...is his position as Secretary of Defense now in serious jeopardy? I don't think so. It has become the modus operandi of the American conservatives, from the grass roots level and upwards, to never, ever admit to any responsibility.
Rumsfeld is a classic example of this. When cornered with his own mistakes he talks of ongoing investigations and tries to make out that there is nothing unusual in what has happened. When this fails he resorts to ridicule as we see
Aquilla doing in his post here.
At no point in the proceedings will Rumsfeld (nor Bush) accept any blame for the many failures we see happening in the War in Iraq. Instead we shall continue to be confronted with a man who openly sneers at public concern and boasts that he has stopped reading newspapers.

...and since when was a self imposed ignorance something to boast about?
Should it be?It should indeed. Rumsfeld is a servant of the people and as such his primary concern should be his accountability to the public. A serious set of human rights violations have happened under his jurisdiction and his response has been pitiful at best.
Now the allegation has been made that he himself authorized these violations and his response is once again to attempt to pour scorn and ridicule on the allegations rather than dealing with them in any open and honest fashion.
If it is such that Rumsfeld is seeking to protect the SAP referred to in the article, then obviously its too late, and due to his gross incompetence in supporting Stephen Cambone, he himself must take full responsibility for what has happened.
As I said earlier in a previous thread, this sort of action (the violation of prisoners at Abu Graib) does not just happen in isolation. It is an indicator of a culture of violence and repression, and this article (I believe) supports that claim. Since the WTC attacks on the 11 Sept 2001, the United States under the disastrous leadership of the Bush administration has discarded its traditional role, and reputation, as the protector of freedom and Justice, and with that it has also discarded its credibility.
The only way to regain that credibility before the rest of the planet is to punish those who have allowed this dangerous set of affairs to happen.
And I believe the danger is very real. With each case of bumbling incompetence Rumsfeld and his followers provides those elements of the Islamic world who seek to sow discord between east and west with gratis ammunition, and such gifts we can ill afford to be giving away!
Here is a quote from Stratfor's free email service which illustrates what I mean:
QUOTE
Stratfor indicated last week that many independent jihadist
groups had surfaced since the Sept. 11 attacks. The attack in
Yanbu indicates that the phenomenon might be entering a new phase
in which individuals acting alone or in small groups carry out
attacks.
If true, the multitude of individuals influenced by al Qaeda and
taking cues from other established groups will multiply, and
Yanbu-style attacks are likely to become much more frequent.
The widespread belief has been that the loss of Afghanistan as a
training ground put a dent into planning, preparation and
execution of operations -- particularly by novices. A successful
operation entails avoiding detection, engaging in surveillance
and training in weapons and explosives.
It appears that those at the helm of the Islamist militant
movement had contingency plans prepared in the event they lost
Afghanistan. Examining the behavior of the non-Afghan fighters
during the U.S. military campaign in fall 2001, there did not
appear to be much of an actual al Qaeda presence. Those who stood
their ground and fought the Americans were either Taliban or non-
Afghans foot soldiers. The veterans of al Qaeda training camps
relocated into other states before and during the war.
If any one wishes the entire text, please PM me and I shall provide it.Given the danger posed by this brooding spread of Jihadism I think its about time the leadership of the west looked to their resources and asked themselves, as should we all, how are we going to counter this threat?
Many people support Bush and Rumsfeld for being hard on terrorism, but for my part, this sounds horribly like the sort of denial people might fall back upon when they have no idea how else to meet the threat of violence but with more violence.
The invasion of Iraq was supposed to have been for many reasons, but paramount of them all was the notion that the invasion would provide protection and security by removing a perceived threat (WMD's)
Has that succeeded?
Are we safer now than we were before?
Or have we simply replaced a perceived threat with a real one whilst acting under the illusion of force that Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld have promoted.
AquillaQUOTE
The one fact in all of this remains that we are in a highly partisan political campaign season and everything is viewed through that prism. Does it surprise me that Wertz would call for Rumsfeld's resignation? No. Did he need to read this article to feel that way? No. Did this article change his attitude towards Rumsfeld? Not putting words in his mouth, but I doubt it. I don't think he liked Rumsfeld before and he doesn't like him now. So, nothing's really changed. This article is just another chance to bash the Bush administration "for cause", like Bush bashing really needs a cause.

Just like most other current event/political/war on terrorism threads raised lately in this forum. It always seems to end up with the same old, same old.
Not everything is viewed through that prism. Believe it or not there are somethings that are more important than our individual personal political affiliations, and just a couple of those are the law and what we stand for (regardless of who is in office) and the well being of our citizens and soldiers.
This article is not just 'another chance to bash Bush'. It is a serious look at how our political leadership is failing to tackle the threat which we face. Don't confuse other people's opinions with your own personal political agenda.
QUOTE
My point is that there are investigations underway into all of this. The military justice system is rooting out the offenders and taking legal action against them and following the trail wherever it leads. Congress is investigating and following the trail whereever it leads as well. I have faith in the system and I'm willing to allow it to work it's way forward.
And my point is to question why any one would have faith in a man under who's authority such investigations would arise?
And also to wonder, just how long will such investigations take? Will they take long enough for this whole matter to be swept under the rug whilst the people implicated continue to run things in the worst possible way? Whilst giving them plenty of time to re-allocate internal responsibilities in the knowledge that certain people (like Stephen Cambone) are moved to allow the machinary of 'neo con' policies to continue to operate?
What good will an investigation do if in the meantime Rumsfeld has been dumped by Bush after a possible election victory? Rumsfeld wil take the fall but the policy of using violence against violence which he stands for will still continue regardless.
Even now as the Bush administration talks of handing over authority, the 'neo con' agenda of controlling Iraq is being put into place.
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/0,,SB1...HaaiEm4,00.htmlhttp://sg.news.yahoo.com/040515/1/3kax0.htmlWith such geo political moves taking place and showing the opposite side of the 'neo con' coin to the Islamic world, how is any one supposed to accept the possible outcome of an investigation which may, or may not uncover the truth at some distant point in the future?
Rumsfeld has been implicated now. He should move to either prove these allegations false, or he should resign now.
QUOTE
I will remind you that Hersch didn't "break" this story at all. The Defense Department "broke" it way back in January.
Then why is the Defense Department strongly denying the claims made in the report?
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=...eld_7&printer=1