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fff Rancher

Joined: 04 Feb 2008 Posts: 1721
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Posted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 2:51 pm Post subject: White House snubs Palin |
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This week, Sens. John McCain (R-AZ), Barack Obama (D-IL), and Joe Biden (D-DE) all were contacted by Defense Secretary Robert Gates or Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice regarding the Iraq security agreement.
In today’s White House press briefing, spokesman Dana Perino explained that the adminstration contacted the candidates “to keep them equitably informed.” “One of them is going to win the election, and they will be taking over and having to deal with these issues,” Perino explained. But nobody called Gov. Sarah Palin. In today’s State Department briefing, reporters got a chuckle out of Palin being left out:
Q: You called Senator Biden, you called McCain. Did you also call Governor Palin?
McCORMACK: No. If you hadn’t noticed, she’s a governor. Not a senator or a congressman.
Q: She’s a vice presidential candidate.
McCORMACK: Right.
Q: She also has extensive foreign affairs experience. (LAUGHTER)
McCORMACK: Right. I explained to you the reasoning behind the phone call.
Q: Maybe if this has to do with Russia, you would have called her.
Video at the link
While Sean McCormack insisted the apparent snub was not intentional, it’s puzzling that Palin was left out of the administration’s effort to build support for the agreement. As the AP noted, “presumably Palin is an important political figure too. And, like Biden, she has a son currently serving in Iraq who would be directly affected by the so-called Status of Forces, or SOFA, agreement.”
Is it because of Palin’s lack of foreign policy potential? In a September interview with CNN, Rice was reluctant to say Palin has “enough experience” on foreign policy. “Well, obviously — Of course she doesn’t have that,” said First Lady Laura Bush last month regarding Palin’s foreign affairs experience.
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http://thinkprogress.org/2008/10/17/bush-administration-contacts-obama-mccain-biden-on-iraq-troop-deal-but-snubs-palin/
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kolanuraven Rancher

Joined: 27 Jul 2005 Posts: 9981
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hopalong Rancher

Joined: 12 Nov 2006 Posts: 5969 Location: Az.
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fff Rancher

Joined: 04 Feb 2008 Posts: 1721
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VanC Member

Joined: 14 Jul 2007 Posts: 678 Location: Illinois
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Posted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 7:44 pm Post subject: |
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There was no snub. Vice presidential candidates aren't normally briefed on such things. Presidential candidates are. Obama, McCain, and Biden are senators whose support would be essential for such an agreement. Biden is the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, so naturally he would be briefed whether he was on the ticket or not. As for Palin having a son in Iraq, does anyone really think that every parent with a son or daughter in Iraq should be called to the White House and briefed on policy? Once again the media and it's lackeys, in their unrelenting quest to smear Palin, only prove that they don't know what they're talking about.
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John McCain got a call from Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was on the phone to Barack Obama, and to his Democratic running mate, Joe Biden. Nobody called Sarah Palin.
The calls this week were part of the Bush administration's campaign to line up political support for a compromise deal with Iraq that cedes some authority over U.S. forces, and a courtesy to the presidential hopefuls on whose watch the deal would take effect. Palin, the only politician among the presidential and vice presidential contenders who is not in Congress, didn't get the call.
"We are keeping them informed about activities and remember, certainly, they have committee assignments and things like that as senators as well," White House press secretary Dana Perino said Friday. "One of them is going to win the election, and they will be taking over and having to deal with these issues ... So it's only prudent for us to make sure that we get them the information that we think they need."
Administration officials said that although the Alaska governor is the only candidate at the top of the tickets not contacted, there was no snub. Initial telephone briefings by Rice, Gates and other senior officials were aimed only at key lawmakers whose support for the agreement is considered essential, according to the White House, Pentagon and State Department. McCain, Obama and Biden are all senators who serve on relevant foreign affairs and military oversight committees.
"If you hadn't noticed, she's a governor, not a senator or congressman," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters.
Rice on Wednesday briefed Obama, who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations committee; Biden, the chairman of the panel; and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., the committee's top Republican. She also spoke to key House members.
Gates spoke to McCain, the ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services committee; Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the committee chairman as well as lawmakers on the House side.
Like Perino, McCormack said the top-level outreach made practical sense in a campaign season.
"Senator Obama is the Democratic presidential nominee and, obviously, is an important political figure in the United States," McCormack said. "(Either) one of Senator McCain or Senator Obama are going to be president come January. And so just in terms of the courtesy and protocol aspects of this and the practical aspects of this, we thought it was appropriate to make those calls."
Palin, like Biden, has a son currently serving in Iraq who would be directly affected by the so-called Status of Forces, or SOFA, agreement.
The accord calls for the withdrawal of U.S. troops at the end of 2011 and gives Iraq limited authority over off-duty, off-base U.S. soldiers who commit crimes.
Other provisions give the Iraqis a far greater role in U.S. military operations than at any time during the nearly six-year war. Under it, American troops would no longer be allowed to detain suspects or search homes without Iraqi legal authorization except in active combat.
In addition, anyone detained by the Americans must be handed over to the Iraqis within 24 hours, and all detainees currently held by the U.S. must be released or transferred to Iraqi control.
The security agreement would give a legal mandate to U.S. forces to operate in Iraq when the current U.N. authority runs out at the end of the year.
The administration had wanted a deal by August, but talks bogged down over questions of Iraqi sovereignty and U.S. insistence of broad legal protections for soldiers and contractors. |
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Yanuck Rancher

Joined: 10 Sep 2007 Posts: 4283 Location: Alberta
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Sandhusker Rancher

Joined: 10 Feb 2005 Posts: 18244 Location: Nebraska
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