Not Enough Retreat on Iraq by President Obama

By Steve Chapman

Mar 2, 2009

A sound, if cynical, policy for elections is to never vote for a candidate whose policies match your own. Since politicians often renege on their promises, you are better off voting for a candidate who says he'll do the opposite of what you want -- and trusting that he's a liar. George H.W. Bush, after all, gave an emphatic promise not to raise taxes and then raised taxes. Bill Clinton vowed to crack down on China's human rights abuses and didn't. George W. Bush championed a humble foreign policy.

Barack Obama opposed the war in Iraq from the outset, promised to bring our troops home in short order and criticized John McCain for his "stubborn refusal to end this misguided war." Without his stance against the war, he would not have won the Democratic nomination and he would not have won the election. But the meaning of his speech Friday at Camp Lejeune is that we shouldn't have believed him.

During the campaign, Obama pushed a plan to withdraw one or two combat brigades per month until they were all out. Only two things have changed in Obama's 16-month departure plan: It will take longer than 16 months, and we won't depart.

Instead of May 2010, the target date has been pushed back to August of that year. Nor will he bring back one or two combat brigades each month. Instead, The New York Times reports, Obama plans to withdraw only two between now and December, or one combat brigade every five months.

The administration claims it will speed up the pace of withdrawal next year. But if someone says he's going to sober up tomorrow, it doesn't mean he will definitely do it tomorrow. It just means he definitely won't do it today.

What we can deduce from the new timetable is that for now, we are staying put. As for what happens next year -- well, why cross that bridge before we come to it?

Assuming the president adheres to this backloaded schedule, a large U.S. force will remain for some time. After August 2010, the administration plans to keep as many as 50,000 troops in Iraq. That's 16,000 more than we currently have to fight the war in Afghanistan. We'll also be spending $50 billion on the effort in 2011.

Crime Beat: Combating Organized Crime Taking Backseat

By Jim Kouri
Mar 2, 2009

There is a feeling that permeates throughout the law enforcement community that organized crime gangs are getting a free ride in post-9/11 America. While most of the focus of federal law enforcement is on counterterrorism, counterintelligence and cyber crime, federal police agencies must still contend with more traditional anticrime operations including emerging organized crime gangs.

Criminal enterprises represent a near and long-term threat to our nation. The criminal activities of these enterprises are increasing in scope and magnitude as they network with each other to expand operations worldwide. The geopolitical and technological changes of the last decade have allowed these enterprises to flourish globally, and their impact on the United States is expected to increase over the next five years.

Organized crime groups from Russia and other former members of the Soviet Union are engaged in racketeering activity, and are deeply involved in large scale white collar crime. They are skilled in the use of monetary systems to funnel and conceal the proceeds of their criminal activity, employing state-of-the-art encryption to safeguard their communication networks against traditional forms of detection. Asian criminal enterprises are composed of US-born citizens and immigrants. They are multi-crime organizations that, like other ethnically-based criminal enterprises, often victimize their own ethnic immigrant communities.

These communities are typically hesitant to report victimization to authorities. As the immigration of Russian, former Soviet Union, and Asian populations into the United States increases in the next five years, so too will related ethnic organized crime. La Cosa Nostra and Italian organized crime enterprises still pose a significant threat and will continue to influence the political and economic structure of the United States through engagement in racketeering-related activity.

Barack Obama: We Have Seen the Enemy, and It Is Us

By Roger Simon

Mar 2, 2009

It was a night of reckoning. It was a night to face up to the mistakes of the past, the calamity of the present and the hopes of the future. It was a night when Barack Obama showed why he had been elected president. "As we stand at this crossroads of history, the eyes of all people in all nations are once again upon us," he said in his address to Congress Tuesday night, "watching to see what we do with this moment, waiting for us to lead."

It was, he said, "a tremendous burden, but also a great privilege -- one that has been entrusted to few generations of Americans." It was not a night of sugar plum fairies dangled before us or sweet nothings whispered into our ears. We have had plenty of those over the years.

President Obama used the word "crisis" repeatedly, because what, after all, could you call the current state of our economy? He spoke of Americans facing "sleepless nights," with their dreams "hanging by a thread." He spoke of "a trillion-dollar deficit, a financial crisis and a costly recession."

And he also spoke of who was to blame: us.Us and the people we have, term after term, elected to represent us. "And though all these challenges went unsolved, we still managed to spend more money and pile up more debt, both as individuals and through our government, than ever before," he said.

The "critical debates and difficult decisions were put off for some other time on some other day," he said. "Well, that day of reckoning has arrived, and the time to take charge of our future is here."

At moments, his speech had almost Churchillian rhythms to it. At a time of great peril to his nation, June 4, 1940, Winston Churchill said: "We shall not flag nor fail. We shall go on to the end. ... We shall fight on beaches, landing grounds, in fields, in streets and on the hills. We shall never surrender."

Sexy Back: Angelina Jolie (Photos) Megan Fox and Britney Spears Tattoo

By Julie Pike
Mar 2, 2009

Megan Fox is Often referred to as Angelina Jolie 2.0 and the two sexy actresses have landed on the sexy back list for 2009. For ink. Megan and Angelina both carry ink all over and a little ink gives them the sexy back they need for this list. Now that Megan is single (she recently broke up with Brian Austin Green, does she move up? Fox grabs one, along with Jolie at number two and Britney Spears with a surprising number three.

Angelina Jolie - Now that looks like it’s got to hurt? The mother of six, who has more than a dozen tattoos all over her body (including four on her lower back) sat still for two painful hours a s artist Sompong Kanhphai used a manual needle to tattoo on a 12 by 8 inch tiger in Bangkok in July 2004. Angie, 33, got inked to celebrate the Cambodian government’s offer of citizenship (adopted son Maddox, 7, was born there). She says the animal art is a favorite of her kids. “They talk to it all the time. They like to say hi to it and paint it with fingerpaints. It’s like a little friend.” Good thing it doesn’t bite! Daily Mail has more with photos here.


Britney Spears - the former All New Mickey Mouse Club star shocked some of her younger fans, when she debuted her first permanent ink, a cutesy fairy, in 2000. Although she tried to play it off as fake, Britney, now 27, posed this hypothetical: “if I was to get a fairy on my back, that would be like she’s watching my back.” Brit’s little fairy must have been off duty during her February 200 meltdown, during which Brit shaved her head and then got a pair of lips tattooed on her
wrist.”


Jonathan Bennett Finds Place For Hot, Dorky Guys: 'Van Wilder'

By Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith

Mar 2, 2009

Those hot, dorky guys can't seem to catch a break! Luckily for Jonathan Bennett, he's found a perfect role in the newest "Van Wilder" film hitting theaters March 13. "I don't see myself as the hunky guy. I'm more of a dork trapped in this body," says the good-looking actor, who first turned heads in his breakout role in Mean Girls.

"It's the hardest thing ever. They always tell me I'm too dorky to play the hot guy and too hot to play the dorky guy, so I'm somewhere in between. Van Wilder is, too, which is why I was so happy to play this role. I was born to make people laugh. If I can make people forget about their day for 10 minutes, then I'm doing my job."

The role was originated by another hunky dork, Ryan Reynolds, who has become more of a hunk than a dork as of late. Stepping into his shoes left Bennett a little apprehensive. "Yeah, you're a little nervous at first, but I actually met Ryan in passing just a few days before I went to shoot it, so I introduced myself, and he was really nice. I apologized in advance if I butchered the character. He laughed and told me to just have fun with it. I feel like I was able to make it my own in some way."

The movie, which goes back in time to Van Wilder's freshman year, also stars "Laguna Beach" reality star Kristin Cavallari. "We had so much fun, and she totally held her own acting-wise. She came to set prepared, and that was more than I got from a lot of my other co-stars."

Amber Tamblyn Reticent To Play Cop, 'Til She Read 'Unusuals'

By Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith

Mar 1, 2009

Amber Tamblyn admits her first reaction to ABC's "The Unusuals," in which she'll be seen starting next month, was not exactly positive. "I said, 'Oh, God. A cop show when I'm 25 years old? It sounds not good.'" But her agent said, "Trust me,'" she recalls, and pointed out that the show's creator is "Bones" writer-producer Noah Hawley. "Then I read it, and I was blown away."

The forthcoming series has Tamblyn as a very odd NYPD undercover officer -- "you see enough of her on the job to know just how bad she is at pretending to be a hooker" -- who works with equally quirky fellow cops. "It's about the cops as characters -- their things that they're hiding, their neuroses," she says. She adds, "It's like 'NYPD Blue' meets 'The Office.' Very different. I love the fact that ABC is bringing out a bunch of unique shows."

As far as the network cutting back its episode orders for some of those shows -- hers as well as Bobby Cannavale's "Cupid" remake, and "Castle," with Nathan Fillion as a roguish mystery writer -- Tamblyn is upbeat. "I think it was good they cut right in the very beginning so everyone could adjust. We're still doing 10, and they've been very supportive of us."

She reports that they're currently shooting the eighth of the first 10 shows, and after that, she's planning to "take some time off, take some time with my boyfriend," says the actress, who's linked with comedian David Cross. Last year saw Tamblyn in "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2" and the TV movie "The Russell Girl," in addition to making the forthcoming big screen "Beyond a Reasonable Doubt" and "Spring Breakdown." Now, "I'm going to chillax, as the kids say."

As far as the rumored "Sisterhood 3," there's certainly nothing set as yet. Whether producers move forward with the project, she notes of her cast mates and herself, "It's not our decision to make."