Friday, May 30, 2014

Benghazi


Recently I was following a vehicle sporting a “Remember Benghazi” bumper sticker and it reminded me how, even two years after the attack, we remain divided on exactly what happened and who was to blame. Certainly someone must be, and depending on your politics it was either an unfortunate tragedy or an impeachable offense. There are accounts that would seem to indicate both President Obama and then Secretary of State Clinton actively hindered US military intervention in the embassy attack by issuing a “stand down” order and have never been held properly accountable. Others have claimed that Benghazi has been blown out of proportion and cite multiple fatal embassy attacks under George W. Bush’s presidency as proof that this incident is a political “witch hunt” by detractors of the current administration.
In order to form my own opinion, I first read the House Armed Services Committee’s most recent report on Benghazi (issued February of this year) which addressed the alleged “stand down” order:


There was no “stand down” order issued to U.S. military personnel in Tripoli who sought to join the fight in Benghazi. However, because official reviews after the attacks were not sufficiently comprehensive, there was confusion about the roles and responsibilities of these individuals.


For those concerned with investigative bias, the committee who issued the report is comprised of majority Republican members and chaired by a Republican so I feel somewhat confident dismissing the “stand down” order as a fabrication. The report does conclude that the United States military response to the Benghazi attack “was severely degraded because of the location and readiness posture of U.S. forces, and because of lack of clarity about how the terrorist activity was unfolding.”

This narrative was consistent with a recent NPR interview given by retired US General Carter Ham who was the head of US Africa command at the time of the attack. When asked if the US military should have or could have done more, he responded:

HAM: Well, as I think back about that event as it was unfolding, we did respond. And as I have, and as others have stated to the accountability review board, to a number of congressional groups both in public and in private hearings, forces were put into motion. But the nature of the mission changed over time and we certainly were working against very significant time-distance factors.

INSKEEP: Meaning that a lot of the troops you were talking about were outside...

HAM: That's right. Mostly Europe-based and you're talking a matter of several hours to get to Libya during that timeframe in a situation that, at least the initial attack, began and then largely subsided over about an hour. So not much time to respond very quickly. But the good news is, I think, after - one of the lessons learned from the attacks on Benghazi was to provide more forces to the current commander of Africa command and have a better response capability for instances in the future.

There appears to be a consensus that United States armed-forces were poorly positioned to rapidly respond to the embassy attack. What is still unclear is whose fault that was. Some have pointed to an as-of-yet unreleased cable sent August 16th 2012 to the State Department from officials in Benghazi. FoxNews, who claims to have knowledge of the cable’s content, indicated that the RSO (Regional Security Officer) expressed concerns over “the ability to defend Post in the event of a coordinated attack due to limited manpower, security measures, weapons capabilities, host nation support, and overall size of the compound.”

Assuming that the cable was signed by Ambassador Stevens and addressed to the Secretary of State (as would have been protocol) it is difficult, if not impossible, to prove that Stevens even drafted the cable or that Hillary Clinton was aware of its existence since there are over 60,000 State Department employees around the world generating millions of cables annually. This phenomenon is somewhat akin to every check being cut by a large company bearing the “signature” of the CEO. In most cases the checks are cut and issued by members of a support staff who utilize a stamp to affix the busy executive’s moniker to the document on his behalf.

So did anyone pay attention to the concerns raised in the August 16th cable? General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified that both he and General Carter Ham were aware of the concerns. He stated that they “never received a request for support from the State Department, which would have allowed us to put forces on the ground.”  He further elaborated that General Ham had called the embassy to ask if they wished to “extend the special security team there and was told no.”

In regard to the embassy attacks under George W. Bush, there are similarities and key differences. While there were around 13 attacks on US diplomatic consulates and embassies around the world resulting in at least 60 fatalities during the tenure of the previous commander and chief, the majority of these attacks took place outside the facility and the fatalities were by and large local contractors and not State Department employees. We have not had an actual ambassador killed in the line of duty since the 1970’s which does qualify the Benghazi incident as both unique and troubling.


As best I can tell, the already sub-optimal security apparatus in Libya was further crippled by the inefficient bureaucracy of the US State Department. Given the deteriorating situation in Libya combined with the significance of the date, there should have been much tighter security surrounding the diplomatic compound in Benghazi. At the very least, our ambassadors and diplomats should be provided with security proportional to the threats they face and it seems readily apparent that was not the case here. It is also fairly clear that the Obama administration worked tirelessly to portray themselves in a more positive light than perhaps they deserved (this is known as "politics").


Much of the outcry is based upon the fact that "no one has been fired" over the incident, but even amongst the disenchanted there does not seem to be a consensus. Was it Hillary Clinton's fault because she was acting Secretary of State at the time? Was it General Ham's fault because the armed forces tasked with protecting with those that died were under his command? Was it the Regional Security Officer's fault for failing to follow-up or allow continued support from the special security team? Perhaps it was ultimately President Obama's fault because all of the aforementioned government employees served at his discretion. All I can say for sure is that it is always easier to assign blame in hindsight.   

Friday, May 23, 2014

Verizon, Porn, and Morality



Recently, I have been hearing talk of boycotting Verizon due to their stand on pornography. Being a Verizon customer and having read multiple posts citing their proliferation of “incest” and “child” porn, I was eager to get to the bottom of this contemptible behavior. One of the posts linked to a FoxNews article titled “Verizon defends decision to offer incest and child themed porn on video-on-demand.” The article cited its source as Morality In Media (MIM), a New York based non-profit that opposes “pornography and indecency through education and the application of the law.”
Apparently, the organization issues an annual “Dirty Dozen” list of the companies or individuals they consider the “12 leading contributors of sexual exploitation and facilitators of porn.” Verizon indeed made this list by offering hardcore pornography titles through pay-per-view on their home cable service FiOS. The “incest” and “child” charges stem from the report citing adult titles that utilize the word “teen” or “stepdad.”

While blended-family specific pornography isn’t my particular cup of tea, I realize that Verizon doesn’t produce the material in question they simply distribute it. I also realize that these are fantasy films not documentaries. That gentleman is no more that young woman’s legal guardian than he was a certified cable technician in the last film he made. If making such content available provides enough ethical culpability to necessitate a boycott then so be it; but let’s not pretend that the same couldn’t be said about every Cable Company, satellite provider, hotel, and ISP we give our money to.  

Pornography is, even by conservative estimates, an industry that generates Billions of dollars each year. I can only assume that these figures are made possible because people pay money to view it. The truth is that these businesses risk attracting the ire of a religious populace by allowing access to pornography because it generates revenue. If we, as a society, ceased to consume it then private companies answerable to shareholders would cease to provide it.

On the other hand, I have no reason to believe that pornography adds anything positive to our society. In fact, I believe the opposite to be true. For many people, pornography trivializes sex and provides unhealthy and unrealistic portrayals of human intimacy. It can have severe detrimental effects on relationships and in some cases become an addiction. Furthermore, I doubt that very many people find themselves lamenting on their death bed that if they had any regrets it is that they did not make more time to view explicit adult films.

That being said, our nation has an ambiguous relationship with pornography. We produce it, regulate it, and even allow for its copyright protection. Conversely, we have decency laws that rely on the fickle perception of what the current majority of Americans consider “obscene.” The indecency statutes are so ambiguous that no presidential administration since their passage has made even a token effort to enforce them.

Interestingly enough, studies on the subject have shown that the states with the highest per capita rate of pornography consumption tend to be the most religious and conservative. Case in point is a study authored by Benjamin Edelman and released in the Journal of Economic Perspectives that ranked states based on paid Internet pornography subscriptions (per capita) among broadband Internet customers. Surprisingly Utah topped the list which featured Mississippi, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana in the top ten. Meanwhile, states like Michigan, Delaware, New Jersey, and Connecticut were the lowest out of the 50 states in the same category.

I suppose there are two ways we could look studies like this. Either these areas actually consume and purchase proportionally more adult media than the rest of the United States or their inherent morality compels them to pay for it at a proportionately higher rate (as opposed to seeking out free porn like the godless cheapskates in other states).

If our country wishes to criminalize the production, filming, and distribution of adult videos then so be it, but at this point we have decided as a nation to recognize footage of carnal activity between consenting adults as a form of free speech. That can, and perhaps should, be changed but I am not convinced that a disingenuous attempt by a non-profit watchdog group to guilt Verizon customers into paying their early termination fees is going to make that happen.

Other companies who made MIM’s infamous list include Google, Facebook, Playstation, Hilton Hotels, Barnes & Noble, Tumblr, The American Library Association, and Cosmopolitan Magazine. The objective of the list is to publicly expose and shame the companies into altering their products and policies to hinder the proliferation of pornography in the United States. In a final bit of irony, you can learn more about Morality in Media’s campaign against “The Dirty Dozen” on their Facebook or Google + pages.