Puppet Masters
Before Osama bin Laden was killed, the president's critics liked to portray Obama as a wimp. From radio shock jocks to Fox news, they branded him a bookish academic who hid behind his desk. He was comfortable on a university campus, or working as a "community organiser" - but not when dealing with folks in Baghdad, Kabul, or Islamabad. Obama preferred thoughtful seminars to action, ran the myth, and he would never make Americans proud.
How they must be eating their words now. As of last Sunday, the world knows that this man can kick ass when he wants to. A political Clark Kent, Barack Obama has emerged from the commando raid in Pakistan looking like an action hero. There are hints of ruthless cold-bloodedness in those White House photos. The raid played out like a cowboy film starring John Wayne, where the hero is a man of few words but deadly action.

Former Secretary of State and Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Powell speaks during a ceremony inducting him as an honorary member of South Carolina State University's Army ROTC Hall of Fame Friday, May 6, 2011, on the school's campus in Orangeburg, S.C. Powell credits his time in ROTC at City College of New York with helping shape his military career.
But the former secretary of state and Joint Chiefs chairman told South Carolina State University's 400 graduates on Friday that he particularly enjoyed another recent event: "That was when President Obama took out his birth certificate and blew away Donald Trump and all the birthers!"
The stadium roared in approval of Powell's comments on the president's move last week to quell the doubts of those who don't believe he was born in Hawaii. The retired Army four-star general endorsed Obama's 2008 presidential bid.
Earlier Friday, Powell was made an honorary member of the school's ROTC hall of fame.
On Friday, diplomats met in Brussels to discuss sanctions. The officials, who are from the country's military, its intelligence services and government, will be subject to asset freezes and travel bans. The EU has agreed to halt arm sales to Syria.
Up to 30 reportedly killed in the cities of Homs and Hama, as protesters around the country take to the streets.
Activists claim that up to 30 people have been killed in Syria where thousands have taken to the streets for another day of anti-government rallies, dubbed a "day of defiance".
Human rights group Insan said that at least 16 people had been killed in the central city of Homs, six in Hama and two in Jableh. It said the total death toll was 26 but didn't specify where the other two deaths occurred.
A human rights activist told the Associated Press news agency that 30 people had died, while Syrian state television said an army officer and four police were killed in Homs by a "criminal gang".
Security forces killed four protesters in the city of Deir al-Zor, a local tribal leader told Reuters.
Al Jazeera could not independently verify the reports because of restrictions on reporting in the country.
The major candidates for the Republican nomination for the presidency, including Rick Santorum, Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich and Mike Huckabee, along with television personalities such as Bill Maher, routinely employ hate talk against Muslims as a way to attract votes or viewers. Right-wing radio and cable news, including Christian radio and television, along with websites such as Jihad Watch and FrontPage, spew toxic filth about Muslims over the airwaves and the Internet. But perhaps most ominously - as pointed out in "Manufacturing the Muslim Menace," a report by Political Research Associates - a cadre of right-wing institutions that peddle themselves as counterterrorism specialists and experts on the Muslim world has been indoctrinating thousands of police, intelligence and military personnel in nationwide seminars. These seminars, run by organizations such as Security Solutions International, The Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies, and International Counter-Terrorism Officers Association, embrace gross and distorted stereotypes and propagate wild conspiracy theories. And much of this indoctrination within the law enforcement community is funded under two grant programs for training - the State Homeland Security Program and Urban Areas Security Initiative - which made $1.67 billion available to states in 2010. The seminars preach that Islam is a terrorist religion, that an Islamic "fifth column" or "stealth jihad" is subverting the United States from within, that mainstream American Muslims have ties to terrorist groups, that Muslims use litigation, free speech and other legal means (something the trainers have nicknamed "Lawfare") to advance the subversive Muslim agenda and that the goal of Muslims in the United States is to replace the Constitution with Islamic or Shariah law.
"I thinks those SEALs did exactly what they should have done," the senator from Massachusetts and 2004 presidential nominee said Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation." "And we need to shut up and move on about, you know, the realities of what happened in that building."
What is the reaction to bin Laden's death in Abbottabad?
We've been here all week and have been able to get quite close to bin Laden's former compound - right outside the walls. And it's not just the media who are interested, but also the people who live in this town.
What is most interesting is how few people actually believe bin Laden was killed in that house or that he even lived there at all.
It will be interesting over the next few days to see what their reaction is to the news that al-Qaida has put a statement online confirming that bin Laden was killed and calling on Muslims around the world to rise up and avenge his death.
Several Republicans and ex-officials have asked the Justice Department to drop the investigation, launched nearly two years ago by Attorney General Eric Holder.
"It's unfortunate. These men deserve to be decorated. They don't deserve to be prosecuted," Fox News quoted Cheney, as saying.
He said Holder's decision to reopen the case against CIA agents sets a "terrible precedent."
"These are government employees. They did nothing wrong, as best as any of us knows. It is an outrage that we would go after the people who deserve the credit for keeping us safe for seven and a half years," Cheney said.
Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld also said the Obama administration should set the CIA probe "aside" and move on, calling it a "most unfortunate thing."

Forrmer US Vice-President Dick Cheney said harsh interrogation methods such as waterboarding should be reinstated due to their playing a key role in tracking down Osama bin Laden.
Another top member of the Bush administration, former defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld, credited the use of so-called 'enhanced interrogation techniques' with yielding 'a major fraction' of US intelligence on Al-Qaeda and called ending them a 'mistake.'
In one of the first acts after entering the White House in 2009, President Barack Obama suspended such methods, equating them with torture and saying they represented all that was wrong with the Bush-era 'war on terror.'
But the killing of Osama, or more exactly the way the intelligence was gathered that led the CIA to track him down, has reopened a raging controversy in the United States over their use.
Mr Cheney, speaking on the Fox News Sunday program, said top intelligence officials had stated that 'some of the early leads' that helped agents find bin Laden had come thanks to the harsh interrogation techniques used on terror suspects.
Former Vice President Dick Cheney said waterboarding - which the Obama administration nixed as torture - "probably" played a role in tracking down Bin Laden and should be brought back.
"It was a good program. It was legal program. It was not torture," Cheney told Fox News Sunday. "I would strongly recommend we continue it."
Former Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld called it "a mistake" to rule out waterboarding. "It's clear that those techniques that the CIA used worked," he said on CBS.
Officials have said the key to finding Bin Laden was locating his courier. Captured terrorist Khalid Sheikh Mohammed gave the courier's nickname in 2003 after being waterboarded 183 times.







Comment: Mr. Kerry seems to be rather upset about the idea that people are actually paying enough attention to notice that the "realities of what happened in that building" can't, under any circumstances, match the 'story' of the assassination of Osama bin Laden. Those paying attention are rather unlikely to "shut up and move on" any time soon.