UPDATE: It's a yes. Here's Powell speaking to reporters after his appearance this morning on "Meet the Press," where the former Secretary of State and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Republican, declared his support for Barack Obama and chided John McCain for the negative tone of his campaign:
Original item follows:
My fellow NEWSWEEK blogger Howard Fineman says... well, maybe:
Is Gen. Colin Powell getting ready to
endorse Sen. Barack Obama on "Meet the Press" this Sunday? Two sources
close to Powell, speaking on the condition of anonymity, predict that
he will. On the record, a third, Ken Duberstein, a Washington lobbyist
and former White House chief of staff, didn't flatly deny it. "You can
say what you want," he told me, "but I didn't tell you that and neither
did Powell."
OK, true enough. If Powell does endorse
Obama, racial pride will have something to do with it, which is
understandable. Powell has been a trailblazer himself, and he admires
Obama's unflappability and skill in rising so quickly through the ranks
of American politics. While Powell is personally close to
McCain, and has been for many years, he seems to have taken a special
interest in making himself available, behind the scenes and from time
to time, to discuss foreign policy and defense issues with the novice
Illinois senator...
However,
if Powell does endorse, it will have less to do with American sociology
than world affairs. Powell simply has no use anymore--if he ever had
any--for the neo-con cowboys he thinks misled the country (and him)
into a mistaken and costly war in Iraq. Powell has been careful
in public not to criticize his colleagues in the Bush administration
nor bluntly call the war a mistake... An endorsement of Obama would be an indirect but
powerful way of expressing his resentments and regrets: refusing to
support a fellow Republican who has very Bush-like ideas about how to
make America more secure in a world of terror. "It's not so much
about race as it is about foreign policy," a friend of Powell's told
me. "He thinks Obama has a lot to learn, but that he has the capacity."
READ THE REST HERE.