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"Our out of control government is shredding every concept of what America is all about."

Secret Plan Outlines The Unthinkable

•  UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION  • THE BILL OF RIGHTS  • DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
• ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION  • THE SACRED 13th AMENDMENT  •  PATRIOTS FOR THE 2nd AMENDMENT •

Information Clearing House - News Index
The Constitution In Crisis
From The Archives: Bill Moyers, documents U.S. support of terrorist regimes and the brutality of Americas foreign policy.
(Video/Audio Presentation)
The Secret Government - Part I
The Secret Government - Part II

Bush Planned Iraq 'Regime Change' Before Becoming President
By Neil Mackay
September 15, 2002
©2002 SMG Sunday Newspapers Ltd.

The President's real goal in Iraq
By JAY BOOKMAN
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
September 29, 2002

Articles On This Page:

• From the Editor
• Bush Doctrine Makes Waves
• Bush to Arab World: Drop Dead
• U.S. Hurries; World Waits
• Reasons to be Fearful
• Corporate Moles
• What Bush Gang Wants
• Evidence Distorted For War
• Selective Prosecution
• Bush Attacks Greenpeace

  

• Court Jousters
• Undermining Environmental Law
• Insanity of Bush's war
• Pentagon knew: NO Iraq WMD
• Psychopharmacological Warfare
• The Blackout Bomb
• Bush's Death Squads
• Religion & Patriotism
• Comment: President Lincoln
• ** YOUR FEEDBACK **

  

• Veteran's Beware!
• Scrap The Bill Of Rights
• End Of American Citizenship
• Absolutely No Dissension
• New World Order Police
• Bring Back America
• Questioning The Patriot Act
• Fog of War
• Troops Unprepared
• Veteran's On the Roll

Visit the "THINK TANK".


Editor's Desk

Many people throughout the U.S., (and let's not forget those around the world who also watched our last elections), agree that the current presidency is the first in our history to seat a President ignoring the People's Voice, the Vote and without the due election process. Even though some would argue that he was elected in Florida and others are positive that the Bush Administration stole the White House.
Arguments have surfaced leaving us to wonder about how fixed our national elections really are and after this last fiasco it has become rather obvious that the voice of the American People falls on deft ears, dull eyes and brain-dead 'wanna-be' politicians. We've been had.
There are a several articles on this page which expose the mindset of the pretzel President and his transparent astigmatic group of mindless puppets who have been staging a take over of the People's Government for several decades. The deck has been stacked.
It is a real shame on our nation that We The People have been manipulated by the very government many, supposedly, elected to trust. We have not been left a lot to defend ourselves with against this type of corporate/industrial/police state form of government short of one extremely important document...The Constitution of the United States. This is our defense...and the only thing we need, but, the current administration is using every means possible to tear it apart.
When there are issues concerning each and every citizen nationwide and around the world of such magnitude then it is important for all of us, no matter our deportment, to speak out and be heard.
If you have viewed the link offered above, which is about the use of Depleted Uranium, then perhaps you may understand why we believe it vitally important for you to understand the hard facts about the Bush Administration and what it has been doing to America under the cloak of Homeland Security and the U.S. Patriot Act I & II. Viewing this link should make you aware that what is being done by America in Irag and other countries is no different that what we claim they are doing to us. Not quite. Former President Truman was responsible for giving the order to drop two atomic weapons on Japan, which by the way, killed thousands of innocent men, women and children. No other country in the world has used these types of weapons aside from the United States. Is it any wonder why the world hates us? Just remember this, it is not the American people the world hates...it is our government...and We the People have been demanding straigh-forward accountability from our government ever since WWII. We have received nothing but lies and run-arounds.
After viewing this link if you are not offended that such things are happening today in our so-called civilized world by so-called civilized nations then you should be ashamed, very ashamed and also have your head examined. It is your duty as an American, as a citizen of this planet to demand from our government and the entire Bush administration the call for total accountability. There must be a stop to this madness...no matter who is doing it. There is absolutely no justification. Any nation that activates it's military over political differences is no less a barbarian than those they claim they are opposed to.
The issues are very severe. America is in danger on many levels, but, terrorism on our nation should not be feared anymore than the gangs that plague or city streets and neighborhoods already.
What the American people need to wake up to is "the very administration that was not elected by the people" and is continually playing a deadly game with our industry, jobs, health, education, immigration, Our Constitution and Bill of Rights along with so much more.
There are several links herein which will take you through a journalistic tour that has been built from the beginning of the Bush Administration and presents the hard facts from numerous resources. This is the news the media is NOT reporting because the Bush Corporate Government does not want us to know how America has been sold out. This is not a joke folks! Check out some of the over-whelming references and articles presented on this page alone.
There is a major difference when a free democratic people criticize their elected government, which this one is not, and when they speak of our family members serving in the U.S. Armed Forces. A grave mistake is made when these two are viewed as one. Criticizing the government is our right and our duty as a free people; to put it down, if not throw it out, by force if necessary, as protected in OUR Constitution. To do these things does not mean one does not support our troops. As a matter of fact, it is just the opposite. I have not heard, nor read, any article or comment from anyone criticizing our troops short of saying that many veteran experts believe that many of them are not trained well enough for the task that the Bush Administration has forced them to do. Look folks, this is not America's war, it's the Bush Family war, the war of the Trilateral Commission, the War of the NWO.
It doesn't matter whether you're a Democrat, a Republican, Independent or other political idealist; a Native American, a Christian, a Buddhist, a Jew or an Atheist; what race you are, your gender or the level of your education...what matters is whether you are an American, a real free and independent citizen of the greatest nation on earth. It is beyond all these things. It is a human responsibility that you let your voices be heard and heard loud and proud. If you and I and the rest of the people in the country do nothing to stop this madness and cater to the white-wash of the upcoming elections then we can rest assured that within the next four years we will watch the final stages of the end of America...from within.


Bush doctrine makes waves overseas
International reaction to new policy of preemptive strikes
casts a suspicious eye on "imperialist" designs.
By: Anthony York
Associate Editor Salon News
salon.com


Sept. 24, 2002 | Last week, the Bush administration published a 33-page document outlining an official shift in U.S. foreign policy and military strategy. In the post-Cold War era, the United States would act as a global policeman, willing to take preemptive action against hostile states and terrorist groups that the United States deems a threat to global stability or American interests.

This new policy of "distinctly American internationalism" is the culmination of changes in American foreign policy since the end of the Cold War, accelerated by the Sept. 11 attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. And, the document makes clear, the Bush administration will tolerate no rivals to the U.S.'s position as the world's only superpower. "The president has no intention of allowing any foreign power to catch up with the huge lead the United States has opened since the fall of the Soviet Union more than a decade ago," the document states.

The global reaction to this new "Bush Doctrine" has been, to say the least, mixed. Some leaders charge that the Bush administration's doctrine of preemptive strikes amounts to a new level of American arrogance. Others dismiss it as a rhetorical device to wage what Bush has called America's "war on terrorism."

Salon has culled reactions from a handful of international editorial writers to the Bush Doctrine, as the administration continues to use its new policy as a justification for a possible future war with Iraq.

Le Monde Diplomatique, France
"We must face facts: A new imperial doctrine is taking shape under George Bush. Now is reminiscent of the late 19th century, when the U.S. began its colonial expansion into the Caribbean, Asia and the Pacific, the first steps to world power. Then the US was seized by great imperialist fervor. Journalists, businessmen, bankers and politicians vied to promote policies of world conquest ...

"U.S. historians have generally considered the late 19th century imperialist urge as an aberration in an otherwise smooth democratic trajectory. The U.S. had emerged from a war of independence to cast off British colonial domination, and had played its part in the Enlightenment project against absolutist continental European monarchies. Surely this experience inoculated it once and for all against the virus of imperialism?

"Yet a century later, as the U.S. empire engages in a new period of global expansion, Rome is once more a distant but essential mirror for American elites. In 1991 the U.S. found itself the only remaining great power. Now, with military mobilization on an exceptional scale after September 2001, the U.S. is openly affirming and parading its imperial power. For the first time since the 1890s, the naked display of force is backed by explicitly imperialist discourse ...

"Bush does not seem to be trying too hard to resist. He is reluctant to invest in nation building or commit the U.S. to humanitarian interventions. But he is quick to deploy U.S. armed forces all over the world to crush the enemies of civilization and forces of evil. His vocabulary, with its constant references to civilization, barbarians and pacification, betrays classical imperial thinking.

"There is no knowing quite what Bush learned at Yale and Harvard, but since 11 September he has become the unlikely Caesar of the new imperial camp in the U.S." -- Philip S. Golub


Irish Times, Republic of Ireland
"The Cold War threat came from states that pursued a strategy of deterrence. Now, however, the enemy is one who wishes to resort to weapons of mass destruction as a primary tool of attack. Should any such enemy ever succeed, the appalling carnage of September 11th last year could pale into insignificance.

"It is this perspective which is underpinning President Bush's policy of preemptive action. He refers to the 'unique responsibilities' of the United States. They are unique indeed: at the start of the 21st century, the U.S. is the only global superpower, a position that is unlikely to change in the foreseeable future. And that responsibility includes acting in concert with the rest of the civilized world.

"The U.S. says the case against Iraq is clear. The Americans, however, have yet to provide the evidence. There is near universal agreement that Saddam Hussein is a tyrant and evil ruler. Let the president state his case, with evidence, to the United Nations."
-- unsigned editorial


The Observer, United Kingdom
"This Pax Americana that is being proposed -- including its commitment to throw itself into the 'battle for the future of the Muslim world' -- is a curiously old-fashioned one. It is one that has been shared by empires from that of Rome to Britain and the Soviet Union, that says by virtue of its unique inherent values it can educate and save while dominating.

"It is not a new strand in American thinking. From Roosevelt to Kennedy and the New World Order, statesmen have struggled to locate America's sense of its pre-eminent power to effect global change for the good.

"The difficulty, as ever, is that it inevitably encompasses a very partial and contradictory world view. The Bush Doctrine will inevitably be coloured by the prejudices of those who have contributed to Republican foreign policy thinking.

"In this world view, the security interests of Israel and the U.S. are indivisible. Turkey is among the good guys. So is Britain, among a sea of vacillating Europeans. The bad guys are a roll call of troubled states: China, North Korea, Syria, Iran, Iraq.

"There are dozens of unpleasant regimes ... Is the U.S. going to overthrow every one of them?"

"It is here that the tensions are most likely to emerge. America may wish to be a power for good in the Muslim world, but it will try to do so from a position of strong uncritical support for Israel and the unpopular Saudi royal family, which will inevitably undermine that ambition and increase and not diminish Muslim suspicions about America's agenda.

"A bigger tension is likely to come from the Bush Doctrine's central tenet: That America, as the last man standing in the old superpower club, must be allowed to call the shots -- an ambition that is in conflict with the internationalism of the U.N. and treaty obligations and negotiations."
-- Peter Beaumont


The Globe and Mail, Canada
"After all, there are dozens of unpleasant regimes, and some of them have weapons of mass destruction. Is the United States ... going to overthrow every one of them? And what is to prevent other countries from claiming the right to pre-emptive attack? If Washington can overthrow Mr. Hussein because he might attack the United States one day, what is to stop, say, India from attacking Pakistan, or China from attacking Taiwan? As former Canadian ambassador Kimon Valaskakis put it on these pages the other day, 'unilateral pre-emptive war in the name of national interest opens up a Pandora's box much more dangerous than the problem it addresses.'

"That would certainly be true if Washington's new doctrine were as sweeping as the worriers say. Thankfully, it is not. No U.S. leader is claiming the right to overthrow every regime that Washington happens to dislike or that happens to dislike the United States. No matter how nasty they may be to their own people, no one is talking about unseating Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe or even Fidel Castro of Cuba. Why? Because they pose no threat to international peace. Equally, no one in Washington is talking about taking on China or India just because they possess nuclear weapons.

"What the Americans are talking about is something far more limited. Under the emerging Bush doctrine, the United States would reserve the right to take pre-emptive action against a hostile regime if it (a) backed, harbored or conspired with terrorists; (b) had shown clear aggressive intent; and (c) had acquired or was consistently trying to acquire weapons of mass murder.

"Very few regimes are guilty on all three counts. In fact, only one currently is. Iraq has (a) backed, harbored and conspired with terrorists for more than 20 years (Abu Nidal, one of the world's leading terrorists, recently met his end in Baghdad after living there for many years); (b) made war against two neighbors -- Iran in the 1980s and Kuwait in 1990; and (c) spent billions of dollars trying to acquire weapons of mass murder, succeeding in the case of chemical and biological weapons and coming close in the case of nuclear weapons.

"This pattern of behavior puts Iraq in a class of its own."
-- Marcus Gee


Asahi Shimbun, Japan
"It is increasingly clear that following last year's terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, rogue states, terrorists organizations and others involved in the development of weapons of mass destruction have replaced the socialist nations of the Cold War era as the United States' newly declared enemies.

"This has prompted George W. Bush's administration to state that while the United States will seek allies in the battle against terrorism, it will also not hesitate to act alone, when deemed necessary, to exercise its right to self-defense by acting pre-emptively. With this, Bush has underscored his willingness to resort to unilateral action or first strikes against Iraq or other members of the 'axis of evil.'

"The document also states the intent to maintain military strength capable of dissuading potential enemies with ambitions of building up arms on a par with the United States to abandon such aspirations. This is a signal of the Bush administration's determination for the United States to sustain overwhelmingly superior military might.

"The United States has emerged as the sole military superpower in the post-Cold War age, and there is no doubt the strength of the U.S. armed forces is integrally linked to global security. The sudden recent shift in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's (North Korea) stance also reflects the impact of U.S. pressure.

"Yet this new strategy also reveals the desire of the Bush administration to make up the rules for what lies ahead. If allowed to develop in this context, this will be an inevitable source of concern and suspicion." -- unsigned editorial

Die Tageszeitung, Germany
(Translation by Ewald Christians)
"It is becoming more obvious with every statement issued by Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld: The U.S. administration is determined to go to war with Iraq and there is little chance to change their minds. Approval by Congress -- well before the upcoming November elections -- is assured. Every move that signifies Iraq's increased willingness to cooperate, the U.S. denounces as a mere attempt to conceal Iraq's true motives. Bush will attack, because if he hesitates now, or does not win a war by 2004, he need not bother seeking re-election.

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"In November 2001, when the U.S. declared the 'axis of evil' and accused all countries seeking weapons of mass destruction of harboring terrorists, there should have been vocal protests from Europe's leaders. Their failure to protest led Bush to assume his allies were with him all the way. In the spring of 2002 Bush advisors followed up with more wholesale threats, and still there was no response. There could be no better way to make the U.S. feel very comfortable about a joint strike against Iraq.

"It seems too late to counteract now. It would be helpful, however, if Europe took Washington's war cries more seriously and spoke out against them right from the start. It's no guarantee to prevent U.S. war plans, but certainly worth a try."
-- Eric Chauvistre


World Dispatch!!
Reasons to be Fearful....

The real risk of military action in Iraq
Escalating and spreading
Is just one of a number of important
Considerations that must be weighed
Says Simon Tisdall
Email: simon.tisdall@guardian.co.uk
Thursday September 12, 2002


By taking his concerns about Iraq to the UN general assembly, the US president, George Bush, has indicated that he is willing, in theory, to work towards a multilateral, diplomatic resolution of the crisis. On the other hand, the US government has left little room for doubt that it intends to provoke a confrontation with Saddam Hussein over his efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction - with or without UN backing.

Under pressure from allies such as Britain and France, Bush is effectively giving the UN a last chance to enforce its own resolutions. If the US has its way, Iraq will be told to comply within a very limited timeframe.

But the US does not expect the UN to succeed now any more than it has in the past four years, since inspectors were withdrawn. The only remaining option will then be military action - and Bush is clearly prepared to use it.

Bush sets his Iraqi objectives in the context of his global "war on terror" and most Americans seem to agree, although polls indicate a majority would prefer allied support for military action.

It also seems likely that if the US does attack Iraq again in order to destroy its WMD capabilities, it will not stop short this time of overthrowing Saddam. The Iraqi leader was left in power at the end of the Gulf war in 1991 and Washington has regretted it ever since.

Thus any war will not be concluded and deemed "won" until "regime change" is achieved in Baghdad. This predicates a far more serious and larger-scale struggle than the battle to liberate Kuwait.

This time, it will be a war to the death. This time, Saddam will have nowhere to run. This time, unlike 1991, the Iraqi dictator may try to use his existing chemical and biological weapons, against US forces or Israel, since he may have nothing left to lose. This time, there is a significant risk that the conflict could escalate and spread.

That is one reason why Bush's policy is under such critical scrutiny. But as the debate at the UN and elsewhere unfolds, there are several other reasons worthy of careful consideration and that should be held constantly in mind.

·A war with Iraq will certainly not help ameliorate the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and could well exacerbate it.

·A war could have a devastating impact on a global economic situation that is already less than rosy. In particular it could lead to a shutdown in Middle East oil supplies to the west that would impact as much on Europe as the US.

·A war with Iraq cannot be justified in terms of September 11 and al-Qaida. There is no evidence of Iraqi involvement with either. On the contrary, however, a war would disrupt the hunt for al-Qaida and actually make its success much harder to achieve.

·A war undertaken without the backing of most European nations and other key allies could be diplomatically disastrous on a whole range of fronts. It could for example spell the end of Nato as an effective alliance.

·Nobody knows what would follow a war of conquest in Iraq, whether the country would hold together or split into several disparate parts, or who or what would replace the current regime. Civil war is a strong possibility. Intervention by neighbours such as Iran and Turkey cannot be ruled out.

·A long process of nation-building is in prospect in post-Saddam Iraq. Is the US ready to commit itself to this task? If not the US, then who? It will be difficult for Washington to ask the UN to take over if its wishes have previously been ignored.

·The US says the UN's credibility is at stake if Iraqi defiance continues. But what price UN credibility if the US ultimately bypasses the security council, ignores the general assembly and goes ahead regardless?

·In terms of international law, an attack on Iraq would be illegal unless the US could convincingly show that it acted in self-defence or unless a new UN resolution were passed authorising specific action. Despite what US officials say, there is no authority for the overthrow of the Iraqi government contained in existing UN resolutions.

Legally, and morally, an attack that lacked such authority by one sovereign state against another would set an alarming, potentially disastrous precedent. It would in fact inevitably be compared to another notorious act of unprovoked aggression - the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait that set in train all the problems described above.

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Bush Administration is
Undermining Environmental Law

WNOL Research Dept.


On issues large and small, the Bush administration has spent the better part of two years rolling back Bill Clinton's environmental legacy. It has abandoned the Kyoto accord on global warming, weakened protections for wetlands and eased mining laws. Now it appears to be aiming at even bigger game — the National Environmental Policy Act, regarded as the Magna Carta of environmental protection and perhaps the most important of all the environmental statutes signed into law by Richard Nixon three decades ago.

The act, NEPA for short, is no stranger to controversy. Bureaucrats blame it for gridlock, commercial interests for blocking progress. Environmentalists, of course, love it, as well they should.

The act is essentially a sunshine law. It requires all federal agencies to make a detailed assessment of the consequences of any project likely to have a significant impact on the environment, and make that assessment available for comment from the public and other federal agencies. The law does not mandate particular outcomes. Its purpose is to keep federal agencies from doing destructive things — clear-cutting forests, straightening rivers, destroying wildlife in the name of development — under cover of darkness. And over the years it has done a world of good.

The Bush administration has been seeking to ignore or limit the reach of this statute in three main areas. The clearest example is forest policy. Mr. Bush's "Healthy Forests" initiative, now the subject of intense debate in Congress, would ease NEPA requirements for timber projects that the federal government deems necessary to prevent fires. Conservationists believe that many such projects are in fact camouflage for commercial logging. They are worried, and rightly so, that suspending NEPA could lead to widespread environmental degradation for no other purpose than to enrich the timber companies.

Energy policy has been equally troublesome. Though President Bush has never hidden his desire to open up vast expanses of the public lands to oil and gas drilling, the White House has always insisted that it had no intention of end-running NEPA. But in fact it has. In recent months, at least two projects — a 77,000-well methane project in Wyoming and Montana, and a seismic testing project near Arches National Park in Utah — have been challenged (and may ultimately be significantly revised) because the administration failed to do the necessary environmental reviews.

The administration has also tried to limit the law's reach offshore. In a recent court case, involving a Navy plan to test sonar devices off the Pacific Coast, the Justice Department argued that the Navy was under no obligation to assess potential harm to marine life. The Natural Resources Defense Council sued, arguing that not only did the law apply but that suspending it in this case would open the door to a range of unregulated and potentially destructive activities, including ocean dumping and the overfishing of depleted species.

The judge sided with the environmentalists, who, though pleased with the ruling, regard it as only a temporary respite in the NEPA wars. Even now, a White House task force is working on ways to "enhance" the act by streamlining it. That sounds innocent enough, but based on the administration's behavior so far, some fear that the real intent is not to streamline the process but to circumvent it, perhaps by executive order. Congress, which wrote this law 33 years ago, must be alert to any effort to undermine it.

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THE IRREFUTABLE AND UNDENIABLE
EVIDENCE OF INSANITY IN BUSH'S WAR

by Polar Levine for PCM
February 7, 2003

As Nixon apologist and Bush cheerleader, William Safire, said in his NY Times column last week after Colin Powell’s performance at the UN, the evidence against Saddam Hussein is “irrefutable and undeniable.” Well, maybe. Apparently, the UK’s intelligence study he quoted was cribbed, typos and all, from a student paper written over ten years ago based on documents smuggled out of Iraq. But, what the hell -- for the sake of argument I’m prepared to believe the worst about Saddam Hussein. Are George W. Bush and his Merry Men as bad as the people who rule the Middle Eastern countries, including Israel? No way. I don't buy into the tired lefty construct that this is all our fault, we got what we deserve and we're responsible for the mayhem around the world. It's true that we take full advantage of global mayhem's residual rewards, particularly when we create the mayhem. And true -- we just shrug and say, "It's-a-the-biz-i-nizz" when it suits our interests. But I basically believe we're the good guys in a world where, all our favorite dieties notwithstanding, there is no real moral compass to be found when dealing with issues of eating, fornicating and wealth accumulation. I would sleep a lot better if we were better guys. But I'll defend this country and it's mostly toxic culture to the very end compared to the competition.

The primary question that Bush’s propaganda machine has effectively erased from the public forum is this: assuming Saddam is hiding weapons, has Al Qaeda ties and is dangerous -- does that unquestionably validate an unprovoked invasion with potentially cataclysmic global results? Is anybody, hawk or dove, surprised that Saddam lies and is sociopathic? Sponsoring evil sociopaths (Saddam included) has been the bedrock of our foreign policy for the past century and much of this policy was carried out by the same people designing this war with Iraq. Some of these men running our government who are too shocked for words over Saddam’s treatment of his own people and his many attacks on his neighbors (a total of two) -- these same men had no problem sponsoring El Salvador’s death squads even when there was “irrefutable and undeniable” evidence that the government of El Salvador, our client, was responsible for raping and murdering five American nuns. As I write that last sentence I’m woozy from the astounding moral and intellectual disconnect. These are the folks we elected as our leaders, ladies & gentlemen. How many of their kids will be in uniform in the streets of Baghdad?

Osama Bin Laden hits us with the weapons and training our leaders gave him. Saddam grows chemical and biological weapons with the seeds we gave him. The Iranian revolutionaries that took our people hostage, were the byproduct of the murderous dictator we paid to keep Iran safe for democracy. And on and on. The America I love would still be strong and powerful today without that particular savage element of our state culture.

The people of the muslim world have a lethal rage against their own governments that have removed any possibility of a future for them and their children. And they hate us for our involvement in the perpetuation of poverty and terror inflicted on them. It's easier to hate Americans than to hate a tyrant who looks and worships like themselves (or claim to). To call them simply crazy fanatics is to insult the integrity of the human spirit in response to decades of horror and suffocation. I truly hate the people who would incinerate my child for the sake of carousing with the seventy virgins they believe await them in heaven. If seventy hot babes in the sky were all I had to look forward to in my life, I'm not sure how generous I'd be toward my perceived tormentors. If we invade Iraq, Al Qaeda will recruit millions of these lost men and boys. It's undeniable.

With inspections added to current intelligence, we could find a dozen or more countries equally deserving immediate invasion based on serious threats to our security. Pakistan, North Korea, Indonesia, Sudan, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia are as culpable as Iraq. But, thankfully, we're not planning invasions on them as well. Since the historic success and enlightened vision of the Marshall Plan, there is nothing to suggest that our country has had any inclination or talent for creating functional democracies overseas. Does anybody really believe we’re going to succeed in turning Iraq into something resembling democracy in a real sense? Iraq is a European dice-and-spliced monster with a Kurdish nation, a Sunni muslim nation and a Shiite muslim nation pacing alongside each other greasing up for the three-way Ultimate Smackdown when Saddam is gone. Bush's deal-making with Turkey and Iran will preclude post-war Kurdish independence. How will the Kurds or the large population of Sunnis accept a majority Shiite president peacefully? How would our own government accept a huge Shiite state next door to Iran? Nobody in Iraq or that region has any experience of a democratic, peaceful means of dealing with political defeat or compromise. It's not learned from a textbook, particularly theological sources, the only texts widely accepted as valid. No country we’re trying to court in that region for this sad comedy will tolerate a democracy in it’s midst. There’s no way the Bush administration has the stomach, know-how or creativity to do anymore than install another dictator who will peel off fingernails as a peace-keeping device while we fiddle with the faucet on the oil machine.

While our government is preparing for war (a simultaneous war with North Korea is also contemplated) it's letting Afghanistan fall apart and the Administration’s fear of body bags on page one has allowed Bin Laden, Mullah Omar and countless Taliban and Qaeda members to escape. Is this crew capable of conducting the insane enterprise they're selling us? Terrorists made a horrifying mess in my neighborhood. I’m real mad. But I’m not going to accept the random craziness of this obsession with Iraq.

What is Bush’s passion for war with Iraq really about? Before this man knew the name of the president of Pakistan, he was pressing for this war. Before 9/11 George W. Bush was intent on an unprovoked invasion of Iraq. Why? Why is the mainstream press covering this story without the skepticism and passion it used to examine Clinton’s sexual cover-ups? What’s irrefutable and undeniable is that the Administration wants this war for reasons beyond all the “evidence.” When will our news media begin inspections on those agendas of mass destruction hidden away in the oval office?

Polar Levine
Editor, PCM
"AS THE MEDIA WATCH THE WORLD,
WE WATCH THE MEDIA."

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Corporate Moles
By Molly Ivins

Bush's appointees have walked straight out of the boardrooms of big business America.

AUSTIN, Texas -- More bizarre appointments by the Bush administration. This problem is reaching tidal wave proportions. It's not so much a matter of setting the fox to guard the chicken coop as it is letting the raccoons loose in the henhouse.

Those of you who know how government works are fully aware of the difference agency heads and other top officials can make in the workings of a bureaucracy. With a president who is notoriously uninterested in details, those in charge of the details often actually set the policy. As we have seen in Texas, even when George W. has what might be a good idea, like charter schools, sloppy execution can result in disaster.

"Captive agencies" are a constant problem in government. They are agencies supposedly in charge of regulating an industry or group, which then acquires undue influence over or even control of the agency. In Texas, the most spectacular example is the state's equivalent of an environmental protection agency, to which then-Gov. Bush appointed three commissioners who literally represent major groups of polluters. Texas is, of course, Number One in toxic pollution. The pattern continues in Washington.

-- Bush has nominated B. John Williams, a corporate tax attorney, as chief counsel to the Internal Revenue Service. According to The Wall Street Journal, Williams won a case that could jeopardize the government's attempts to crack down on corporate tax havens. The decision allows two companies to post the same loss when one sells a money-losing unit to the other. Sure, that's fair, just the way you get to double your deductions, right? If the decision stands, it is expected to cost the IRS $10 billion in annual revenue.

-- In another case, also reported in the Journal, B. John Williams (beware the man who parts his initials on the wrong side) tried to justify disputed tax credits taken by his client, Shell Oil Co. He did so by hiring a private investigator, who provided false information to destroy the credibility of the government's expert witnesses. One witness later sued for defamation, a case that was settled out of court, the settlement paid for by Shell.

-- The curious case of John Graham, the "regulatory czar," who can block any new regulation from his position inside the Office of Management and Budget, has attracted some attention because of Graham's unusual public record. While serving on an EPA subcommittee on dioxin, Graham said reducing dioxin levels too far might "do more harm than good." He argued that dioxin might prevent cancer in some cases, an argument so outlandish it produced more amusement than outrage. He also claims the problem of pesticides on foods is "trivial," that the public has "paranoia" about toxic chemicals (it is to be hoped), that safe housing codes kill people and all manner of other dandy theories.

-- Graham was director of the Center for Risk Analysis at Harvard, which tries to apply cost-benefit exams to health, safety and environmental protection. This curious idea, of assigning a dollar value to human life, illness and harm to eco-systems and then seeing if that outweighs the cost of regulation, is like some chilling mad-scientist fantasy. You say it will only cost three lives per million dollars spent and so it's not worth it? Fine, then let one of them be your wife and the others your son and daughter.

-- J. Steven Griles, new deputy secretary at the Interior Department, was a top lobbyist for the oil, gas and coal industries. The new solicitor, William Myers III, was top guy at the National Cattlemen's Beef Association and represented the grazing interests in lawsuits against the policies he will now be enforcing. The new Number Two at the EPA was a lobbyist for Monsanto. And as the new chairman of the Council on Environmental Equality, Bush wants the lawyer who represented General Electric in its fight with the EPA over toxic waste sites.

-- A sentimental favorite of mine is Jon Huntsman Jr., the new deputy trade representative, who is hot to trot on a new round of trade liberalization under the World Trade Organization. Huntsman resigned from the privately-owned Huntsman Corporation, a familiar name in Bush's hometown. Huntsman is famous in Midland-Odessa for its "upsets," burn-offs of benzene, butadiene and other carcinogens. Huntsman gets fines even under Texas' toothless standards, and has already paid millions to the plant's neighbors over "upsets." A Huntsman spokesman was memorably quoted in Vanity Fair magazine: "We fear that Huntsman is being held up as the poster child for Bush's sh**ty environmental record here in Texas." Junior was a Commerce Department official under Bush the Elder.

Some of these appointments are merely ironic, if you have a strong stomach. Others literally involve matters of life and death. As Arthur Miller once wrote, "Attention must be paid."

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COURT JOUSTERS
A Small Cartel of Conservative Lawyers
Rewrites the American Rule
By James Ridgeway
June 19 - 25, 2002

Behind the Bush Administration's attack on civil rights in the name of war lurks the network of attorneys crafting laws for a new America. Their hodgepodge of rules and statutes either now or soon will remake the nation, providing local police with sweeping federal authority, pushing the military and CIA directly into everyday domestic politics, and sanctioning indefinite detention without a charge or even a court hearing. Immigration policy already has disintegrated into the random search and arrest of anyone with dark skin. College students are to be singled out on the basis of ethnic background and required to carry special identity papers. In the rather near future, all citizens will be registered in a national database that includes criminal records, welfare payments, delinquent loans, credit card debt, and so on. Committees of local vigilantes are on the way to being sanctioned as legitimate militias assigned to root out terrorists, just as the Ku Klux Klan was after the Civil War.

These are not distant ideas out of George Orwell, but real laws and practices about to be put in place.

The underpinnings of this new America rest in the hands of a fairly small group of conservative lawyers in Washington. There is nothing sinister about them, per se, but they frame the arguments and devise the legal mechanisms that, for example, allow the president to make war against Iraq without any meaningful consent from Congress. These intense, smart ideologues hail from the right-wing revolutionary movement, which believes it's past time to take America back from the crummy, weak-kneed liberal elites. Their moment has finally arrived.

Among the attorneys in this Bush brain trust are three key players:

Viet Dinh, an assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Policy, is without question the leading figure in laying the legal fretwork for the war. Dinh graduated from Harvard Law, clerked for U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judge Laurence H. Silberman and Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, and now teaches at Georgetown University. He was associate special counsel to the U.S. Senate Whitewater Committee, which fought unsuccessfully to bring down the Clintons. Born in Vietnam in 1968, Dinh was soon separated from his father, who was sent to a post-war retraining camp. His mother took the children and escaped on a crowded raft, traveling 12 days to Malaysia, where she purposefully sank the boat and made her way to freedom.

Despite having entered the U.S. as a refugee at the age of 10, Dinh has emerged as a hard-liner on the administration's 9-11 dragnet. What he says counts. Here he is in Naples, Florida, at a mid-January American Bar Association conference, setting the line on detainees. "We are reticent to provide a road map to Al Qaeda as to the progress and direction of our investigative activity," Dinh said. "We don't want to taint people as being of interest to the investigation simply because of our attention."

He added, "We will let them go if there is not enough of a predicate to hold them. But we will follow them closely, and if they so much as spit on the sidewalk, we'll arrest them. The message is that if you are a suspected terrorist you better be squeaky-clean. . . . If we can, we will keep you in jail." In the wake of September 11, some 2400 Muslim men currently sit behind bars, many on minor or no charges. The government waits for the guilty to break down and talk. For the innocent, it's their tough luck.

How did officials pick their suspects? "By the criteria Al Qaeda itself uses," he said. "Eighteen- to 35-year-old males who entered the country after the start of 2000 using passports from countries where Al Qaeda has a strong presence."

As for liberal complaints about discrimination, Dinh was blunt: "The U.S. does use racial profiling—not for identification, but for investigation."

The second most important figure is Timothy E. Flanigan, deputy White House counsel and deputy assistant to the president. Chief counsel Al Gonzales may be a Bush favorite for the Supreme Court, but Flanigan is the designated hitter. Since he's tight with GOP House Majority Leader Dick Armey, Flanigan will be the one the administration depends on to make the risky Homeland Security department a reality. Through Armey, he'll look to cut enough pork-barrel deals to retain the support of libertarian-minded members concerned about civil rights and thus keep the tiny Republican majority intact.

Flanigan's conservative credentials are impeccable. After graduating from Brigham Young and the University of Virginia Law School, he served as an assistant AG in the Office of Legal Counsel under Bush the elder. Hours after the voting stopped in Florida two years ago, Flanigan hit the ground, organizing the legal attack for Bush. He worked in tandem with now solicitor general Ted Olson arguing Bush v. Gore in Supreme Court.

Flanigan is one of those tireless grunts who made up the Reagan right. It was Flanigan who scoured the Clinton passport files for dirt. He backed Ken Starr, calling him "moderate." The father of 14 children, he opposes abortion. Like so many other Bush legal minds, he's a member of the Federalist Society, which gave him over $700,000 to write a biography of Chief Justice Warren Burger. According to press reports, Flanigan wants the return of the imperial president, arguing in one memo that the commander in chief doesn't have to enforce laws he doesn't like.

Third man on the list is a real backroom player: Jim Haynes, 43, Pentagon general counsel and Defense Secretary Rumsfeld's chief legal adviser. Haynes has served as a vice president of General Dynamics and was the army's general counsel under the original Bush. Plainspoken like Rummy and no-nonsense, he's especially important because he worked in the Pentagon during the Gulf War and knows how to adapt to fast-changing situations on Washington's political front. And he's had experience in Central Asia, developing small businesses as part of a relief project in oil-rich Kazakhstan.

Haynes drafted the outline for the Bush administration's military tribunals, which will try suspected terrorists. They require that only the presiding officer be from the judge advocate, with the other jurists being "competent and educated people." In describing the commission, Haynes said, "Well, there are some similarities to Nuremberg and there are some dissimilarities to Nuremberg. These procedures are, frankly, much more detailed, and in many respects are more generous than what was done at Nuremberg."

Haynes knows his place. "My agenda is driven by the secretary of defense," the low-key Harvard grad has said. "He is a very energetic man, and I just try to keep up with him. Hopefully I'm a little ahead of him from time to time."

These three lawyers are at the vanguard of the legal attack, but they are scarcely by themselves. Rather, they're part of a loose, extensive team of conservative lawyers who have collected here over the years. Some have clerked for justices Scalia and Thomas. Some learn about liberals by working in their midst as "counter clerks."

They mostly know each other, sometimes from Harvard Law. Several of them, like deputy AG John C. Yoo, also share the experience of having clerked for conservative D.C. Appeals Court judge Silberman. Just about everybody seems to have some attachment to the Federalist Society and, when it comes to policy matters, the Heritage Foundation, whose links to the administration and conservative lawmakers are preeminent.

The Federalist Society is often pictured in the liberal media as some sort of darkly sinister cesspool of conservative thought. Conservatives more often view it as their own ACLU. "It's certainly not some kind of a pipeline into the hearts and minds of decision makers," says David Rivkin, a D.C. attorney in private practice whose work appears on the Federalist Web site.

Of all the Federalist members, perhaps the best known is Solicitor General Olson. An assistant attorney general under Reagan, Olson has popped up at just about every event in D.C. since then, defending convicted spy Jonathan Pollard, representing Starr, advising Paula Jones and Monica Lewinsky, and supposedly taking part in the infamous Arkansas Project, which tried to link Clinton to mob dope runs from Central America into Mena, Arkansas. Olson has denied any connection. He is perhaps most famous for this statement: "There are lots of different situations when the government has legitimate reasons to give out false information."

Ruth Wedgwood, a Yale law professor, currently serves as a Bush flack on legal matters, appearing here and there, especially on Jim Lehrer's terribly correct NewsHour. Civil rights? No problem, says Wedgwood, as in this smart analysis of the situation after Chicago thug Jose Padilla was arrested: "So your dilemma is, do you want to let folks go when you have good intelligence that they are involved in such things as terrible as a dirty bomb that would really destroy city blocks and thousands of people's health, or do you want to simply . . . treat it in a criminal-justice paradigm alone? You have to make a choice, really, between evils here, I think."

"Civil liberties aren't in any grave danger. We all need to relax about this." —jurist Robert Bork, Voice interview, June 14, 2002

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From: COUNTERPUNCH
What the Bush Gang
Really Wants

The Roots of the Iraq War
by WILLIAM BLUM
February 20, 2003

Which is the more remarkable -- that the United States can openly announce to the world its determination to invade a sovereign nation and overthrow its government in the absence of any attack or threat of attack from the intended target? Or that for an entire year the world has been striving to figure out what the superpower's real intentions are?

There are of course those who accept at face value Washington's stated motivations of "liberating" the people of Iraq from a dictatorship and bestowing upon them a full measure of democracy, freedom and other eternal joys fit for American schoolbooks. In light of a century of well-documented US foreign policy which reveals a virtually complete absence of such motivations, along with repeated opposite consequences, we can dispense with this attempt by Washington to win hearts and mindless.

Presented here are some reflections about several of the causes that make the hearts of the imperial mafia beat faster in regard to Iraq, which may be helpful in arguing the anti-war point of view:

Expansion of the American Empire: adding more military bases and communications listening stations to the Pentagon's portfolio, setting up a command post from which to better monitor, control and intimidate the rest of the Middle East.

Idealism: remaking the world in what the true believers see as America's image, with free enterprise and Judeo-Christianity as core elements; here is Michael Ledeen, former Reagan official, now at the American Enterprise Institute (one of the leading drum-beaters for attacking Iraq): "If we just let our own vision of the world go forth, and we embrace it entirely, and we don't try to be clever and piece together clever diplomatic solutions to this thing, but just wage a total war against these tyrants, I think we will do very well, and our children will sing great songs about us years from now."

Oil: the sine qua non of Middle East policy, yesterday, today and tomorrow; to be in full control of Iraq's vast reserves, with Saudi oil and Iranian oil waiting defenselessly next door; OPEC will be stripped of its independence from Washington and will no longer think about replacing the dollar with the Euro as its official currency; oil-dependent Europe may think twice next time about being so uppity.

Globalization: Once relative security over the land, people and institutions has been established, the transnational corporations will march into Iraq ready to privatize everything at fire-sale prices, followed closely by the IMF, World Bank, World Trade Organization and the rest of the international financial extortionists.

Arms industry: As with each of America's endless wars, military manufacturers will rake in their exorbitant profits, then deliver their generous political contributions, inspiring Washington leaders to yet further warfare, each war also being the opportunity to test new weapons.

Israel: The men driving Bush to war include long-time militant supporters of Israel, such as Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, and Douglas Feith, who, along with the rest of the powerful Israeli lobby, have advocated smashing Iraq for years. Israel has been playing a key role in the American military buildup to the war. Besides getting rid of its arch enemy, Israel could use the opportunity to carry out its final solution to the Palestinian question -- transferring them to Jordan, (liberated) Iraq, and anywhere else that expanded US hegemony in the Middle East will allow. Iraq's abundant water could be diverted to relieve a parched Israel.

William Blum is the author of Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, Rogue State: a guide to the World's Only Super Power. and West-Bloc Dissident: a Cold War Political Memoir. He can be reached at: BBlum6@aol.com

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CIA's 'Worldwide Attack Matrix'
Of Specific Targets
J'Accuse - Bush's Death Squads

By: Wayne Madsen
NewsMakingNews.com
1-31-2002

Today, The Washington Post ran the fifth segment in its series on what transpired within the Bush Cabinet in the aftermath of September 11. Of particular interest is what CIA Director George Tenent brought to the table at Camp David last September 15. According to the article by Bob Woodward and Dan Balz, when Tenent produced a Top Secret "Worldwide Attack Matrix" that specified targets in 80 countries around the world, he sought unprecedented authority to simply assassinate foreign terrorists directly or though allied intelligence services. The CIA even prepared a "Memorandum of Notification" which would allow the agency to have virtual carte blanche to conduct political assasinations abroad.

This Memorandum trumped previous mechanisms by which the President would authorize intelligence actions (but not assassinations) through individual Presidential Findings. The fail safe mechanisms established under the administrations of Presidents Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush I, and Clinton were simply erased at the urging of Tenent. In light of these revelations, what was authorized by the President may have led to the assassinations of a number of human rights and ethnic leaders not connected in any way with Al Qaeda but did represent bothersome roadblocks to a number of U.S. military and corporate interests.

It now seems likely, given the unprecedented "license to kill" President Bush granted to the CIA, there was U.S. complicity in the murders of the following individuals. Human rights commissions and war crime tribunals in Belgium and France should take a close look at these likely criminal misadventures:

1. Theys Eluay. Today, the Indonesian army chief, General Endriartono Sutarto, confirmed in Jakarta that West Papuan independence leader Theys Eluay was assassinated by Indonesian Army units after he was kidnapped last November 11. The assassins were members of KOPASSUS, a special operations unit trained by U.S. Special Forces and CIA personnel and was involved in massacres in East Timor during the Indonesian occupation of that country. In 1969, West Papua was formally handed over to Indonesia by the United Nations after a referendum, now widely recognized as rigged, determined that the non-Indonesian population wanted to be Indonesian. Eluay was a thorn in the side of Freeport McMoran, a Louisiana-based mining company that has pillaged West Papua's natural resources and has been accused by local activists of propping up local Indonesian army and KOPASSUS officers with bribes and favors. Henry Kissinger serves as a Director Emeritus on the board of directors of Freeport and former Louisiana Senator J. Bennett Johnston, recently identified as a lobbyist for Enron, serves as a full member of the board.

2. Abdullah Syafii. On January 22, 2002, Indonesian army troops assassinated the military commander of the Free Aceh Movement, Abdullah Syafii. The Free Aceh Movement demands independence for Aceh, a region in northwest Sumatra, and is a member of the non-violent Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), an international organization headquartered in the Netherlands. It has also been at loggerheads with ExxonMobil, which has extensive drilling and refining operations in the territory. Aceh's Governor Abdullah Puteh, who is claimed by local activists to be on the payroll of ExxonMobil, had written a letter to Syafii inviting him to attend peace talks with the government. Syafii's lieutenants claim that the letter contained a small microchip that permitted Indonesian KOPASSUS troops to track him down and ambush him. The operation has all the earmarks of the CIA, which can rely on National Security Agency (NSA) satellites to track such microchip transponders.

3. Elie Hobeika. Elie Hobeika was the head of the Lebanese Forces militia, a right-wing Christian army that was allied with Israel during its 1982 occupation of Beirut. Although Hobeika was in charge of the Christian forces that massacred hundreds of Palestinian men, women, and children at the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps that year, he had irrefutable evidence that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon had authorized the mass murder in his role as Israeli Defense Minister. An official Israeli commission of inquiry found Sharon indirectly responsible for the massacres. Hobeika was going to testify against Sharon at an upcoming Belgian war crimes tribunal which has already indicted Sharon for the war crimes. It was that testimony that resulted in Hobeika being silenced by a Mossad car bomb that exploded near his SUV near Beirut. The bomb killed Hobeika and his bodyguards. The CIA, now closely allied with Mossad, is said to have given its approval for the action.

4. Chief Bola Ige. On December 23, 2001, Chief Bola Ige, the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Nigeria, was assassinated in the bedroom of his home in Ibadan by unknown gunmen. Ige was a leader of the Yorubas, a largely Christian ethnic group that has championed the cause of southern Nigerian Christian tribes like the Igbo, Ogoni, and Yoruba that maintain grievances against exploitative Western oil companies that have spoiled their lands with pollution and pocketed most of the oil revenues for themselves and corrupt Nigerian politicians. Ige was the presidential candidate of the pan-Yoruba Alliance for Democracy but lost to the current President Olusegum Obasanjo, a former general who is thought by many Nigerians to be in the hip pocket of western oil companies, including Chevron and ExxonMobil. A lucrative CIA and Pentagon front operation, the private military contractor MPRI, has been training special units of the Nigerian armed forces. These forces have been active in putting down anti-oil industry protests by Igbo, Ogoni, and Yoruba tribal peoples along the Nigerian coast. Michael J. Boskin, the Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Bush I is a member of the Exxon Mobil board, while current National Security Adviser Condolleezza Rice served on the board of Chevron. Currently serving on Chevron's Board is Bush I trade representative Carla Hills and former Louisiana Senator Johnston, who also serves on the board of Freeport McMoran.

In all likelihood all of these assassinations were likely known to the CIA and allowed to take place unhindered. The killings all directly benefitted the interests of the US military-industrial complex that President Eisenhower so poignantly warned us about some 40 years ago.

****

I more or less predicted the Indonesian murders a few months ago (just after Tenent received authorization to conduct assassinations of "terrorists") during an interview with Radio Singapore International. The transcript of that broadcast follows:

CIA assassination missions - a look into the implications of this US Foreign policy.

Source: Augustine Anthuvan, Newsline, Radio Singapore International Broadcast date: 30 October 2001

Wayne Madsen, a former Intelligence Officer at the National Security Agency in Washington with this comment.

When Senator Frank Church had a committee in the Senate that found out that the CIA was conducting assassination missions against foreign leaders and they passed very stringent laws against the CIA to prevent any abuses. And now what we're hearing is that the late Senator Church went too far. Well Senator Church was responding to some very severe abuses of authority by the CIA. And now we're hearing basically history is being changed on us here and we're hearing that Senator Church went too far in what he did.

And I think its very important now to understand that these things are all in context and what people like Senator Frank Church did in the 1970s really still applies today."

If CIA assassination missions are taken beyond the present operations in Afghanistan to other countries where terrorists are known to be operating, what sort of repercussions will this present for country to country relations? A concern I posed to Wayne Madsen.

"Especially in countries in South East Asia, we have a President who is very much in it with the US multi-national companies. What if they decide that West Papua independence movement in Irian Jaya - West Papua - could be a terrorist organization. And they could decide well we're going to target their leadership for assassination because they happen to be against the interests of Freeport McMoran - one of the biggest mining companies in West Papua. Or what if they decide that the Aceh movement in Northern Sumatra happens to be ÖÖ. to the interests of Exxon Mobil corporation, and they decide to target their leadership for assassination. I think this is the problem with this type of wide sweeping authorization to assassinate foreign leaders. We may find ourselves assassinating people because they just so happen to be against US interests."

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There Will Absolutely
Be No Dissension

by Stanley I. Kutler
Published: Tuesday - March 18, 2003
by the Chicago Tribune

As we march to war, the Bush administration's interest is to discredit, even foreclose, dissent.

Passivity and a sense of powerlessness are pervasive everywhere. Tabloids and cable channels refer to the "treason" of celebrities who oppose President Bush. Our political leaders march in lockstep with the president. The so-called "opposition" hedges its bets, "patriotically" supporting Bush's actions, but ever hopeful he will stumble on the economy and give them the opportunity of 1992 all over again.

The freedom and diversity we so cherish for others is strikingly lacking in our public discourse. We must not forget our traditions of challenge and dissent. For openers, we can invoke the injunctions of Theodore Roosevelt, the most red-blooded and manly of our presidents--if that is to be the litmus test for strong leadership. In 1918, ex-President Roosevelt challenged Woodrow Wilson's sweeping crackdown against dissent after the American entry into World War I. "To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong," Roosevelt said, "is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public."

Abraham Lincoln more pointedly serves the present, critical need. Challenging President James Polk's dubious response to alleged Mexican aggression against the United States, Congressman Lincoln voted to censure the president in 1848--while the war against Mexico still raged. He contended that the president's justification for war was "from beginning to end the sheerest deception." Polk would have "gone further with his proof if it had not been for the small matter that the truth would not permit him." Lincoln threw down the gauntlet: "Let him answer fully, fairly and candidly. Let him answer with facts and not with arguments. ... Let him attempt no evasion, no equivocation." Lincoln more than suspected that the president was "deeply conscious of being in the wrong."

Today, as we prepare to go to war, will the qualities of democracy, diversity, and the open society President Bush so ardently desires for the nation-building he will do for the Iraqis be available at home? The chorus for unanimity is rising, usually in the name of support for our troops in harm's way. Hardly a new ploy for presidential behavior. Once he commits troops abroad, the argument goes, then we must have a moratorium on criticism.

Again, Lincoln can help us. He realized that he had to distinguish between the role of the military and the policies of President Polk. The army had done its work admirably, Congressman Lincoln noted, but the president had "bungled" his. Polk, he feared, was "a bewildered, confounded and miserably perplexed man. God grant he may be able to show there is not something about his conscience more painful than all his mental perplexity."

Our "loyal opposition" at this moment borders on the comic. Most Democratic leaders desperately try to walk both sides of the line, keeping their options open, and say little to criticize or restrain the president in his headlong rush for war. Notably, ex-President Jimmy Carter and Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) have spoken out.

Carter rests his opposition to Bush's policy on Christian principles of a just war. We have not exhausted all non-violent options, Carter argues; we plan no distinctions between combatants and civilian non-combatants; and we face a strong prospect that war will only destabilize Iraq and the Middle East, and increase opportunities for terrorism. Carter also has noted that the war will not be sanctioned by the international community the United States professes to represent. George Bush's "alliance of the willing" apparently is a very exclusive club.

Sen. Byrd has pointedly challenged the president's recital of slogan, and his paucity of facts and evidence. Byrd is a powerful man within congressional boundaries, but he is readily dismissed as a caricature of sorts in the media, and elsewhere. Those anxious to discredit him resurrect his youthful membership in the Klan, a fact which he has decisively repudiated--unlike Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), and others like him, who never, never publicly disowned or repudiated their support for segregation, then or forever. But the passivity of the media is most striking in giving President Bush an open field.

Bush's March 6 press conference was not, in the minds of many observers, a particularly forceful or articulate moment for him. His answers seemed repetitious. Commentators suggested that many questions might have been planted, and that the president carefully limited his attention to friendly reporters. Planted questions? Favored softball questioners? How shocking; how surprising. Meanwhile, chattering commentators shortchanged their audience with little or no attention to the substance, or lack thereof, of his performance. Omission is the weapon of choice for the media's passivity.

The Sunday TV programs ignored the revelations of the executive director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, demonstrating that a document purporting to show an Iraqi purchase of uranium from Niger had been forged. That document was a key element in a British intelligence report, which the United States in turn had used to build its case against Iraq.

Even more lamentable has been the ongoing refusal of the American media to acknowledge a March 2 London Observer story detailing "an aggressive surveillance operation" against UN delegates, including the interception of home and office telephone calls and e-mails. The information came from a leaked memo from the National Security Agency. The targets were uncommitted UN delegations, including Angola, Cameroon, Chile, Mexico, Guinea and Pakistan.

The pro-war, Murdoch-owned London Times called it an "embarrassing disclosure."

American officials quietly labored to discredit the report, suggesting it was a forgery. Well, the British government has announced an arrest of someone in its National Security Administration counterpart, who is charged with leaking the memo. The New York Times did not print it because it could not get confirmation, although it had been confirmed in a variety of ways by the English press. Several days later, The Washington Post downplayed the story by noting that it was not particularly alarming, and the Los Angeles Times said American spy activities were "longstanding."

No one could quite bring themselves to acknowledge the obvious: It was true, however longstanding and commonplace such practices may have been.

And now, on CNN, Richard N. Perle, chairman of the Defense Policy Board and the president's "minister without portfolio" labeled Seymour M. Hersh a "terrorist"--"the closest thing American journalism has to a terrorist." And why? Because "he [Hersh] sets out to do damage." In a recent New Yorker magazine article, Hersh exposed how Perle's venture-capital firm invests in "companies dealing in technology goods and services that are of value to homeland security and defense."

CNN talk show host Wolf Blitzer sat silently through Perle's tirade and dutifully asked him if the opponents of war were "sending a mixed message to Saddam Hussein and giving him some comfort in suspecting that if he plays out this game, he's going to be able to get his way."

Perle almost smiled.

Stanley I. Kutler is the author of "The Wars of Watergate."

Copyright © 2003, Chicago Tribune

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Evidence Distorted For War
Associated Press
June 7, 2003

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration distorted intelligence and presented conjecture as evidence to justify a U.S. invasion of Iraq, according to a retired intelligence official who served during the months before the war.

"What disturbs me deeply is what I think are the disingenuous statements made from the very top about what the intelligence did say," said Greg Thielmann, who retired last September. "The area of distortion was greatest in the nuclear field."

Thielmann was director of the strategic, proliferation and military issues office in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. His office was privy to classified intelligence gathered by the CIA and other agencies about Iraq's chemical, biological and nuclear programs.

In Thielmann's view, Iraq could have presented an immediate threat to U.S. security in two areas: Either it was about to make a nuclear weapon, or it was forming close operational ties with al-Qaida terrorists.

Evidence was lacking for both, despite claims by President Bush and others, Thielmann said in an interview this week. Suspicions were presented as fact, contrary arguments ignored, he said.

The administration's prewar portrayal of Iraq's weapons capabilities has not been validated despite weeks of searching by military experts. Alleged stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons have not turned up, nor has significant evidence of a nuclear weapons program or links to the al-Qaida network.

Bush has said administration assertions on Iraq will be verified in time. The CIA and other agencies have vigorously defended their prewar performances.

CIA Director George Tenet, responding to similar criticism last week, said in a statement: "The integrity of our process was maintained throughout, and any suggestion to the contrary is simply wrong." On Friday, the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency acknowledged he had no hard evidence of Iraqi chemical weapons last fall but believed Iraq had a program in place to produce them.

Also Friday, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he was not prepared to place blame for any intelligence shortcomings until all information is in.

"There are always times when a single sentence or a single report evokes a lot of concern and some doubt," Warner told reporters after a closed hearing of his committee. "But thus far, in my own personal assessment of this situation, the intelligence community has diligently and forthrightly and with integrity produced intelligence and submitted it to this administration and to the Congress of the United States."

Thielmann suggested mistakes may have been made at points all along the chain from when intelligence is gathered, analyzed, presented to the president and then provided to the public.

The evidence of a renewed nuclear program in Iraq was far more limited than the administration contended, he said.

"When the administration did talk about specific evidence - it was basically declassified, sensitive information - it did it in a way that was also not entirely honest," Thielmann said.

In his State of the Union address, Bush said, "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."

The Africa claim rested on a purported letter or letters between officials in Iraq and Niger held by European intelligence agencies. The communications are now accepted as forged, and Thielmann said he believed the information on Africa was discounted months before Bush mentioned it.

"I was very surprised to hear that be announced to the United States and the entire world," he said.

Thielmann said he had presumed Iraq had supplies of chemical and probably biological weapons. He particularly expected U.S. forces to find caches of mustard agent or other chemical weapons left over from Saddam's old stockpiles.

"We appear to have been wrong," he said. "I've been genuinely surprised at that."

One example where officials took too far a leap from the facts, according to Thielmann: On Feb. 11, CIA Director Tenet told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Iraq "retains in violation of U.N. resolutions a small number of Scud missiles that it produced before the Gulf War."

Intelligence analysts supposed Iraq may have had some missiles because they couldn't account for all the Scuds it had before the first Gulf War, Thielmann said. They could have been destroyed, dismantled, miscounted or still somewhere in Saddam's inventory.

Some critics have suggested that the White House and Pentagon policy-makers pressured the CIA and military intelligence to come up with conclusions favorable to an attack-Iraq policy. The CIA and military have denied such charges. Thielmann said that generally he felt no such pressure.

Although his office did not directly handle terrorism issues, Thielmann said he was similarly unconvinced of a strong link between al-Qaida and Saddam's government.

Yet, the implication from Bush on down was that Saddam supported Osama bin Laden's network. Iraq and the Sept. 11 attacks frequently were mentioned in the same sentence, even though officials have no good evidence of any link between the two.

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NEW WORLD ORDER POLICE
By Suzanne Thomas
Guest Writer

There are currently over 874,000 Links on the subject of the New World Order International Police found on just one search engine. This operation is a NATO factor and they are in the process of recruting active, non-active, retired and 'terminated' law enforcement officers and personnel to make up this body of Big Brother's Storm Trooping Jack-booters. Don't be surprised if a non-english speaking NATO Law Enforcement Officer knocks on your door in the middle of the night to collect your guns or your kids - even you! Sound shocking? It's happening right now. Why don't you hear about it on the nightly news? What?! And give away the element of surprise? Wake up! You very well could be next. Don't laugh. There are already thousands of Americans sitting in jail right now that don't know why.

THE SPIES AMONGST US

Under the guise of "Homeland Security" and the "U.S. Patriot Act (1)" the United States is taking steps to subject the American Society to a false sense of protection. There is a format outline of this implementation and operation in Adolf Hitler's 'Mein Kampf'.

Quote: Chapter XV;
The Right of Emergency Defense; opening paragraph:

"The Armistice of November, 1918, ushered in a policy which in all human probability was bound to lead gradually to total submission. Historical examples of a similar nature show that nations which lay down their arms without compelling reasons prefer in the ensuing period to accept the greatest humiliations and extortions rather than attempt to change their fate by a renewed appeal to force.
This is humnaly understandable. A shrewd victor will, if possible, always present his demands to the vanquished in installments. And then, with a nation that has lost its character - and this is the case with every one which voluntarily submits - he can be sure that it will not regard one more of these individual oppressions as an adequate reason for taking up arms again. The more extortions are willingly accepted in this way, the more unjustified it strikes people finally to take up the defensive against a new, apparently isolated, though constantly recurring, oppression, especially when, all in all, so much more and greater misfortune has already been borne in patient silence". -End Quote.

It is agreed that we definately need to inhance our homeland security operations but it is not necessary to create another organization to do this. It would be better to clean-up what we already have. As we know, with any job, if you don't do the work you were hired to do then find another job. These people are not elected officials and yet they seem to have a lot of power as to what goes on in our lives.
All is not quiet on the Western Front; in Homeland America.

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More Body-Bag Bait?
Colonel David H. Hackworth (Ret.)
January 23, 2004

The 81st Brigade is rated as a combat-ready fighting outfit. But when it came time for this federally activated Washington state National Guard unit to ship out to Iraq, the high brass ruled that it was nowhere near ready to rock ‘n’ roll down where the bullets fly and people die. The brigade’s foxholes, in one of the most vicious contemporary killing fields in the world, were filled instead by regular units from the combat-worn 82nd Airborne.

Wait a minute! Isn’t the 81st one of the U.S. Army's 13 “enhanced” National Guard brigades? Haven’t millions of dollars and platoons of our best-and-brightest regular officers and noncoms been detailed to these special brigades for almost a decade in yet another ill-conceived Pentagon scheme to try to turn part-time citizen soldiers – who drill an average of 40 days a year – into full-time centurions?

When the 81st deployed last year for annual training, its skipper reported that the brigade was all-the-way combat-ready-to-go, with 100 percent personnel. Except that when it was activated last November to play hardball down where the body bags are filled, the brigade’s strength and deployment status had mysteriously plummeted to the low 80s.

Brigade soldiers report that at least another 10 percent of their comrades are now not deployable overseas because of past injuries, bad teeth, failure to qualify with their individual weapons – even after three trips to the firing range and with scores “improved” by instructors – or the inability of some of the brigade soldiers to wear a flak jacket or a helmet, let alone pack a 7-pound rifle.

One company had every senior sergeant fall out during a two-mile run, and in another line unit, troopers had to be “carried off on stretchers” halfway through a training exercise. Yet these unfit soldiers – who’d be guerrilla bait on the actual battlefield – are still on the good-to-go-to-Iraq list.

All of which sounds like another case of virtual reality: books being cooked with Ghost Soldiers who show up only on paper and readiness stats sharpened with a pencil rather than actual sweat on training fields. A drill that’s sadly – and dangerously – become all too standard in many regular, Reserve and Guard units.

Most of the soldiers in the 81st are good troopers. But it’s impossible to take a conventional Guard combat unit, which trains no more than a month and a half a year, and expect it to be fighting fit after a mere few months of accelerated combat training. Desert Storm and the pre-emptive war in Iraq proved that even our regulars could have used more training before crossing the Line of Departure.

But strong and experienced leadership, from squad level up to those sporting stars, is also crucial to success in combat. So while the 81st Brigade general is no doubt a smart guy – he’s got a master's degree in criminology, apparently a key asset for commanding a 4,600-strong armor/motorized brigade these days – it’s relevant that he's never commanded a combat unit on active duty. Unfortunately, Brig. Gen. Oscar B. Hilman’s active-duty experience was more than 30 years ago as an enlisted finance clerk and a medic. Resumewise, he probably weighs in on a good day at a tad below a regular lieutenant.

Would you like this man to lead your kid through the Sunni Triangle’s bloody maze? Would you allow a doctor who practiced only a few months a year and had never slit open a belly to take out your son’s or daughter’s appendix?

Reserve and Guard soldiers make up about 30 percent of the casualties in Iraq. They probably were rushed to the Middle East before they were ready for Freddy because a bunch of Pentagon clowns didn’t get that quality wins fights, not quantity.

SecDef Donald Rumsfeld, reputedly a hard-nosed efficiency expert, needs to determine whether Pentagon pork to states such as Washington is worth putting fine kids in the middle of a red-hot frying pan when they’re far from ready. He should also ask why a regular parachute unit is now doing double combat duty because the 81st wasn’t up to snuff.

Hopefully, Rummy will conclude that one regular Army brigade is better and more cost-effective than 10 so-called enhanced brigades.

Columnist and former soldier David H. Hackworth is the author of The Price of Honor, and contributes weekly commentary to DefenseWatch. For more information, visit
Colonel Hackworth's homepage or the DefenseWatch Website. Sign up for the free weekly Defending America column at his Website, or send mail to P.O. Box 11179, Greenwich, CT 06831.

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Ashcroft’s actions suggest Selective Prosecution
Jonathan Turley
Special to the Los Angeles Times
Washington Post News Service
October 23, 2003

It has lain dormant in the darkest recesses of American law for 125 years, but this month Attorney General John Ashcroft introduced critics of the administration to his latest weapon in law enforcement.

In a Miami federal court, the attorney general charged the environmental group Greenpeace under an obscure 1872 law originally intended to end the practice of “sailor-mongering,” or the luring of sailors with liquor and prostitutes from their ships. Ashcroft plucked the law from obscurity to punish Greenpeace for boarding a vessel near port in Miami.

Not only is the law being used to prosecute one of the administration’s most vocal critics in an unprecedented attack on the First Amendment, but it appears to be part of a broader campaign by Ashcroft to protect the nation against free speech, a campaign that has converted environmentalists into “sailor-mongers” and nuns into terrorists.

The case against Greenpeace started with a protest in April 2002. The activist group was leading an international effort to stop the illegal importing of mahogany. It believed that a ship, the APL Jade, was engaging in this illegal trade and decided to conduct one of its signature demonstrations to protest the Bush administration’s failure to stop the imports.

In clearly marked boats, Greenpeace followed the ship. Two of its members boarded the vessel about eight miles outside the Miami port, carrying a banner that read “President Bush, Stop Illegal Logging.”

Such protests are common, and the two activists wore Greenpeace jackets, identified themselves as Greenpeace members and allowed themselves to be arrested. They ultimately pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and were released. The wood was unloaded and everyone seemed satisfied.

Everyone, that is, except Ashcroft.

Fifteen months after the incident, the Justice Department filed an indictment in Miami against the entire Greenpeace organization under the 1872 law, a law that appears to have been used only twice.

A New York court in 1872 described the law as both “inartistic and obscure.” An Oregon court in 1890 described the purpose of the law as preventing “the evil” of “sailor-mongers [who] get on board vessels ... and by the help of intoxicants, and the use of other means, often savoring of violence, get the crews ashore and leave the vessel without help to manage or care for her.”

Of course, there did not appear to be many sailors on the APL Jade being lured out to join Greenpeace. But proceeding against two protesters on trivial misdemeanor charges wasn’t enough for the Justice Department. So it decided to treat Greenpeace activists not as protesters but as sailor-mongers.

Greenpeace could lose its tax-exempt status – a potential death knell for a large public interest organization. A conviction could also force Greenpeace to regularly report its actions to the government. Such a prospect must secretly delight many people in the administration who see the group as an ever-present irritant. After all, it was Greenpeace that held the first demonstration at the president’s ranch after his inauguration, causing a stir when activists unfurled a banner reading “Bush: the Toxic Texan. Don’t Mess With the Earth.”

Since then, Greenpeace has waged a continual campaign against Bush’s environmental record. Ashcroft’s jihad against free speech, however, is not limited to environmentalists. Consider the case of three Dominican nuns. Last year, Sister Ardeth Platte, 66, Sister Jackie Hudson, 68, and Sister Carol Gilbert, 55, participated in a peaceful demonstration for nuclear disarmament.

As part of the protest, the three nuns cut through a chain-link fence around a Minuteman III missile silo. There is only a light fence because the missile is protected by a 110-ton concrete cap designed to withstand a nuclear explosion. The nuns proceeded to paint crosses on the cap and symbolically hit it with hammers. They then knelt, prayed, sang religious songs and waited for arrest. The most the government could allege in terms of damage was $3,000.

But the Ashcroft Justice Department wanted more than compensation and a common misdemeanor. It charged the nuns with obstructing national defense, which subjected each to a potential 30-year prison term. When the government pushed the court to impose sentences of as much as eight years, the judge refused. But the judge found, as alleged by the government, that the three nuns had put military personnel “in harm’s way.” Accordingly, he imposed on them sentences ranging from 2 1/2 years to 3 1/2 years.

The administration has pursued a similar zero-tolerance policy in other cases. It has been accused of using unconstitutional “trap-and-arrest” tactics to suppress protests in Washington, D.C., where hundreds of journalists, bystanders and student protesters were arrested en masse without a warning or an opportunity to disperse. They were then left hog-tied in holding areas for as long as 20 hours, with their hands bound to their ankles.

The Greenpeace case is particularly chilling because of the extraordinary effort to find a law that could be used to pursue the organization. The 1872 law is a legal relic that must have required much archeological digging through law books to find.

It is also notable that other organizations have not faced such attacks. For example, in this same judicial district in Florida, the Cuban American group Democracy Movement organized a protest in which members sailed into a government-designated security zone. Although the members were charged, the organization was not. Similarly, other groups viewed favorably by the administration – such as anti-abortion groups – have not been subject to criminal indictments of their organizations for such protests.

The extraordinary effort made to find and use this obscure law strongly suggests a campaign of selective prosecution – the greatest scourge of the First Amendment.

Greenpeace was engaged in a classic protest used by countless organizations, from those of the civil rights movement to anti-abortion groups. It is a way for citizens to express their opposition by literally standing in the path of the government.

None of these organizations contests the right of the government to punish them for trespass or even criminal misdemeanors. Indeed, they view such punishment as a badge of honor.

But Ashcroft is seeking symbols of his own: The image of a major environmentalist organization placed on probation or nuns being sent to jail is clearly meant to send a chilling message from the man who once accused his critics of aiding and abetting terrorists.

Unless deterred by Congress or the courts, Ashcroft will continue his campaign to protect Americans from the ravages of free speech. If he succeeds, it will not be sailors but free speech that will be shanghaied in Miami.

Turley is a Professor of Law at George Washington University.

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'Picture of innocence' defies Bush attack on Greenpeace
Picasso on the beach

Sunday - January 18, 2004
UNITED STATES/Miami Beach, Florida

Over a thousand people gathered this weekend on South Beach, Miami to create a massive 'human art' image in creative protest against the unprecedented prosecution of Greenpeace by the Bush Administration. Supporters of the international environmental organization gathered Saturday afternoon in support of the 'Endangered Forests, Endangered Freedom' campaign, replicating the 1950s Picasso work of art, of a dove flying past a jailed man.

The event, the largest of its scale to take place in the Miami area, comes as Greenpeace faces a serious federal indictment in South Florida, following a protest against the importation of illegal mahogany from the Brazilian Amazon in April 2002. Activists boarded the timber ship as part of our on-going campaign to save the world's ancient forests from destructive logging, work that continues despite the extraordinary prosecution.

The federal government has levelled charges under an obscure 1872 law originally intended to prevent "sailor-mongering"; a law only enacted twice since entering into force, most recently in 1890. The indictment has drawn criticism from many quarters -- from negative ink in the Washington Times to criticism from the American Civil Liberties Union and Al Gore -- and accusations that the Bush administration seeks to silence us and our vocal criticisms of the administration's environmental policies.

"This is a chance for the people of Miami to show their support for Greenpeace, and to creatively protest the Bush administration's decision to silence its critics," said Ginger Cassady, Greenpeace campaigner in Miami. "The hundreds of people gathered here today represent the desire of people all across the world who are willing to take a stand for the world's forests and for the right of citizens and Greenpeace alike to peacefully protest," affirmed Cassady.

Picasso created the image as an appeal for amnesty for Spaniards who were persecuted under the Franco regime.

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Depleted Uranium Research Information / Links

What is depleted uranium?
Discounted Casualties
9,600 U.S. Gulf War Veterans have died since the end of Operation Desert Storm
How the Pentagon Radiates Soldiers & Civilians with DU Weapons
Silver Bullet: Depleted Uranium
Stop NATO
US forces' use of depleted uranium weapons is 'illegal'
Depleted Uranium weapons in 2001-2002
International Depleted Uranium Study Team
Metal of Dishonor
Issues on the Use and Effects of RADIATION Weapons
DU: Cancer as a Weapon - Radioactive War

GulfLINK - FAQ

  

Bush to Arab world: Drop dead!
Driven by right-wing ideologues and his own zeal,
President Bush has taken Ariel Sharon's side in the Middle East
Even while plotting a war with Iraq.
Foreign policy experts say that's a dangerous combination.
By: Ian Williams
United Nations Correspondent for The Nation.


Sept. 24, 2002 | In the old days scientists used to look for the "missing link," the fossils that bridged the gap between stupid monkeys and clever men. There is a similar missing link between the U.S. government and a coherent foreign policy. The Bush administration has totally sidelined the Middle East conflict, the one between Israel, the Palestinians and the Arab world. For a variety of reasons -- the ascendancy of neoconservative hawks in the White House and the State Department; President Bush's own embrace of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's hard-line positions; Bush's simple, black-and-white view of the world, in which the "war on terrorism" trumps everything else; the complete absence of any pressure from Congress; and domestic political considerations -- the Bush administration has apparently decided that it doesn't need to reach out to the Arab world by pushing for Mideast peace before a possible invasion of Iraq.

In contrast, when former President George Bush went to war to chase Iraq out of Kuwait, he pledged the world in general, and the Arabs in particular, that the U.S. would push hard on the Middle East peace process immediately afterwards. "And he met the promise, and began the process with the Madrid peace talks," comments Richard Murphy, who was assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs in the Reagan administration. Contrasting that with what he calls the present administration's "obsession with Iraq, that we can't deal with anything until Saddam is replaced," Murphy says the Bush administration is missing the obvious -- and he doesn't know why. "They do not buy the argument that they could make it easier for themselves by paying attention to the Israel-Palestine confrontation to buy more space and maneuverability with the Arab world. They just resist it. I can't explain it, but they just don't buy it."

It's not as if the vital strategic importance of resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a secret. Everyone from close allies like Tony Blair to strategic partners like Saudi Arabia to U.N. head Kofi Annan have been telling Bush that the U.S. needs to advance the peace process -- not just because it's the right thing to do, but because it will help him oust Saddam Hussein without plunging the region into chaos. Such voices of reason persuaded Bush that going to the U.N. was essential to gain European support and to at least contain Arab hostility for his Iraqi adventure, but they have been completely unable to convince him to get involved in the peace process.

In the eyes of most of the world, Bush seized the moral high ground after his speech in the General Assembly -- and then last week he slid off it. It was not merely because he behaved like a petulant kid who took his ball and went home when Saddam Hussein said he would let in the weapons inspectors without conditions, thus revealing the shallowness of his conversion to multilateralism. It was also because it became clear once again that the U.S.'s Middle East policy is barely distinguishable from Ariel Sharon's. (On Monday, the White House broke days of silence and criticized Israel's siege of Yasser Arafat's headquarters in Ramallah as having "aggravated" U.S. attempts to reform the Palestinian Authority; it was administration's first explicit criticism of Israel in months.)

Last week the "Quartet" -- the U.N., E.U., U.S. and Russia -- met at the U.N., supposedly to organize an international peace conference on the Israel-Palestinian issue. But far from seizing the opportunity to tackle the problem that has haunted the organization since its foundation, the U.S. showed no interest. One U.N. official commented, "If anything, the U.S. is backpedaling -- after all, the International Conference was their idea, but they don't seem in any hurry to have it now. The idea that you need to promise anything about Palestine to get Arab cooperation seems to have gone out of the window."

Instead of being a triumphant follow-up of the previous week's events, the press conference to announce the Quartet's anodyne report was dominated by a public row between Igor Ivanov, the Russian foreign minister, and Secretary of State Colin Powell, about the appropriate response to Saddam's apparent capitulation. Many of the non-U.S. participants were not happy. Palestine's U.N. representative, Nasser El Kidwa, was terse and to the point about the results of the Quartet meeting. "It was a lousy declaration," he said. For their part, the Europeans also came away angry and frustrated that their attempts to secure obligations for Israel on the "road map" for a peace deal with the Palestinians were overruled by Washington.

The Arab ambassadors came away irate as well. Echoing a complaint heard througout the Arab world and Europe, El Kidwa charged that America was guilty of hypocrisy for threatening to invade Baghdad while ignoring "Three decades of Israeli defiance [of the U.N.]." El Kidwa pointed out that the U.S., almost always acting alone, has vetoed dozens of Security Council resolutions on the Palestinian issue.

Some overseas and domestic policy experts say the administration's refusal to move the peace process forward reflects a lack of planning and foresight, either on how to achieve the stated end of removing Saddam Hussein, or about what will happen afterwards either in Iraq or in the region.

Jim Hoge of the Council on Foreign Affairs says, "There is no sign of planning. If there were, I would think they would be alerting us to it, because it would be reassuring." He suggests that the Bush administration's obsession with Iraq is "diverting attention and energy particularly at the top, where it is so important, from two much more serious problems: the war against Al-Qaida, which is still capable of causing a tremendous damage against the U.S., and the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, one of the most potentially disruptive issues in the region and in the world. And over the last 50 years, every time we get diverted or back off, matters get worse not better."

For this preoccupation to make sense, Hoge says, the administration has to prove that "there is an imminent danger from Saddam Hussein's regime that has to be met. If there is such a case I haven't seen them make it. They are far from answering the important questions: what are we going to do, what happens afterwards if we conquer Iraq, what effect will it have on the region."

Bush's Evangelical Crusade Against Evildoers

Richard Murphy agreed that the president "still has a lot to tell us about postwar planning, and I suspect that is because there isn't much of it." In his speech to the U.N., Bush suddenly promoted Iran from being a charter member of the "axis of evil" to being the first victim of Iraqi aggression. It certainly pleased the Iranians, but there was no follow-up; any hopes that the White House might be considering a thaw toward Iran were dashed. Murphy skeptically recalls that Bush told off his speechwriters recently for trying to put some "nuance" in his orations: He was having none of it. The overture to Iran was apparently as expedient as the momentary multilateralism of the rest of his speech, to be blown away as soon as Saddam Hussein ruined the game by giving in.

Trying to find some reason why the President is not taking the obvious diplomatic steps, such as reassuring the allies he needs to mount a successful military operation, Murphy suggests, "Being obsessed may be why he's not interested in the tactics of building support with Iran or with the Saudis. He's done a little bit to smooth them over -- but they are in a pretty fussed state."

There is a reason why the Saudis are fussed. Their regime, like the other precarious, despotic ones that sit on much of the region's oil, may not survive the anger that would follow all-out American unilateral war on Iraq, without some gesture toward the Palestinians. And if, as many Palestinians and some Israelis fear, Sharon used the cover of a war with Iraq to "transfer" (i.e. ethnically cleanse) Palestinians, moving them from the West Bank to Jordan, then a more general conflagration would be inevitable.

The ideologues driving the Bush administration seem to believe, first, that the threat of the "enraged Arab street" is exaggerated, and second, that if the "moderate" regimes do fall, that might be OK. (In a profile in the New York Times Magazine Sunday, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz is characterized as "not ... so sure that rocking the stability of tyrannies in the Arab world, even West-leaning tyrannies, is a bad thing.") For many veterans of the international diplomatic arena, that kind of thinking is disturbingly over-optimistic -- even disconnected from reality. In attempting to explain Bush's actions, Murphy sees the president as someone who is acting on faith, rather than facts.

The president "is a believer," says Murphy. "This is a man who's on a mission. He is very evangelical about terrorism: he's got to root out evil. I wonder if in his mind there really is a very strong linkage between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida. Evil is there, and evil must be uprooted and the fixation on terrorism has now encompassed Saddam Hussein -- who 'tried to kill my father' as a footnote. He seems to think the facts are there about the linkage -- if only we could discover them. In his mind they are joined up. He does not speak as man with any doubts."

Is the president's policy based on a series of deeply felt but disconnected prejudices in which Yasser Arafat, Saddam Hussein, Iran and Osama bin Laden metamorphose into one single evil entity, and Ariel Sharon and the USA are together on the side of the angels? The Brookings Institution's Judith Kipper sees this as "not an inappropriate analysis of the way they think. This is a very, very ideological administration, more than conservative, and the president does have a sense of priorities that sees everything in black and white."

Referring to the well-known schism in the Bush administration between the moderates and the hawks, Kipper says, "There's no doubt about who's in charge. He is closer to the Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz point of view." The hawks, of course, tend to be avowedly and uncritically supportive of Likud policies: Rumsfeld, for example, referred to the "so-called occupied territories" recently.

For the hawks, removing Saddam Hussein will make the Israeli-Palestinian conflict easier to resolve, because it will weaken the Palestinians. (The hawks believe that regime change in Iraq will also keep Iran, another major backer of the Palestinians, in line.) Kipper deduces that the administration "tends to see the Arab-Israeli conflict, in fact most foreign policy, through the prism of the war on terrorism. They think that if you remove the regime in Iraq then it will be much easier since then rogue states and people will have less of a mandate."

If, for Bush, invading Iraq is part of a war between good and evil, most European allies, and all the Arabs, are much less sure about where Ariel Sharon and Yasser Arafat place on the scale. Without the ideological views of the president's coterie, they see the need to enforce U.N. resolutions as one that does not just apply to Iraq. Few of them are the slightest bit convinced that Saddam Hussein had anything at all to do with Sept. 11, and most of them are worried about the possible consequences of an attack and the Bush administration's lack of forward planning.

Talking about democracy in the Middle East sounds good, but in reality a democratically elected government in Baghdad is likely to be just as militantly pro-Palestinian as Hussein's regime, or even more so. As indeed are other regimes that could replace the U.S. allies toppled for their connivance in what most Arabs see as an Israeli-inspired American crusade against Iraq. If the hawks are right, invading Iraq will open a new era of democracy, freedom and prosperity in the Arab world. If they are wrong, they will be remembered as ideologues who wanted to defeat the forces of evil, but succeeded only in losing Saudi and Gulf Oil -- or, in the worst-case scenario, opened a Pandora's box of global terrorism even worse than bin Laden's.

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U.S. Hurries; World Waits
By: TODD S. PURDUM


UNITED NATIONS, Sept. 17 — Just five days ago, President Bush's strong appeal to the United Nations for collective action on Iraq allayed world suspicion that the United States was a go-it-alone superpower bent on war and forged a broad consensus that Iraq must give up any weapons of mass destruction or face the consequences.

Now Iraq's sudden offer to readmit international weapons inspectors has turned the world again, and left Mr. Bush scrambling with mixed success to press his case for disarming Iraq and dislodging Saddam Hussein as the next milestone in his campaign against terrorism.

In Washington today, Vice President Dick Cheney lobbied Congress for swift action on a resolution authorizing force against Iraq, and the Senate Democratic leader, Tom Daschle, who had earlier said a debate might take a long time, predicted a vote "well before the election." Asked why, Mr. Daschle said that the administration had done much of what Democrats wanted, by going to the United Nations and consulting Congress, and that "now we are reciprocating."

But here in the Security Council, the hard work of multilateralism was just beginning, and the diplomatic lifting will be heavy. Russia, France and crucial Arab allies all expressed skepticism about the need for a new Security Council resolution in light of Iraq's offer, despite Secretary of State Colin L. Powell's insistence that "We've seen this game before."

"What has changed in the last few days is not the letter that came in yesterday," Secretary Powell said. "It's the full will of the international community being directed to this problem. And it is the international community, through its agency, the United Nations and the Security Council, that should make the judgment as to when, where, if, under what set of circumstances and with what potential consequences" Iraq must comply with a string of past United Nations resolutions.

The Bush administration showed not the slightest indication to heed entreaties from Russia and France — each with veto power over any Council resolution — and Arab countries to take Iraq's offer at face value. Pressing his argument with Americans, Mr. Bush set the tone by warning schoolchildren in Tennessee, "You can't be fooled again."

In short order, the White House released a detailed chronology of Mr. Hussein's past obstruction of United Nations efforts, including his repeated refusal to give teams access to sites they sought to inspect.

Kenneth Pollack, an Iraq expert at the Brookings Institution, said that by allowing the return of inspectors, Mr. Hussein had effectively agreed to Security Council resolution 1284 of December 1999, which sets a much lower threshold for inspections than the Bush administration would like.

"We've really got our work cut out for us," Mr. Pollack said. "I've always opposed going down the inspections route, because at the end of the day, you are betting that Saddam won't give in, and his past record always indicated he would give in. What's so interesting now is that he's given in at the ideal moment: really early, when it messes us up."

One State Department official acknowledged that any significant delay at the United Nations could re-open differences between Secretary Powell and administration hawks led by Mr. Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who have been highly skeptical about the utility of weapons inspectors.

"I wouldn't be surprised if there are some who will use this to point out the dangers of engaging multilaterally," the official said.

For now, senior officials said they would keep up pressure in foreign capitals and here in the Security Council to follow up on Mr. Bush's demand for United Nations action, and diplomats braced for a siege.

"If I were on the Security Council, which I'm not, I would in the next days sleep with my eyes open and the boots on," said the Danish foreign minister, Per Stig Moller, whose country currently holds the presidency of the European Union.

The administration was not completely surprised by Iraq's offer, which had been rumored here for much of Monday and drafted in part with the participation of Secretary General Kofi Annan. Washington's initial response was swift, skeptical and in sync, from the State Department to the White House.

But the early timing of Mr. Hussein's move nevertheless seemed to take the administration a bit aback, and some officials feared it could offer Russia, China and France an opportunity to slow the process.

That is particularly troublesome to those administration officials who believe they have to get through the process in a month or two because military action, if required, would almost certainly have to take place in January or February. Only then is it cool enough in the desert for soldiers to wear full chemical and biological protective gear.

"We built in some time for Saddam to play around with the U.N.," one senior official said this week. "But not much time, and we have to convince the rest of the Security Council that the old timelines — 60 days for the inspectors to `assess' what needs to be done — won't work."

Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers, who are to discuss Iraq with Mr. Bush on Wednesday, rallied behind him to bolster his hand in the United Nations. Mr. Daschle said he was "still very skeptical about Saddam Hussein's intent and position."

Asked if he would support a resolution of force that calls for a new Iraqi government, he said Democrats "have been supportive of a regime change from the very beginning."

Representative Richard A. Gephardt, the House Democratic leader, said, "After 12 years of Saddam Hussein's defiance of United Nations resolutions, his regime's new offer to admit inspectors does not address my concerns about the threat he poses to the United States and the international community."

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Another Backdoor Attack on Vets
January 16, 2004
By Lt. Col. Ralf W. Zimmermann (U.S.Army Retired)

(Lt. Col. Zimmermann is a decorated Desert Storm veteran and former tank battalion commander.)

Vets and military retirees must be on heightened alert during 2004 and beyond.

As I have predicted, th