More Noted ...
Gitmo: Speaking of toilets, by now we all know that Newsweek has retracted its story about prisoner interrogators at Gitmo flushing a Koran down the toilet. As Tim Burke suggests, the reactions in the media and on the net are tiresomely predictable. But even this sad story had its lighter moments. Juan Cole says that a colleague heard one student report that prison guards at Gitmo had flushed a Korean down the toilet. More seriously, he writes,"As a professional historian, I would say we still do not have enough to be sure that the Koran desecration incident took place. We have enough to consider it plausible. Anyway, the important thing politically is that some Muslims have found it plausible, and their outrage cannot be effectively dealt with by simple denial." The fact is that there were prior published reports of the desecration of the Koran and they did not lead to riot and death. The fact is that the administration had prior access to the story and did not object to its publication. The fact is that no one can prove that Newsweek's story is false. What is disturbing is that the administration is now, not only giving government contracts to columnists and journalists to report favorable stories, but it is demanding retractions of stories that it doesn't approve of – after having cleared the story on national security grounds.
Yalta: At Crescat Sententia, the University of Chicago's Amy Lamboley challenges the claims of StephenBainbridge that the United States could have prevented the Soviet Union from dominating eastern Europe at the end of World War II. In my humble opinion, Professor Bainbridge should stick with corporate law. Lamboley thinks like a historian and you can put her"What If?" right there beside Alan Allport's"More War Bunk" and Greg Robinson's George W. Bush, Historian?"