Norman Solomon is the author of War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. For information and excerpts from the book, go to: www.WarMadeEasy.com

Blog Entries by Norman Solomon

Mr. President, War Is Not Peace

73 Comments | Posted December 10, 2009 | 09:41 AM (EST)


Eloquence in Oslo cannot change the realities of war.

As President Obama neared the close of his Nobel address, he called for "the continued expansion of our moral imagination." Yet his speech was tightly circumscribed by the policies that his oratory labored to justify.

Lofty rationales easily...

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The Hollow Politics of Escalation

1 Comments | Posted November 30, 2009 | 03:52 PM (EST)


An underlying conceit of the new spin about benchmarks and timetables for Afghanistan is the notion that pivotal events there can be choreographed from Washington. So, a day ahead of the president's Tuesday night speech, the New York Times quoted an unnamed top administration official saying: "He wants to...

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Biggest State Party to Obama: Get Out of Afghanistan

10 Comments | Posted November 16, 2009 | 11:40 AM (EST)


This week begins with a significant new straw in the political wind for President Obama to consider. The California Democratic Party has just sent him a formal and clear message: Stop making war in Afghanistan.

Overwhelmingly approved on Sunday by the California Democratic Party's 300-member statewide executive board,...

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The War Stampede

5 Comments | Posted November 12, 2009 | 09:34 AM (EST)


Disputes are raging within the Obama administration over how to continue the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan. A new leak tells us that Washington's ambassador in Kabul, former four-star general Karl Eikenberry, has cautioned against adding more troops while President Hamid Karzai keeps disappointing American policymakers. This is the...

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The Next Phase of Health Care Apartheid

5 Comments | Posted November 5, 2009 | 12:10 PM (EST)


In Washington, "health care reform" has degenerated into a sick joke.

At this point, only spinners who've succumbed to their own vertigo could use the word "robust" to describe the public option in the health care bill that the House Democratic leadership has sent to the floor.

...

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Uncle Sam in Afghanistan: Good Help Is Hard to Find

1 Comments | Posted October 22, 2009 | 01:54 AM (EST)


Almost eight years after choosing Hamid Karzai to head the Afghan government, Uncle Sam would like to give him a pink slip. But it's not easy. And the grim fiasco of Afghanistan's last election is shadowing the next.

Another display of electioneering and voting has been ordered up from Washington....

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Starting Another Year of the War in Afghanistan

1 Comments | Posted October 1, 2009 | 10:55 AM (EST)


October 2009 has begun with the New York Times reporting that "the president, vice president and an array of cabinet secretaries, intelligence chiefs, generals, diplomats and advisers gathered in a windowless basement room of the White House for three hours on Wednesday to chart a new course in Afghanistan."

...
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Men with Guns, in Kabul and Washington

2 Comments | Posted September 8, 2009 | 03:29 PM (EST)


For those who believe in making war, Kabul is a notable work product. After 30 years, the results are in: a devastated city.

A stale witticism calls Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai "the mayor of Kabul." Now, not even. On block after block in the Afghan capital, AK-47s are...

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A Little Girl in Kabul

Posted September 3, 2009 | 03:36 PM (EST)


A few days ago, I met a little girl named Guljumma. She's seven years old, and she lives in Kabul at a place called Helmand Refugee Camp District 5.

Guljumma talked about what happened one morning last year when she was sleeping at home in southern Afghanistan's Helmand Valley. At...

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The Afghanistan Gap: Press vs. Public

5 Comments | Posted August 26, 2009 | 11:01 AM (EST)


This month, a lot of media stories have compared President Johnson's war in Vietnam and President Obama's war in Afghanistan. The comparisons are often valid, but a key parallel rarely gets mentioned -- the media's insistent support for the war even after most of the public has turned against it.

...
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When the Dead Have No Say

1 Comments | Posted August 13, 2009 | 02:12 PM (EST)


Official Washington is buzzing about "metrics." Can the war in Afghanistan be successful?

Don't ask the dead.

Days ago, under the headline "White House Struggles to Gauge Afghan Success," a New York Times story made a splash. "As the American military comes to full strength in the Afghan buildup,...

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The Incredible Shrinking Health Care Reform

36 Comments | Posted August 5, 2009 | 10:58 AM (EST)


Like soap in a rainstorm, "health care reform" is wasting away.

As this week began, a leading follower of conventional wisdom, journalist Cokie Roberts, told NPR listeners: "This is evolving legislation. And the administration is now talking about a glide path towards universal coverage, rather than immediate universal coverage."

Notions...

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Spinning Health Care: A Bad Case of Vertigo

25 Comments | Posted July 23, 2009 | 10:05 AM (EST)


"I want to cover everybody," President Obama said at his news conference Wednesday night. "Now, the truth is that unless you have a -- what's called a single-payer system, in which everybody's automatically covered, then you're probably not going to reach every single individual. . ."

The same conventional wisdom...

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Cronkite and Vietnam: Beyond the Hype

6 Comments | Posted July 20, 2009 | 04:13 PM (EST)


Media eulogies for Walter Cronkite -- including from progressive commentators -- rarely talk about his coverage of the Vietnam War before 1968. This obit omit is essential to the myth of Cronkite as a courageous truth-teller.

But facts are facts, and history is history -- including what Cronkite actually did...

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Escalation Scam: Troops in Afghanistan

68 Comments | Posted July 9, 2009 | 05:42 PM (EST)


The president has set a limit on the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan. For now.

That's how escalation works. Ceilings become floors. Gradually.

A few times since last fall, the Obama team has floated rising numbers for how many additional U.S. soldiers will be sent to Afghanistan. Now, deployment...

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Abstract Quality Journalism

Posted July 1, 2009 | 03:45 PM (EST)


The New York Times used three square inches of newsprint on Tuesday to dispatch two U.S. Army soldiers under the headline "Names of the Dead." Their names -- Peter K. Cross and Steven T. Drees -- were listed along with hometowns, ranks and ages. Cross was 20 years...

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Full-Spectrum Idiocy: GOP and Chavez on Iran

23 Comments | Posted June 25, 2009 | 12:36 PM (EST)


When approaching Iran, the Republican Party line and the Hugo Chavez line are running in opposite directions -- but parallel. The leadership of GOP reaction and the leadership of Bolivarian revolution have bought into the convenient delusion that long-suffering Iranian people require assistance from the U.S. government to resist the...

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Obama and Anti-War Democrats

9 Comments | Posted June 18, 2009 | 01:16 PM (EST)


Days ago, a warning shot from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue landed with a thud on Capitol Hill, near some recent arrivals in the House. The political salvo was carefully aimed and expertly fired. But in the long run it could boomerang.

As a close vote neared on a supplemental...

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Words and War

2 Comments | Posted June 8, 2009 | 02:33 AM (EST)


It takes at least tacit faith in massive violence to believe that after three decades of horrendous violence in Afghanistan, upping the violence there will improve the situation.

Despite the pronouncements from high Washington places that the problems of Afghanistan can't be solved by military means, 90 percent...

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The March of Folly, Continued

5 Comments | Posted May 21, 2009 | 03:56 PM (EST)


To understand what's up with President Obama as he escalates the war in Afghanistan, there may be no better place to look than a book published 25 years ago. The March of Folly, by historian Barbara Tuchman, is a chilling assessment of how very smart people in power can do...

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