Benghazi, Bergdahl, and the Bomb: Matthew Continetti

President Obama’s stories haven’t held up before. How is the Iran deal any different?
President Obama strode to the lectern in the Rose Garden Thursday to announce a “historic” agreement between the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran. The preliminary deal made in Lausanne, Switzerland, the president said, “cuts off every pathway Iran could take to develop a nuclear weapon.” I hope he’s right.
But I’m not counting on it. The president has a terrible record of initial public pronouncements on national security. He has a habit of confidently stating things that turn out not to be true. Three times in the last four years he has appeared in the Rose Garden and made assertions that were later proven to be false. He and his national security team have again and again described a world that does not correspond to reality. No reason to assume these concessions to Iran will be any different.

Obama’s Iran Deal Falls Far Short of His Own Goals

The “key parameters” for an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program released Thursday fall well short of the goals originally set by the Obama administration.

None of Iran’s nuclear facilities — including the Fordow center buried under a mountain — will be closed.

Not one of the country’s 19,000 centrifuges will be dismantled. Tehran’s existing stockpile of enriched uranium will be “reduced” but not necessarily shipped out of the country.

In effect, Iran’s nuclear infrastructure will remain intact, though some of it will be mothballed for 10 years. When the accord lapses, the Islamic republic will instantly become a threshold nuclear state.

That’s a long way from the standard set by President Obama in 2012 when he declared that “the deal we’ll accept” with Iran “is that they end their nuclear program” and “abide by the U.N. resolutions that have been in place.” Those resolutions call for Iran to suspend the enrichment of uranium. Instead, under the agreement announced Thursday, enrichment will continue with 5,000 centrifuges for a decade, and all restraints on it will end in 15 years.

FRED FLEITZ : NOT A GOOD DEAL ****

It legitimizes and advances Iran’s uranium-enrichment program.

At a press conference this afternoon, President Obama lauded the preliminary agreement reached with Iran to reduce the risk of an Iranian nuclear weapon, saying “this is a good deal.” He claimed it will keep Iran at least a year away from constructing a nuclear weapon and will be subject to intrusive and unprecedented inspections and verification. This preliminary agreement is the outline for a comprehensive agreement due by June 30. The details of the framework agreement as spelled out in a White House fact sheet and President Obama’s speech raise many questions about a final deal. It is troubling that no final agreed-upon text has been released and that Iranian and EU officials were vague in their statements about the framework. Earlier today on National Review, Patrick Brennan wrote about tweets by Abas Aslani, the head of an Iranian government news agency, that show how the Iranian view of the agreement differs from the Obama administration’s view.

Aslani tweeted, for instance, that Iran will continue to develop advanced centrifuges during the duration of the deal and “all economic sanctions by EU, US will be lifted immediately including financial, banking, insurance, oil.” Here are my initial thoughts about the preliminary agreement, based on our knowledge of it at this hour. Uranium Enrichment According to the White House fact sheet, Iran will go from 9,000 operational centrifuges to 6,104. Of these, 5,060 will enrich uranium for ten years. All centrifuges will be Iran’s first-generation IR-1 design. The remaining 10,000 operational and non-operational centrifuges will be put in storage and monitored by the IAEA.

YALE KRAMER, M.D. :DOES BIOGRAPHY NEED AN ANALYST?

Does every biographical subject need “psychoanalytic treatment?” No, no more than every individual needs psychoanalytic treatment. For any one, contrary to the view prevalent back in the post-war golden age of psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic treatment should be the treatment of last resort. Because it is so expensive, time consuming, and labor intensive it is much better if one can get by without it. The same general principles apply to its use in the fields of biography and history.

What are the biographical situations in which psychoanalytic understanding may be useful or desirable? First there is the subject in which overt and extensive psychopathology exists without question; Vincent Van Gogh would be one of the most obvious cases. In such cases one wants to know not only about the nature of the illness and its causes but the relation between the subject’s illness and his art.

Then there are examples of biographical subjects whom some might wish to refer to an analyst—an intermediate group—who are creative and able to function more or less but who seem quite miserable. Such as Poe and Coleridge struggling with their addictions; Charles Darwin, paralyzed with fear about presenting his ideas and obsessed with his crippling psychosomatic symptoms; Herman Melville, lost to his alternating depressive and manic moods.

The Iran Nuclear Deal Allows Continued Uranium Enrichment, a Bunkered Centrifuge Center and No snap Inspections. By: Lori Lowenthal Marcus

LUCKY IRAN!

They can’t even coordinate their public descriptions of what the deal entails, that’s how bad it is.

The sort of, kind of nuclear agreement between the P5+1 and Iran makes concrete the previous understanding that U.S. President Barack Obama has been dead wrong about almost every major terrorist threat he has encountered: Al Qaeda is not, as he intoned, “decimated”; ISIS is not a “junior varsity” terrorist network; and Iran is not a partner with whom the west can successfully negotiate.

It looks like the U.S. is the captain of the junior varsity team. And Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu will not sugarcoat his assessment.

This “agreement” which is not a deal, is not even the framework of a deal, is, ultimately, an attempt by the Obama administration to rack up at least one foreign policy “achievement” during its tenure.

Obama’s Justice Department Charges Menendez … But Not Reid: Andrew McCarthy

The Obama Justice Department has filed its much anticipated corruption indictment against Senator Robert Menendez. He is the New Jersey Democrat who, from his powerful senior seat on the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, has vehemently opposed President Obama’s negotiations with the jihadist regime in Iran, as well as his outreach to Castro’s Cuba.

Two things about the Obama administration cannot be denied. First, the president is desperate to cut a deal with the mullahs on their nuclear program, so much so that he has erased virtually every red line he ever purported to draw and has not been shy about strong-arming naysayers, including our allies in Israel and France.

Second, the Obama’s Justice Department, which features the first attorney general in American history to be held in contempt of Congress (for obstructing the House’s investigation of the outrageous Fast & Furious scandal), is the most politicized in American history – practicing discriminatory law-enforcement that stays its hand against friends (see, e.g., its treatment of New Black Panther Party voter intimidation, Solyndra fraud, and the Obama 2008 campaign’s large-scale campaign finance violations) while punishing critics, scapegoats, and others who dare to cross the president (see, e.g., treatment of Dinesh D’Souza’s de minimis campaign finance violation; of Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, producer of the anti-Muslim video the administration fraudulently blamed for the Benghazi massacre; and of Standard & Poor’s, squeezed for a $1.37 billion settlement in a retaliatory suit Justice filed after S&P downgraded the U.S. credit-rating).

MY SAY: PASSOVER AND IDOL WORSHIP

FROM MIDEAST OUTPOST 2013-http://www.mideastoutpost.com/archives/idol-worship-ruth-king.html

Passover offers another message beyond freedom from bondage and the beginning of Israel’s journey to the Promised Land. It was on this journey that Moses gave the Ten Commandments, revealed by God, to his people. The Decalogue, as they are known, provide the obligations for a decent life: to worship God, keep the Sabbath, honor parents, reject murder, adultery, the bearing of false witness, theft, and envy.

Most people do their best to follow these commandments. Except for the Second Commandment. The Second Commandment says: “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them.” It has been roughly translated to mean “Thou shalt not worship false idols.”

Modern false idols do not take the shape of golden calves, but cults and liberal cant that people worship with the same fervor.

RUTHIE BLUM: TIME TO REGAIN OUR FREEDOM

All Jewish holidays can be invoked to serve as metaphors for current events. The same goes for the Bible as a whole. Indeed, with a tweak of the Hebrew from ancient to modern, one might mistake the Five Books of Moses for a bound volume of daily newspaper clippings.

This is why holidays constitute both a blessing and a curse for media outlets. On the one hand, any anniversary worthy of note provides automatic content. On the other, it creates a problem where originality is concerned.

Passover is no exception.

Hal G.P. Colebatch: England Circles the Plughole

But it is an Imam-approved, multicultural plughole wherein there is always to be found respect and tolerance for the shining diversity of our non-judgmental modern world. So that makes it OK because, if there is one thing officialdom needs to instill, it is that head-loppers are good people too.

The news from Kenya of yet another Islamist massacre reminds us yet again that Christians are being killed by their tens of thousands across the Islamic World and Africa. A Christian woman in Pakistan is sentenced to be hanged for drinking from a Muslim cup. An official who tries to save her is murdered by his own bodyguard, who becomes a popular hero. ISIS carries out mass beheadings of Christians and burns a captured pilot alive. Jewish babies are murdered by more Islamic heroes in Jerusalem. Islamic terrorist outrages occur somewhere in the world virtually every day.

The Church of England, meanwhile, devotes its energies to attacking the British Education Secretary for plans to teach “British values” in schools, calling them potentially “dangerous, divisive and undemocratic.” London’s Daily Telegraph reported that the church, which is responsible for educating about a million children in England, voiced fears that a “narrowly focused” definition of British values would be used to test whether people were loyal and safe to be around.

Christopher Carr The GOP’s Quest for a ‘Viable’ Contender

“The long endurance race for the GOP nomination will end up as a contest between Ted Cruz, Scott Walker and Marco Rubio. Notice that I end up eliminating Jeb Bush and Rand Paul. Yes I realise that Bush will raise huge money. Yet, big money is not always politically astute, as Connally’s war chest and dismal performance remind us. You cannot win in the face of hostility from the conservative grass roots. As for Rand Paul, however sensible he may try to sound, there will always be his father, Ron Paul, casting a shadow. As for the likes of Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry, I suspect Cruz’s announcement may have eliminated them as even remotely viable. ”
After Barack Obama’s eight years of eloquent uselessness, Republicans are champing at the bit to take their crack at the White House, with Ted Cruz first out of the starting gate. If the GOP heeds the wisdom of William F. Buckley, an early start will not count for half so much as the ability to win hearts, minds and, most of all, votes
The announcement by Senator Ted Cruz that he is running for the GOP Presidential nomination is unprecedented in two ways. First, he has announced his candidature almost a full year before the first primaries are to take place. Second, like President Obama, he has announced his run during his first term as a Senator. Predictably, the Left Liberal media are making much of Cruz’s supposed inexperience. Of course, the same media were silent back in 2008, when Barack Obama was making his bid for the nomination.

True, Ted Cruz does not have experience as a state Governor, but he was Solicitor General for Texas from 2003 to 2008. Prior to that, he had been associate deputy attorney general and then the director of policy planning at the US Federal Trade Commission during the George W. Bush Administration. At the very least, this is a far more substantive resume than anything of which Obama could boast.