Murphy and Blumenthal |
Soleimani was engaged in his usual business in Iraq –
killing Americans. He had, during his years as the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s top
general, become proficient in the art, providing IED’s to friendly terrorist
groups in all quarters of the Middle East. The state department has said he was
responsible for upwards of 500 deaths of American soldiers in Iraq. After
washing himself in American blood, Soleimani would duck back into Iran, a safe
harbor from U.S. retribution.
President Barrack Obama, hungry for a nuclear deal with Iran
in the midst of a political campaign, sought to placate Khamenei, the Supreme
Leader of Iran, by plying him with unfrozen assets worth approximately $50
billion and planeloads of cash – “reimbursements,” it was claimed, for equipment
undelivered that Iran had purchased from the US in the late 1970s in the amount
of $1.7 billion. The cash award was delivered secretly without
the imprimatur of the U. S. Congress, and Soleimani doubtless used the
money to finance his terrorist activities throughout the Middle East, laughing
up his sleeve and thumbing his nose at Senators Murphy and Blumenthal.
This time, with a different president in office, Soleimani’s
sowing of terror just didn’t work. Despite clear warnings from President Donald
Trump that the killing of Americans would be repaid in kind, Iran persisted and
killed an American contractor in Iraq. The attack on the embassy in Bagdad –
reminiscent of an earlier attack on an American compound in Benghazi that
claimed the life of U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens – was answered by a
drone attack on Soleimani. Good riddance to bad rubbish, most Americans thought.
Soleimani’s untimely demise was greeted with shouts of joy in Iraq, which has a
history of “troublesome” relations with Iran.
Immediately after the strike on Soleimani, Blumenthal and
Murphy appeared at a joint press conference in Hartford to vent. The question
foremost on some reporters' minds was this one: Was the attack on Soleimani
prompted by Trump’s earlier impeachment in the U.S. House of Representatives?
It was a tender question.
In a piece in CTMirror, “Blumenthal, Murphy walk a fine line on Iraq attack,”
reporter Mark Pazniokas put it this way: “The complicated politics of
criticizing a commander in chief during a military crisis were evident Friday
as Connecticut’s two Democratic U.S. senators sharply questioned the wisdom of
the U.S. killing Iran’s top military commander, while avoiding any suggestion
the attack was influenced by domestic politics on the eve of an impeachment
trial.”
Here is Murphy, avoiding imputations: “For the time being,
I’m going to take the administration at its word that they believe there were
imminent attacks against the United States. Obviously, with this president you
have to worry about ulterior motives. He has made it clear that he is willing
to use the national security tools at his disposal in order to advance his
personal political priorities. That is in fact the subject of the impeachment
trial. I can’t know the motivation, but I can see the ramifications, the very
dangerous potential ramifications in war, in attacks on Americans, terrorist
activities that directly imperil the United States.”
Blumenthal diplomatically noted, “And all of those concerns
would be as grave and urgent even without an impeachment trial coming.”
This might have been the place to ask somewhat different questions
on the pending trial for impeachment in the U.S. Senate: “Since the impeachment
indictment of Trump drafted in the U.S. House appears to be fluid, why
shouldn’t your misgivings be added to the indictment prior to the trial in the
Senate? If you can call new witnesses and elicit new testimony in the Senate, why
can’t you add new charges as well? Isn’t this what Senator Chuck Schumer and
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi have in mind by their insistence in calling
new witnesses? Oh, and I have a follow-up question, since the subject of this
media availability was supposed to be impeachment. The House already has
prepared its indictment. It has said in effect, the President should be
impeached on two counts: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. That being the
case, why is it necessary to call new witnesses AFTER majority Democrats in the
House have decided that testimony already taken in the House is sufficient for
prosecution? Aren’t you guys asking for a strike four?”
Questions of this kind will never be answered by Blumenthal
or Murphy – because they never will be asked by Connecticut incurious media.
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