April 22, 2024
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
After FISA failure, it will take a President working with Congress to insist on real intelligence and surveillance reform
By Robert Romano
On April 19, the Senate completed passage of a two-year reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which will not come up again until 2026 with either incumbent President Joe Biden or challenger former President Donald Trump deciding how best to work with Congress.
This time around, attempts to include a warrant requirement for queries of the Section 702 database were defeated in the U.S. House of Representatives on a razor thin 212 to 212 margin on April 12.
Although the legislation passed the House, it was with a 273 to 147 margin, very sizeable, but not a veto-proof margin with only 65 percent of those voting being in favor of final passage of the FISA reauthorization. It takes two-thirds of each chamber to override a veto.
Similarly, in the Senate, the FISA reauthorization passed by a vote of 60 to 34. Only 63.8 percent of those voting were in favor. That’s not veto-proof either.
Meaning, if President Joe Biden gave a whit about preventing abuses of FISA — or if a different president were in the Oval Office like Trump — a veto threat might in fact have made a difference in terms of the outcome of the legislation.
But it still takes a President to stand up and use the bully pulpit to articulate an agenda and then to influence legislation by threatening a veto if it doesn’t come out correctly, whether it’s reupping FISA or passing foreign aid for Ukraine, Israel or Taiwan.
In this case, the only pressure from President Biden was to reauthorize Section 702, and so that’s what was done. Despite no help from the President, however, the reform effort to include a warrant requirement failed by just one vote in the House, coming in at 212 to 212.
That was an even better showing after former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s disclosures of mass surveillance of the American people using FISA in the 2013, when attempted reforms by former U.S. Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) failed by a 205 to 217 margin, the last time any significant reforms were really attempted.
But that was 11 years ago. That in itself is worth considering: With sunset provisions and reauthorizations lasting from two years to four years or longer if Congress so decides, the opportunities for FISA reform might only come up once a decade.
Otherwise, options in between reauthorizations might include prohibitions on the use of funds that can be included in appropriations and budget bills, or attempts to amend FISA directly via other kinds of legislation.
The President could also presumably order reviews and other mitigations by the Attorney General via executive order, since intelligence comes directly under the President’s implied Article II constitutional executive powers, but that approach will almost be certainly limited by the text of the laws Congress has already authorized.
And in the meantime, the FISA system will continue to operate more or less on autopilot by the Justice Department and intelligence agencies with modest presumed oversight by the top-secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the briefings given to the President and the House and Senate intelligence committees that may or may not be properly briefed on how the system is being used.
In that sense, all that prevents abuses of mass surveillance against the American people at the moment is faith in those institutions to use the information gleaned from FISA to protect national security, and not to spy on the American people in an unlawful manner. Unfortunately for reformers, the mass surveillance remains authorized, and as a result, barring an intervention by federal courts, the spying is still considered lawful. It will take a president and Congress to change that.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.
It’s the Biden IRA Tax Doubling the Cost of Our Medicine, Stupid
By Rick Manning
Conventional political wisdom teaches that when the economy is bad, the party in power pays for it. James Carville owes his wealth and fame to the phrase “It’s the economy, stupid.” While that ushered his team to victory 32 years ago, we’re living in very unconventional times. Will the Democrats pay this year for their disastrous economic policies?
They have given us skyrocketing oil prices, unaffordable housing, catastrophic food prices, and on and on. The Biden Administration’s unprecedented inflation is corroding the ability of middle-class Americans to get ahead, and poorer Americans’ ability to survive.
Amidst all of this, the Democrats insist they have the solution … to the problems they created. The signature domestic “achievement” of the Biden administration has been the so-called Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which has helped propagate the worst inflation in recent American history.
Left-wing lapdog media have spent the last three years covering Biden’s disastrous economic policies. At one point, the Biden sycophants at CNN literally wrote the headline, “Why inflation can actually be good for everyday Americans and bad for rich people,” while MSN insisted that, “‘Bidenomics’ is making America great forever!”
That kind of Ministry of Truth-level propaganda is intense, but the facts speak for themselves. Inflation is terrible for normal people, and inflation has been terrible under the Democrats’ current regime.
And in addition to destroying normal people’s ability to pay for oil, housing, and food, now Democrats have their sights set on medicine.
Snuck into the IRA are measures that allow the government to enact price controls on some prescription medicines for seniors under Medicare. Indeed, one provision allows the administration to designate ten Medicare drugs as targets for government-controlled price “negotiation.” If companies don’t accept the price controls, they are forced to pay a 95 percent excise tax – for everyone who buys it, not just through Medicare.
So, either we have government price controls or we have a tax that all but doubles the cost of some medicines.
Very much like how the Inflation Reduction Act has increased inflation, this effort to reduce the cost of prescription drugs will increase it. And it appears the Biden administration won’t just settle for doing this to drugs for seniors under Medicare.
In his State of the Union, Biden declared war on everybody’s prescription drugs. Without sharing any details – but a heartstring-pulling anecdote about a 13-year-old boy with diabetes – Biden declared, “Let’s cap the cost of insulin at $35 a month so everyone can afford it. Drug companies will still do very well. And while we’re at it let Medicare negotiate lower prices for prescription drugs, like the VA already does.”
So that’s a threat that will only get worse. The IRA statute mandates that the government impose this 95 percent tax on up to 60 medicines for seniors. This is all but extortion, as the government is demanding that drug manufacturers give their products to the government for free.
The only possible outcome to this government price fixing scheme rather than honest negotiations will be drug scarcity in the present and, more concerning, reduced R&D budgets for the future – so no more miracle drugs on the horizon. Democrats want everyone to think that they’re Robin Hood – robbing from the rich and giving to the poor – but really, they’re robbing from everyone, keeping for themselves or their insurance company cronies, and dispensing breadcrumbs to peasants … who should really be more grateful?
If you weren’t worried enough about this, the Internal Revenue Service is committed to ensuring they get this pound of flesh from each of us. With their new cadre of 87,000 door-kicking agents, expect them to collect this excise tax at your local pharmacy. However, in a concession to transparency, the IRS allows companies to levy the 95 percent tax as a separate line item on receipts. So, at least, we’ll all know who to blame.
Inflation has sabotaged normal people’s livelihoods, so much so that too many articles say “The American Dream is dead” for us to hyperlink; so we’ll just do the search results. Staples like energy, housing, groceries, and medicine are now increasingly out of reach for more and more people, and the November election can’t come soon enough for most of us. The people who’ve made our economy more expensive are stupid, but will they pay for it at the polls?
Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.
To view online: https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2024/04/22/its-the-biden-ira-tax-doubling-the-cost-of-our-medicine-stupid/
Jason Olson and Bart Marcois: The American Peace Initiative: Lessons Learned from the Abraham Accords
The Abraham Accords, centered on regional peace and prosperity, brought the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, and Kosovo into normalized relations with Israel.
By Jason Olson and Bart Marcois
The United States has its own Middle East peace initiative. While the Israeli-Palestinian 1993 Oslo Accords and the regional 2002 Arab Peace Initiative were cultivated outside the United States, the 2020 Peace to Prosperity plan and the Abraham Accords were born in the USA.1
The Abraham Accords, centered on regional peace and prosperity, were the 2020 agreements that brought the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, and Kosovo into normalized relations with Israel. They were an aggressive pursuit of American strategic and security interests that capitalized on emerging dynamics in the Middle East. The intent of the Accords was to strengthen stability and deter Iranian, Chinese, and Russian attempts to extend influence or hegemony in the region. Expanding the Accords further secures a part of the world long synonymous with conflict.
The following lessons learned are based on interviews of those who paved the way for the Abraham Accords. We call upon leaders and lawmakers to support us in creating a digital archive to document guiding principles and lessons learned in the process. We believe this model can be replicated for other Muslim-majority countries through courageous, practical diplomacy.
There were certain dynamics that highlighted the benefits of the Abraham Accords process. For example, Israel, as a trade partner, has so many quality of life benefits to offer, including sectors such as water, technology, agriculture, pharmaceuticals, health sciences, and defense. In short, it would be regressive not to normalize with Israel.
1) It Starts with the People: Historically, an important foundation for the Abraham Accords agreements was laid with the Israel plank of the 2016 GOP Platform, a collection of policy positions embraced by tens of millions of grassroots Americans. Donald Trump captured 81% of self-identified Evangelical Christian voters in the 2016 election, and their faith-based voting regarding Israel was paramount. The plank, known as “Our Unequivocal Support for Israel,” authored by former South Carolina Representative Alan Clemmons, was a departure from all previous GOP platforms. Rather than endorsing a U.S. policy that would impose the formation of a Palestinian state as an inevitability, this plank gave Israel and its neighbors leeway to negotiate a peace agreement that would be mutually beneficial.
The policy foundation for the 2019 Pompeo Doctrine, which holds that Israel has a superior legal title to its current territories as a matter of law and historical fact, was built upon the foundation laid by Clemmons within American legislatures and other public policy spaces. Clemmons’ position held that it is incumbent upon the U.S. to legally recognize Israeli sovereignty in its current territories. This principle affirmed that any suspension of sovereignty over portions of the land of Israel would be for political, not legal, reasons. This was captured by his phrase on the platform, “We reject the false notion that Israel is an occupier.“ Clemmons believes that this term “occupier” is used to delegitimize Israel altogether and embolden violence by Israel’s enemies.
The work of Alan Clemmons gave Israel diplomatic leverage and negotiating space to make peace with the Abraham Accords countries with U.S. support in hand. The irony of his work is that Israel’s legitimacy in any portion of the land of Israel was actually a driver for peace, not an obstacle.
The 2016 plank also envisioned what would become the Abraham Accords:
The United States seeks to assist in the establishment of comprehensive and lasting peace in the Middle East, to be negotiated among those living in the region. We oppose any measures intended to impose an agreement or to dictate borders or other terms, and we call for the immediate termination of all U.S. funding of any entity that attempts to do so. Our party is proud to stand with Israel now and always.
This policy relieved the United States of imposing a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and freed it to engage in pursuing a practical peace between Israel and other Arab countries.
2) Quiet Diplomacy: All initial discussions about the potential for normalization were bilateral and very secret. Only a handful of officials at the very top of each government even knew they were under way. Once two governments expressed openness to the idea, multilateral discussions could begin. But throughout the process, the existence of the discussions was kept within a very small circle. Any premature publicity would have allowed enemies of normalization to prevent a conclusion.
To put it starkly, according to Robert O’Brien, being too open and public about each incremental step in Saudi-Israeli normalization may have been one of the factors that precipitated the attack of October 7. Iran and its terror proxies knew from public discussions that Saudi-Israeli normalization was close and sought to spoil it.
The first lesson learned from the Abraham Accords is: Don’t announce the talks until the deal is done.
3) Build the Trust of the Israelis: The United States can expand the Abraham Accords when it stands firm on its policy that Muslim allies and partners should normalize with Israel as a matter of pursuing their citizens’ best interests. Imposing preconditions on Israel to merit simple normalization prevents discussions from beginning. The U.S. and Israel will have policy disagreements, but Israel has no need to apologize for its existence.
The American administration built trust with Israel in the earliest stages by carrying out the will of its voters in connection with granting a key concession to the Israelis. For example, the U.S. recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and moved its Embassy there in 2018. Likewise, in early 2019, the U.S. recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights. These were major, historic concessions that earned the U.S. tremendous political capital from the Israeli Prime Minister that paid off during the 2020 Peace to Prosperity plan (which conditionally offered the Palestinians a state).
In another concession, the Peace to Prosperity Plan would eventually allow Israel to depart from the 1949 Armistice Lines and redraw its borders by extending sovereignty over roughly 30% of Israeli-held territories. According to Clemmons, this vision failed to capture the support of the millions of American faith-based voters mentioned before. But the vision helped the American administration become the first to get a Prime Minister of Israel to agree to a framework to recognize a Palestinian state.
The political capital paid off again during the final negotiations of the UAE Abraham Accords, when the Prime Minister of Israel agreed to suspend declaring Israel’s sovereignty over portions of the West Bank. This was a concession Israel made, considering it had already received U.S. recognition of similar sovereignty over Jerusalem and the Golan Heights. The UAE’s offer of normalization was of greater interest to both Israel and America.
In an interview, Aryeh Lightstone said that even though the U.S. was willing to recognize extended Israeli sovereignty in parts of the West Bank, a U.S.-led coalition to deter Iran had more value. The Abraham Accords could deliver on this vital U.S. interest. But concerning this delicate point of diplomacy, Amb. John Rakolta Jr. said, “If there is one thing that could derail the UAE from continuing in the Abraham Accords, it would be for Israel to go back on its word.”
4) Build the Trust of the Emiratis and Other Gulf Monarchies: For the countries involved, especially the UAE, peace means security, the reduction of regional terrorism, and stable sovereignty, according to Amb. Rakolta. Prosperity means a better quality of life for the people of the region and its children. In that framework, food, housing, healthcare, water, agriculture, education, an opportunity for a good job, and security from threats of Iranian hegemony were crucial for the integration of the Middle East and normalization with Israel. The UAE advanced these core interests in the Abraham Accords process with its trust in the United States.
Early in his time in the Trump administration, Robert O’Brien discovered that Emirati willingness to normalize with Israel could come in exchange for practical cooperation and security guarantees from the U.S. Those security guarantees included the UAE’s need for advanced U.S. armaments to deter Iran and to enhance regional cooperation to that same end. At the same time, the U.S. recognized the need to strengthen its Qualitative Military Edge doctrine, which guarantees Israel’s technological and tactical advantage to deter or defeat numerically superior adversaries.
The strengthening of the QME doctrine clearly declared that the UAE would no longer be considered an adversary of Israel. The zone of peace and security for America, Israel, and Israel’s Sunni partners would be expanded. As a U.S. partner, the UAE also needs its own qualitative military edge to deter Iran.
Indeed, with the Abraham Accords, the U.S. began thinking multilaterally about security with its allies and partners in the Middle East, rather than the traditional bilateral U.S.-Israel or U.S.-Emirati constructs. This multilateral security vision has Israel as the lynchpin, with Arab U.S. allies and partners connecting in a tightening, deterring coalition. The U.S. and its Arab and Israeli partners could collaborate to check Iran’s power in the region.
5) Offer the Palestinian People Peace Aligned with American Interests, But Don’t Give Them a Veto: Contrary to the mainstream media’s focus, the American administration offered a peace deal and a limited time to accept the conditional offer of a state to the Palestinians. America coordinated with Israel, the UAE, Bahrain, Oman, and others to make an incentivized offer to the Palestinians, including a 50 billion dollar aid package (see the Peace to Prosperity Workshop hosted by the Kingdom of Bahrain). Demonstrating their support of the plan as a starting point for bilateral Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, ambassadors from the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Oman attended the plan’s unveiling in January 2020.
The American administration first tried to build peace from the inside out in January 2020, meaning Israeli-Palestinian peace, then expanded to regional peace. But when that effort failed, the team denied the Palestinians a veto over other peace agreements, and it didn’t put the Palestinians’ interests above those of America or its Arab partners.
When the Palestinians flatly rejected the Peace to Prosperity plan, the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan decided that they and other Arab countries would not have their interests suppressed by refraining from normalization with Israel. Rather than setting things back, the Abraham Accords team took advantage of opportunities for peace wherever they could find them. They treated Israel as their primary ally in the region.
6) American Diplomats Must Advance American Interests: One of the obstacles to the Abraham Accords was that some foreign policy professionals were so narrowly focused on the bilateral Israeli-Palestinian peace process that they failed to see alternative possibilities for the pursuit of regional peace. They didn’t comprehend America’s core interests in the Abraham Accords’ multilateral, regional dynamic. They believed Israeli-Palestinian peace was the end all and be all, and they appeased Palestinian intransigence and anti-normalization demands rather than moving on to other Arab countries willing to normalize under current conditions.
7) Politically Appointed Envoys and Ambassadors Proved Effective: The U.S. envoys and ambassadors assigned to Abraham Accords countries under the Trump administration were political appointees, willing to break with a foreign policy establishment and take calculated risks for regional peace and integration. Presently, Congress has mandated an Abraham Accords special envoy to work out of the State Department. Robert O’Brien suggested that this envoy should have the attention and support of the president to further the process the Abraham Accords began.
The Trump administration had Jared Kushner lead this initiative from the White House. National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien, Ambassadors John Rakolta Jr. (UAE), David Friedman (Israel), David Fischer (Morocco), and John Abizaid (Saudi Arabia), all politically appointed, drove the negotiations forward. Most career diplomats were unaware of the Abraham Accords discussions until they were concluded. That first Israel-UAE agreement may not have been possible without the unity and risk-taking of the politically appointed envoys and ambassadors, reporting directly to the President and his inner circle.
8) Genuine Reverence for Religious Freedom and Judaism Mattered: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien had an unusual commitment to global religious freedom that set appropriate conditions for the Abraham Accords to succeed. They had no tolerance for jihadism, Islamism, or anti-Semitism. This clarity increased their trust in the UAE, for example, which banned the Muslim Brotherhood from its territory in 2014.
But the UAE has assertively demonstrated its commitment to religious tolerance since September 11, 2001. In line with its values, the UAE openly condemned the extremism of Al Qaeda and ISIS. It then made a strategic decision to advance its tolerant, humane, reformed approach to Islam, conducive to regional peace, setting the stage for the Abraham Accords—all years in the making.
The clear rejection of Islamism led to increased trust between Emirati Muslims and Israeli Jews. In 2019, the United Arab Emirates government announced a Year of Tolerance, officially recognizing the existence of the Jewish community and two synagogues in the UAE. Israel allowed its first passenger flight from the UAE to Israel in October 2020. The new Emirati tolerance for Judaism allowed visiting Israeli tourists to openly conduct bar/bat mitzvahs and Passover Seders there for the first time. The UAE-Israel flights gave Emirati Muslims the chance to pray at sacred Islamic shrines in Jerusalem for the first time.
In addition, many members of the Abraham Accords team were observant Jews who cared deeply about the Jewish people’s future in the land of Israel. This insistence on the legitimacy of Zionism and its core role within Jewish religious belief drove the Abraham Accords’ success.
9) Peace Through Strength: While many domestic and foreign leaders warned that no path to comprehensive peace existed, Abraham Accords diplomats pursued the component agreements with vigor, born of a conviction that they were in American interests. These diplomats demonstrated clarity and tenacity in pursuing America’s national interests without appeasing international opinion or international institutions. A strong, clear American foreign policy draws allies and partners to bind their interests to the U.S.—peace through strength.
10) Recognizing the Shift in Power Balance in the Middle East: Amb. Rakolta noted the opportunities in the Arab League’s shift in power from Egypt’s military-centric system to the wealthy, diplomatically moderate monarchies in the Gulf. Saudi Arabia had emerged as the leading state in the Arab League, but the United Arab Emirates, with its 21st-century vision and strategic advantages, took the initiative in the Abraham Accords.
According to Amb. Yousef al-Otaiba, the UAE wanted normalization for its own interests but could not do so if Israel declared sovereignty over additional territories envisioned in the US Peace to Prosperity Plan. This made the UAE the first Arab country to normalize with Israel while also obtaining a concession for the Palestinians. The concession was that the U.S. and Israel would suspend a declaration of sovereignty over those Vision for Peace territories.
Before normalization, the UAE could only support regional peace by using “sticks” against Israel. With normalization, the UAE has both carrots and sticks in its relationship with Israel, which gives it greater leverage to shape peace. Indeed, the UAE wisely recognized how much the status quo had changed since the 1967 war. Israel was not going anywhere, and the UAE should not be prevented from pursuing its mutual interests by submitting to the Palestinian “veto.”
After the UAE signed the first of the Abraham Accords, incurring great political risk, other Arab countries followed. According to Amb. Rakolta, the UAE’s leadership and strategic use of its enormous wealth built goodwill and attracted reliable allies to complete the peace process. This positioned the UAE for a massive economic boom based on a growing hybrid of oil and technology. Collaborating with Israel in this intra-regional, knowledge-based economy continues to provide the UAE with opportunities for their rising generation. It resulted in the UAE’s massive economic expansion from 2019 to 2024—more than 18% growth per year. Like Israel, the UAE has proved to be a “startup” nation and is now becoming a “scale up” nation.
The shift in the Arab League’s balance of power to the moderate Sunni Gulf monarchies means deterrence against Iran has become the primary strategic issue. This has aligned Arab and Israeli interests to make peace and integration possible.
11) The Pivotal Role of the Saudis: According to Amb. Rakolta, the indirect involvement of Saudi Arabia in the Abraham Accords underscores the complexity of Middle Eastern geopolitics, and the significant role Riyadh plays in regional dynamics. The Saudi decision to grant airspace privileges for commercial flights between Tel Aviv and Abu Dhabi was a pivotal moment in the normalization process, reflecting a receptive stance towards the broader framework of Middle Eastern peace and the normalization of relations with Israel. The kingdom’s decision to allow flights was a clear indication of its tacit support for the Accords. This move was significant for several reasons:
According to Aryeh Lightstone, the Abraham Accords are squarely in the Saudi interest — they cannot achieve their Vision 2030 without Israeli normalization. Like the Emiratis, the Saudis must also transition from an oil-based to a knowledge-based economy to thrive in the 21st century. This is a powerful convergence with U.S. interests that can be used to re-stabilize the region.
12) Great Power Competition in the Middle East: As an American peace initiative, the Abraham Accords could exclude China from the Israeli innovation market, according to Robert O’Brien. It can also keep the Belt and Road Initiative out of the Middle East, China’s western flank. Indeed, America’s Arab allies and partners, particularly the UAE, are beginning to invest their vast capital in Israel’s innovative economy.
The economic-security theory of the Abraham Accords is that new allies will protect their new trade channels, according to Robert Greenway. The UAE and Israel are making each other more prosperous through open trade agreements and people-to-people exchanges. Based on the rules of national interests, the security ties will integrate into this economic relationship. This creates a network of U.S. allies and partners in the Middle East who are also allies among themselves. In the security domain, welcoming Israel into CENTCOM has changed the arithmetic of deterrence for the United States.
13) Reform of Palestinian Society: The unconditional surrender of Germany and Japan after World War II eventually led to the positive reconstruction of those nations and a change of heart among their people. America and her allies need a similar policy course that incentivizes the reform of Palestinian society and its inclination toward jihadist ideology, including the enforcement of the Taylor Force Act and the dismantling of UNRWA.
Abraham Accords partners have already rejected jihadism and Islamism. The reform of Palestinian society will weaken the set of ideas that chronically bring instability to the Middle East and will lead to a better future for the Palestinian people. This will strengthen the commitment of Abraham Accords partners to support their mutual sovereignty and security.
The strategic argument for Arab-Israeli integration has still not changed, said Amb. Otaiba.
14) We Need an Open Abraham Accords Digital Archive: Congress should ensure that these lessons are taught in U.S. national institutions studying war and diplomacy, like the National Defense University, the Foreign Service Institute, and the Library of Congress. We propose an Abraham Accords digital archive that focuses on Arab-Israeli-U.S. primary sources that illustrate normalization and regional integration developments to train America’s leaders.
Establishing such an archive will provide a foundation of fact to understand the path that led to normalization. This will assist American diplomats and representatives who engage in the region to advance America’s interests, which include a peaceful, stable, prosperous, and integrated Middle East.
Conclusion: Focusing American attention on the integration of American allies is the only policy that can prevent Iranian, Chinese, and Russian interference in the region and expand American interests there. Bringing American allies who were former enemies into an integrated framework serves American interests, the interests of those allies, and the interests of world peace and stability. Forming a digital archive describing the historical path to the Abraham Accords will show scholars, diplomats, and governing officials the best ways to replicate that success in other areas.
To view online: https://amgreatness.com/2024/04/18/the-american-peace-initiative-lessons-learned-from-the-abraham-accords/
Video: Mysterious Juror Could Upend Trump Trial
Watch here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ftm_Crf7nOU