World Bank provides billions of dollars in development funds to the poorest countries and is also at the center of issues such as climate change, rebuilding countries emerging from conflict and recently the transitions to democracy in Tunisia and Egypt. (Editing by Kristin Roberts and David Storey) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.
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